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Something to do with Corpus Christi

The first day of classes in the new Engineering and Science Building

Such a long way down. This was the view from the Hoover Dam looking out to the new bridge.

 

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Robots developed by DU's School of Engineering and Computer Science. Each has a pair of video camera "eyes," so that they can conduct war zone surveillance and even ride alongside troop transports to detect roadside bombs. To learn more about these and other robots being created at DU, see www.du.edu/magazine/archive/2009/04/Building_a_Better_'B.....

NASA engineer Krista Shaffer, left, speaks to Rachel Power of NASA’s Digital Expansion to Engage the Public (DEEP) Network inside Kennedy Space Center’s Vehicle Assembly Building during Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day. Held in conjunction with National Engineers Week and Girl Day, the event allowed students from throughout the nation to speak with female NASA scientists and technical experts. Photo credit: NASA/Glenn Benson

NASA image use policy.

Near the Engineering Deck we have converted an old cargo bay into a crew lounge area. We spend the endless hours in deep space cranking out some of our favorite space country classics.

Reverse Engineering @ luff, Lausanne [2003-10-08]

Ashwani Lohani, Indian Railways captured during the Session:"Re-engineering Bureaucracy " at the India Economic Summit 2017 in New Delhi, India, Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell

TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla., April 15, 2014. - U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Axel Fiksman, right, 116th Civil Engineering Squadron (CES), Robins Air Force Base (AFB), Ga., Georgia Air National Guard, uses a circular saw to cut an even edge on a portion of a wall frame while Senior Airman Daniel Tift, 143rd CES, Quonset National Guard Base, R.I., and Staff Sgt. Joe Wells, 433rd CES, Lackland AFB, Texas, help to steady the boards during Silver Flag training.

 

During the weeklong course, Guardsmen from the 116th CES and more than 30 other U.S. Air Force and Air National Guard units trained on building and maintaining bare-base operations at a forward-deployed location. In addition, they honed their combat and survival skills and repaired simulated bomb-damaged runways, set up base facilities and established various critical base operating support capabilities. More than 30 Airmen from the 116th CES attended the exercise that consisted of extensive classroom and hands-on training culminating in an evaluation of learned skills on the last day of class.

 

(Georgia Air National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)

The first day of classes in the new Engineering and Science Building

Engineering Mathematics graduation

Engineering consutancy specialising in laser scanning, collision reconstruction and expert witness services.

 

www.advancedsimtech.com/

 

A small engineering workshop in Ho Chi Minh City / Saigon (Vietnam, 2016).

A team of engineers at Vanderbilt’s Center for Intelligent Mechatronics led by Michael Goldfarb, H. Fort Flowers Chair in Mechanical Engineering, has developed a powered exoskeleton that enables people with severe spinal cord injuries to stand, walk, sit and climb stairs. Its lightweight, compact size and modular design promise to provide users with an unprecedented degree of independence. The university has several patents pending on the design, and Parker Hannifin Corporation, a global leader in motion and control technologies, has signed an exclusive licensing agreement to develop a commercial version of the device that it plans to introduce in 2014.

Students participated in STEM related projects during lunch during the week of February 17, 2020.

John Wilson uses synthetic vaccines to further the fight against diseases news.vanderbilt.edu/2013/10/new-faculty-john-wilson/

The UC Davis College of Engineering presented its annual Scholar Awards during a recognition ceremony at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 in the AGR Room of the campus’ Alumni and Visitor Center.

 

The ceremony featured 70 awards worth a combined total of $218,000. Specific awards have been sponsored by corporations that include Boeing, Bushnell Outdoor Products, Chevron, Micron, Phillips 66, Texas Instruments and Union Pacific.

 

College of Engineering students applied for the various awards via an online application that required short answers to questions designed to spur creativity and reveal details about applicant interests. Sample questions included “Cite your favorite UC Davis course, and why” and “Describe yourself in a tweet.” Applications then were reviewed, and winners selected, by faculty within each College of Engineering department.

 

The Scholar Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate enthusiasm for their engineering fields of choice, while obtaining some extra money to help support their education. The corporate donors benefit as well, since it allows them to establish relationships with top College of Engineering undergraduates.

 

Student involvement and corporate sponsorship have grown significantly this year; by way of comparison, the 2013 Scholar Awards honored 40 individuals with cash awards that totaled $60,000.

 

Photo by T.J. Ushing/Academic Technology Services

at the University of Alberta

Ford Research and Engineering center.

The UC Davis College of Engineering presented its annual Scholar Awards during a recognition ceremony at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 in the AGR Room of the campus’ Alumni and Visitor Center.

 

The ceremony featured 70 awards worth a combined total of $218,000. Specific awards have been sponsored by corporations that include Boeing, Bushnell Outdoor Products, Chevron, Micron, Phillips 66, Texas Instruments and Union Pacific.

 

College of Engineering students applied for the various awards via an online application that required short answers to questions designed to spur creativity and reveal details about applicant interests. Sample questions included “Cite your favorite UC Davis course, and why” and “Describe yourself in a tweet.” Applications then were reviewed, and winners selected, by faculty within each College of Engineering department.

 

The Scholar Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate enthusiasm for their engineering fields of choice, while obtaining some extra money to help support their education. The corporate donors benefit as well, since it allows them to establish relationships with top College of Engineering undergraduates.

 

Student involvement and corporate sponsorship have grown significantly this year; by way of comparison, the 2013 Scholar Awards honored 40 individuals with cash awards that totaled $60,000.

 

Photo by T.J. Ushing/Academic Technology Services

an engineering marvel, the Petronas Twin Towers. This is one of the components of the main entrance ceiling.

Two days travelling through the beautiful countryside of Devon and Wiltshire and this is the best image I got :-). A fully grown Minnion hard at work/play. This guy is an engineering genius, the parts he is 'displaying' are anodes of a propeller system he developed and I was there to talk to him about his latest creation, that we can't make public until March.

James Kelly, right, a computer engineering and electrical engineering undergraduate, and Miles Hanbury, left, a computer engineering undergraduate, work together in one of the EECS labs on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Wednesday, September 28, 2022.

 

Their current project is to design as “smart” aquarium, one that will allow a pet owner to have video streamed to their wearable device, as well as to automatically feed the fish when traveling. This is their project for the EECS 373 Expo scheduled for early December.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

The UC Davis College of Engineering presented its annual Scholar Awards during a recognition ceremony at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 in the AGR Room of the campus’ Alumni and Visitor Center.

 

The ceremony featured 70 awards worth a combined total of $218,000. Specific awards have been sponsored by corporations that include Boeing, Bushnell Outdoor Products, Chevron, Micron, Phillips 66, Texas Instruments and Union Pacific.

 

College of Engineering students applied for the various awards via an online application that required short answers to questions designed to spur creativity and reveal details about applicant interests. Sample questions included “Cite your favorite UC Davis course, and why” and “Describe yourself in a tweet.” Applications then were reviewed, and winners selected, by faculty within each College of Engineering department.

 

The Scholar Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate enthusiasm for their engineering fields of choice, while obtaining some extra money to help support their education. The corporate donors benefit as well, since it allows them to establish relationships with top College of Engineering undergraduates.

 

Student involvement and corporate sponsorship have grown significantly this year; by way of comparison, the 2013 Scholar Awards honored 40 individuals with cash awards that totaled $60,000.

 

Photo by T.J. Ushing/Academic Technology Services

Sits on the rear of an engineering working in platform one at kettering

Future engineers receive their education in international degree programmes at Valkeakoski Campus.

 

Valkeakoski Campus offers two degree programmes in the field of engineering:

- Degree Programme in Industrial Management and Engineering

- Degree Programme Automation Engineering

Lamborgini Gallardo, Charlestown, MA

The UC Davis College of Engineering presented its annual Scholar Awards during a recognition ceremony at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 in the AGR Room of the campus’ Alumni and Visitor Center.

 

The ceremony featured 70 awards worth a combined total of $218,000. Specific awards have been sponsored by corporations that include Boeing, Bushnell Outdoor Products, Chevron, Micron, Phillips 66, Texas Instruments and Union Pacific.

 

College of Engineering students applied for the various awards via an online application that required short answers to questions designed to spur creativity and reveal details about applicant interests. Sample questions included “Cite your favorite UC Davis course, and why” and “Describe yourself in a tweet.” Applications then were reviewed, and winners selected, by faculty within each College of Engineering department.

 

The Scholar Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate enthusiasm for their engineering fields of choice, while obtaining some extra money to help support their education. The corporate donors benefit as well, since it allows them to establish relationships with top College of Engineering undergraduates.

 

Student involvement and corporate sponsorship have grown significantly this year; by way of comparison, the 2013 Scholar Awards honored 40 individuals with cash awards that totaled $60,000.

 

Photo by T.J. Ushing/Academic Technology Services

The UC Davis College of Engineering presented its annual Scholar Awards during a recognition ceremony at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 in the AGR Room of the campus’ Alumni and Visitor Center.

 

The ceremony featured 70 awards worth a combined total of $218,000. Specific awards have been sponsored by corporations that include Boeing, Bushnell Outdoor Products, Chevron, Micron, Phillips 66, Texas Instruments and Union Pacific.

 

College of Engineering students applied for the various awards via an online application that required short answers to questions designed to spur creativity and reveal details about applicant interests. Sample questions included “Cite your favorite UC Davis course, and why” and “Describe yourself in a tweet.” Applications then were reviewed, and winners selected, by faculty within each College of Engineering department.

 

The Scholar Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate enthusiasm for their engineering fields of choice, while obtaining some extra money to help support their education. The corporate donors benefit as well, since it allows them to establish relationships with top College of Engineering undergraduates.

 

Student involvement and corporate sponsorship have grown significantly this year; by way of comparison, the 2013 Scholar Awards honored 40 individuals with cash awards that totaled $60,000.

 

Photo by T.J. Ushing/Academic Technology Services

The UC Davis College of Engineering presented its annual Scholar Awards during a recognition ceremony at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 in the AGR Room of the campus’ Alumni and Visitor Center.

 

The ceremony featured 70 awards worth a combined total of $218,000. Specific awards have been sponsored by corporations that include Boeing, Bushnell Outdoor Products, Chevron, Micron, Phillips 66, Texas Instruments and Union Pacific.

 

College of Engineering students applied for the various awards via an online application that required short answers to questions designed to spur creativity and reveal details about applicant interests. Sample questions included “Cite your favorite UC Davis course, and why” and “Describe yourself in a tweet.” Applications then were reviewed, and winners selected, by faculty within each College of Engineering department.

 

The Scholar Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate enthusiasm for their engineering fields of choice, while obtaining some extra money to help support their education. The corporate donors benefit as well, since it allows them to establish relationships with top College of Engineering undergraduates.

 

Student involvement and corporate sponsorship have grown significantly this year; by way of comparison, the 2013 Scholar Awards honored 40 individuals with cash awards that totaled $60,000.

 

Photo by T.J. Ushing/Academic Technology Services

Some cool precision engineering photos:

William T. Sherman

 

Image by dbking

William Tecumseh Sherman Monument

Place: 15th Street at Pennsylvania Ave. NW

Sculptor: Carl Rohl-Smith

Date: 1903

Medium: Bronze

Even though the Grant Memorial might be the grandest, the Sherman Monument behind the U.S....

 

Read more about Cool Precision Engineering pictures

(Source from Chinese Rapid Prototyping Blog)

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