Originally published on the SeatSync Blog. One of my other loves (aside from writing software) is making coffee. Notice I wrote making coffee. For me, the journey is just as important as the ...
Move over Bunn, Keurig and Krups, there’s a new coffee maker in town—and it’s built using a refurbished 35-year-old computer, discarded ink cartridges and a Game Boy. The Coffee Baron is a combination ...
The bitter undertones of coffee are no longer a matter of taste, but of science. Using the popular drink as a teaching tool, Jacob Schmidt, a bioengineering professor, will be teaching Engineering 96A ...
Like so many brilliant innovations, the idea seems obvious in hindsight. Just combine college, coffee, and chemical engineering. Of course! But no one, apparently, hit upon this magic formula until a ...
What prompted the idea for the course? In 2012, my colleague professor Tonya Kuhl and I were drinking coffee and brainstorming how to improve our senior-level laboratory course in chemical engineering ...
An industrial engineer and former Starbucks executive (as a “director of profit improvement”) Mike Caswell has long thought that there were things in the coffee industry that were just never offered ...
Students learn how making coffee relates to the principles of engineering. (Gregory Urquiaga/UC Davis photo) From a latte with friends to an all-night study session, students likely drink as much ...
Move over Bunn, Keurig and Krups, there’s a new coffee maker in town—and it’s built using a refurbished 35-year-old computer, discarded ink cartridges and a Game Boy. The Coffee Baron is a combination ...
Coffee can teach us many things, including engineering. At the University of California, Davis, it's now the focus of the most popular elective... STEM To Steam: How Coffee Is Perking Up Engineering ...