News
- Stephanie Wanek has been a longtime CU Boulder staff member, including with the ATLAS Institute and National Center for Women in Info Tech/NCWIT. In this interview with her alma mater, the
- ATLAS PhD students Katie Gach, Keke Wu, Fiona Bell, Kailey Shara and Sasha Novack, and Affiliated PhD students Gabrielle Johnson, Dreycey Albin and Varsha Koushik recently received graduate school awards.
- ATLAS PhD Student Kailey Shara was an invited guest on the YouTube channel of Robert Feranec to discuss design engineering and the chemistry of printed circuit board (PCB) manufacturing. In this video, Shara explains the multi-step chemical process used to electrically connect together the different layers of a circuit board.
- ATLAS researchers have10 published works and one special interest group associated with theCHI 2021 conference, the worlds preeminent conference for the field of human-computer interaction.Held virtually, CHI 2021,also known as ACMs Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, took place May 8-13.
- Before she graduated in May with a bachelor's degree in Creative Technology and Design, Monica Chairez used the skills she gained at ATLAS to help solve several needs for CU Dental School of Medicine.
- During the pandemic lockdown, Laura Devendorf used textiles woven with resistive yarns to document a particular part of her lifethe daily forces that pressed against her body, especially her two children. Two of her memory fabric innovations are being exhibited at the The Centre for Heritage, Arts and Textile (CHAT) in Hong Kong as part of the Interweaving Poetic Code exhibition.
- Three of Chris Hill's projects Circuit Playground Extension E-Textile Debugging Tool;E-Textile Logic Probe Debugging Tool; and aWearable Mini Voltage Meter were featured this month in "Instructables," an online community of makers. But this wasn't the first time the ATLAS PhD student's projects were featured in Instructables.
- Did you get enough steps in today? Maybe one day youll ask your smart shirt.
- CTD Capstone (previously TAM Capstone)is a rigorous, two-semester course sequence required for all Creative Technology & Design majors. Normally taken during the senior year, it involves the completion of a culminating project that goes through multiple rounds of faculty review and iteration. This small collection of project presentations gives a sense of the kind of work students complete in theCTD program.
- Shanel Wu, ATLAS PhD student, discusses their work with smart textiles, weaving, computational craft and hardware hacking in this fiber arts podcast.