Unlocking Reliable Satellite Imagery at an Industrial Scale
Duke Engineering spinoff company Extellis announced an oversubscribed $6.8 million round of seed funding.
Duke Engineering spinoff company Extellis announced an oversubscribed $6.8 million round of seed funding.
Professors David Smith, Xiaoyue Ni and Ken Gall are among those who will share tech being spun out of their labs at the annual event.
Joel Greenberg is taking research conducted in his former lab at Duke and spinning it out into a new type of airport security scanner.
Resolv, a spinout of Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering, closed on $5 million seed funding round to develop metamaterials-based device that could impact the $10 billion building construction and remediation industry.
Using technology he developed as a research professor at Duke, Joel Greenberg is trying to roll out a new X-ray scanner that will help the TSA at airports.
Duke spinout Quadridox is developing new X-ray machinery for both airports and health care.
Startup built by three Duke Engineering undergraduates is acquired by industry-leading construction planning platform.
In just its second year, the hackathon inspired dozens of student-built projects lauded by industry and practice professionals for their inspiring creativity
Over a half dozen Duke Engineering startups and researchers were featured at the 6th annual Invented at Duke event
Satellite antenna developed by ECE Research Scientist Michael Boyarsky can take images faster and more often than existing technology
A student team rekindled a class project with the help of ChatGPT and debuted their construction site delivery scheduling system over the summer.
Faculty entrepreneurs from Duke Engineering share their experiences of what it takes to spin a startup out of a university.