Fridaygram: Science Fair winners, crowd-sourced comet, Olympic salute
By Scott Knaster, Google
Developers Blog Editor
This year’s
Google
Science Fair launched
in January and attracted young scientists from more than 100 countries, who created
thousands of projects. The
judges performed the
difficult task of choosing
the finalists, who
were rewarded with a trip to Google’s office in scenic Mountain View, California. Following a
final round of judging,
three
winning projects were chosen:
- Jonah Kohn for “Good Vibrations:
Improving the Music Experience for People with Hearing Loss Using Multi-Frequency Tactile
Sound”.
- Iván Hervías Rodríguez, Marcos Ochoa, and Sergio Pascual for “La Vida Oculta del
Agua (The Secret Life of Water)”.
- Brittany Wenger for “Global Neural Network Cloud Service for Breast
Cancer”.
The Science Fair is especially impressive when you consider that all entrants are
18 years old or younger, and some of us have t-shirts older than that. Congratulations to all
the winners and near-winners!
If you were thinking of using “crowd-sourced astronomy” as your future science fair project,
take note: your idea is not original. A team of researchers at Princeton University recently
reconstructed
the 2007 orbit of Comet Holmes using images taken by amateur photographers and found
by Yahoo image search. They then used a cool app called
Astrometry.net to help figure out how to put the
images together.
Finally, the Olympic Games opening ceremony in London is happening today, and we’d like to pay
tribute here to
Trevor
Barron, an olympian who also participated in
Google Summer of Code. Trevor's coding project
involves working with
Benetech to implement
text-to-speech for mathematical expressions. Good luck in the games, Trevor!
Each week our Fridaygram
presents cool things from Google and elsewhere that you might have missed during the week.
Fridaygram items aren't necessarily related to developer topics; they're just interesting to
us nerds. This week we say goodbye to Sally
Ride, pioneering astronaut and hero to many Earthlings.