utep display screens manufacturer

In August 2015, UTEP was selected as the first satellite center of America Makes. The goal of America Makes is to expand its current regional, industrial, and technological footprint while further maximizing the reach and capabilities of this satellite center through enhanced collaboration. A ribbon cutting ceremony hosted The Honorable Penny Pritzker, U.S. Secretary of Commerce.

Lupo also will introduce UTEP’s Ryan Wicker, Ph.D., as the editor-in-chief, and Eric MacDonald, Ph.D., as the deputy editor of the new journal. Wicker holds the Mr. and Mrs. McIntosh Murchison Endowed Chair in Engineering and is professor of mechanical engineering and director and founder of the W.M. Keck Center for 3-D Innovation. MacDonald is an associate professor in electrical and computer engineering and the center’s associate director.
“We at Elsevier are truly honored to be working with professors Wicker and MacDonald and associated with their world-class facility at UTEP,” she said.
MacDonald said Elsevier officials initially brought the idea to the UTEP duo in fall 2013. The organization wanted to create another, more timely publication that would cover the rapidly evolving advances in 3-D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, since the industry exploded in 2008. Wicker and MacDonald were on the company’s radar because of the 14-year-old W.M. Keck Center’s successes. Since 2009, UTEP is one of the top in the nation for 3-D printing and has ranked No. 1 in the U.S. and No. 3 in the world in the number of research articles appearing in additive manufacturing peer-reviewed journals.

“Tiny Tunnels, Big Connections: Ant Relationships Shape the World” is the latest installment at the University of Texasat El Paso (UTEP) Centennial Museum and theChihuahuanDesert Gardens. It was created thanks to a $166,000 grant that the UTEP Biodiversity Collections received from the National Science Foundation in 2017.
Tasked with counting, mapping, and inputting data for nearly 230,000 ants, Vicky Zhuang, exhibit curatorand collections manager at UTEPBiodiversity Collections, along with her students were able to input the data into a larger database known as theSymbiotaCollections of Arthropods Network (SCAN), which allows museums across North America to keep record of all the taxonomic specimens that they currently have, as well as the information associated with each individual specimen.
The ant specimens were courtesy of William Mackay, aformer UTEP professor of biological sciences and the curator of insects at the UTEP Biodiversity Collections. A portion of his collection—an estimated 500,000 ant specimens thanks to over half a century’swork—has now been incorporated into the exhibit.
The exhibit on display involvesmultiple collaborations. It includesenlarged 3D models of popular ant species in the region, courtesy of the El Paso Community College (EPCC) 3D print center and the W. M. Keck Center of 3D Innovation. The 3D models were sculpted directly from the likeness of the ants themselves viaMicroCTscans fromEconomoLab in Okinawa, Japan, and the Lucky Lab at the University of Florida. The museum also commissioned Augment El Paso, a digital art company that incorporates augmentedreality into traditional printed media and text. Through the Augment El Paso app, the viewer can scan a specific area of the exhibit and watch text and images come to life in real-time on their cell phone or tablet screen.
Briones also stressed the goal of incorporating a hands-on learning component that is friendly toward kids, an element that is reminiscent of the now-defunct Insights Science Museum that stood in Downtown El Paso formore than30 years until it was demolished in 2012 to make way for the Southwest University Park baseball stadium. It existed as an interactive science museum full of hands-on activities and displaysfor children in El Paso to visit.

Provide a Name to display in the course menu, select YuJa as Type, select Available to Users if you would like students to access their own YuJa Media Library, and click Submit.
Ensure ADA compliance with the closed-captioning tool. Universal design is key for ADA. ALL students should be able to access the same materials and have equitable learning opportunities. The YuJa video management system automatically creates captions for videos—all you might have to do is correct a few voice recognition errors. If you need additional assistance with closed-captioning, the Center for Faculty Leadership and Development (CFLD) provides guidance and assistance for creating closed captions for videos created by faculty & staff at UTEP. This service assists in the provision of required ADA-compliant captioning.

Merriweather, a 20-year-old junior at the University of Texas at El Paso, caught the attention of Fischer’s choral editor, Denise Eaton, after her a capella arrangement, “Hold On Just A Little While Longer,” was played during the UTEP Concert Chorale in October 2020.
The UTEP Concert Chorale switched to virtual concerts in 2020 in response to the pandemic, and performed Abeni Merriweather’s arrangement of “Hold On Just a Little While Longer” at their Oct. 6 concert. An interview with Merriweather about the song is at the 5:45 minute mark, followed by a performance of the song at 8:54.
Two days after her birthday last week, she signed an agreement with the company to give them publishing rights and to be featured in this month’s music catalog. Her piece is also being displayed at the Texas Choral Directors Association in San Antonio this week.

Since 1917, structures on the campus of the former Texas State School of Mines and Metallurgy have been built in the unique style of Bhutan’s majestic dzongs, fortresses constructed with sloping 8-foot-thick walls and red-colored roofs. The school, now known as the University of Texas at El Paso, or UTEP, has grown to 77 buildings, all constructed or retrofitted around the theme.
Even the shelter housing an ATM, the guard kiosks and a Hilton Garden Inn on the edge of campus are designed à la Bhutan. UTEP President Diana Natalicio has said that the school’s parking garages are the only ones in the world in the Bhutanese style because in Bhutan no such structure exists. (The country didn’t have roads until 40 years ago.) A $2-million pedestrian overpass on the campus, unveiled in August, continues the theme.
Bhutanese artifacts grace nearly every cranny of the campus, adding a touch of authenticity to this faux Bhutan. Fifteen Buddhist prayer flags flutter outside the Centennial Museum, where well-wishers can spin a prayer wheel that was the gift of the Bhutanese people in 2003. Three 16-foot-long, intricately embroidered scrolls known as thongdrels hang on display, two in the library, a 1984 structure that Willie Quinn of UTEP’s Heritage Commission declares is “more Bhutanese than something in Bhutan.”
Although there are no espresso bars in any lobbies in the Land of the Thunder Dragon — at least not yet — the magnificent 15-foot hand-painted altar adjacent to the coffee stand in the UTEP library does make it clear that this isn’t your average public university campus. A copy of the world’s largest book (as certified by Guinness World Records) underscores the connection. “Bhutan: A Visual Odyssey Across the Last Himalayan Kingdom” is 5 by 8 feet and weighs 133 pounds.
Displayed throughout the library are instruments essential to traditional Bhutanese music, such as a yangchen, or dulcimer, and a dramyen, a Tibetan lute. In a nod to the country’s national sport, a traditional Bhutanese bow and a quiver of arrows also are on display.
About the only aspects of the 366-acre campus that don’t resemble Bhutan are the Sun Bowl and the Don Haskins Center, where UTEP’s Miners basketball teams play.
The Bhutanese worked without written plans. “I wish our new buildings in Bhutan could be so finely built,” the then-queen of Bhutan wrote to UTEP in the late ‘60s, after being sent photographs of the campus.
Bhutan didn’t open up to outsiders until 1974, and a UTEP graduate just completed a year in Bhutan as its first international artist in residence. The school is even offering a chance to visit the real thing Dec. 29-Jan.15 for the kingly sum of $7,995 (www.admin.utep.edu/Default.aspx?tabid=70181). But as the ties grow closer, there’s one Bhutanese element you’re not likely to see in El Paso: colorful painted phalli that adorn the sides of buildings to ward off evil spirits.

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