AE students and alumni connect with Googles Project 10^100

10/7/2009

This week, the Department of Aerospace Engineering can boast connections to two finalists in the Google’s Project 10^100 competition--an international contest that seeks ideas to help the world.

Written by

This week, the Department of Aerospace Engineering can boast connections to two finalists in the Google’s Project 10^100 competition--an international contest that seeks ideas to help the world.

 

Tanil Ozkan and Onur Ozyesil
Tanil Ozkan and Onur Ozyesil

One idea incorporates a wristwatch embedded with a health monitoring system that would let emergency personnel know if the wearer were in medical distress. The idea was offered by Tanil Ozkan, a mechanical engineering graduate student (advised by AE Associate Prof. Ioannis Chasiotis), and collaborators, Dr. Ilker Bayer, an AE postdoc, and Onur Ozyesil, a graduate student at Princeton University.

According to Ozkan’s group, the wristwatch can be easily built and integrated to the existing cell phone communication network with current capabilities of sensory electronics and miniaturization. The designers believe the device could let emergency personnel know if the wearer were having an emergency, such as heart attack, even if the wearer were incapacitated.

 

The other "finalist" concept, proposed by Daniel Vidakovich (BS, 2002, Aerospace Engineeirng), is to create a free, web-based college. Vidakovich proposed the free, web-based college through his nonprofit organization, Innovative in Education. The project would provide accredited undergraduate degree programs free of charge. Vidakovich drew inspiration from MIT OpenCourseWare, iTunesU, and Flat World Knowledge, all resources that provide free educational content on the Internet.

Google, the web-browsing giant wants to celebrate its 10-year anniversary through ideas that can “change the world by helping as many people as possible.” Participants in Google’s 10^100 competition have submitted over 150,000 ideas. Similar ideas among the thousands collected were combined to make 16 final “themes.” Up to five of those could share in the $10 million Google will make available for funding projects. The public can vote for their favorite ideas on Google’s site through Thursday (October 8).

______________________

Writer: Susan Mumm, editor, Department of Aerospace Engineering, 217/333-3598.

If you have any questions about the College of Engineering, or other story ideas, contact Rick Kubetz, Engineering Communications Office, 217/244-7716, editor.


Share this story

This story was published October 7, 2009.