Computer Science

Trends in 2024: Cybersecurity
Information security expert Thomas Vallario discusses emerging cybersecurity trends, tips, and predictions for what’s to come in the new year.

Taking a Bold Step
New York Tech is striving to achieve high research activity status by 2028. With faculty and students increasing cutting-edge research, the university is well on its way.

Fusing Atoms and Passions
Computer science student Manpreet Singh spent his summer at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, where he performed experiments around inertial confinement fusion—an explosive source of energy.

Student Profile: Joanna Sroka
Computer science student and aspiring data scientist Joanna Sroka can speak five different languages—and that’s not including the languages she uses to code devices in the ETIC.

Researchers Secure Prestigious Federal Grants
Five research projects led by faculty have collectively secured more than $1.6 million in federal funding from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

Student Profile: Danielle Ongsohu
Danielle Ongsohu discovered her passion for coding and web design in high school and is now pursuing her bachelor’s degree in computer science to support her dream of becoming a front-end web developer.

Alumni Profile: Soyeb Barot
Soyeb Barot (M.S. ’05) credits New York Tech for putting him on a path to success. Now, he gives back to his alma mater as a mentor in the College of Engineering and Computing Sciences CAMPUS Mentoring Program.

Guiliano Global Fellows: From the Midwest Plains to the African Savanna
Computer science student Amadeaus Reeves, and medical student Nathanael Rehmeyer recently completed their research projects as part of the Edward Guiliano Global Fellowship Program, one in the great plains of Oklahoma and the other in the subtropical grassland savanna in Eswatini, respectively.

Searching for the True Sequence of RNA
Shenglong Zhang, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biological and Chemical Sciences, received a National Institutes of Health grant estimated at $2,588,918 over the next four years, to develop a tool to reveal the true sequence of RNA.

Student Profile: Joanna Pedretti
Computer science student Joanna Pedretti was part of New York Tech’s inaugural cohort of students participating in the co-op track. Now, she works part-time with the same company she interned with.