Alumni News

If you have some alumni news you'd like to share, we'd love to hear from you! Please send your news to Jessica MacInnis, ECE's External Relations Manager, at jessica.macinnis@utoronto.ca.

This feature appears in the newest issue of ECE's magazine ANNUM. Read or download the full issue.

Baking an Improved Breadboard


James Milton Ham (ElecE 4T3) (left) and R.F. Moore (BASc MinE 4T5) at the ceremony for the demolition of the School of Practical Science, 1966 (Photo: University of Toronto Archives).

Former Engineering dean inducted into the Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame

Dr. Illan Kramer and the sprayLD setup he designed to spray solar cells onto flexible surfaces.

New technique offers spray-on solar power

From left to right: David Li, Mehrad Mashayekhi, Richard Medal and Deep Prasad.

“Don’t treat this as a course—it could change your life”

Alumnus Mike Branch (CompE 0T3) delivered this year's plenary address to incoming Engineering students.

Branch’s challenge to engineering undergraduates: do something game-changing

Paul Anderson and University of Toronto President Meric Gertler.

Two ECE alumni recognized at 2014 Arbor Awards

Alex Huang, left, and Jason Yakimovich of FuelWear hold up the first Flame Base Layer.

ECE alumni burn up Indiegogo with first intelligent heated base layer

Left: Nymi, wearable technology from U of T startup Bionym, detects its wearer's unique heart rate signature to eliminate the need for passwords (Photo: Nymi). Right: Quanttus invites users to ask vital questions about his or her body and lifestyle in order to change the way we manage personal health (Photo: Quanttus).

Two wearable tech startups from ECE alumni making news

U of T has "a world-class learning environment where I met some of the best teachers and the brightest classmates that I know" said David He.

ECE alumnus makes MIT’s Innovators Under 35 list

From left: Christian Yan, Tom Rodinger and Gimmy Chu show off their Nanoleaf Bloom.

This new dimming bulb doesn’t need a special light switch—and it’s still the world’s most energy efficient