Both honorees聽spoke at the event: Byyny, who served as chancellor of CU Boulder 1997鈥2005, recalled a demonstration of Mosaic in the mid-1990s that helped him understand the World Wide Web and its vast potential. "I came out of that room and I knew it was going to change everything," said Byyny. After becoming chancellor, he charged his Chief Information Officer聽Bobby Schnabel, with launching an initiative that would prepare all students for the information revolution, not just computer scientists and engineers.
Recalling this early meeting, Schnabel held up a blank sheet of paper to represent the open-ended directive Byyny gave: 鈥淚t was the greatest thing; we had full license to innovate,鈥 said Schnabel.
Current ATLAS Director Mark Gross commended Byyny and Schnabel鈥檚 vision in creating the institute, and the critical role his predecessors and campus leadership have played in guiding and supporting its evolution over the last two decades.
Today, ATLAS enrolls approximately 1,200 students, supports one of the fastest growing bachelor鈥檚 degrees on the CU Boulder campus (an unconventional, interdisciplinary engineering program that blends design and creative technologies) and houses a rapidly growing portfolio of research labs.