The digital world presents an endless repository of innovation and breakthroughs — and its equal share of questions and problems. Where the physical realm limits us, a rapidly digitising world holds promise for a better, brighter and more sustainable future. At the same time, it is tainted with issues related to privacy, transparency and accountability.
For all its setbacks, however, its potential triumphs. It is digitisation that holds the key to solving some of the most pressing global problems today, from the climate crisis to COVID-19 and social unrest. The catalyst for those fresh solutions to come? Seeing the world through a multi-disciplinary lens.
The opportunity to do this is at the core of two postgraduate courses at Malmö University’s Faculty of Technology and Society — Media Technology: Strategic Media Development and Computer Science: Innovation for Change in a Digital Society.
Graduate Sebastian Hastrup describes the Master’s what do computer engineers do in Media Technology: Strategic Media Development as “interesting and challenging.” “It forced me to think critically about media and design problems. I particularly liked how it enabled me to make use of my previous knowledge in new contexts,” he says.
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