TRGS is a finalist for the university’s Swing Out Awards: awards for student organizations “that have demonstrated excellence in leadership on campus.” Check back in after April 18 to see if TRGS wins Best Graduate Organization!!!
![](https://sites.utexas.edu/trgs/files/2022/10/MicrosoftTeams-image-15-1024x768.jpg)
TRGS is a finalist for the university’s Swing Out Awards: awards for student organizations “that have demonstrated excellence in leadership on campus.” Check back in after April 18 to see if TRGS wins Best Graduate Organization!!!
STEM Girl Day allows young girls to explore STEM activities with STEM members from UT. TRGS supported Texas Robotics in tours, demos, and a robot building activity.
TRGS fulfilled the requirements for Exemplary Status in the Pillars of the Forty Acres program. To achieve this, student organizations must complete one activity that fulfills each of the University’s six Core Values.
TRGS will be honored at the Evening of the Stars in April.
Join TRGS on February 9th (3:30-4:30 pm in the AHG Seminar Room) for this invited talk by Dr. Elliott Hauser and Dr. Samantha Shorey from Good Systems!
“Loose Threads” is a collaborative conversation that engages participants in imagining and redesigning the systems where technology is embedded. What are the compromises, considered actions and embedded values we impart on the path to automation? How might we hold open the possibility of meaningful work at its edge?
The elimination of human labor underlies many conversations about automation. Yet, every innovation begets new types of work that are constituent of its success. Situated at the human-technology frontier, there are new jobs made possible by automation. Kevin Kelly, the founding editor of Wired, calls these the jobs that “machines dream up.” Here human collaboration and oversight increases, not decreases, in value. Yet, this oversight can come at a grueling cost. Dystopian futures are already present in the seemingly automated places where human hands still assemble the iPhone and human eyes moderate online content. When we look more closely at automated processes, we begin to see both the glimmering and dark future of technology work.
TRGS celebrated Robootics (wordplay shamelessly stolen from John Duncan) with fall treats and a costume competition! We had very creative entries and it was difficult for our esteemed panel of judges to select winners.
1st Place – Lilo by Sheela and Jeff from ARTS
2nd Place – Demodog by Christina and Daniel from NRG
3rd Place – daVinci Scare by HeRo lab