2022 Fall ENGIN 183C 001 SEM 001

2022 Fall

ENGIN 183C 001 - SEM 001

Formerly Industrial Engin and Oper Research 185

Challenge Lab

Connected Life: How Mobile/AI/Internet of Things Will Improve Our Lives

Gert R Christen

Aug 24, 2022 - Dec 09, 2022
Fr
02:00 pm - 05:59 pm
Social Sciences Building 170
Class #:32467
Units: 4

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Offered through Engineering

Current Enrollment

Total Open Seats: 13
Enrolled: 32
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 45
Waitlist Max: 30
Open Reserved Seats:
16 reserved for Undergraduates in the College of Engineering, L&S Computer Science and Data Science Majors

Hours & Workload

4 hours of student-instructor coverage of course materials per week, and 8 hours of outside work hours per week.

Resources

Course Catalog Description

This course is meant for students in engineering and other disciplines who seek a challenging, interactive, team-based, and hands-on learning experience in entrepreneurship and technology. In this highly experiential course, students work in simulated start-up teams to create products or start-up ideas to address a broadly-defined need of an industry partner or social challenge.

Class Description

Many of us lead an “always-on” lifestyle - e.g. using smartphones to stay in touch with faraway friends. And under pressure from Covid companies have learned to use technologies to enable employees to work remotely. “Always-on” has indeed become ubiquitous: With Apps for people, data for companies, IoT for machines, AI for decision making, robotics for automation, and many, many more. To be “always-on” means to be always connected. And technologies including 5G enable the real-time connecting of people, machines, and sensors, regardless of distance. These technologies empower entrepreneurs to solve previously unsolvable problems: A surgeon can now use technology to save the lives of patients on the other side of the world. And anyone can be automatically alerted if a faraway family member needs help. However, some questionable uses have also appeared: Off-the-shelf drones are used for real-time targeting of artillery fire in the war in Ukraine, and there is a constant battle to protect private data against illegal use for commercial, political, or criminal uses. And not everybody has equal access to this technology, putting them at a disadvantage in our increasingly connected world. This class explores the use of technologies that are at the foundation of connectivity for people, communities, businesses, factories, and the environment. Each student will choose a team to join based on their own interests and knowledge. Each team will apply “always-on” connectivity to an area to develop and test possible solutions, build prototypes and develop a new business. The following are proposals for areas that teams may choose: -Connected me (personal use, food, hygiene, shopping) -Connected community (friends, family, and neighborhood use) -Connected health (health, health care, fitness, free time, aging) -Connected study (learning, both as students and as teachers) -Connected work (in-person and remote work, teamwork) -Connected factory (manufacturing, robotics, Industry 4.0, agriculture) -Connected planet (environment, climate change) Who is this class for? This class is open to anyone who wants to examine how technologies such as 5G, Mobile, IoT Internet of Things, or AI could be leveraged to improve our lives in private, at work, at play, for companies, for communities, and for our planet. The objective of this Challenge Lab is to plan new start-up companies with scalable business models. We are not working on non-profit business models. Students from all majors, both undergraduate and graduate are welcome. Preference will be given to masters-level students, seniors, and juniors with experience or demonstrated interest in technology businesses and startups. This class requires an application to be considered for enrollment. If you are interested in enrolling, please submit the application. As we near the start of the semester, the instructor will review applications and you will be notified via email if you have been admitted or not. If admitted, we will send instructions on how to enroll. The system will not allow you to enroll or add yourself to the waitlist until admitted. Apply: https://forms.gle/GxZZN2CgQgr3RAQN8 More info: https://scet.berkeley.edu/students/courses/special-topics/future-of-mobile-ai-iot/

Class Notes

This course was formerly INDENG 185.

Note: This class was previously listed as ENGIN 183C-004 Challenge Lab, then as ENGIN 183/283 Special Topics in Technology Innovation and Entrepreneurship and now ENGIN 183C-001 Challenge Lab. The class has also moved to Fridays 2-6pm.

S.. show more
This course was formerly INDENG 185.

Note: This class was previously listed as ENGIN 183C-004 Challenge Lab, then as ENGIN 183/283 Special Topics in Technology Innovation and Entrepreneurship and now ENGIN 183C-001 Challenge Lab. The class has also moved to Fridays 2-6pm.

See https://scet.berkeley.edu/students/courses/ for enrollment FAQs and contact scet-academics@berkeley.edu for additional questions.

This course counts towards the SCET Certificate in Technology and Entrepreneurship (https://scet.berkeley.edu/certificate-in-entrepreneurship-and-technology/). show less

Rules & Requirements

Repeat Rules

Reserved Seats

Current Enrollment

Open Reserved Seats:

Textbooks & Materials

See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.

Textbook Lookup

Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials

eTextbooks

Associated Sections

None