
Weaving through the aisles of the grocery store, you ask yourself: Are we out of milk? What about eggs? Orange juice?Ģż
In the future, your fridge might be able to answer those questions for you, thanks to technology developed by University of Louisville students that uses artificial intelligence software to identify what foods you have and whatās missing.Ģż
The project won second place in FirstBuildās 2017 MegaHackathon, held at the GE Appliances-backed makerspace and microfactory on UofLās Belknap campus.ĢżHundreds of hackers spent September 9-10 trying to āHack the Home,ā with futuristic tech like smart spice cabinets and automated pet-feeders.Ģż
The fridge team ā all sophomores at UofLās J.B. Speed School of Engineering ā also considered building a QR-code oven or a wine cooler for your refrigerator. But after those ideas didnāt pan out, they went back to the drawing board and came up with the āA.I. Fridge.āĢż
āThe big challenge of the Hackathon was finding something that truly made sense,ā said Nico Ferreyra, a member of the team. āIn other words, something that the average consumer could use and would want to buy. So, we had to think on a broad scale and come up with certain inefficiencies in the consumer’s lifestyle and solve those inefficiencies.āĢż
For example, the inefficiency in trying to remember what groceries you need at the store. After scanning whatās inside, the A.I. fridge creates a shopping list based on what you normally buy and syncs with your calendar to make the whole grocery shopping experience more automated and streamlined.Ģż
Ferreyraās team received $2,000 for their overall second place win. They also won $750 for the winning the GE IDO Best Digital Experience for a Physical Product award, and received the PCI LTD Co. Smart Home Award.Ģż
Larry Portaro, FirstBuildās director, said the third annual competition allowed FirstBuild to showcase its āmodel of manufacturing to bring out the best and brightest ideas for the next smart appliance.āĢż
āThe prototypes generated from each team truly illustrate the idea behind our collaborative community and how ideas can come from anywhere and anyone,ā he said.
Another UofL team competing at this yearās MegaHackathon made an umbrella stand that tells you the weather. In past FirstBuild contests, UofL teams have designed and that give you step-by-step recipe instructions.Ģż
Aside from just the prizes, Ferreyra said participating in his first hackathon gave him the chance to get some hands-on experience and apply what he learned in class.Ģż
āI do think students benefit from these events,ā he said. āEvents like these immerse engineering students into these challenges and bring the true engineer out.ā





























