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- ATLAS Institute's聽Whaaat!?聽Festival has returned from the virtual wilderness! Back in-person in November, the fourth annual event promises聽an arcade and conference packed with phenomenal guest speakers, bizarre games聽and experimental interactions.聽
- A team of three recent CU 麻豆影院 College of Engineering graduates recently took second place at Pinnacle, coined "The Olympics of Hackathons."
- The 12 members of the CU 麻豆影院 community who contributed to the new $50-million Meow Wolf Denver location are all associated with the ATLAS Institute.
- To assist first responders and site operators, the ACME Lab developed ARMAS鈥攁ugmented reality maintenance and safety鈥攁 marker-based AR system that lets the user see color-coded visualizations of battery cells inside containers.
- Creative Technology and Design seniors may now opt to work on sponsored projects: "Students work on real-world projects in a client-contractor relationship, and companies have the opportunity to work with creative engineering students exploring聽interesting and leading-edge creative technology projects.鈥
- THING Lab researchers, led by recent PhD graduate, Ryo Suzuki, developed a swarm of shape-changing robots that move furniture around a room, opening up new haptic ideas for virtual reality.
- Imagine opening up a book of nature photos only to see a kaleidoscope of graceful butterflies flutter out from the page. Such fanciful storybooks might soon be possible thanks to the work of a team of designers and engineers at CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 ATLAS Institute.
- ATLAS Instructor Annie Margaret 聽is creating a Digital Wellness Summer Program for middle-school girls that provides strategies adolescents can use to minimize the negative psychological impacts of social media.
- 鈥婨llen Do, professor of computer science with the ATLAS Institute,聽has a long history of doing community outreach and service for the ACM Creativity & Cognition聽Conference, and this year is no exception.