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Master of Business, Entrepreneurship and Technology (MBET) students captured second place in the RBC Next Great Innovator Challenge  held January 17 in Toronto. The team of five students called RBC+ included  MBET students Shanae Vander Togt, Rahim Dhanani, Ali Esmail, Aleesha Babineau, and Vejey Karthick Gandier.

The five teams that competed in the final challenge event were required to propose an innovative idea that would enable RBC to use big data to create a competitive advantage.

Adel Sedra, dean of Waterloo Engineering from 2003 to 2012, was Adel Sedra and Matt Stevensinvested in the Order of Ontario by the Honourable David Onley, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario at a ceremony held January 23 at Queen's Park. Sedra was recognized for his "seminal work which has resulted in major developments in fields ranging from medical technology to wireless communications."

Ralph Haas, distinguished professor emeritus of civil engineering, was presented with the Roy W Crum Award, the highest honour of the Transportation Research Board of the US National Academies.  He received the award at the board's annual conference in Washington, DC on January 15, 2014 for his "outstanding leadership in transportation research."  Haas is only the second Canadian in 63 years to receive the prestigious award.

Calvin Chu and Ashish Bidadi, both 2013 mechatronics engineering graduates, are using old technology - buttons, dials and sliders - to make it easier and faster to use computers.

And, according to an article in the Waterloo Region Record, a lot of people think they're taking their startup, Palette, in the right direction. Chu and Bidadi recently raised $158,470 on the crowdfunding site Kickstarter, far exceeding their $100,000 goal.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Work Ethic from ASEE Prism

Excerpt of Work Ethic from ASEE Prism's October 2013 issue.

Industry experiences help lift a Canadian engineering school to star status

No one would use the term venerable to describe the University of Waterloo. Set on a former cornfield some 70 miles west of Toronto, the campus’s oldest building dates only to 1958 — a year after the first 74 students began classes in two makeshift structures erected on the parking lot of Waterloo College down the road.