Penn supports education start-up incubator
Penn has helped to create the first startup incubator in the world solely focused on education.
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Penn has helped to create the first startup incubator in the world solely focused on education.
There are no rows of students on Facebook or napping in Professor Donald Berry’s Chemistry 101 lecture.
The Towne building has a secret padlocked in the basement..
The School of Design, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and the Wharton School of Business have something new in common this fall — they are all part of the Masters in Integrated Design degree.
Imagine a portable solar panel that can be rolled up like a yoga mat, or a car dashboard that is entirely a touch screen.
PennApps is over, but the hacking isn’t.
Irvine Auditorium looks like the Quad at Fling when I arrive at 6 p.m. on Friday — if sunglasses were replaced with Google Glass and hip flasks with SodaStream bottles.
A few weeks ago, Alan Leshner, editor of Science Magazine, wrote an editorial ominously beginning with: “The U.S. scientific enterprise is heavily beleaguered.”
Penn Engineers’ summer projects include cockroach inspired robots and improved cell phone chips.
Dawn Bonnell is an optimist.
Imagine you ordered a test from a genetics company and they discover that you have a high chance of developing early-onset Alzheimer’s. You did not ask to be tested for Alzheimer’s and the scientists know this, but they feel compelled to tell you. This raises for them a conflict without a good resolution.
How much time do you spend thinking about your coffee?
A recent confluence of events made me wonder whether the U.S.-China relationship affects how Asian Americans are viewed.
There’s a part in Coraline where the talking cat imparts a particular little nugget of wisdom:
Ryan Lizza’s got a crush on Obama.
Sunday night, Bodek Lounge was briefly transformed into a Hindu temple.
Eight floors above the lunchtime bustle of Locust Walk, over 70 students gathered to learn the secrets of success in the business world.
Talk of bras and parachute jumpsuits replaced the usual Wall Street chatter in Huntsman Hall Tuesday night.