BIG ideas thrive in New York’s small towns
Corning’s research mantra – if you can’t make it, you can’t sell it – has propelled it’s success in glass for Edison’s light bulbs, flexible glass for fiber optics, Gorilla glass for smart phone covers, and durable Valor glass for high speed manufacture of medical vials and tubing. The two basic components of flight – Aircraft and Pilots who can fly - are well rooted in Central New York State technology. Propellers for the B-17 Flying Fortress World War II bombers were designed and built in Johnson City, NY, on the site where after the war General Electric Aerospace group pioneered inertial navigation with gyroscopes for Vietnam War fighter planes and fly by wire systems for commercial aircraft. Engineers at IBM Owego, now Lockheed Martin Systems, built and programmed computers for NASA, esp. the Space Shuttle. In the 2st century. Owego continues to advance radar, communication devices, and helicopter avionics The first American Pilot Makers – pioneered in Binghamton by Link Aviation Devices – were classrooms for more than 500,000 World War II pilots - key to victory over Hitler. Twenty five years later, GP-Link’s
Apollo Mission Simulator directed the survival strategy for the Apollo 13 astronauts. In 2009, the two highly trained pilots who executed a landing on the Hudson River without engines demonstrated the value of in-depth flight training.
Susan Sherwood specializes in solving monumental problems. At the US National Park Service, she championed air quality to preserve cultural properties in American urban areas and parks. She led bi-lateral projects in Krakow, Poland, and in Agra, home of the Taj Mahal. As a result, air pollution evels in both cities have been reduced to at least half.
Ms. Sherwood earned a Bachelor degree in Classical Archaeology and Chemistry from Bryn Mawr College and a Masters degree in Roman Archaeology from Aarhus Universitet. In 2003, she compiled Ansco/General Analine and Film’s advances in photochemistry a Senior Research Fellow at the Smithsonian’s Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention & Innovation.
Ms. Sherwood has held senior management positions at The Scientific Center of Kuwait, Kuwait Museum of Islamic Art, New York City Parks Foundation and Roberson Museum & Science Center. Since 2003, Ms. Sherwood has directed Binghamton’s Center for Technology & Innovation, Inc. and its TechWorks! Next Gen initiative. The Center’s teams have been recognized by awards from Google UK and The National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park, as well as formal partnerships with Binghamton University, SUNY Broome Community College, Broome-Tioga BOCES, Computer History Museum, CA; Cradle of Aviation, Long Island; IBM Corporate Archives, and the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum.
Venue and Time
EB Q23, 12:00 - 13:00
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