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🎓 Academic Projects Repository

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Welcome to our collection of projects designed for students and academics in computer science, electronics, and related disciplines. This repository offers a diverse range of innovative projects aimed at enhancing learning and research. We encourage academic institutions to explore and contribute to this growing repository, fostering collaboration and knowledge sharing. Whether you're looking to develop new skills, conduct research, or collaborate on cutting-edge technology, our collection provides valuable resources and opportunities for growth. Join us in advancing education and innovation in these dynamic fields.

Our project collection caters to all academic levels, from undergraduates to postdoctoral researchers. It includes diverse university projects, from simple computer vision applications to custom silicon tape-outs with industry partners. This variety ensures relevant and challenging projects for everyone, helping you develop practical skills, engage in cutting-edge research, and collaborate with academic and industry experts.

Why Participate?

  1. Standout projects could be internally referred for relevant positions at Arm! 📃

  2. If your submission is approved, you may receive a recognised badge that you can list on your CV and shared on LinkedIn. A great way to stand out from the crowd! 🎓

  3. It's a great way to demonstrate your initiative and commitment to your field.

  4. It offers the opportunity to learn valuable skills that are highly relevant to a successful career at Arm! 🎉

Give it a try and see how it can boost your academic and professional journey.

Explore Arm-based Projects!

The following infographic details the directory structure and where to find example projects!

Project-Ideas
├── Design Contests         # Design Contests and Hackathons
├── Masters-Level           # Masters Projects (e.g., MEng, MSc)
├── PhD-Level               # PhD Projects (e.g., UK CDT PhD)
├── README.md
├── Undergraduate-Level     # From 1st to final year undergraduate
├── images                  # Images
└── template.md             # Template to suggest a project

Previous Examples

  1. Carnegie Mellon Cloudlet Collaboration

Arm-CMU collaboration

How to Participate

  1. Read the project details clearly
  2. (Optional) If you are unfamiliar with some of the tools used, take some of our foundational education courses.
  3. Let us know you've started by opening a discussion (see gif below). Someone may reach out if the project is complex.

how-to-participate

How to submit your project

To receive recognition for your efforts. Send An email to education@arm.com with the title 'Academic Project XXX' where XXX is replaced with your project name. Please include the following in the email body:

  • Name of the participant(s)
  • University / Academic affiliation
  • Links to your project outputs for review (e.g., GitHub repo's, academic posters, reports etc.)

Please do not include any confidential information in your contribution. This includes confidential software or unannounced product information. Please also clarify with your academic institution what content you are permitted to share.

Please tick and add the following information to your email submission.

[ ] I have checked my contribution for confidential information

By sending this email, I confirm that you can use, modify, copy, and redistribute this contribution, under the Arm education license.

How to Suggest Projects

If you've been working on an Arm-based project or have a suggestion for a project or hackathon. Click on the discussion section of this repository, fill out the template.md file and open a discussion (see GIF below for instructions).

gif

Someone from Arm education will be in contact to discuss how we can support.

Technical Support and Supervision

For community driven support we have the Arm developer program, including discord channels where you have access to Arm experts and fellow arm developers.

For projects on system-on-chip design, please reach out to SoC labs for community driven SoC design support

Licensing

We aim to work closely with the University to ensure that the IP rights are managed in a way that benefits both parties and promotes the dissemination of knowledge. Please refer to the specific licensing terms outlined in each project's documentation for detailed information.

We are committed to fostering collaboration with universities on intellectual property (IP) rights for the content produced through our academic projects. Each project may have different licensing terms, tailored to suit the specific needs and goals of the collaboration. For instance, our current learning path tutorial is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0).

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