User:Bosworth: Difference between revisions

From OpenWetWare
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
  will bosworth
  will bosworth
  bosworth AT mit.edu
  bosworth AT mit.edu
  mit bs meche 2008
  http://wbosworth.mit.edu
currently deferred from mit meche grad school...
...in order to start [www.nublabs.com nub labs] and develop a sustainable business model around empowering people,
work at [www.seegrid.com Seegrid] and design robots and watch a 5th year start-up bloom,
and perform & record with [www.thepears.org The Pears] and as [www.tfwillie.com TF Willie].  


  previously a member of the [http://www.openwetware.org/wiki/IGEM:UC_Berkeley/2006 UCBerkeley iGEM team 2006],
 
  designing cellular logic gates in cells; creating and testing conjugation-based communication models
  Member of the [http://www.openwetware.org/wiki/IGEM:UC_Berkeley/2006 UCBerkeley iGEM team 2006],  
in e.coli .
  and [http://openwetware.org/wiki/IGEM:MIT/2005 MIT iGEM team 2005].  
   
   
  previously a member of the [http://openwetware.org/wiki/IGEM:MIT/2005 MIT iGEM team 2005], where
  In iGEM, I learned a great deal about complex system design & debugging  while interacting with some
I did alot of struggling and learning. We tried to modify a chemical pathway to create a platform to
  ''really good'' engineers and biologists. The experience certainly benefited me in my
  sense different environmental factors. Our method involved significantly modifying surface protein's
  currently-not-bioengineering engineering career.
structures (synthesizing altered sequences) and then expecting those proteins to still work. We did
  not get very far.

Latest revision as of 19:42, 18 October 2013

will bosworth
bosworth AT mit.edu
http://wbosworth.mit.edu


Member of the UCBerkeley iGEM team 2006, 
and MIT iGEM team 2005. 

In iGEM, I learned a great deal about complex system design & debugging  while interacting with some 
really good engineers and biologists. The experience certainly benefited me in my 
currently-not-bioengineering engineering career.