College of Engineering and Computing News
- March 25, 2024On March 21, 2024, Break Through Tech Mason hosted "A Day in the Life: Tech Jobs Unveiled," a panel event featuring Jamie Bowers, Site Reliability Engineer at Microsoft; Veeraj Modi, Security Analyst at Microsoft; and Cassandra Rothrauff, Senior Computer Engineer at Booz Allen Hamilton. Each panelist discussed their path in the tech industry as well as advice they would offer students just starting out.
- March 21, 2024Computer Science Professor Alex Brodsky and his team are working to develop a tool that will help Mason planners project costs and savings.
- March 19, 2024Mason student Don Beyer is the focus of a story about his work in Congress.
- March 18, 2024Mason hosted CGI leadership, employees, and Mason alumni for CGI Night at the men’s basketball game against Duquesne at EagleBank Arena on March 2. More than 250 Mason alumni work at CGI.
- March 14, 2024Jeffrey Moran and Amit Kumar Singh's Coffee Bots are featured as a low-cost solution to contaminated water supplies.
- March 13, 2024During her time at Mason, Mason alumna Shrishti Singh has used all the tools the university provides to bring her discovery to the marketplace.
- March 10, 2024Jonathan Auerbach is quoted and his team's research is cited in this op-ed.
- March 8, 2024At "Strategies for Success in Navigating Male-Dominated Industries,” hosted by Break Through Tech Mason, students heard from a panel of four women working throughout the tech industry.
- March 6, 2024Katherine Scafide, David Lattanzi, Janusz Wojtusiak, and Melissa Perry talk about Mason receiving funding to expand bruising research.
- March 5, 2024Associate Dean Deborah Goodings will use her expertise and experience to serve on a task force of the White House National Infrastructure Advisory Council
- March 5, 2024The funding will help develop new tools in imaging technology using a light source that is five times better than white light for identifying and visualizing bruising across all skin tones for use by forensic nurses, social service providers, and law enforcement.
- March 5, 2024George Mason University today announced an anonymous $4.85 million gift to advance groundbreaking research on bruise and injury detection for individuals who experience interpersonal violence. The funding will help develop new tools in imaging technology using a light source that is five times better than white light for identifying and visualizing bruising across all skin tones for use by forensic nurses, social service providers, and law enforcement.