Team Daedalus

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Latest Daedalus News

Team Daedalus Engineers, Fall 2006: (Left to Right)
Jeremy Chan, Eric Lee, Jimyleah Castro, Sae Yoon

Posted January 20th, 2008

  • The Icarus project is now completed. No further updates will be done to the project. All our team members have now gone on to the applications of our research. This page will remain up as an archive. Good luck to our team members and advisors on their future en devours!

Posted December 9th, 2007

  • Team Daedalus has completed its Junior level EEx96 project. You can view the presentation slides here and the final report here. The presentation and documentation sections have also been updated with these links.

Posted October 22nd, 2007

Posted September 21st, 2007

  • Team Daedalus is presenting for its preliminary design review session on the 22nd. You can find the slides here:

Team Daedalus Personnel

We would like to take the time to recognize our past and current team members, supporting students, and advisors for their contributions. Everyone involved has contributed important parts to the development of our key projects. Please see our personnel page to see everyone who has been, or is a part of Team Daedalus.


Team Daedalus Projects

Team Daedalus's goal is to perform multi year efforts to practice skills related to the education from the University of Hawaii. We're expanding from simple telemetry to flight control and advanced sensor interfaces. The team will incorporate students from all related fields, such as engineering and computer science, to practice cooperation between different focuses within a team. Please see the following documents for a description of the project. More administrative or technical information can be found below in the "Site Map" section.

Project Icarus

Team Daedalus, Project Icarus: General Purpose Telemetry System

Telemetry

More Info

Project Hermes

Team Daedalus, Project Hermes: Mesh Networking with Embedded Devices

Mesh Networking

More Info


Related Links

From simple balloons to space and beyond. Picture courtesy of NASA
Personal tools
project hermes