Officers: | David Marca (chair), Dennis Bahr (vice chair), Tim Chapman (secretary), Charles Gervasi (treasurer) |
Purpose: | Networking: projects, needs and resources. Special topic (varies). |
Location: | Madison Area
Technical College (MATC, Downtown Campus), Rm D331 211 North Carroll Street, Madison, WI 53704 Parking at city lot on Carroll Street, $1.25/hour (no free event parking downtown) MATC Directions/Maps |
Lunch Price: | pasta bar and salad, $10 IEEE Members |
RSVP: | by January 4th
to Tim Chapman
via email (no lunch w/o RSVP!)
|
Agenda
Speakers: | Jeff Anthony,
Director of Marketing, American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) Michael Vickerman, Executive Director, RENEW Wisconsin Mitch Bradt, P.E., Program Director, UW Madison Dr. Adel Nasiri, Professor UW Milwaukee There may be a speaker from the new Vestas-UW-Madison R&D partnership |
|
Location: | Crowne Plaza
Hotel 4402 E. Washington Ave. Madison, WI 53704 (877) 454-5025 (location changed!) |
|
Registration Cost: | Free if pre-registered by Jan. 25th, $20 thereafter | |
RSVP: | Neil
Stechschulte via e-mail
or by phone at 608.825.0894. Please also CC your RSVP to David Marca or by phone at 607.645.1358. |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
Mr. Anthony will provide a presentation on the market demand for wind energy in the United States, as well as an overview of supply chain trends.
Mr. Vickerman will provide an overview of wind energy and wind farm development here in Wisconsin.
Mr. Bradt will provide an introduction to Wind Turbine Equipment and make a comparison of the technologies.
Prof. Nasiri will provide a presentation on the research and educational activities at UW-Milwaukee
See attached flyer for full details.
Officers: | David Marca (chair), Dennis Bahr (vice chair), Tim Chapman (secretary), Charles Gervasi (treasurer) |
Purpose: | Networking: projects, needs and resources. Special topic (varies). |
Location: | Madison Area
Technical College (MATC, Truax Campus) 3550 Anderson Street, Madison, WI Room 141A just East of the main cafeteria Parking in the gated lot per attached map. ACCESS CODE: 2121. |
Lunch Price: | Boxed Lunches
$8 (Sandwich, beverage, chips, dessert) will be served. Options are: Turkey, roast beef or cheese. |
RSVP: | by Monday
February 1st and indicate your lunch preference to Tim Chapman
via email |
Agenda
Speaker: | Denise Reimer - Program Manager, Business Procurement Assistance Center, MATC Madison |
Location: | Rocky Rococo's
Pizza 7952 Tree Lane (Madison Beltline Hwy. at Mineral Pt. Rd.), 608.829.1444 |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by February
15th to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
Ms. Denise Reimer is the Program Manager of the Business Procurement Assistance Center for the Greater Madison Area. For several years, Denise has led the center's key service: to support local business in their quest to participate in government contracting.
The Business Procurement Assistance Center (BPAC), funded in part by the U.S. Department of Defense, was established in 1988 to provide technical and marketing assistance to Wisconsin businesses interested in government contracting. This presentation will discuss government contracting, its process, registering your business for consideration, and becoming a responsible contractor. This is a "must attend" for those firms wishing to enter the realm of government contracting!
Officers: | David Marca (chair), Dennis Bahr (vice chair), Tim Chapman (secretary), Charles Gervasi (treasurer) |
Purpose: | Networking: projects, needs and resources. Special topic (varies). |
Location: | Madison Area
Technical College (MATC, Truax Campus) 3550 Anderson Street, Madison, WI Room 122 / 130 (small bldg just south of Main MATC Truax bldg) Parking in the gated lot per attached map. ACCESS CODE: 5711. |
Lunch Price: | Boxed Lunch $8 (Sandwich, beverage, chips, dessert) will be served. Please indicate turkey, ham, or meatless in RSVP. |
RSVP: | by Monday
March 1st and indicate your lunch preference to Tim Chapman
via email |
Agenda
Speaker: | Mike Arnold, Assistant Professor - Department of Materials Science & Engineering, UW-Madison |
Location: | Rocky Rococo's
Pizza 7952 Tree Lane (Madison Beltline Hwy. at Mineral Pt. Rd.), 608.829.1444 |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by March 15th
to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
The Earth is continuously bathing in over 10^17 watts of sunlight. This talk will discuss the science, technology, and economics of using photovoltaic solar cells to collect and convert a fraction of this free solar energy into electricity. In particular, this talk will focus on the materials and composition of photovoltaic solar cells and the principles of their operation and will attempt to answer the question of why past and current solar cell technologies have failed to become widespread. The talk will conclude by discussing the future of solar photovoltaics and new materials and technologies (with a focus on those being pursued by my research group such as semiconducting carbon nanotubes) that have the potential to boost the efficiency, decrease cost, and increase the practicality of solar cells.
Michael S. Arnold joined the faculty of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison as an assistant professor in August 2008. He directs the Advanced Materials for Energy and Electronics Group at UW-Madison and is a leader in the research of novel materials for next generation solar photovoltaic, optoelectronic, and semiconductor logic devices. Prof. Arnold graduated summa cum laude from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering in 2001. He earned his Doctor of Philosophy degree in 2006 from Northwestern University in Materials Science and Engineering. Prof. Arnold also conducted post-doctoral research at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor where he studied carbon-based electronic materials for high-efficiency white lighting and photovoltaics.
Officers: | David Marca (chair), Dennis Bahr (vice chair), Tim Chapman (secretary), Charles Gervasi (treasurer) |
Purpose: | Networking: projects, needs and resources. Special topic (varies). |
Location: | Madison Area
Technical College (MATC, Truax Campus) 3550 Anderson Street, Madison, WI Room 141 A Parking in the gated lot per attached map (Note: pass says March 4th but should work for April 1). ACCESS CODE: 4709. |
Lunch Price: | Boxed Lunch $8 (Sandwich, beverage, chips, dessert) will be served. Please indicate turkey, ham, or meatless in RSVP. |
RSVP: | by Monday
March 29st and indicate your lunch preference to Tim Chapman
via email |
Agenda
Speaker: | Gregg Vanderheiden Ph.D., Director Trace R&D Center |
Location: | Rocky Rococo's
Pizza 7952 Tree Lane (Madison Beltline Hwy. at Mineral Pt. Rd.), 608.829.1444 |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by April 12th
to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
Broadband technologies are rapidly becoming integral to education, commerce, employment, community participation, health and safety Yet there remain multiple barriers to effective and affordable access by people with disabilities, elder, or those with low literacy creating an increasing digital divide. There are assistive technologies that can provide access for some. However it is not available for all disabilities, not affordable by many, and lags mainstream developments and deployments. Even when the latest AT is close to the latest IT, few people have the latest version. The cost of keeping up with mainstream technologies reduces resources available for innovation in assistive technologies and new directions in broadband technologies will require an already strapped AT industry to retool and re-architect their products. We are moving to an ICT environment with a profusion of hardware models (desktop, laptop, netbook, smartphone, tablet, set top box, game systems, players), multiple operating systems (Windows, Mac, Linux, Chrome OS, iPhone, Android, Windows Mobile, Symbian, Maemo (Nokia), Bada (Samsung), WebOS, etc.), hundreds of software applications that embed another universe of widgets, plug-ins, and players, and a networked information environment that adheres to no standard and mutates far beyond the initial conception of the Web. Our current access technologies and infrastructure cannot handle this; the assistive technologies that now exist do not address all disabilities well, particularly cognitive, language, and learning disabilities, deaf-blindness and the mixed problems faced by elders; current assistive technologies often add, rather than reduce, complexity; finally, but importantly, people are not aware of what is possible, see it as complicated, and do not have any easy way to determine that there is something that can help them.
A coalition of academic, industry and non-governmental organizations and individuals are coming together to promote the creation of a National Public Inclusive Infrastructure (NPII) to address these problems. The purpose is to ensure that everyone who faces accessibility barriers due to disability, literacy or aging, regardless of economic status, can access and use the Internet and all its information, communities, and services for education, employment, daily living, civic participation, health and safety.
An NPII would provide key software enhancements to the physical infrastructure to allow lower cost accessibility that could be invoked on any computer, anywhere. Its key components would be a cloud based delivery system that would allow anywhere, any computer access, a personal preference system to allow systems to automatically configure themselves to users, a system of wizards to make creation of a preference profile simple even when a professional is not available, a metadata server to allow users to find accessible media or captions or descriptions for inaccessible media, a trusted source for malware free solutions, a rich development environment with common building blocks, and an awareness program to make more people aware of what is possible for them. All of the NPII components are being designed to support both commercial assistive technologies and free, built-in access features (universal design). The NPII will include a delivery system, personalization profiles and a rich development system and common modules. In addition to lowering development costs and increasing the number of solutions for different disabilities, the NPII can also enable new types of assistive technologies and services, including assistance-on-demand services that allow consumers to invoke computer or human assistance whenever and wherever they need it. The goal is a richer set of access options that it is less expensive to create and distribute and that can address the needs of a wider range of disabilities than is possible today. And a model infrastructure that can be replicated internationally and bring this wide variety of access options and the lower cost delivery system for both commercial and free access features to countries world-wide.
Gregg Vanderheiden is a professor of Industrial and Biomedical Engineering, and director of Trace R&D Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has worked in technology and disability for more than 38 years and currently directs the NIDRR Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center (RERC) on Information Technology Access, and co-directs the RERC on Telecommunications Access (joint with Gallaudet University).
Dr Vanderheiden was a pioneer in the field of Augmentative Communication (a term taken from his writings in 1979), and worked with people having physical, visual, hearing and cognitive disabilities. His work with the computer industry led to many of the access features that are standard today. For example, access features developed by Dr. Vanderheiden and his team (e.g., StickyKeys, MouseKeys, etc.) have been built into the Macintosh OS since 1987, OS/2 and the UNIX X Window system since 1993, and more than half a dozen were built into Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000, XP, Vista and now System 7. His work is also found in the built-in access features in ATMs, Point of Sale terminals, and cross-disability accessible USPS Automated Postal Stations, as well as the accessible Amtrak ticket machines, and in airport terminals.
Dr. Vanderheiden has served on numerous professional, industry and government advisory and planning committees including those for the FCC, NSF, NIH, VA, DED, GSA, NCD, Access Board and White House. Dr. Vanderheiden served on the FCC's Technological Advisory Council, was a member of the Telecommunications Access Advisory committee and the Electronic Information Technology Access Advisory Committee (508 and 255 refresh) for the US Access Board, and served on the steering committee for the National Research Council's Planning Group on "Every Citizen Interfaces," and the National Academies’ Institute of Medicine Committee on the Future of Disability in America.
He has received over 30 awards for his work on technology and disability include the ACM Social Impact Award for the Human-Computer Interaction Community, the Ron Mace Award, the Access award from AFB, the Yuri Rubinski Memorial World Wide Web Award (WWW6), and the Isabelle and Leonard H. Goldenson Award for Outstanding Research in Medicine and Technology (UCPA).
Speaker: | Dr. Michael Dalecki, Dept. of Sociology, UW-Platteville |
Location: | UW-Madison, Mechanical Engineering Bldg, Rm ME1153 |
Menu: | TBD |
Dinner Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by May 3rd to Charles Gervasi via
email or call 608.446.1178 |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
Abstract will be posted when available.
Dr. Dalecki is a Professor of Sociology who teaches about social change, research methodology, and energy. He teaches the first sequence course in the Renewable Energy minor at UW-Platteville, and is part of the team creating a new Sustainable and Renewable Energy Systems major. Recent presentations have included "Got Energy?" and "The Ethanol Fraud." He received his BS from UW-Platteville, his MS from Texas Christian and his PhD from Penn State.
Speaker: | Todd Allen, Associate Professor, Dept. of Engineering Physics, University of Wisconsin – Madison |
Location: | Rocky Rococo's
Pizza 7952 Tree Lane (Madison Beltline Hwy. at Mineral Pt. Rd.), 608.829.1444 |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by September
13th to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
Even though similar materials are used and the temperatures and applied stresses to which materials are subjected in a nuclear system are similar to those in a fossil fired energy plant, the materials degradation is dramatically different. Degradation happens faster in nuclear systems and unique degradation modes like void swelling and irradiation assisted stress corrosion cracking on occur in nuclear systems. All this can be tied to the displacement of atoms by high-energy neutrons from fission. This talk will explain the degradation that occurs in a nuclear system, why it is unique, and how it is mitigated.
Prof. Allen is an Associate Professor in the Dept. of Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin – Madison since 2003. Prof. Allen’s research expertise is in the area of materials related issues in nuclear reactors, specifically radiation damage and corrosion. Dr. Allen has established the Extreme Environment Laboratory equipped with facilities for a wide array of high temperature studies as well as the ion beam laboratory for radiation damage studies. Dr. Allen is also the Scientific Director for the Advanced Test Reactor National Scientific User Facility at Idaho National Laboratory, a position that he holds in conjunction with his faculty position at the University of Wisconsin.
Speaker: | David Marca, President, OpenProcess, Inc. |
Location: | Rocky Rococo's
Pizza 7952 Tree Lane (Madison Beltline Hwy. at Mineral Pt. Rd.), 608.829.1444 |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by October 18
to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
Non-member guests are always welcome!
"That social networks are hard to penetrate" is an often given reason for recent corporate investment decreases in this technology. The cause is the traditional mass market perspective: generalizing a population creates weakly aligned online ads. Adopting a Language-Action Perspective - understanding the conversation in a social network - builds stronger online ads. One measure of alignment is the mental distance between the intent of a social network conversation and the intent of the online ads that surround it. This talk will: explore the nature of "intention" in social networks, introduce its elements, show how these elements can create data and software architecture, and show how that architecture creates better online ads.
David Marca is president and founder of OpenProcess, Inc., specializing in strategic planning and e-Business consulting. He is also a professor for the University of Phoenix Online School. His six books and 27 papers cover e-Business, business process design, workflow, and software engineering. His latest book with the IEEE is "Open Process Frameworks: Patterns for the Adaptive e-Enterprise." He holds a patent in workflow technology, and is a member of the IEEE.
Speaker: | Sheila S. Hemami, Editor-in-Chief, IEEE Transactions on Multimedia, IEEE Fellow |
Location: | Promega
BioPharmaceutical Technology Center Room Number: 122 5445 E Cheryl Pkwy Madison, Wisconsin |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by November
1st to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
Current state-of-the-art algorithms that process visual information for end use by humans treat images and video as traditional signals and employ sophisticated signal processing strategies to achieve their excellent performance. These algorithms incorporate characteristics of the human visual system (HVS) in a relatively simplistic manner, and performance is reaching asymptote. However, large gains are still realizable by aggressively incorporating HVS characteristics to a much greater extent, combined with a good dose of clever signal processing. This requires HVS characterizations which better model natural image perception ranging from sub-threshold perception (distortions are not visible) to supra-threshold perception (distortions are visible). In this talk, I will review results from our lab characterizing the responses of the HVS to natural images, contrast these results with 'classical' psychophysical results, and present examples of signal processing algorithms which have been designed to fully exploit these results.
Sheila S. Hemami, an IEEE Fellow, received the BSEE from Michigan, and MSEE and Ph.D. from Stanford. She was one of the first researchers on "error concealment." She was with HP Labs in 1994 and joined the School of EE at Cornell in 1995, as Professor and Director of the Visual Communications Lab. She has held many international teaching positions and numerous college and teaching awards. She is the Editor-in-Chief, IEEE Transactions on Multimedia.
Speaker: | David Marca |
Location: | Promega
BioPharmaceutical Technology Center (BTC) Room Number: 122 5445 East Cheryl Parkway Madison, Wisconsin |
Menu: | Pizza buffet, salad and soft drinks |
Lunch Price: | $5.00 members, $10.00 non-members (free for UW-Madison Student Branch members) |
RSVP: | by December
13th to Charles Gervasi
via email or call 608.446.1178 |
IDEF0 (ICAM Definition Method Zero), the non-proprietary subset of SADT (Structured Analysis and Design Technique), was a U.S. Air Force and U.S. government standard for almost three decades. It has the capability to functionally describe any system, regardless of type: natural, biological, electrical, mechanical, industrial, military, financial, computer, political, etc. The technique is a combination of graphics, natural language, and hierarchical decomposition, plus rules for: distinguishing controls from transformations, relative context coding, function activation, and annotation, plus heuristics for authorship, readership, model complexity management, and project management. In this presentation, you will receive a very brief overview of the technique, but more importantly, you will have a direct experience of general systems modeling.
David Marca is president and founder of OpenProcess, Inc., specializing in strategic planning and e-Business consulting. He is also a professor for the University of Phoenix Online School. His six books and 27 papers cover e-Business, business process design, workflow, and software engineering. His latest book with the IEEE is “Open Process Frameworks: Patterns for the Adaptive e-Enterprise." He holds a patent in workflow technology, and is a member of the IEEE.
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