Alumni showcase training data devices for swimmers
Coach Jeff Slater, second from left, gives instructions to members of the University of Waterloo swim team during a demonstration of TritonWear training devices.
Coach Jeff Slater, second from left, gives instructions to members of the University of Waterloo swim team during a demonstration of TritonWear training devices.
Zhongwei Chen received the prestigious International Automotive Lithium Batteries Association (IALB) Young Investigator Award at the 9th International Conference on Advanced Lithium Batteries for Automobile Applications held last month in China. The award recognizes the chemical engineering professor’s work in developing advanced silicon anode materials that make batteries smaller, lighter and longer-lasting.
The University of Waterloo’s International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Team achieved a gold medal standing for the fourth consecutive year, as well as the award for Best Poster in the overgrad division in the 2016 iGEM Giant Jamboree competition.
Waterloo’s team, made up of undergraduate students from the Faculties of engineering, math and science, competed against over 300 others from universities throughout the world at the jamboree held in Boston from October 27 to 31.
Waterloo Engineering has been ranked the best engineering school in the country by the U.S. News and World Report.
The new rankings compared 1,000 universities around the world. The University of Toronto’s Faculty of Engineering placed second in Canada behind Waterloo.
Innovation and sustained growth in the field of live video production have earned a Waterloo Engineering alumnus recognition as CEO of the Year in Ottawa for 2016.
David Ross, CEO and majority owner of Ross Video, will collect the award from the Ottawa Chamber of Commerce and the Ottawa Business Journal at a gala Nov. 10 attended by about 800 business leaders.
Four graduates of Waterloo Engineering took top honours in their categories this week at a prestigious awards gala for Ontario entrepreneurs.
Sponsored by professional services firm Ernst & Young and held in Toronto, the event recognized Waterloo alumni with successful businesses in fields ranging from video games to aluminum manufacturing.
Cited by judges at the 23rd annual EY Entrepreneur of the Year program for Ontario were:
The co-founder of a startup company based on research at Waterloo Engineering won a $25,000 provincial award this week for student entrepreneurs.
Chekema Prince, who earned her PhD in mechanical engineering at Waterloo in 2014, took home the Martin Walmsley Award for Entrepreneurship from the annual meeting of the Ontario Centres of Excellence in Toronto.
A technology innovation with potential applications in biomedical, diagnostic and optical imaging took a top prize for a Waterloo Engineering master’s student at a contest in Montreal this week sponsored by CMC Microsystems.
Researchers at the University of Waterloo are joining a major effort to help make Canadian manufacturers more competitive through the use of computer modelling.
Led by Kaan Erkorkmaz, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering, the Waterloo team is in line for $1.3 million in funding over five years to tackle complex issues in advanced manufacturing.
Following up on comments made by Donald Trump in a presidential campaign debate regarding the North American Free Trade Act (NAFTA), both the New York Times and BNN reached out to Jim Bookbinder for his input on the consequences proposed.