Photo: Jeff Beardall
鈥淒ata plus algorithm equals output.鈥
Martin Wildberger, RBC鈥檚 Executive Vice President of AI Innovation and Technology, shared that idea with a full room of emerging technologists from the 海角视频s of Computer Science and Electrical and Computer Engineering during the Tech@RBC Insider Series on February 25.
This series is a collaboration between the Faculty of Arts & Science, the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering and Tech@RBC. Together, we are building a three鈥憏ear, 12鈥慹vent program to help students develop industry-ready skills, make meaningful connections and explore new directions in AI, cybersecurity and innovation.
RBC is supporting the series and . The bank has created two new scholarships that will benefit 10 students each year. This year鈥檚 computer science recipients are:
James Han
Amber Liu
Kiarash Sotoudeh
Dhairya Thakkar
Helen Zhao
Reflecting on the keynote, RBC Scholar Dhairya Thakkar says the discussion shifted how he thinks about his future in tech.
鈥淭he biggest thing I鈥檓 taking away is something Martin said: you and someone else can have the exact same data but end up in completely different places because of your 鈥榓lgorithm鈥 鈥 the way you think, how you approach problems, the perspectives you bring. That really changed how I think about my path in tech.鈥
The audience enjoying the Tech@RBC Insider Series keynote with Martin Wildberger. (Photo: Jeff Beardall)
Student impact went beyond the keynote. They attended two program tracks: a hiring insights and r茅sum茅 workshop, and career micro-chats with RBC experts who work across the bank鈥檚 tech teams.
鈥淭alking to RBC鈥檚 data engineering team showed me how central data governance and compliance are at an enterprise level,鈥 said Carmen Chau, a third-year CS specialist and statistics major. 鈥淎s CS students, we focus a lot on coding but tonight helped me see how those skills connect to real, large鈥憇cale problems.鈥
The value of the Tech@RBC Insider Series comes in many forms: it shifts perspectives, sparks new ideas about the future and gives students a clearer sense of where they see themselves in the tech landscape.
鈥淭alking with the data team from RBC Borealis really opened my eyes,鈥 said Krisha Kalsi, fourth-year CS specialist. 鈥淚n school, we focus so much on coding, but in industry, data work intersects with compliance, governance and even national鈥憀evel priorities. Seeing that bigger picture was eye鈥憃pening.鈥
Students were able to participate in a resume workshop and industry-expert micro chats. (Photo: Jeff Beardall)
Thakkar says attending events like these matters to him as a computer science student.
鈥淎s a CS student, it almost felt necessary to be here. AI is changing so fast, and hearing how Canada鈥檚 largest bank is approaching it 鈥 especially in fintech 鈥 was invaluable. It helped me understand where the industry is heading and how I might fit into that future.鈥
