24 November 2010

IEEE SoutheastCon 2011 CALL FOR PAPERS

The annual IEEE SoutheastCon '11 conference promotes all aspects of the theories and applications of the engineering disciplines. Sponsored by the IEEE Region-3, this event will attract researchers, professionals, and students from the southeast region of the U.S. The event will be held in Nashville, Tennessee, the city of country music. Also, IEEE SoutheastCon 2011 will feature tutorial sessions and workshops.

Scope of the Technical Program

IEEE SoutheastCon 2011 invites prospective authors to submit their technical work on all aspects of engineering, science, and technology of current interest to the conference. The conference technical program includes, but is not limited to the following technical categories:
  • Power and Sustainable Energy
  • Military and Security Applications
  • Optics and Optoelectronics
  • Communications and Networking
  • Applications and Interdisciplinary
  • Bioengineering and Informatics
  • Control and Automation
  • Software Engineering
  • Instrumentation & Measurements
  • Robotics and Computer Vision
  • Embedded Systems
  • Remote Sensing
  • Nanotechnology and Materials
  • Electromagnetics and Microwaves
  • Sensor Networks
  • Signal and Image Processing
  • Devices and Semiconductors
  • Topics on Education
The Technical Paper submission deadline is December 10, 2010.
More information is available on their homepage.

20 November 2010

This year E-Week is 20-26 February 2011

Engineers Week is traditionally the week in February that encompasses George Washington's actual birthday.

George Washington - The First US Engineer

NEW YORK - "First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen," George Washington has also been described as America's first engineer. That his birthday, on February 22 (observed February 20), is celebrated during National Engineers Week, February 20-26, is no coincidence.

A gentleman farmer of inherited wealth and limited formal education, Washington acquired credible surveying skills early in life, but excelled as a manager, strategist, and leader.
Washington directed a growing nation toward technical advancements, invention, and education. He promoted construction of roads, canals, the Capitol, docks and ports, water works, and new efforts to extract coal and ores and develop manufacturing resources.

Around the world, technology was gaining equal footing with pure science. Washington's contemporaries included James Watt (Scottish steam-engine inventor); Joseph Priestley (British chemistry pioneer); Richard Arkwright (British cotton-spinning inventor); John Fitch (American steamboat inventor); and the Montgolfier brothers (French aeronauts).
First in Washington's heart, it seems, was agriculture. As a young surveyor, his first sight of the Shenandoah Valley reportedly inspired the vision of an agricultural empire. As an adult, Washington settled into Mt. Vernon as a tobacco planter and experimented with the innovative agricultural techniques of crop rotation, soil fertilization, and livestock management. He had accurately predicted the valley's fertile farming potential.

As the foremost American general, Washington promoted at least one engineering marvel ahead of its time. During the Revolutionary War, he sent David Bushnell's hand-operated submarine into New York Harbor to sink a British warship. The Turtle's lone operator attempted to attach a timed bomb to the British Eagle's hull. The mission failed when the bomb floated away before exploding. The technology just wasn't advanced enough for Washington's vision, and submarines didn't become a force in navies for the next 100 years.

On June 9, 1778, at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, General George Washington issued a call for engineers and engineering education. This order is considered the genesis of a US Army Engineer School, which found its permanent home at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, where Washington had practiced surveying. As President (1789-97), Washington pushed for the passage of the first US Patent Act in 1789, and signed the first official US patent to Samuel Hopkins of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for his process of making potash and pearl ashes. In 1794, President Washington established a Corps of Artillerists and Engineers to be educated and stationed at West Point in New York, which later become the US Military Academy at West Point.

From transportation to education, Washington's engineering vision proved to be ahead of its time. After his death in 1799, many of the technologies he supported provided an impetus to the American Industrial Revolution. New York's Erie Canal (1817-25) was built, and canals soon crisscrossed America east of the Mississippi. By the 1830s, the nation's population tripled, traveling west through canals, along rivers, and across new roads and bridges. The Army Corps of Engineers began many of these projects.

By the middle of the century, the railroads become the favored mode of transportation. As a result, America had gone west and Washington's vision was realized.

Courtesy of the
National Engineers Week Foundation
1420 King Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

19 November 2010

2011 IEEE Computer Society Simulator Design Competition

IEEE Computer Society is presenting the 2011 Simulator Design Competition for students worldwide with a top prize of 8,000 USD and a second place prize of 2,000 USD. Student teams will be invited to design a CPU simulator, a program used in many architecture courses to illustrate how computers work.

The competition requires that students have taken a course in architecture and have both programming and software engineering skills. Student teams will submit both a report and a working program at the end of the competition.

Who can compete?

The competition is open to student members of the IEEE Computer Society organized into teams consisting of three to five students enrolled at the same institution of higher learning.

The competition is conducted through online submission of reports and simulators to the panel of international judges (chosen by the IEEE Computer Society). This year's judges include Bob Colwell, one of the world's leading experts on computer design and Intel's former chief architect on the Pentium 4 processor.

To register and for more information visit the competition web site at: www.computer.org/portal/web/competition

Registration deadline is 18 January 2011

Download the Flyer

14 November 2010

Virginia Technology Conference & Expo

Sponsored by Va Technology Alliance
Wednesday 26-Jan-11 8:00 AM to Thursday 27-Jan-11 6:00 PM EST
Register Now! Registration deadline is Saturday 15-Jan-11 11:45 PM
Greater Richmond Convention Center
403 North Third Street
Richmond VA 23219
Phone: (804)783-7300

www.hrtc.org/en/cev/448

Hampton Roads Defense & Homeland Security Consortium (DHSC) Forum

Venue:
Friday January 21, 2011 11:15 AM to 1:00 PM
Virginia Modeling & Simulation Center
1030 University Blvd. Suffolk, VA 23435
www.hrtc.org/en/cev/567

Hampton Roads Defense & Homeland Security Consortium (DHSC), an integration organization sponsored by Technology Hampton Roads (formerly known as Hampton Roads Technology Council). The mission of the DHSC is to serve as a forum to coordinate activities of business, government and educational groups in our region that would contribute to supporting a robust local economy and equip its workforce.

01 November 2010

2011 Systems and Information Design Symposium

2011 Systems and Information Design Symposium (SIEDS) - 29 Apr 2011, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, IEEE Sponsor: Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society (SMC)

2011 IEEE Electric Ship Technologies Symposium

2011 IEEE Electric Ship Technologies Symposium (ESTS) - 10 Apr – 13 Apr 2011, Alexandria, VA, IEEE Sponsors: DEI, IA, OE, PEL, PES, SEN, SYSC, and VT.

2010 International Conference on Machine Learning and Applications

2010 International Conference on Machine Learning and Applications (ICMLA) - 12 Dec – 14 Dec 2010, Hyatt Regency Bethesda, Washington, DC, IEEE Sponsor: Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society (SMC).

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Section Annual Elections for 2011

The Hampton Roads Section will be holding its annual election of officers in December. The elected positions are: Chair, Vice Chair, Treasurer, and Secretary. The current slate of candidates are:
  • Chair - Jason Naramore
  • Vice Chair - Mike Cooper
  • Treasurer - open
  • Secretary - open
Nominations are still be accepted for these positions. Send them to James Bolitho or Bill LaBelle .

This year we will be using officer elections tool available to sections using Vtools. An e-notice will be sent out when it is set up.

November 2010 From the PES Corner

The Oct Distinguished Lecture was an excellent presentation, and slides will be posted to the PES Chapter Webpage for review. Many thanks to our Section Chair, James Bolitho and Section Treasurer, Mike Cooper for their help in bringing this meeting to Hampton Roads. Also, Bill LaBelle was instrumental in developing brochures and announcements to publicize the event. As a result of the publicity Distinguished Visitors from the City of Newport News Engineering, Langley AFB Civil Engineering, and ODU Civil Engineering attended. John Whitelaw, Project Manager for Team Tidewater, the ODU-HU Solar Decathlon Team, provided a display of updates on that project for informal discussion during the social period. Currently, the Chapter is pursuing an opportunity to hear a more formal update from Team Tidewater, as a meeting topic. An e-mail to follow up with an e-mail on date and location will be provided, once those details have been locked down.


While the turnout for the Distinguished lecture was good (29) the Chapter did not break even on the expenses, and we are considering a more structured format to make it easier for folks to plan attending meetings. This will be helpful in cooperation with other Engineering organizations (ASME, ASCE, NSBE, SWE, etc) to expand membership development opportunities for necessary continuing education. As we test our theories on the best way to meet and learn there are bound to be bumps along the way. It is more affordable to make arrangements at local restaurants, rather than the conference room setting.
Please send inputs on where you would like to see meetings held to jennifer.ammentorp@ieee.org by Dec 1st, to begin the selection process in time for the 2011 meeting schedule.

Future technical meeting topics, in addition to Team Tidewater, include Arc Flash and another tour of the Surry Nuclear Plant in early April, and a tour of Aetna Wire. We are expanding our invitation to include other engineering organizations.

Some updates on our membership statistics include we are now at 50 members, compared to the 32 when we first formed in May of 2009. There are still volunteer leadership opportunities available for Vice Chair and Secretary. Also, if anyone can offer about 4 hours a month to help organize future events (just to help coordinate) and activities, that would be very welcome support! Thanks again for your feedback, and have a great Thanksgiving!

Jennifer Ammentorp
jennifer.ammentorp@ieee.org

November 2010 From The Chair

The September presentation by Dr. Yoon of Norfolk State University was extremely interesting. He shared a video clip of a neural nano-probe that helped a violin player overcome a case of the shakes. The amazing thing was that the violin player was awake during the procedure, playing the violin. I recently had an aunt die from a grand mal seizure, so this kind of technology, if it could be applied to help people like my special aunt, would be a tremendous benefit to mankind. Probably the most exciting part of my evening was the tour of Norfolk State’s industrial sized cleanroom. The setup was very nice and big.

The October meeting, held with the Power and Energy Society Chapter, was also very enlightening. By some experts’ analysis, there is forty years of petroleum left on our planet if consumed at the current rate; less if the consumption rate increases. Fifty percent of all trips that we take in our vehicles are less than twenty miles in length, which is well within the distance covered by the capacity of an electric car’s battery. Charging the batteries is a different story. In Virginia, we are billed on our consumption, whereas other states actually have demand management. The timing to charge your car is different in Virginia than say in Maryland. Or to run your clothes dryer or whatever electrical load you have in your house.

In November, we will have our student paper presentation at Hampton University. I want to thank Dr. Nare and Hampton University for hosting this event for the section. Please come out and support our engineers of tomorrow.

We have not received any additional volunteers for the section officers other than Jason Naramore for Chairman and Mike Cooper as Vice-Chair. These are two fine individuals that I have had the opportunity to work with over the past two years. I feel very comfortable that the Section will be in fine hands with Jason and Mike. It is not too late to volunteer. We can combine the secretary and treasurer positions if we only get one volunteer or keep them separate if we get two volunteers. Please contact any section officer if you are interested in being an officer in the coming year

This will be my last section chair message. I want to thank my officers for their assistance for the past two years. I have been richly rewarded with the time that I have spent as your chair, well beyond the effort that I put in. I have met some really interesting people and I believe even more strongly today, that the Hampton Roads Section could be one of the best sections in the Region and in the entire IEEE organization; we have that much engineering diversity. But we have to go out and make it happen. It has been a little bit of a struggle for me over the past two years, between finishing my MBA and the surgeries that I had to endure, but if I had it to do all over again, I would once again volunteer to be an officer in our section. Thank you for all of your support and I look forward to seeing you all at the next meeting.

Regards,
James Bolitho
2010 Chair
Hampton Roads Section

The Open Channel for November 2010

Inside The Open Channel

Front Page 2010 Annual Student Paper Presentations
Page 2 From the Chair
Page 2 Directions to Hampton University
Page 3 From the PES Corner Upcoming Conferences
Page 4 Upcoming Conferences

Upcoming Events

Dec Executive Committee (EXCOM)
Jan 20 Meeting
Feb 17 Meeting
Feb 20-26 National Engineer's Week

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