CIR & CIS: How to Design a Product that Actually Works

#Design #Product #Work #engineering #operations #computers #robotics
Share

Presentation: How to Design a Product that Actually Works
 
Abstract: Many electronic products just don’t work very well. The products are full of both hardware and software bugs and often fail right out of the box or within a few weeks. Then the product joins millions of other pieces of junk in the landfill. Learn how to put in just a small amount of extra effort that makes the difference between a product that is junk and a product that is useful, manufacturable, and profitable. From getting the requirements correct, to passing electromagnetic interference tests that every product is required to pass by the FCC, to being able to build thousands or millions in the factory, there are pitfalls easily avoided every step of the way. Join Dr. Steve Murphy and the IEEE CIR for a discussion on the planning, design, and improvement involved with the designing of a “Good Electronic Product”.


  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 16 Oct 2024
  • Time: 06:00 PM to 08:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-06:00) Mountain Time (US & Canada)
  • Add_To_Calendar_icon Add Event to Calendar
If you are not a robot, please complete the ReCAPTCHA to display virtual attendance info.
  • Contact Event Hosts
  • Starts 25 September 2024 12:00 AM
  • Ends 16 October 2024 09:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-06:00) Mountain Time (US & Canada)
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr Steven Murphy

Topic:

How to Design a Product that Actually Works

Abstract: Many electronic products just don’t work very well. The products are full of both hardware and software bugs and often fail right out of the box or within a few weeks. Then the product joins millions of other pieces of junk in the landfill. Learn how to put in just a small amount of extra effort that makes the difference between a product that is junk and a product that is useful, manufacturable, and profitable. From getting the requirements correct, to passing electromagnetic interference tests that every product is required to pass by the FCC, to being able to build thousands or millions in the factory, there are pitfalls easily avoided every step of the way. Join Dr. Steve Murphy and the IEEE CIR for a discussion on the planning, design, and improvement involved with the designing of a “Good Electronic Product”.

Biography:

 

Dr Steven Murphy

  • PhD Electrical Engineering and Numerical Analysis
  • Lockheed Martin Fellow Engineer
Dr. Murphy holds a PhD and a BS in Electrical Engineering, with a minor in numerical analysis, from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. Dr Murphy completed his masters in Electrical Engineering at Johns Hopkins while serving as a US Naval officer and doing ASIC design. Dr Murphy has worked for one company that has gone through many acquisitions through companies such as Sperry, Unisys, Paramax, Loral and Lockheed Martin. Dr Murphy has conducted research in parallel processing and holds 11 patents related to that research. Dr Murthy is currently a Lockheed Martin Fellow engineer and designs custom high-performance computers for signal processing and performs technical oversight on numerous projects across the corporation. Dr. Murphy is an expert in digital/analog circuit design, signal integrity and electromagnetic interference.