What's next for the Class of 2017: Abhishek Balaji

Abhishek Balaji

Class of 2017, Singapore

Payoff: Associate Product Manager for Salesforce in San Francisco, CA

Education: Bachelor’s degree in computer and information technology with a minor in management from the Krannert School of Management.

Job duties: Leverage market analysis, competitive understanding, and customer research to define the roadmap for the product.

What's next for the Class of 2017: Maryam Bacchus

Maryam Bacchus

Class of 2017, Fort Wayne, Indiana

Payoff: Junior Product Manager for ZapLabs, San Francisco, CA

Education: Bachelor’s degree in computer graphics technology with a minor in computer networking and information technology

Job duties: Creating product requirements, developing wireframes/mockups, and working with design and engineering teams to manage details.

Augmented reality STEM education app wins Boiler Business Competition

Purdue Polytechnic students John Allen and Connor Wright, juniors in computer and information technology, won the fourth annual Boiler Business Competition on April 28 with teammates Wesley Virt, Thanh Tran, Chris Palermo, and Charles Frey.

The team created an app which turns learning into a game where students complete learning-based tasks in pursuit of completing a mission. The app features augmented reality technology and is designed to foster STEM education.

National Institute of Justice awards research assistantship to doctoral student in cyber forensics

The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) has awarded a research assistantship to Danielle Crimmins, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Computer and Information Technology chaired by Kathryn Seigfried-Spellar, assistant professor of computer and information technology.

Computer graphics seniors create interactive 3-D rendering of Fort Ouiatenon

A new 3-D version of Fort Ouiatenon created by students in the Department of Computer Graphics Technology (CGT) provides the most accurate representation ever created of what the historical site may have looked like, and the project could be the first of several collaborations between CGT and the Tippecanoe County Historical Association.

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