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CHENNAI, SEPT. 28.
Step aside,
IIT-Madras and Anna University: it's time to make way
for a new set of stars from the suburbs. For students
from the above two institutions, so long accustomed to
viewing themselves as the elite of the engineering
streams, it might come as something of a shock to find
out that their `poorer cousins' are now sprinting ahead
in the international arena.
For the disbelieving, here are a few
facts. Top-class research papers and innovative ideas
are no longer the exclusive domain of students of
IIT-Madras or Anna University. Students of unaided
engineering colleges are cranking out absolutely
first-rate stuff these days.
Take for instance, a bright young duo
from Sri Sai Ram Engineering, West Tambaram, R.C.
Aravindakshan and R.S. Bharath (II year Computer
Sciences and Engineering). They have jointly developed
the "I-Cane" or intelligent cane that helps visually
impaired persons. The cane has a guidance motor and a
computerised `brain' and scanner that warns the user
about obstacles -- pits, bumps, objects, or overhanging
wires, branches or other static obstacles. It also
factors in dynamic obstacles, though this is yet to be
perfected.
Aravindakshan is bursting with pride
and with good reason: he has an invitation from
organisers of Robomaxx 2004 to display the `I-cane' in
Grants Pass, Oregon, U.S. next month. He and Bharath
are, meanwhile, trying to cut the weight of the cane to
less than a kilo.
Arvindakshan points out that safety is
the biggest concern for visually impaired persons.
"Walking or taking the next step comes naturally to
normal persons, not so for these people. I want to
perfect the equipment before going commercial. We are in
the process of patenting the idea ... " he adds.
A private company, Essem Systems, is
helping them fabricate the parts for the cane, with
three IIT professors S. Ramesh, G.T. Manohar and
Ravindran and Sri Sairam College's head of computer
sciences department Saravanan guiding the youngsters.
A versatile sniffer robot developed by
P Rajan, A Raja and E. Lavakumar, of the same college,
won the "Innovation potential of students" project award
this year from the Indian National Academy of
Engineering. |