t he b -side U The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I Thursday, March 15, 2012 means of connectivity are a ubiquitous presence on campus. Walk into a Univer- sity lecture hall and you'll see students typing away on MacBooks, some taking careful notes, others idly surfing the Internet via MWire- less. But in the early '80s, as personal computing was just beginning to establish itself as an industry, then-Dean of Engineering James Duderstadt found himself with a problem he desperately needed to solve. "It turned out very few members of our faculty had ever used computers," he remembered. His solution? Give every faculty member easy access to a computer, but with one important caveat. "I'd only let them have (a computer) if they'd take two of them, and one of them they'd have to take home," Duderstadt said. "They might not use it themselves, (but) their wife or their children would use it." Sure enough, the home computers of many engi- neering professors were taken overby their children. The activities of two of these children, Thomas and John Knoll, would eventually lead to some of the University's first and most meaningful contribu- tions to new media and technology. "From time to time, (their father) would tell me what they were doing, and one day, he told me, 'They've got this little program that they can use to manipulate images, that this company I've never heard of from California called Adobe would like to license,' " Duderstadt recalled. " 'The boys call it Photoshop."' Building the digital world from the ground up In addition to Photoshop, the University has pro- duced more of today's technical mainstays, such as the iPod and the predecessor to the modern Inter- net, and counts among its alumni Silicon Valley entrepreneurs such as Google co-founder Larry Page and Sun Microsystems co-founder Bill Joy. *"We're very good at blazing trails," Duderstadt said. "That's what people expect us to do." But blazing We keep inv trails isn't the future. Is M i work of any one individual. In and the c halleng outside the class- room, innovation I thini at the University is, and always has.. been, a collabora- tiveprocess. Prof. Elliot Engineer- College of E ing Prof. Elliot Soloway at the College of Engi- neering teaches a class that helps1 students develop iPhone applications. Soloway follows a hands-off, anti-book-learning mantra that emphasizes student creativity over textbooks and code samples. "I help the kids figure out how they can be the next Larry Page," he said. "I'm not there to teach them how to program; they can do that by them- I f i k t E selves ... what you're really trying to find is that abso- lute crystalline gem of an idea." So far, this approach seems to be working. Past student applications include the Michigan app, a must-have all-in-one app featuring University news, abuilt-in directory, dininghall menus, and, of course, bus routes with real- time schedules. On a broader scale, his course is also respon- sible for the DoGood application, which esting in the suggests individual acts of kindness to its c n up to users. Digital media e of change? company Tonic, Inc. purchased the appli- k it is. cation in the spring of 2010. Accord- ing to its App Store description, DoGood Solloway is now responsible for Engineering "over 1,000,000 good S S deeds." In order to main- tain this level of accomplishment and foster an environment conducive to ingenu- ity, the University provides substantial investment in the latest available technology. "We worked hard to acquire the latest and greatest technology," said Daniel Atkins, professor of electrical and computer engineering. "We provide (students) with atool set ... the free- dom to be entrepreneurial, to do new things and develop a self-confidence," he said. In addition to course offerings, the University's investment is reflected in state-of-the-art facilities such as the Digital Media Commons in the Duder- stadt Center on North Campus. It's designed specifi- cally to assist students in implementing new ideas that merge creative arts with more technical fields. The center houses multimedia facilities including virtual reality simulators, 3-D labs and recording studios, which are all free and open for students to use. "Over the last couple of years ... we've actually integrated all these spaces together. So you can go in the video studio and record something and then you can walk over to the multimedia room and actually have all your assets (and) be able to access it," said Daniel Fessahazion, IT/media integration specialist at the Duderstadt Center. Nor is this equipment the pinnacle the University seeks to reach in terms of fostering innovation. Staff at the DMC work constantly to add new devices and improve the center's overall functionality. Recently, for example, the team worked together to solve a long-standing student complaint. "We've (heard from) people who are writing code, and they want to show the teacher, or they have rich media that they want to share with the group. (Originally), you'd have to hook up your device, all that stuff," Fessahazion said. "(But) we built systems with Apple TV in them, so as long as you're in the network, you can actually project whatever you have in your hand to the big screen. It allows collabora- tion to happen more easily. We've been working on See NEW MEDIA, Page 3B ; , W weekend essentials - EVENT Who better to thank for our unseasonably beautiful weather than Mother Earth? Hop onto a free shuttle bus in front of the Union on Saturday to join in the Native American Student Association's 40th Annual Dance for Mother Earth Powwow. The event will take place at Pioneer High School, and admission is $7 with a student ID. AT THE MIC Sunny War will take the stage at the Ark tomorrow with a repertoire as diverse as it is deep, and her eclectic blues-punk-folk sound will keep you engaged and guessing as she winds her way through a night of musical bliss. The show begins at 8 p.m., but be sure to go early - War, who opened the 35th Ann Arbor Folk Festival, is sure to draw a crowd. From $15. FILM The State Theater is celebrating its 70th Anniversary this Sunday by giving you a present - $7 admission to films all day long. Stop by the historic theater and catch a showing of Academy Award-winning "The Artist," "Shame" or "Jeff, Who Lives at Home" at their one-dayonly price, and be sure to wish the State a very happy birthday. b