ME lecturer and EE alumnus loisted by MIT's Technology Review among 100 innovators under 35
 
Natalie Jeremijenko, lecturer in our Mechanical Engineering Department, and Electrical Engineering alumnus Gregg Favalora ’96 are included in MIT’s 1999 Technology Review list of 100 innovators under 35 years old who "exemplify the spirit of innovation in science, technology, business and the arts." Technology Review, November/December, p. 73.
Natalie Jeremijenko is cited for her innovations at the intersection of art and technology, often under the auspices of the "Bureau of Inverse Technology," her ironically-named organization.
Her profile
www.technologyreview.com/magazine/tr100/bio.asp?p=Jeremijenko
Her projects:
www.uchicago.edu/research/jnl-pub-cult/backissues/pc27/14-artworks.html

www.yourserver.co.uk/revolting/workplace/bitplane/index.html

Earlier this year, Ms. Jeremijenko's work was on exhibition in London and her CD-ROM "Mutate" is available for sale.

"(Natalie Jeremijenko) has made some of the most abstruse and provocative works of techno-art over the last decade," wrote Steven Henry Madoff in a major article in the Art/Architecture section of the New York Times, 2/14/99.

Gregg Favalora '96 is cited for his work on 3-D displays at his company, Actuality Systems. Favalora’s initial prototype 3-D display was his Yale EE senior project and is still running in the display case in Yale’s Becton Engineering and Applied Science Center basement elevator lobby, since 1996. It is unprecedented that the breadboard circuit assemblages which are operating the display should work this long.

Favalora's profile: <http://www.technologyreview.com/magazine/tr100/bio.asp?p=Favalora>

Gregg Favalora was also a runner-up in the prestigious MIT 50K Entrepreneurship Competition.

See the interesting article on Favalora in the Wall Street Journal <http://public.wsj.com/careers/resources/documents/19990816-managersjournal.htm>.

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