Newspoints:
- National Instruments and Nurturing Innovation and Creativity in Engineering (NICE) Committee hosts more than 500 professors, researchers and eminent academicians from across India
- National Instruments CEO and cofounder, Dr. James Truchard meets the Vice Chancellor of Anna University, Prof. Dr. M Rajaram and motivates students at Anna University to dream big
- National Instruments announces NI myRIO, an embedded hardware device to help students design real, complex engineering systems more quickly and affordably than ever before
- Annual academic engineering excellence awards for VIMANTRA, NIYANTRA announced
India, Sept 2, 2013: National Instruments (NI) and the NICE (Nurturing Innovation and Creativity in Education) Committee hosted the 12th Annual Educator’s Day 2013 in Chennai. The conference showcased the latest tools and best practices in engineering education. It was a compelling success with participation of over 500 researchers, professors and eminent academicians across the country. It emphasized the necessity of hands on learning in making engineers industry ready.
Dr. James Truchard, president CEO and cofounder of National Instruments met the vice Chancellor of Anna University and discussed the challenges in Engineering education. Addressing the student gathering at Anna University, he spoke about the need for more hands-on learning and experimentation in the classroom. Mr. Jayaram Pillai, MD, National Instruments India, Russia and Arabia spoke about the endless opportunities available for tomorrow’s engineers, and creation of engineering applications based on NI’s standardized GSD platform.
National Instruments also announced NI myRIO, an embedded hardware device to help students design real, complex engineering systems more quickly and affordably than ever before.
Based on the same powerful technology as the popular NI CompactRIO platform, NI myRIO is smaller and more student-friendly than its industrial counterpart. NI myRIO includes the latest Zynq® all programmable system on a chip (SoC) technology from Xilinx, which combines a dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor and an FPGA with 28,000 programmable logic cells. Using the power of the NI LabVIEW graphical programming environment, students can program the FPGA and evolve their systems in real time, giving them the flexibility to prototype and quickly iterate on their designs.
Addressing the conference, Dr. Truchard said, ‘’ NI believes in inspiring the next generation of innovators to solve the world’s engineering grand challenges. By giving the students of today access to hands-on learning, students have the opportunity to do engineering and gain valuable skills that prepare them for the jobs of tomorrow. ”
Jayaram Pillai, Managing Director, NI (India, Russia and Arabia): “We believe that ‘engineering’ is an action – that you can only learn by ‘doing’, not by ’reading’. Educator’s day is aimed at driving powerful positive change in the existing engineering education system in India, through experiential learning. ”
The highly acclaimed National level student competitions – NIYANTRA, embedded systems design contest for engineering students and VIMANTRA, technical paper writing contest staged its Grand Finale on 2ndSep. The competitions saw an overwhelming response this year with 1700 entires for NIYantra alone. The winner of VIMANTRA was the team from Dwarkadas J. Sanghvi College of Engineering for the project on ‘Collision avoidance in self aware vehicles.’ NIYANTRA winner is the team from University Institute of Engineering and Technology, Punjab University for their application titled ‘Autonomous Surface Monitoring Robot.’
About NICE (Nurturing Innovation and creativity in Engineering) Committee:
NICE Education is a nonprofit association which came into existence during Educators Day on 21st November 2008. NICE was started with the aim of providing all academic institutes in the country with access to high quality technical tools, to effectively learn and teach engineering subjects. NICE focuses on the facilitation of experiential learning to enhance student learning and prepare them better for the Industry. The NICE Committee strives to promote methods to improve the quality of engineering education in India.