Tiffany 1837 Lock pendant nose
Students have been guided, cajoled, coaxed and whatever else is necessary to move them toward their goals. Their senior projects are really the fruit of everyone's dedication and hard work.For DeVry University students majoring in Information Technology, Electronics Engineering Technology, or Tiffany 1837 pendant Engineering Technology. Required senior projects are about more than just completing requirements needed to graduate.For me, my senior project was not only an opportunity to showcase everything I had learned, but about how I could take those skills and contribute something significant in my field and find a way to help others.
Campus-wide, DeVry. University senior project presentations or "fairs" are held several times a year. Employers and business leaders in the community are invited to attend the events, view the projects up close, talk to the student inventors and get a first-hand look at the imagination, Paloma Picasso Loving Heart pendant and industry prowess a student might bring to a job.Many Senior Project Fairs include more than one robot Professor Forough Ghahramani of DeVry believes there's a simple explanation for the students' interest in robots. "There is a limitless horizon to what robots can do in our world, and how they can help from the most complicated to the most simple of tasks and our students take full advantage of the opportunity to explore those functions and capacities," she says.
At DeVry University Fremont, Calif, campus, a robot named AMI for Artificial Machine Intelligence (and pronounced "Amy") responds to the verbal commands of Paloma Picasso Loving Heart Pendant inventors, students Eduardo Arreola and his teammates Perseo Gonzalez and Feras Khatib. Using voice recognition software, artificial intelligence and Bluetooth technology, AMI not only responds to voice commands, but when thanked answers, "You're welcome." According to Michael Zohourian, Dean of Engineering programs at the Fremont campus, "Senior projects are not only about the 'wow factor' - students have to demonstrate elegance of design, technical merit and marketability."
For DeVry Calgary student Fady Khaled, his senior project was the culmination of a childhood dream. The electrical engineering student created Nova 5, a compact robot mounted with a camera that combines visual images with sound waves and infrared sensors and may be fitted with an Tiffany 1837 Lock pendant nose to sniff out harmful gases, making it useful in such emergency situations as mine collapses or fires.Khaled saw an opportunity "to build something that saves lives, that's the bottom line." Employers seeing the robot at the campus Senior Project Fair apparently agreed. "It's absolutely brilliant," says Canadian Centre for Unmanned Vehicle Systems President Don Matthews.
0 comentarios