Noah Snavely is a Professor at Cornell Tech in the Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science. His research interests lie in computer vision and graphics, with a particular focus on recovering structure from large photo collections, as well as understanding and visualizing the world. At Cornell Tech, Snavely's work spans a diverse range of projects, including mapping technologies and immersive virtual reality experiences. His recent research involves synthesizing entire 3D worlds from text prompts, which has exciting real-world implications across industries such as game design and filmmaking. The Snavely research group at Cornell Tech explores unstructured collections of online photos to develop new technologies for modeling the world in 3D and analyzing images for computer graphics applications, as well as detecting trends in photos. Snavely has received several prestigious awards including the PECASE, Microsoft New Faculty Fellowship, Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, and the SIGGRAPH Significant New Researcher Award. He is a fellow of ACM and IEEE and has been featured in major news outlets such as New York Times, New Scientist, and MIT Technology Review.