Lehman College has opened its new Virtual Reality and Training and Development Lab, offering students the chance to study the burgeoning technology inexpensively. It is the only such programming currently being offered at a college in the Bronx.
Lehman is pushing the virtual reality lab as it seeks to position the Bronx as the stop for new talent in the tech industry while providing the community with a convenient and affordable way to gain the knowledge. Virtual reality takes a person into a “different place,” meaning user feel as if they are transported to another location.
The virtual reality Icube at the school creates a simulation like walking on an oilrig in the middle of the ocean. An augmented reality adds something to the space a person already is in.
The app Pokemon Go, for example, allows characters from the game to appear on sidewalks and other places around Riverdale, all seen through the smartphone.
“It’s really mind-blowing,” said Julio Montas, 31, who is enrolled in the program and lives in Washington Heights. “Normally it would be downtown (Manhattan) or in Brooklyn … just having anything around uptown, Harlem, the Bronx that has to do with tech, it’s pretty convenient.”
“It’s a huge opportunity here in the borough,” said Edgar Roque, adding that augmented reality programming would continue to be the wave of the future. Roque, 43, is currently a network engineer and wanted additional skills to adapt to a changing industry.
Lehman senior Justin Acosta said the program would enhance what he is learning as he completes his degree in computer science, especially when it comes to learning various types of software like Java. He plans to study at Lehman part-time and attend the virtual training academy, which meets weekdays in the evenings and all-day Saturday for the next 11 months.
“I calculated that you get a degree’s amount of work here,” Acosta said. The curriculum includes web design, animation and 3-D graphics — a rigorous course load that’s similar to his studies as a computer science major. The bonus, he added, is that he could have a job lined up at the end of the course since Lehman’s programming partner, Eon Reality, said it would hire some of the students, although it wouldn’t share how much they’d pay them.
Eon’s involvement is part of a public-private partnership with the school, said Ronald Bergmann, Lehman’s vice president of information technology and chief information officer. Eon covers the equipment, software and training resources, and the school provides in-kind contributions such as administrative staff. Lehman’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies oversees the initiative.
Eon has created software programs for the aerospace, education and travel industries. For example, the company created an augmented reality program that show workers the basics of diesel engine maintenance by creating a series of augmented reality lessons, according to its website.