Metadata
Title
Helluva Engineer Magazine
Category
general
UUID
edb9b2243f114a9ca6646e0844c0f0a6
Source URL
https://coe.gatech.edu/magazine
Parent URL
https://coe.gatech.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T20:18:01+00:00
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Helluva Engineer Magazine

Source: https://coe.gatech.edu/magazine Parent: https://coe.gatech.edu/

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FEATURES: The Future of Computing#

Smaller, Smarter, Speedier, Stacked: Engineering Next-Gen Computing

Some technologists suggest we’re nearing the limits of packing ever-more computing power into ever-smaller chips. At Georgia Tech, engineers are finding new ways to shrink transistors, make systems more efficient, and design better computers to power technologies not yet imagined.

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Wearing the Future

From smart textiles to brain-computer links, Georgia Tech engineers are designing wearables that connect humans and machines more closely than ever to sense, respond, and heal.

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Digital Doppelgängers

Engineers are building computerized replicas of cities, and even Georgia Tech’s campus, to save lives and create a better, more efficient world for all of us.

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Better, Not Just Bigger

The massive computing facilities popping up across the country have become notorious for requiring huge resources. These engineers are thinking about how data centers can be more efficient and how they influence our future power needs.

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From the Dean#

Dear Friends,

I’m settling into a new role at Georgia Tech as provost and executive vice president for Academic Affairs. So, I especially relish the opportunity to greet you a final time as dean and reflect on what has been an extraordinarily fulfilling five years.

Serving as dean and Southern Company Chair has been an incredible honor — leading my alma mater and the nation’s largest program of its kind.

Together, we’ve accomplished so much since 2021:

Our programs continue to rank among the nation’s best. The undergraduate program is No. 3 overall and tied for No. 1 among public programs, and our graduate program is No. 4, according to U.S. News & World Report. From 2021 – 2025, four individual programs have been ranked No. 1: aerospace, biomedical, environmental, and industrial.

None of this would have been possible without you. The passion and commitment from our alumni, faculty, students, and staff have built a community that is second to none.

Leadership in higher education is challenging; this is a pivotal moment for universities and their role in society. I feel called to step forward, and that’s why I pursued the opportunity to serve as Georgia Tech’s chief academic officer. I am deeply grateful for the chance to make a broader impact on the Institute.

Still, leaving the dean’s position comes with mixed emotions — and this issue is full of examples of why.

In this edition of our magazine, we look at the future of computing. From building digital twins of streets or whole cities, to reducing the burdens of data centers, to designing more powerful and efficient semiconductors, our engineers are redefining how computing technology will shape our lives and our futures.

Although my office has moved from Tech Tower to the building next door, my heart remains in the College of Engineering. Thank you for everything you’re doing to make us the best in the nation.

Go Jackets!

Raheem Beyah

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Better Brain-Machine Interfaces Could Allow the Paralyzed to Communicate Again

02 December 2025

Biomedical engineer Chethan Pandarinath collaborates with neurosurgeons and scientists across the country in a massive project to help patients with ALS or stroke damage reconnect with the world.

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More Power, Less Heat

02 December 2025

As an electrical and computer engineering Ph.D. student, Edgar Garay reimagined how chips called power amplifiers could work. His startup company based on that innovation has raised millions in capital to disrupt a $23 billion dollar industry where designs haven’t changed much in decades.

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Behind the Wheel and Around Town, We’re Moving Toward a Connected, Autonomous Future

02 December 2025

How we get around is changing as new options like autonomous vehicles arrive in earnest. Srinivas Peeta works to unravel what that means for our communities and how we plan for a more connected future.

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10 Questions with Ryan Pickren

02 December 2025

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