Siemens FutureMakers Challenge to Spark Students' Tech Innovations

Next month, students at five U.S. universities will work on next-generation software concepts in an on-campus FutureMakers Challenge program designed to foster innovation and develop the next-generation digital engineering workforce. The competition is being hosted by Siemens in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University, University of California, Berkeley, Princeton University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Teams of undergraduate and doctoral students at each university will have 24 hours to create software solutions for Siemens' Mindsphere cloud-based operating system that address emerging technology trends such as cybersecurity, machine learning, artificial intelligence, industrial automation and smart manufacturing. Winners will be selected by a panel of Siemens experts, based on "innovation, out-of-the-box thinking and relevance to market needs"; Siemens will invest $150,000 in each university's winning idea.

In addition, Siemens will spend six months working with a Ph.D.-level student from each winning team to make the technology concepts a reality.

"We are pleased to be working with Siemens on this hackathon concept," said Edward Felten, director of the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University, in a statement. "By combining the work of undergraduate and graduate students during the FutureMakers Challenge itself with an ongoing research project for the first place winner, this event is a novel way to foster university-industry collaboration in a way that supports both teaching and research."

For more information, visit the FutureMakers Challenge site.

About the Author

Rhea Kelly is editor in chief for Campus Technology, THE Journal, and Spaces4Learning. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • Hand holding a glowing AI sphere

    Beyond the Hype: 5 Actionable Steps for Higher Ed to Master AI in 2026

    AI has arrived as a powerful, pervasive reality, bringing with it a whirlwind of innovation, new tools, and pressing questions. Here are five practical steps to help your institution navigate this rapidly evolving landscape and accelerate its path to real transformation.

  • glowing brain above stacked coins

    The Higher Ed Playbook for AI Affordability

    Fulfilling the promise of AI in higher education does not require massive budgets or radical reinvention. By leveraging existing infrastructure, embracing edge and localized AI, collaborating across institutions, and embedding AI thoughtfully across the enterprise, universities can move from experimentation to impact.

  • abstract networking lines with AI text on top

    WWT, NVIDIA Introduce Framework for Secure, Scalable, Responsible AI Adoption

    Technology services provider World Wide Technology and NVIDIA have jointly developed an AI security framework dubbed AI Readiness Model for Operational Resilience (ARMOR), designed to help organizations accelerate AI adoption while maintaining security, compliance, and operational resilience.

  • Businessman holding Chatbot with binary code, message and data 3d rendering

    Anthropic Criticizes OpenAI Ad Strategy

    Anthropic recently launched a multi-million dollar Super Bowl advertising campaign criticizing OpenAI's decision to start showing ads within ChatGPT.