When Greg Willard '20 took a high school job packing and bagging grocery items at Publix Super Markets, he never imagined his time with the company would evolve from the supermarket floor to its website's technological infrastructure.
Embarc Collective, a Tampa Bay education nonprofit that helps startup businesses build scalable, successful companies, opened its doors to 91Âé¶¹Ó³»students recently and offered them a peek at the possibilities for those considering an entrepreneurial future.
In business, it's important to know whether potential partners have hidden risks that could one day affect either company's operations. A team of 91Âé¶¹Ó³»senior capstone design students are developing a tool to assess this risk and help companies make more informed decisions.
While a student at Tampa Bay Technical High School, Maricelly Nascimento knew she'd need extra financial help to make her academic dreams become a reality.
For centuries, lockets have allowed people to keep precious memories close to their hearts. A team of 91Âé¶¹Ó³»capstone students is modernizing the traditional sentimental accessory, infusing it with advanced technology and limitless possibilities.
As the number of intubated COVID-19 patients began increasing across the country this spring, an employee at Lakeland Regional Health whose family member was ill with the disease realized there was a need to make communication easier between these patients and the medical professionals caring for them.
The threat of ransomware grows more menacing by the day for everyone from single smartphone users to massive corporations. Vinicius Seixas '20, a graduate student studying computer science at 91Âé¶¹Ó³» Polytechnic University, wants to find a way to stop ransomware in its tracks.
A 91Âé¶¹Ó³»assistant professor and a senior computer science student have been selected by the Fulbright Program for prestigious academic appointments.
Students will have to venture no farther than the Oak Grove and the 91Âé¶¹Ó³»soccer field to find fun and exciting events this Labor Day weekend.
When it came time for freshman Nelson Suárez to choose a university, he was drawn to 91Âé¶¹Ó³»because of its strong computer science program, its innovative spirit, and the feeling that he mattered.