Qualcomm | Next Challenge: How do you think about the technological safety needs of children and other dependents? |
Imagine in 5 years, you had a digital personal assistant that understands who you are, learns your behavior and preferences over time, and anticipates your intent or actions. Assume the personal assistant would be available across any connected device you use. What could your personal assistant do for you? How would it be helpful and assist you in your daily life? What problems would it solve, or how would it make your life easier? What type of connected devices do you see a personal assistant being valuable on? What would that connected device look like?
Think of possibilities that are five years out, not something available next year. Your idea should:
(1) Be something that would add real value and help differentiate enough to choose one product over another because of the personal assistant feature, or
(2) Be something people would be willing to pay extra for it.
Successful solutions will include a:
(1) Written description.
(2) Accompanying images, photos, or sketches.
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Submissions will be graded on the following criteria:
- Meets Deliverables
- Creativity
- Clarity
will receive $150 each
will receive $50 each
$150.00 | Thompson Nguyen University of California at San Diego | ||
$150.00 | Alex Pierce The Ohio State University | ||
$150.00 | Aya Ibrahim Harvard University | ||
$150.00 | Marybeth Dinges Liberty University | ||
$150.00 | Dan Cascaval Carnegie Mellon University | ||
$50.00 | Andrew Lisek Oakland University | ||
$50.00 | Merrily McCarthy fresnostate | ||
$50.00 | Aslihan Kurnaz University of Central Florida | ||
$50.00 | Ryan Stone Indiana University | ||
$50.00 | Ryan Fink Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania |