
Inside Engineering
This blog features news, events, student work and activities, faculty research, and more from NYIT’s College of Engineering and Computing Sciences. Contact Raed Elzenaty at rjelzena@nyit.edu for more information.
Results for "ComputerScience" on Inside Engineering

Student Profile: Nicholas Cariello
Profile | May 15, 2018
Ten years ago, Nicholas Cariello (B.S. ’18) participated in a summer camp on the Long Island campus. Now he is an NYIT graduate and on his way to earning a master’s degree in computer science. Cariello has gained hands-on experience through a coveted internship with IBM, jobs on campus and as a software developer at a startup, and as the president of the Association for Computing Machinery. Read more about his journey.
Read More at NEW YORK TECH NEWS

Q&A: Two Students on Breaking Into Blockchain
Feature | May 10, 2018
NYIT students Arshit Arora and Denisolt Shakhbulatov discuss their new blockchain-based news platform and the blockchain app that led to success in two competitions.
Read More at NEW YORK TECH NEWS
Senior Design and Graduate Thesis/Project Presentations
Blog | Dec 13, 2017
Students present their Fall 2017 senior design and graduate projects.
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Our Genome at Risk: New Tools for Exploring RNA
Feature | Sep 20, 2017
Computer Science and Life Science faculty members at NYIT are developing cutting-edge tools to detect and describe RNA modifications and their potential links to serious diseases.
Read More at NEW YORK TECH NEWS
Professor Kopecky Promotes STEM Education
Blog | Jun 02, 2017
In collaboration with We Connect The Dots, NYIT adjunct professor Sandra Kopecky taught at Our Lady of Mercy Academy in Syosset as a visiting professor for an AP Computer Science Principles class.
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Creative Design Solutions to Aid People with Disabilities
Feature | May 31, 2017
NYIT students in the Viscardi Industry Project course presented four innovative ideas to support people with disabilities.
Read More at NEW YORK TECH NEWS

Laurie Cantileno
Profile | May 23, 2016
After graduation, Cantileno went to work as a programmer full-time. “Around that time, a lot of women started going into technology,” she says. “But it was tough—I would walk into a room, and I would immediately be judged. I had to prove myself.”
Read More at NEW YORK TECH NEWS