University of Toronto Robotics Association
Shreyaansh Dadoo is currently the President of the University of Toronto Robotics Association, leading a robotics club of over 200 members and achieving notable success in international competitions. As the Pacbots Hardware Team Lead, Shreyaansh is developing hardware for an upcoming robot competition at Harvard and creating algorithms using ROS and Python. In addition to experience at UofTHacks in various roles related to web development, logistics, and sponsorship, Shreyaansh has worked as an Associate Data Engineer at Wattpad, where development of a financial reporting system resulted in substantial cost savings for the company. Early career experience includes internships in marketing and business development at Flash Entertainment and FerroFab. Shreyaansh is pursuing a Bachelor of Engineering in Computer Engineering at the University of Toronto, expected to graduate in 2025.
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University of Toronto Robotics Association
UTRA was founded in 2002 as a student organization within the University of Toronto. In its infancy, it competed strictly in combat robotics competitions. Since 2006, UTRA has begun rapidly expanding the scope of its activities to include Sumo Robots, Robot Fire Fighting, Robot Soccer, Autonomous Robot Racing, 3D Printers, and the UT-FIRST mentorship program. It currently has over 150 members and it receives funding and support from various engineering faculties within the university, as well as student organizations, university alumni, and corporate sponsors. Starting in 2007, UTRA began traveling to California to compete in RoboGames. RoboGames is the largest robotics competition in North America, with a large number of international competitors. Because of its size, RoboGames provided UTRA with an annual event in which all of its different robots could compete under one roof. UTRA has been the most successful with its combat robots, taking bronze two years in a row followed by gold medal wins in 2010 and this year for the 120-lbs weight class category. Read more at http://utra.ca/node/1