Posted by Bram Bout, Director, Google for Education
(Cross-posted on the Google for Education Blog.)
While university students are on their summer holidays, internships or jobs, their professors are already hard at work planning for fall courses. These course maps will be at the center of student learning, research and academic growth. Google was founded on the basis of the work that Larry and Sergey did as computer science students at Stanford, and we understand the critical role that teachers play in fostering and inspiring the innovation we see today and will see in the years to come. That’s why we’re excited to offer
Google Cloud Platform Education Grants for computer science.
Starting today, university faculty in the United States who teach courses in computer science or related subjects can
apply for free credits for their students to use across the full suite of
Google Cloud Platform tools, like
App Engine and the
Cloud Machine Learning platform. These credits can be used any time during the 2016-17 academic year and give students access to the same tools and infrastructure used by Google engineers.
Students like Duke University undergrad Brittany Wenger are already taking advantage of cloud computing. After watching several women in her family suffer from breast cancer, Brittany used her knowledge of artificial intelligence to create
Cloud4Cancer, an artificial neural network built on top of Google App Engine. By analyzing uploaded scans of benign and malignant breast cancer tumors, Cloud4Cancer has learned to distinguish between healthy and unhealthy tissue. It’s providing health care professionals with a powerful diagnostic tool in the fight against cancer.
Google Cloud Platform offers a range of tools and services that are unique among cloud providers. The tool that Brittany used
— Google App Engine — lets you simply build and run an application without having to configure custom infrastructure. Our
Machine Learning platform allows you to build models for any type of data, at any size, and TensorFlow provides access to an open-source public software library (tinker with that extensive data
here). Students will also be able to get their hands on one of Cloud Platform’s most popular new innovations: the
Cloud Vision API, which allows you to incorporate Google’s state-of-the-art image recognition capabilities into the most basic web or mobile app.
We look forward to seeing the creative ways that computer science students will use their Google Cloud Platform Education Grants, and will share stories along the way on this blog.
Computer science faculty in the United States can
apply here for Education Grants. Students and others interested in Cloud Platform for Higher Education, should complete
this form to register and stay up to date with the latest from Cloud Platform. For more information on Cloud Platform and its uses for higher education, visit our
Google Cloud Platform for Higher Education site.