Group design projects: Difference between revisions

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The Cambridge undergraduate programme in computer science includes a strong design theme influenced by Crucible research. Students in their second year undertake an intensive design project working for an external client. A selection of these projects with explicit connection to interdisciplinary research concerns includes:
The Cambridge undergraduate programme in computer science includes a strong design theme influenced by Crucible research, including research into computer science project work by [[Sally Fincher]] and [[Marian Petre]]. Students in their second year undertake an intensive design project working for an external client. Professional clients are often recruited via the [[Computer Lab Ring]] and Industrial Supporters Club. Annual prizes are sponsored by [[IBM]] and [[Credit Suisse]], and Hardware and equipment has been loaned or donated by a wide range of companies, including a substantial number of Android handsets from [[Google]], [[Raspberry Pi]] computers, mBed controllers from [[ARM]], XMOS boards and others.
 
A selection of these projects with explicit connection to interdisciplinary research concerns includes:


* [[African SMS Radio]]
* [[African SMS Radio]]
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* [[Critical Care for the World]]
* [[Critical Care for the World]]
* [[Scanning and feedback from chemical structures]]
* [[Scanning and feedback from chemical structures]]
* [[i-Professor]]
* [[Phone programming for children]]
* [[Passive airflow comfort control]]
* [[Race the Wild]]
* [[From Hogwarts to hackers]]
* [[Safer social media]]
* [[Project Darknet]]
* [[Sound Garden]]
* [[Road-pricing game]]
* [[Intelligent graph reader]]
* [[Evolve a pet]]


* [[i-Professor]]
Clients from companies affiliated with the Crucible network include:
* [[Keira Cheetham]] from [[Illumina]]
* [[Russell Bender]] from [[Potential Difference]]
* [[Jonathan Baldwin]] from [[Madingley Hall]]
* [[Steve Platt]] from [[Cambridge Architectural Research]]
* [[Vivian Chan]] and [[Nilu Satharasinghe]] from [[Sparrho]]
* [[Dave Betts]] from [[CEDAR Audio]]
* [[Steve Basford]] from [[Grant Instruments]] (the [[Passive airflow comfort control]] project)
* [[Lee Smith]], [[Matthew Gretton-Dann]], [[Andrew Chapman]], [[Bhaveet Shah]], [[Bernard Ogden]], [[Tejas Belagod]], [[Renato Golin]], [[Fabien Royer]], [[Pawel Moll]] from [[ARM]]
* [[Steven Gilham]], [[Simon Frost]], [[Feng Huang]] and [[Nick Wise]] from [[Citrix]]
* [[Diarmid Mackenzie]] and [[Oliver Nicolson]] from [[Data Connection]]
* [[John Piper]] from [[Kodak European Research]] (the [[Image license retrieval]] project)
* [[Jonathan Boardman]] from [[Aveva]] (the [[Process plant exploration]] project)
* [[Richard Jebb]] from [[PCF Ltd]]
* [[Steve Poole]] from [[IBM]]
* [[Robert Aish]] from [[Autodesk]]
* [[John Tucker]] from [[Metaswitch]]
* [[Amyas Phillips]] and [[Ben Coppin]] from [[AlertMe]]
* [[Laura James]] and [[Will Billingsley]] from CARET
* [[Simon Geard]] from [[CAD Schroer]] (the [[Statistical persuasion authoring]] project)
* [[Mick Kellman]] from [[SolidWorks]]
* [[Clifford Dive]] from [[Qualcomm]]
* [[Michael Jennings]] from [[Google]]
* [[David Roberts]] from [[Symbian]]
* [[Michael Dales]] from [[CamVine]]
* [[Peter Cowley]] from [[ZedCam]] and [[MeLock]]
* [[Hok-Him Poon]] from [[Bloomberg]] (the [[Energy market forecast]] and [[Party Line Detection]] projects)
* [[Matt Segall]] from [[Optibrium]] (the [[Scanning and feedback from chemical structures]] project)
* [[Alex France]] from [[FFEI]]
* [[Tariq Khokhar]] from [[Aptivate]]
* [[David Singleton]] and [[Hugo Hudson]] from [[Google]]
* [[Marko Balabanovic]] from [[Lastminute.com]]
* [[Mike Lloyd]]
* [[Jonathan May]] from [[XMOS]]
* [[Alex Anderson]] from [[FrontlineSMS]] (the [[African SMS Radio]] project)
* [[Kenny Mitchell]] from [[Disney Research]]
* [[Cinu Jose]] from [[Amadeus]]
* [[Douglas Squirrel]] from [[YouDevise]]
* [[Alice Easey]] from [[Red Gate]]
* [[Nicolas Graube]] from [[CSR]]
* [[Nic Greenway]] from [[Credit Suisse]]
* [[Craig Mills]] from [[United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre]]


Most knowledge-workers (and professional scholars are no exception) have a serious struggle to differentiate routine correspondence from management of the new ideas that make the job interesting. Design an automated personal assistant that filters email, infers rules on the likely response to routine items, and looks for thematic patterns in the rest. This can be used to track research ideas, or even set up new clusters of collaboration. All rules should be customisable by the user, and confirm proposed actions before sending a message that might be harmful. After a little ‘bedding-in’, the customised result might be indistinguishable from a real professor.


* [[Phone programming for children]]
[[Crucible Theme: Design education]]

Latest revision as of 08:03, 19 August 2014

The Cambridge undergraduate programme in computer science includes a strong design theme influenced by Crucible research, including research into computer science project work by Sally Fincher and Marian Petre. Students in their second year undertake an intensive design project working for an external client. Professional clients are often recruited via the Computer Lab Ring and Industrial Supporters Club. Annual prizes are sponsored by IBM and Credit Suisse, and Hardware and equipment has been loaned or donated by a wide range of companies, including a substantial number of Android handsets from Google, Raspberry Pi computers, mBed controllers from ARM, XMOS boards and others.

A selection of these projects with explicit connection to interdisciplinary research concerns includes:

Clients from companies affiliated with the Crucible network include:


Crucible Theme: Design education