When it comes to fashion, consumers can be a fickle lot. That can make things difficult for clothing manufacturers and retailers who are always trying to stay ahead of the latest trends, but still remain profitable.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
Whether you’re driving a tank through a war zone or a minivan to the grocery store, you want the assurance of knowing your vehicle was designed to withstand any kind of collision, no matter how severe.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
Imagine a semi-autonomous manufacturing line where machines click in and out as easily as building blocks.
University of Windsor engineering professor Hoda ElMaraghy already has.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
Craig Pearson, Windsor Star
Published on: April 13, 2014
The problem with electricity is if you don’t use it right away it goes to waste, which makes renewable energy tricky.
Enter two plugged-in University of Windsor engineers who have developed a way to store energy underwater.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
Four civil and environmental engineering students at the University of Windsor think they have come up with a way to make it safer to travel a heavily used section of the E.C. Row Expressway between Dougall Avenue and Walker Road.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
The section of the E.C. Row Expressway between Dougall and Walker roads is arguably one of the most dangerous strips of highway in the region, and many believe it’s only going to get worse as traffic increases in the area.
— Published on Nov 16th, 2018
As an undergraduate studying engineering in Windsor, Phil Alexander (BASc 1963, MASc 1964) was struck by the appropriateness of the University’s motto to his chosen profession.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
Proper urban planning can save money while saving the earth’s scarce resources, says Rafal Marynowski. A master’s student of civil engineering, he looked at ways that Windsor can save on expensive upgrades to its stormwater sewers in a project for professor Tirupati Bolisetti’s course on water resources management.
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018
ming to Windsor might have been the best move ever for a young Chinese engineering graduate student who’s trying to improve the performance of hybrid electric vehicles.
“It’s been really good for me,” said Xiaomin Lu, a PhD student who will soon return to Windsor after a productive six-week trip to India to conduct more research. “If I had stayed in China, I never would have had the opportunity to experience so much.”
— Published on Jul 4th, 2018