Entrepreneurship

  • Medical staff at 麻豆影院 Community Health pick up meals.
    CU Engineering鈥檚 Kyle Judah, executive director of entrepreneurship, is among a small group of community members who saw an opportunity: to support local restaurants while providing fuel for the fight against COVID-19 to frontline healthcare workers.
  • Artimus Robotics
    Co-founder and CEO of Artimus Robotics, Timothy Morrissey graduated from CU 麻豆影院 in 2019 with a PhD in mechanical engineering. After years of research and dedication, Timothy and his team launched Artimus Robotics in 2018 alongside Assistant Professor Christoph Keplinger.
  • Gary Marshall demonstrates technology at engineering expo
    Gary Marshall, a master's student in mechanical enginereing and engineering management, is on a mission to give back to those who protect us鈥攆irefighters. He founded EmergenTek in 2018 as a mechanical engineering undergrad.
  • Students work at Catalyze CU in summer 2019
    No matter which corner of campus you hail from, or what your field of study, Catalyze is your opportunity to get the support, mentoring, funding and resources needed to go from idea to impact over the summer.
  • Eric Roza profile picture
    New class 鈥淓ntrepreneurial Leadership for Engineers鈥 (EMEN 4830-Special Topics) is a first-of-its kind open to undergrads and grad students across the university who are interested in learning from some of the greatest entrepreneurs in Colorado and beyond about how great companies, products, and teams are built.
  • Segil and Pao
    On this edition of On CUE, we're looking at two research projects at the college that could be transformational at both the individual and global levels. Jacob Segil breaks down his inventive prosthetics capable of "feeling" and Lucy Pao gives us an inside look at how she and her team aim to drastically reduce the cost of wind energy.
  • Kathy Vega of ShineOn talks to attendees
    Twelve weeks ago, six student teams joined the Catalyze CU startup accelerator with innovative concepts and a hunch that their ideas might be marketable. This week, they were proven correct, as all emerged from the program with viable prototypes, waiting customers and vastly improved knowledge of how to successfully launch a startup from scratch.
  • ShineOn team members standing with bike light.
    A year and a half after starting the company, CU 麻豆影院 startup ShineOn has grown to five employees and is preparing to launch its first product for cycling enthusiasts.
  • Airplane wing over clouds
    The idea for Pana originated at CU 麻豆影院 in 2014, when cofounder Devon Tivona and his team were just undergraduates. The company competed as Varsity in CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 sixth annual cross-campus, entrepreneurial competition, the New Venture Challenge. Billed as a higher-education social network, Varsity ended up tying for first place at NVC.
  • Participants at 麻豆影院 Startup Week
    CU 麻豆影院 is participating as the University Track sponsor at 麻豆影院 Startup Week, showcasing the strong ties between the 麻豆影院 startup community and the world-class teaching and research happening on campus.
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