UTD News Center: A University of Texas at Dallas graduate student is developing biosensors to help physicians make faster decisions that could save patients’ lives.
Category: Students
NTX Inno: While they weren’t packed into the auditorium at UT Dallas this year, hundreds tuned in remotely to the university’s Big Idea Competition, where more than $200,000 in prizes was up for grabs.
Inside Jindal: Marketing senior Varika Pinnam won two major student awards in September — 2020 Student Entrepreneur at Dallas Startup Week and Collegiate Marketer of the Year from the DFW chapter of the American Marketing Association.
The Mercury: Student initiatives range from providing food for frontline workers to technology accessible for the visually impaired.
NTX Inno: For young entrepreneurs, the challenges of building a startup or creating new technology include the long hours of coding, developing and building a deck, often while navigating college classes or their entry to the business world.
Inside JSOM: Two graduate students in the Naveen Jindal School of Management have won funding from the RevTech SAFE Schools Grant Challenge for proposing a solution to help suppress the COVID-19 virus on university and college campuses.
NTX Inno: After announcing a partnership with SMU and UTD in early April to search for applicants for the RevTech SAFE Schools grant challenge, the organizations received a flurry of student pitches. And after sifting through the applications, five winners have been selected.
Dallas Innovates: RevTech expects the grants to deliver more than $1.5 million of community impact. Recipients include Cafe Momentum, COOKED-19, Cooklist, among others with a mission to lift up the city of Dallas.
UT Dallas News Center: University of Texas at Dallas computer science senior Pablo Peillard says he’s always been a maker.
Austin Statesman: Texas undergraduate teams pitched their startup ideas over the weekend at the University of Texas-Austin to win their share of $50,000. UT-Dallas’ SurviVR, a virtual reality platform that standardizes police training, won $5,000.