Team Members








Douglas Crossley


Doug Crossley is a computer science major at the University of Nevada, Reno, who has several years of web programming and application design. During the summers he interns at Intuit as a software engineer. Doug was mainly in charge of the interface design and implementation. He focused on creating the interface in QT from the original mock ups and making something functional and intuitive for users. Another focus was creating an aesthetically pleasing application, which meant creating internal style sheets to give the application a cool look and feel. Doug was also in charge of creating and updating the team website and creating the final presentation.



Alex Fleiner



Alex Fleiner is a senior computer science student at the University of Nevada, Reno, Alex is a great problem solver who also enjoys graphic design. Alexander's main focus was to manage and obtain all assets needed and handle all the video necessary. He assisted with the design of the original interface by creating a mockup in Photoshop and was able to create images for button labels to use throughout the interface to give it the look we wanted. Alex also researched and found all the models and textures used for the application. Alex handled all the video recordings that were presented at the demo and created the poster for the team.

Alexis Oyama


Alexis Oyama is a computer science major who is graduating this semester. Alexis has done research previously and worked on developing the PRACYS system this past year. He just recently got accepted to the prestigious Carnegie Mellon for graduate school. Alexis Oyama was in charge of the AI and implementation of the backend code. Due to his familiarity with the PRACYS framework, Alexis was able to utilize and override certain elements of the framework to deliver the functionality the program needed. He also was able to create a multi-agent artificial intelligence using a reciprocal velocity formula. Alexis created system diagrams and statecharts to help demonstrate the flow of the application and the vision he had for the application.