The current issue of U.S. 1 features a cover story on Princeton Power Systems, a company founded nine years ago by freshly minted Princeton engineering graduates.
Legendary entrepreneur Ed Zschau tells writer Barbara Figge Fox: "After eight years of building a strong technical foundation, customer relationships, […]
New Yorker magazine highlights Smule
Sasha Frere-Jones, the pop-music critic of The New Yorker, writes about I Am T-Pain, a new iPhone application from Smule that is getting something like 10,000 downloads a day.
Smule, a company that specializes in sonic iPhone apps, was cofounded by Princeton Engineering alum Ge Wang. Hear Ge […]
The Keller Center has just posted its spring list of of cutting-edge technology courses, all of which are taught by exceptional teachers and designed to appeal broadly to all undergraduates.
Michael Gordin, the author of a new history of the Cold War as well as a recent
The Silicon Valley Leadership Group honored NetApp Chairman and Princeton Engineering alumnus Dan Warmenhoven last week for lifetime achievement and contributions to the community.
"Dan Warmenhoven is not only a highly talented and creative technology leader, he is one of Silicon Valley’s finest community leaders," said Carl Guardino, president and CEO of the Leadership Group. […]
The Princeton Alumni Weekly this week has a fascinating profile of bioengineer John Dabiri, who graduated from Princeton Engineering in 2001.
Last year Popular Science magazine named Dabiri one of its "Brilliant 10," dubbing him the "jellyfish engineer." By studying the way that […]
Computerworld recently profiled Princeton’s legendary Brian Kernighan, who in 1978 wrote the now-classic C Programming Language with C’s creator, Dennis Ritchie. You can follow the slashdot conversation about the Kernighan profile here.
The book has sold millions of copies […]
Technology Review this month reports on new types of conductive inks being produced by Vorbeck Materials Corp. that can be used to print RFID antennas and electrical contacts for flexible displays.
The inks are made from graphene, the most stable form of carbon on Earth, using a technology developed by Princeton’s
New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine and other prominent politicians were on hand yesterday to christen Princeton Power Systems‘ new office at the historic Sarnoff corporate park.
Andrew Kitchenman of NJ Biz quotes Corzine as saying that Princeton Power — started by Princeton Engineering alumni — is an “important company that fits into our clean energy […]
Google CEO Eric Schmidt — who graduated from Princeton Engineering in 1976 — spoke June 30 at the Aspen Ideas Festival, the annual intellectual pow-wow which this year included among many others starchitect Frank Gehry, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, Atlantic correspondent James Fallows, and the photorealist painter Chuck Close.
In his wide-ranging […]
Princeton’s Keller Center recently hosted a wide-ranging panel discussion of deans from leading engineering schools on the future of engineering. Princeton’s H. Vincent Poor moderated the panel, which included Linda Abriola of Tufts, David Munson of the University of Michigan, James Plummer of Stanford, Subra Suresh of MIT, and T. Kyle Vanderlick of Yale.
The deans discussed five themes at the heart of the […]
About this blog
EQN is a blog from Princeton University’s School of Engineering and Applied Science that highlights faculty, students and alumni who, through innovation and leadership, are changing the world.
Recent Entries
- Starshade deploys for first time
- Hale ’11 and Ohlendorf ’05 shine in the major leagues
- Flood risk study receives $2.3 million Rockefeller Foundation grant
- Ice cream social August 9 to feature vintage technology
- Jennifer Rexford ’91 one of top 10 ‘cloud trailblazers’
- Dan Boneh *96 wins prize for advances in cryptography
- Computer science researchers untangle a hairy problem
- Technology Review: mining cellphone data without violating privacy
- Dean H. Vincent Poor elected fellow of Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Bob Kahn wins Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering
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