Hobbies and interests
Painting and Studio Art
Swimming
Walking
Music
Reading
Reading
Adventure
Business
Contemporary
Design
Fantasy
Mystery
Law
I read books multiple times per month
Kylea Ho
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FinalistKylea Ho
1,405
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
An aspiring creative aiming to bridge the gap between technology and humans for an effortless, elevated future.
Education
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Computer and Information Sciences and Support Services, Other
- Design and Applied Arts
Maumee Valley Country Day Sch
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Master's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Computer and Information Sciences, General
- Design and Applied Arts
Career
Dream career field:
Computer Software
Dream career goals:
Creative Director, Software Engineer, IP Lawyer
Founder, Marketing Strategist
Self-created online store2017 – 20192 years
Research
Mechatronics, Robotics, and Automation Engineering
RMIT University, American Center HCMC — Student Researcher2021 – 2021
Arts
Gia Dinh High School
PhotographyFashion lookbooks , Social media posts , Student-directed photoshoots2018 – 2019Maumee Valley Country Day School
IllustrationPaintings displayed at Marcy Kaptur Ninth Congressional District Art Exhibition 2020 and received University of Toledo Award2019 – 2021
Public services
Volunteering
The Elderly Saigon — Digital Content Producer, Volunteer2020 – 2021Volunteering
Hoa Phuong Do Ho Chi Minh City — Head of Social Media Strategy, Digital Content Producer2018 – 2019
Future Interests
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Dynamic Edge Women in STEM Scholarship
Navigation robot for the visually impaired - a new technology that I believe is indispensable. This invention comes under different names, through different projects: CaBot, Baxter Robot, BlindPilot, etc., but they agree on the fundamental goal to assist disabled people in everyday life.
As stated in the social model of disability, "disability resides in the society, not in the person." "Disability" is often viewed as a defect in a person's body; but the real defect is society's unwillingness to meet that person's needs. A paraplegic has limited mobility in a multistory building not because of their legs, but because said building lacks an elevator, a wheelchair or equivalent tools to accommodate them. Same goes for blindness. Since most of us rely on reading signs to navigate, most spaces are made unwelcoming to blind people. But! Navigation robots can amend that. By putting audio, sensors, tactile interface into a headwear, or a handwear, or a suitcase-sized robot, whatever form it may takes, this technology un-handicaps spaces and helps people with vision loss.
I did, once, plan a special needs robot for a robotics class. I owe the inspiration and passion for this project to my grandma. In the last decades of her life, she had glaucoma. As her vision deteriorated, I, a witless toddler, had nary an idea how daunting it was. All I was was upset. Grandma loved driving me to school, but then she stopped. Grandma loved taking me to the store, she stopped that, too. Grandma loved playing dolls with me, then I was routinely told to sweep the floor clean of toys. I did not understand how noises in public areas, inability to read signs or perceive movable objects hindered grandma - all because she relied on other senses, hearing and touch, to navigate. These environments were incompatible with her condition. Grandma also loved sunsets. She flew kites with me every Sunday until sunset. Long after she was diagnosed, she asked me how the sky looked. Even as witless as I was, I must say I nailed the description. I said the clouds' bottoms were pinkish like cotton candies, their tops dark like my hair, the horizon was my kite's color - orange, with a golden lining, like grandma's bracelet, where it dipped below heaps of roofs. I pried her hand opened so the night's early breezes can caress her gaunt fingers, and through my boisterous laugh, she would know my kite flew up to new heights that evening.
With technology, we can invent and reinvent as much as we want, until the invention caters to the need of every user. This is what technology means to me: helping people with needs. As needs evolve and expland, so do inventions. We must thrive for barrier-free spaces in pursuit of a future where people with disabilities are not punished for their condition, where they are not stripped of opportunities to jobs, education, life enjoyment, because of our spaces' incapability. I am in school for industrial design and information technology. The core to many creative works and engineering is the same: problem-solving. Whenever I make an product, I ask myself what problem it solves and how it benefits others. That is my objective: elevating quality of life. I want to combine technology and the arts to design a world where our environment does not confine people, but enables them.