Dr. Steve Mackay is the founder of the Engineering Institute of Technology. He firmly believes in Nelson Mandela’s mantra that, “Education is the most powerful weapon which we can use to change the world.” His leadership has inspired EIT’s unique and distinctive approach to engineering education.

Since 2008 three core objectives define the essence of the institute:

Collaborating comprehensively with industry to ensure graduates are job-ready.
Employing platforms of learning to facilitate student accessibility and engagement.
Keeping the business of education student-centric.

Dr. Mackay has enjoyed a varied career in engineering, having worked in automation, data acquisition, instrumentation, data communications, and process control throughout Australia, Europe, Africa, and North America over the past 35 years. He has successfully pioneered the application of new technologies in Australia and overseas, installing industrial data communication systems and implementing live online education, (including remote laboratories), for engineering students worldwide. Dr. Mackay has been involved in a range of industries, including power stations, mining, mineral processing, oil/gas/petrochemical plants, and platforms. He has presented courses on industrial data communications, data acquisition, instrumentation, and process control to over 30,000 engineers and technicians worldwide for clients such as NASA, Rolls Royce, and BP. He has also co-authored and edited 25 engineering books that have been published across the world. Dr. Mackay is a Fellow of Engineers Australia with a license to practice as a Chemical, Mechanical, and Electrical Chartered Professional Engineer. As Dean of the Engineering Institute of Technology, Dr. Mackay leads the institute in providing microcredentials and engineering qualifications to over 2000 students per year from 140 countries. He has an unswerving focus on student outcomes and on excellence in education.

Smart chip assists patients who have lost use of limbs

April 5, 2016 5:10 pm
An engineer out of the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore named Dr Arindan Basu has developed a smart chip that is able to measure brain signals. The chip was created for tetraplegics. These are people who have lost the use of most or all of their limbs due to...Read More

Engineering hurdles for autonomous vehicles

April 5, 2016 4:19 pm
Should self-driving cars get their own lane? That is the question left in everyone's minds after Volvo's CEO, Lex Kerssemakers, saw that one of their autonomous vehicles couldn't see the lane it was supposed to be driving in due to how shoddily the lanes looked due to wear and tear....Read More

Engineering hurdles for autonomous vehicles

April 5, 2016 4:19 pm
Should self-driving cars get their own lane? That is the question left in everyone's minds after Volvo's CEO, Lex Kerssemakers, saw that one of their autonomous vehicles couldn't see the lane it was supposed to be driving in due to how shoddily the lanes looked due to wear and tear....Read More

New skin engineered to appear invisible on radar

April 5, 2016 3:38 pm
Engineers at Iowa State University have been hard at work at creating something that might pique the military's interest. It is a translucent material that would make whatever it covers invisible to radar. In a recent report published in Scientific Reports, the engineers said: "It is believed that the present meta-skin technology...Read More

Negotiation is a Key Skill for an Engineering Professional

April 5, 2016 2:33 pm
The Art of Support: EIT’s Learning Support Officers InformationCategory Education10 September 2020Written by: Quintus Potgieter The Engineering Institute of Technology (EIT) is a unique global institute, delivering online engineering short courses, diplomas, and degrees. Students around the world log into EIT’s synchronous online virtual campus to network with other... Read...Read More

Building stronger lithium batteries with a salt named LiTFSI

April 4, 2016 7:46 pm
Are lightweight lithium-sulfur batteries the solution to the uncertainty that some associate with lithium batteries? Whether critics like it or not, lithium batteries are here to stay due to them being the operative force of current energy storage batteries like Tesla and Redflow's house powering cells and of course, in...Read More

In memoriam: Andrew Grove

April 4, 2016 6:19 pm
Andrew Stephen Grove was born in Hungary but lived in America and is one of the most lauded businessmen and engineers in recent history. He pioneered research in the semiconductor industry after escaping from Communist Hungary in his 20s. He then built the largest factory of semiconductors we know today...Read More

Indian flyover collapse raises questions of safety and security in construction

April 4, 2016 4:39 pm
Engineering experts are delivering opinions on a flyover railway bridge that collapsed, killing fourteen, in Kolkata, India. Panduranga Rao, of the IVRCL Construction Company in charge of the flyover, said to media, "It is nothing but God's act. About 70% of the construction work was completed properly. The experts regularly...Read More

Electronics manufacturing looks to new ALD research for help

April 4, 2016 4:10 pm
Nanoscale technology is quickly becoming the most fantasized answer to the future in the engineering world. The University of Alberta's mineral engineering researchers might have just saved the manufacturing processes of electronics industries some money. The researchers have been working with 'Atomic layer deposition' (ALD) which sees slim films covered...Read More

Electronics manufacturing looks to new ALD research for help

April 4, 2016 4:10 pm
Nanoscale technology is quickly becoming the most fantasized answer to the future in the engineering world. The University of Alberta's mineral engineering researchers might have just saved the manufacturing processes of electronics industries some money. The researchers have been working with 'Atomic layer deposition' (ALD) which sees slim films covered...Read More

Singapore and Perth joining hands with new subsea cable

April 4, 2016 3:10 pm
Singtel, a Singapore-based service provider is joining hands with Perth in Australia in the form of a subsea cable. The new link will ensure that customers growing want for bandwidth-heavy applications like unified communications, enterprise data exchange, internet and online gaming will be efficiently run. Along with Australia's Telstra and SubPartners, Singtel signed a...Read More

Civil engineering graduates unable to find work in India

April 1, 2016 8:27 pm
The College of Engineering Pune (CoEP) in Maharashtra, India is reporting that 50 percent of its students in city colleges are jobless. The PuneMirror reported that the industrial and economic slump is the culprit, which has seen only 24 percent of graduates find jobs this year compared to the ninety...Read More

Augmented reality enables virtual 'teleportation'

April 1, 2016 6:50 pm
Like something out of an Isaac Asimov novel, Microsoft has shown what its HoloLens might be capable of in the near future. The HoloLens - if you haven't seen it by now - is a new augmented reality (AR) headset that integrates with the spaces visible in front of you,...Read More

Elon and Elton engineering firm design new energy storage solution

April 1, 2016 5:16 pm
Elon Musk and Elton John are best known for their tagline, "WE BRING THE NOISE". If you haven't seen their advertisements on the telly,there's a good chance you live down under, on the underside of a rock. Now ceramics engineering and electrical engineering will walk hand in hand once again when...Read More

Engineering makes it into best-paid jobs list for 2016

April 1, 2016 4:15 pm
What are the best-paying jobs of 2016 so far? Which jobs are in trouble? Employment website Glassdoor and higher-ups in certain industries claim to have the answers. The company published their findings on their website, also reporting that 7 in 10 people said that salary was the main factor when...Read More

Power utilities face tough times with new energy storage competitors

March 31, 2016 10:30 pm
Tesla's Powerwall is no longer the only player in the game. Australian energy storage company, Redflow, has thrown their hat into the ring with the announcement of a 10-kilowatt battery called the  ZCell. The cell will cost between $17,500 and $19500 (USD) including installations and is the latest competitor in the energy...Read More

Fish mouths inspire engineers to design clog-free filtration

March 31, 2016 8:24 pm
Having 'the knack' for engineering sometimes involves looking at already existing systems prevalent in nature and trying to turn them into machines that are inspired by the natural design of our world. This is no different. The structure of the mouths of filter-feeding fish has given engineers the idea to...Read More

Man-made earthquakes now reported in seismic risk statistics

March 31, 2016 6:49 pm
Man-made earthquakes will now feature in the U.S. Geological Survey's (UGSG) seismic risk maps. This would assist civil engineers and design companies in their contemplation of where to build buildings and how strong those buildings should be.  The Daily Mail writes that these measurements will be included in the survey...Read More

50 day warning for heat waves soon to be reality

March 31, 2016 5:55 pm
Environmental scientists, engineers, and meteorologists have been working together to improve the efficiency of warnings for heat waves. This according to Harvard's School of Engineering and Applied Science.  The new study from Harvard University in collaboration with the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) has been researching sea surface temperature patterns...Read More

Chemical engineering produces interesting fields of work

March 30, 2016 7:56 pm
Chemical engineering and soils. How do they fit together? Well, Aaron Daigh is the assistant professor of soil physics at North Dakota State University and is living proof that an engineering degree can take you wild and wonderful places. "In chemical engineering, a lot of the classes deal with the...Read More

Aerospace engineers bringing inflatable habitats to ISS

March 30, 2016 4:01 pm
The aerospace engineers over at SpaceX and NASA have been innovating again. Along with Bigelow Aerospace, on April 8th, 2016, a resupply mission along with a new module named The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM) will be sent to the International Space Station. Once docked on to the space station it will create...Read More

Printable magnets are next phase of engineered magnets

March 29, 2016 9:56 pm
Printable magnets are the new buzz word around engineering circles when the topic of magnets is brought up. A group called Correlated Magnetics  are conducting research on how magnets will continue to form part of our world in engineering. The end result of this research is an invention they call 'polymagnets'. ...Read More

New fiber-optic data transmission record achieved

March 29, 2016 7:02 pm
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's computer science engineers have made an unprecedented leap into the future of fiber-optic speeds. The university said that their engineers successfully reached 57 gigabits per second error free on a network of fiber optic technology. According to BGR, it is a new record in...Read More

Robotics and automation industry investigates profitability and education

March 29, 2016 6:30 pm
It was just the other day when we saw a video of a mechanical engineer pushing a robot down with a stick and that same robot getting up and continuing its job. That video came out of a robotics company called Boston Dynamics that is owned by the company that owns Google, Alphabet. Then...Read More

Microneedle technology used to battle skin cancer

March 29, 2016 5:00 pm
Biomedical engineering scientists at North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have observed the effects of microneedle technology in the assistance of immunotherapy for melanomas on human bodies. Dermatologists' ears should perk up at the new findings because it directly affects their practices. The...Read More

Renewable energy's big push

March 29, 2016 4:27 pm
2015 was a big year for renewable energy and energy storage, according to a new report. The report issued annually has shown that "renewable energy investments" went up by 5 percent in 2015. The new number indicates that the amount of money invested in renewable energy in 2015 would amount...Read More

Engineers Always Work within the Natural Order of Things

March 29, 2016 2:35 pm
The Art of Support: EIT’s Learning Support Officers InformationCategory Education10 September 2020Written by: Quintus Potgieter The Engineering Institute of Technology (EIT) is a unique global institute, delivering online engineering short courses, diplomas, and degrees. Students around the world log into EIT’s synchronous online virtual campus to network with other... Read...Read More

Biomedical engineers revolutionize ultrasound to assist cardiovascular health

March 24, 2016 3:53 pm
Lund University in Sweden has discovered a new method of using ultrasound to determine whether the plaque levels in blood vessels are harmful or not. Harmful plaque levels are what leads to strokes and heart attacks. Now, with the new method, this could prevent unnecessary surgeries and is a better...Read More

Platinum's replacement in hydrogen production may lead to clean energy future

March 23, 2016 4:30 pm
Griffith University is taking one giant leap into the future of clean energy. According to EurekaAlert, the university is using carbon as a method of delivering energy using hydrogen. The specific team is Griffith's Queensland Micro and Nanotechnology Centre. They have produced hydrogen from water. This would replace platinum as...Read More

Where in the world should engineering students be studying?

March 22, 2016 10:04 pm
The BBC's Andreas Schleicher wrote - a week ago - that China would be building "the equivalent of almost one university a week" due to the rising population. Recently, we reported that China and India were left out of the World Economic Forum's research that detailed which country produced the most...Read More