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Microsoft student competition still open
Dec. 14, 2007

Microsoft is trying to drum up more entrants to its Imagine Cup 2008 student competition. The company first started accepting registrations in late August, but said in a statement this week that contestants are still welcome to enter.

With finals planned for Paris from July 1-8, 2008, Imagine Cup 2008 marks the sixth year of the Imagine Cup competition. The event challenges "young programmers, artists, and technologists around the world to imagine a world where technology enables a sustainable environment," according to Microsoft.

Six teams, made up of students and a faculty mentor, will advance to the finals in France, receiving free travel and accommodations. The first prize winners will receive $15,000, second place $10,000, and third place $5,000. These figures double the total dollars awarded in the 2007 event, when the corresponding dollar amounts were $8,000, $4,000, and $3,000 (third prize).

The Embedded Development section of the competition replaces Microsoft's previously-run Windows Embedded Student Challenge. In the present event, teams of three or four competitors and a faculty mentor are required to build a working prototype of a device that would have an impact on "solving some of our world's toughest problems."

In the first round of the competition, which ends Feb. 1, 2008, teams will present their ideas in written form. In the second round, according to Microsoft, up to 200 teams will receive Microsoft-supplied hardware on which to implement their projects. The specific hardware platform to be provided has not yet been announced, however.


Ebox-2300
(Click to enlarge)
In last year's Imagine Cup 2007, competitors used an eBox-2300 (depicted at right) together with Windows CE 6.0. However, Icop has since discontinued the eBox-2300 in favor of the eBox-2300SX, while also adding a higher-end eBox-4300 model. Presumably, Microsoft could choose either of these systems, or one from a different vendor.

In addition to the Embedded Development section of the Imagine Cup, there are eight other categories: Software Design, Game Development, Project Hoshimi (Programming Battle), IT Challenge, Algorithm, Photography, Short Film, and Interface Design. The Imagine Cup 2007 competition had a Web development category, which the game development category has now replaced.

2007 winners


(Click to enlarge)
The first prize winner in 2007 was Team "Trivent Dreams - ED" from the Universidade Federal de Pernambuco in Recife, Brazil. Its project, known as e-du box, was "inspired by the fact that one fifth of the world's population is illiterate." Designed to be a low-cost device for education and entertainment, the e-du box has a user interface based on a virtual notebook metaphor (see right) and connects to an ordinary TV set. Its primary input device is a vibrating Bluetooth mouse/pen custom-designed by the team. Bluetooth is also used to let teachers monitor multiple e-du boxes from a Windows Vista sidebar gadget.


(Click to enlarge)
The second prize was won in 2007 by Team "Aether" from the University of Iasi in Romania. Its project called the Networked Braille Learning Environment was designed to make learning Braille simpler and cheaper. A single-character tactile device is attached to a student's finger; as characters are formed, the student receives audio feedback. The eBox is used for the front-end application, hosting the Braille lessons which will send characters to students. The team developed its own PCB for the tactile display, which communicates wirelessly with the eBox using the Zigbee (802.15.4) standard.


(Click to enlarge)
The third place winner for 2007 was team "Seed" from the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications in China. Its project, "CasBam," is designed to help children with DSI (Dysfunction of Sensory Information). The system automates some of the physical therapy required, using equipment such as a rotating chair, a pressure sensor, and 3-D glasses. Each child's progress is tracked using RFID, via a tag worn inside a Mickey Mouse watch. A distributed architecture links together multiple kindergartens, each with its own eBox, to a central database server.

Further information

To enter the Imagine Cup 2008 competition, visit Microsoft's registration page, here.

For more information on winners and finalists in last year's competition, see our earlier coverage of the Imagine Cup 2007 Embedded Development section winners. To track the progress of Imagine Cup 2008 entrants, visit the we site Microsoft has dedicated to the Embedded Development section, which includes online forums, here.



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