NECSTFridayTalk – NECSTLab and LEONARDO, It always seems impossible until it is done

Presenter: Prof. Marco Santambrogio
DEIB Full Professor
DEIB - NECSTLab Meeting Room (Bld. 20)
Online by Zoom
February 14th, 2025 | 2.30 pm
Contact: Prof. Marco Santambrogio
DEIB Full Professor
DEIB - NECSTLab Meeting Room (Bld. 20)
Online by Zoom
February 14th, 2025 | 2.30 pm
Contact: Prof. Marco Santambrogio
Sommario
On February 14th, 2025 at 2.30 pm a new appointment of NECSTFridayTalk series titled "NECSTLab and LEONARDO, It always seems impossible until it is done" will take place at DEIB NECSTLab Meeting Room (Building 20) and on line by Zoom.
During this first talk, we will have, as speaker, Marco Santambrogio, Professor at Dipartimento di Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria.
In the general perception, Research and Education form a dichotomy, for it is hard to couple them into productive and virtuous cycles. At NECSTLab, we embrace such a dichotomy, pushing it further by expanding our view over a third axis: personal well-being/ness.
We call it Leonardo.
Leonardo is our research project to augment students’ awareness of themselves and their abilities. It bloomed from the seed idea that technical competencies are just one of the key components to personal success. Resilience – the ability to define individual goals and plan towards them – is the natural step further. Finally – so far – we add one last term to complete the equation: awareness of personal talents and limits.
The Leonardo project is organized over 4 Levels bundled in 2 Phases of 2 Levels each; more in detail, each Level spans from 1 up to 3 semesters. During each Level, the participants face challenges as part of a series of activities drawn from 3 areas: Learning, Personal Well-being/ness, and Research. Each phase has its exit activity: an experience that encourages the participants to measure themselves over the skills and competencies they have become more aware of.
During this first talk, we will have, as speaker, Marco Santambrogio, Professor at Dipartimento di Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria.
In the general perception, Research and Education form a dichotomy, for it is hard to couple them into productive and virtuous cycles. At NECSTLab, we embrace such a dichotomy, pushing it further by expanding our view over a third axis: personal well-being/ness.
We call it Leonardo.
Leonardo is our research project to augment students’ awareness of themselves and their abilities. It bloomed from the seed idea that technical competencies are just one of the key components to personal success. Resilience – the ability to define individual goals and plan towards them – is the natural step further. Finally – so far – we add one last term to complete the equation: awareness of personal talents and limits.
The Leonardo project is organized over 4 Levels bundled in 2 Phases of 2 Levels each; more in detail, each Level spans from 1 up to 3 semesters. During each Level, the participants face challenges as part of a series of activities drawn from 3 areas: Learning, Personal Well-being/ness, and Research. Each phase has its exit activity: an experience that encourages the participants to measure themselves over the skills and competencies they have become more aware of.
The NECSTLab is a DEIB laboratory, with different research lines on advanced topics in computing systems: from architectural characteristics, to hardware-software codesign methodologies, to security and dependability issues of complex system architectures.
Every week, the “NECSTFridayTalk” invites researchers, professionals or entrepreneurs to share their work experiences and projects they are implementing in the “Computing Systems”.