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ECE people, what was that email...
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moron All American 34142 Posts user info edit post |
They recently sent out an email about someone giving a lecture or something at State, and they had a nice flyer made out, and it said something like "come here what life changing event this person had as a kid." I accidentally deleted the email. 2/9/2006 4:44:25 PM |
windhound96 Veteran 284 Posts user info edit post |
[ece-students] Talk on The Life of Maxwell by Jim Rautio of Sonnet
Quote : | "James C. Rautio, AJ3K IEEE MTT Distinguished Lecturer James C. Rautio received a BSEE from Cornell in 1978, a MS Systems Engineering from University of Pennsylvania in 1982, and a Ph. D. in electrical engineering from Syracuse University in 1986. From 1978 to 1986, he worked for General Electric, first at the Valley Forge Space Division, then at the Syracuse Electronics Laboratory. At this time he developed microwave design and measurement software, and designed microwave circuits on Alumina and on GaAs. From 1986 to 1988, he was a visiting professor at Syracuse University and at Cornell. In 1988 he went full time with Sonnet Software, a company he had founded in 1983. In 1995, Sonnet was listed on the Inc. 500 list of the fastest growing privately held US companies, the first microwave software company ever to be so listed. Today, Sonnet is the leading vendor of 3-D planar high frequency electromagnetic analysis software. Dr. Rautio was elected a fellow of the IEEE in 2000 and received the IEEE MTT Microwave Application Award in 2001 and is an adjunct professor at Syracuse University. James Clerk Maxwell stands shoulder to shoulder with Newton and Einstein, yet even those of us who have spent decades working with Maxwell's equations are almost totally unfamiliar with his life and times. This presentation, from the viewpoint of a microwave engineer, draws on many sources in providing an understanding of James Maxwell himself. What was Maxwell like as an infant? What was the tragedy at eight years old that profoundly influenced his life? What unique means of transportation did young Maxwell use to escape a cruel tutor? What memorable event occurred on his first day of school? When did he publish his first papers, and what were they about? What did Maxwell have to do with the rings of Saturn? Why did he lose his job as a professor? Why did he have a hard time getting another job? What was his wife like? What is Maxwell's legacy to us? The answers to these questions provide insight into Maxwell the person and add an extra dimension to those four simple equations we have studied ever since. Open to all MRC 136 (formerly EGRC), Centennial Campus 2410 Campus Shore Drive, Raleigh, NC Tuesday February 14th, 2006 6:30 - 8:00pm Buffet at 5:45pm in MRC 246 – RSVP by Sunday February 12th to jmwilson@ncsu.edu North Carolina State University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Presents – MTT Distinguished Microwave Lecture The Life of James Clerk Maxwell By James C. Rautio" |
this?2/9/2006 4:53:31 PM |
dFshadow All American 9507 Posts user info edit post |
^ftw
Quote : | "James C. Rautio, AJ3K IEEE MTT Distinguished Lecturer James C. Rautio received a BSEE from Cornell in 1978, a MS Systems Engineering from University of Pennsylvania in 1982, and a Ph. D. in electrical engineering from Syracuse University in 1986. From 1978 to 1986, he worked for General Electric, first at the Valley Forge Space Division, then at the Syracuse Electronics Laboratory. At this time he developed microwave design and measurement software, and designed microwave circuits on Alumina and on GaAs. From 1986 to 1988, he was a visiting professor at Syracuse University and at Cornell. In 1988 he went full time with Sonnet Software, a company he had founded in 1983. In 1995, Sonnet was listed on the Inc. 500 list of the fastest growing privately held US companies, the first microwave software company ever to be so listed. Today, Sonnet is the leading vendor of 3-D planar high frequency electromagnetic analysis software. Dr. Rautio was elected a fellow of the IEEE in 2000 and received the IEEE MTT Microwave Application Award in 2001 and is an adjunct professor at Syracuse University." |
Quote : | "James Clerk Maxwell stands shoulder to shoulder with Newton and Einstein, yet even those of us who have spent decades working with Maxwell's equations are almost totally unfamiliar with his life and times. This presentation, from the viewpoint of a microwave engineer, draws on many sources in providing an understanding of James Maxwell himself. What was Maxwell like as an infant? What was the tragedy at eight years old that profoundly influenced his life? What unique means of transportation did young Maxwell use to escape a cruel tutor? What memorable event occurred on his first day of school? When did he publish his first papers, and what were they about? What did Maxwell have to do with the rings of Saturn? Why did he lose his job as a professor? Why did he have a hard time getting another job? What was his wife like? What is Maxwell's legacy to us? The answers to these questions provide insight into Maxwell the person and add an extra dimension to those four simple equations we have studied ever since." |
Open to all MRC 136 (formerly EGRC), Centennial Campus 2410 Campus Shore Drive, Raleigh, NC Tuesday February 14th, 2006 6:30 - 8:00pm Buffet at 5:45pm in MRC 246 – RSVP by Sunday February 12th to jmwilson@ncsu.edu]2/9/2006 4:53:50 PM |
moron All American 34142 Posts user info edit post |
yeah, that's it, thanks. 2/9/2006 4:55:19 PM |
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ECE people, what was that email...
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