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Gap year fellows find their innovator groove

Students with an itch to innovate are seeing their ideas take form with the support of RIT’s Gap Year Entrepreneurship Fellowship Program.

Jonathan Bateman, Aidan Makinster, Michael Norton, and Hridiza Roy—all from RIT’s School of Individualized Study—comprise the seventh cohort of gap year fellows developing business ideas. Each fellow received a $20,000 stipend to use over two semesters, as well as business coaching from the Simone Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and Upstate Venture Connect, a network of business professionals.

RIT alumnus and trustee Austin McChord established the fellowship for SOIS students as part of a larger gift to the university in 2017. The fellowship program launched in 2018 with its first fellow, Brandon Hudson. Since then, the program has supported a total of 28 fellows, including the current cohort.

“Gap year fellows enjoy a rare opportunity to present their ventures directly to Austin, gaining thoughtful, actionable feedback on their biggest challenges, growth strategies, and next steps,” said Meg Walbaum, director of Strategic Partnerships in University Studies. “The experience leaves a lasting impact, shaping both their businesses and their personal development.”

Entrepreneurial thinking sets the gap year fellows apart from their peers and adds a real-world advantage to their college experience. This year’s group is exploring software to prevent AI-powered and deepfake impersonations, and ways to improve underwater drones, 3D digital animation, and mountain bikes.

Bateman, a third-year student from Denver, is developing a free mobile app to authenticate the identities of one’s closest contacts if faced with a targeted deepfake attack. His app, Real Recognizes Real AI (realxreal.ai), uses multifactor authentication to ensure trusted contacts are who they purport to be. The software personalizes methods used by commercial enterprises.

Through SOIS, Bateman has studied applied math and computing security with anthropology and sociology to understand how people use and manipulate technology.

“I want to prioritize security, privacy, and ethics,” Bateman said. “It’s not a hindrance to innovation.”

His goal is to make Real Recognizes Real AI available on the iOS app store by December.

Norton, from Long Island, N.Y., tried different majors before he discovered SOIS last year. “I realized I wanted something in between different types of engineering that didn’t exist,” said Norton, who expects to graduate in 2026 or 2027.

He applied for a fellowship to build underwater drones using 3D printing and open-source software.

Norton founded RocIn Industries LLC., to develop the proprietary technology for his fleet of water-bottle shaped drones.

Although he works independently on the project, Norton runs ideas by “Brutus,” a chatbot he customized from an open-source AI model. Unlike ChatGPT, Brutus is a closed model that only Norton can access.

“I’m a thinker and an ideas guy,” Norton said. “I have a passion for engineering and engineering work. My life goal is to be a successful engineer.”

Makinster, from Waterloo, N.Y., has used his fellowship to develop a mountain-bike part he designed for his senior capstone project. His concept for an adjustable handlebar stem would allow riders to switch the handlebar position while ascending and descending hills, allowing for greater “ease, speed, and safety,” he said.

Makinster used his capstone project as a blueprint and began experimenting with 3D-printed parts and different mechanisms for moving the stem into the preferred position. By mid-spring, Makinster anticipates having a working prototype or, even, a final version.

 “My childhood dream is to open a store and sell bike parts,” Makinster said. “That was always my end goal.”

Makinster also received the Gap Year Enhancement Award and an additional $20,000.

Roy is concentrating her gap year into one semester to fine-tune a 3D stylized animation tool she built during the spring semester and to engage potential end-users.

Her team includes Charlie Blaker, a third-year student in RIT’s 3D digital design program, and Jinhyo Huh, a computer graphics graduate student at Stanford University. They are analyzing existing research and techniques for achieving a painterly look for 3D animation and interviewing 3D artists about their workflow and general preferences.

Roy’s fascination with 3D computer graphics led her to study the mathematics and computer science behind digital animation. Her fellowship focuses on simplifying the process animators use to create the appearance of brush strokes on digital objects.

Movies such as Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and The Wild Robot popularized a stylized look achieved by combining different software applications.

Roy’s 3D stylized animation tool bypasses the cumbersome process and integrates into existing software. She will attend LightBox Expo in Pasadena, Calif., in October to engage with more artists and seek feedback on her product.

“I wanted to create something that automates a stylized look while also giving artists control, and I have been able to explore both the algorithmic and the human side of that space,” Roy said. “The gap year fellowship is an absolutely amazing program. I have gotten the opportunity to research the mathematics of stylized looks within 3D animation, and gained extremely valuable insights from and connected with a lot of 3D artists.”

About the Gap Year Entrepreneurship Fellowship Program

The Gap Year Entrepreneurship Fellowship Program began in 2018 within the School of Individualized Study to encourage students to pursue business ideas while earning a college degree. RIT alumnus and trustee member Austin McChord established the program as part of his $50 million gift to RIT in 2017. McChord started Datto, a global provider of data protection, in 2007, with an idea he had as an RIT student. Vista Equity Partners acquired Datto in 2017 for around $1.5 billion.

McChord is currently the CEO of Casana, a healthcare technology firm, which microsystems engineering alumnus Nicholas Conn started at RIT.

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