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 Volume 51, Number 6

March,  2001


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Inside the 
March, 2001 
Scope

 
 

No March Section Meeting 
is planned. However,
 We have scheduled a very interesting & topical

April 26 Section Meeting

 
  Chairman's Message
 

Texas A&M Conference

  2001 NACE Conference
  IEEE Com Society Meeting
  IEEE IAS Meeting
  CED Seminar Schedule
  Executive Committee
 
  Support our Advertisers
  Don White Consultants
   
   

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Volunteers are needed for the IEEE booth and the proceed- ings distribution committee at the offshore technology con- ference April 30, 2001 through May 3, 2001
Contact:
John Lucey 713-945-5923
Ed Johnson 713-567-6780
Paul Barrett 713-496-9050

On Monday February 19,2001, Houston Section Excom and other invited guests had the opportunity to attend an IEEE Standards Board of Governors Meeting here in Houston. The invited guests viewed a short presentation on the IEEE Standards Associa­tion (SA) and then participated in an open discussion on the IEEE standards, the process, etc. Marco W. Migliaro, the current SA President hosted the discussion.

The basic question posed to the group was “What can the SA and/or IEEE do for the member and/or his company”. Many thoughts come to mind when presented with this question. It has very different answers depending on what section of industry you are working (end user, manufacturer, engi­neering firm etc.). My thoughts on the question: 1) The IEEE in general and specifically the IEEE SA need to provide an avenue for feedback to the individual’s employer to show the value added in participating in IEEE activities. 2) The IEEE SA needs to leverage the global membership base of the IEEE and its 365,000 members to promote the IEEE consensus standards as being equal to the IEC standards, thus having a level playing field in the harmonization process of IEEE and IEC standards. 3) The IEEE needs to further expand the Corporate Relations project to proactively meet with corporate executives to disseminate the value of IEEE membership. I would like to hear what the Houston Section members thoughts are on the same question and pass your comments on to Marco. Please respond back at donald.dunn@eee.org.

The following are some thought provoking highlights from the IEEE SA presentation:

The IEEE publishes 100 journals and magazines, comprising 30 percent of the world’s literature in electrical engineering, computers and control technology. More than 75,000 engineers and scientists attend the 300 plus technical conferences each year sponsored or co-sponsored by the IEEE. The IEEE has 800 active consensus standards with 30,000 volunteers participating in standards development.

The February section meeting had good attendance and a large student body presence from the IEEE U of H student branch. Dr Kumar Krishen gave an excellent presentation on “Space Technol­ogy Development, Transfer, and Commercialization”.  Dr. Krishen is the Chief Technologist for the Technology Transfer and Commercialization Office, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, responsible for developing strategies for joint research, technology projects and plans with, industries, universities, other NASA centers and government agencies.

Our future section meetings will be on April 26, September 27 and De­cember 6. We look forward to your attendance, as the meeting is an opportunity to promote networking and information sharing. Please take a moment of your time to look a the Houston Section website and join our e­mail majordomo-mailing list; instructions are on the website.  Any suggestions about improvements would be greatly appreciated. The address of the website is http://www.ieee-houston.org/. We have recently added a local employment assistance section to the website and have several ads. We will be posting ads from individual members seeking employment opportunities, employers seeking engineers and employment agencies.

As always, the Executive Committee and I look forward to your feedback and comments.  If you have suggestions and/or are interested in becoming active within the section or a local society chapter, contact one of us. The IEEE is a volunteer organization and without the active participation and feedback from you the members, the programs and content of the IEEE would be reduced.