Turn On Your Future @ UWTSD's School of Applied Computing & Electronics

Author Archive

Green Impact Lunchtime Walk on Tuesday 17th May

WP_20160513_14_31_47_ProFollowing their first biodiversity lunchtime walk in January, the School of Applied Computing’s Green Impact Team have arranged another one for Tuesday 17th May 2016. Do join us! We’re meeting at 1.10 pm at Reception.

Mount Pleasant forms the eastern fringe of Mayhill – as well as providing a great opportunity to stretch your legs and admire the stunning views across the bay, Mayhill is surprisingly full of history. “People don’t realise just how much is there!” says lecturer Sue Maw, a former Mayhill resident. Here’s her run-down on what you can find just a stone’s throw from the campus …

Mayhill was originally open countryside, which was divided into a patchwork of hedged fields following the 1762 Enclosure Act – in places, old banks and walls can still be seen. Just off Creidiol Road lies the old Washing Pond. Fed by springs, it was used in the Middle Ages for washing laundry, later becoming the source of water for Swansea’s Victorian Workhouse. Although the pond has silted up in recent years, it’s currently being renovated by local volunteers.

Further along is an old burial ground, established in the mid-1700s for Swansea’s then-sizeable Jewish community. It was located outside the city limits on a hillside facing towards Jerusalem in accordance with tradition. Out of use by the 1960s, it’s recently been restored and is an important are for wildlife.

In more recent times, Mayhill became the location for the first social housing estate in Britain – Mayhill Garden City. The first six council homes ever built can still be seen at numbers 2 to 12 Islwyn Road.

It’s Hand-in Day for year 3’s Exhibition Boards

It’s been a busy day in the SoAC School Office as our third years call in to drop off their Exhibition Boards for marking.

But there’s far more to the Exhibition Boards than simply getting a good grade.  Producing an A1-size poster summarising their degree project also gives students the opportunity to develop presentation and marketing skills – vital in today’s workplace.

After the boards have been marked, the students will be displaying their work to the public at the School’s 2016 Degree Show at TechHub on May 26th. But as well as showcasing their boards, the poster event also gives them the chance to meet local employers who are looking for graduates with their skills.

Businesses and entrepreneurs come to the annual event to browse the ability, innovation and initiative on show.   But they don’t just look.  Impressed employers at previous years’ Degree Shows have offered graduate placements and work experience .. . so don’t miss it!

School of Applied Computing Goes Green

GI2

You can’t have missed noticing what a green bunch we are in the School of Applied Computing. From the  message on the 3rd-floor screen about our recycling point to the stickers reminding you to switch off lights as you leave a room, we never miss an opportunity to do our bit for the environment.

The chance came to prove it today when we were audited for the NUS Green Impact Bronze Award.  The criteria we were assessed on were :

  • Waste & Recycling
  • Energy
  • Travel
  • Procurement
  • Wellbeing, Biodiversity & Community
  • Embedding & Communication

We’ve thoroughly enjoyed participating in Green Impact this academic year.  It’s given us the chance to engage with sustainability at an everyday level, raise awareness and develop good practice within the School.

Our Team’s contribution is currently being assessed, with the results of the awards to be announced shortly.  Watch this space!

GI3

School of Applied Computing welcomes Dr Steve Mosey

The School of Applied Computing at Swansea has a new member of staff – Dr Steve Mosey.

Dr Steve Mosey

He joins the team as Senior Lecturer in Electronics and Control, and will be teaching BEng and MEng Computer Systems & Electronics.  His areas of expertise include Electronic Design, Mechanical Design-CAD, Mechanical Testing, Non-Destructive Testing, Software Engineering and Signal and Image Processing.

Dr Mosey, who was awarded a doctorate in 2013, has a long association with the University of Wales Trinity St David.  In 2011 he was appointed Senior Research Associate in Non-Destructive Testing for the Faculty of Applied Design and Engineering, where he co-authored a number of papers on ultrasound procedures in collaboration with Dr Peter Charlton and Professor Ian Wells.

Dr Mosey then worked for TWI (Wales) in Port Talbot for several years before returning to UWTSD recently to take up his new role in SoAC.

His interests include playing the guitar and reading, and his new colleagues are particularly impressed with his excellent taste in T-shirts!