Alumni
- After earning her BS and MS in electrical engineering, Nouri went on to become a founding member and managing director of Lam Capital.
- Alumnus Fletcher Richman's (ElCompEngr'14) startup success grew from a passion for productivity tools.
- Moon and 10 other alumni donated 1,200 masks to Â鶹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder, which were distributed in March to health care and first responders within CU.
- James Paul Avery passed away Dec. 1, 2018, after a year-and-a-half battle with a rare form of blood cancer. He was 68. He was born July 23, 1950, in Omaha, Neb., to Clarence George Avery and Rachel Leah Kasson Avery. He graduated from DeKalb High
- Irene Peden would go on to Stanford University to earn a master’s and PhD in electrical engineering. Her graduation came with a major distinction—she was the first woman in Stanford history to earn a PhD in any engineering subject.
- "My favorite engineering experience was when I was working on a prototype of a business jet in Kansas during my internship with Textron Aviation. It was amazing to work in the aviation industry with real engineers and on a plane that would be ready for its first flight."
- Jason Breitbarth’s experiences at CU-Boulder continue to impact the way Holzworth Instrumentation does business.
- When people think of futuristic virtual reality, the holodeck from Star Trek often comes to mind. But while that technology may still be a ways off, a CU-Boulder alum says that using visual data to make photos and video feel more personal is a lot closer to reality.
- 12 years after it launched online, SparkFun Electronics is opening its first offline store in Niwot.
- In 1942, Robert Emigh was set to graduate with honors in electrical engineering from CU-Boulder when he and others from his class were excused from their final trimester as the United States entered World War II.