August 12, 2010 Dave and Busters. Milpitas CA
Abstract:
Designed for a nominal 90 day mission the Mars Exploration Rovers (MER rovers) Spirit and Opportunity are still alive after 6 Earth years on the surface of an alien and continually surprising planet. We have had a great deal of good luck but also have been able to utilize a strong and diverse team of scientists and engineers to cobble together a continuing string of 'pulling rabbits out of the hat' tricks to live yet another day. This talk will describe some of what we have accomplished, how we have blended our hardware, software and human resources to continue one of the most successful missions in human history. It is the team working together, and standing on the shoulders of those in our past and using the best tools in our computer prosthesis arsenal - Human 2.0 if you will - that we have been able to achieve such remarkable success both in engineering and in science. Bio: Michael Sims is Research Scientist in the Intelligent Systems Division of NASA Ames, Co-Investigator on the Mars Exploration Rovers (MER), Deputy Chief Scientist for NASA Engineering and Safety Center and cofounder of the Center for Collaboration Science and Applications (CCSA, http://www.cmu.edu/silicon-valley/ccsa/). Michael received a BS in Physics and a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Mathematics from Rutgers University and has been at NASA Ames Research Center since 1987. His research includes robotics, machine learning, visualization, and tools for enhancing and easing scientific modeling and collaboration. Previously he served as agent for artificial intelligence, robotics and human factors for NASA's missions beyond low Earth orbit in the Office of Exploration. Michael is actively involved in plans for future planetary missions including robotic activities and human settlements on the Mars and the Moon. On the MER mission, in addition to being Long Term Planning Lead, for 7 of MER's 9 camera he serves as payload uplink lead and designed and built the software system which is used on each rover for automating most of that work. Registration: Please click here to register for this free event. Feel free to contact usThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it directly for registration or cancellation requests.
September 8, 2010 - UPDATED! Westford Regency, Westford MA Abstract: This will be a discussion of the key items that put control back in the hands of validation and make us effective in proactively driving health into a product, rather than reacting to issues late in the product launch schedule. Bio: Allison Goodman is a validation program manager at Intel for their new client and enterprise solid state hard drives. Prior to her current position, she has been a validation engineer working on several of Intel's products and also a technical project manager in the laptop product group. Allison earned her B.S. in computer and electrical engineering from Cornell University and is PMP certified. She is a Lt. Governor for the Society of Women Engineers and also a master instructor at Intel for Project and Product Risk Management. Registration: Please click here to register for this free event. If you have problems registering, or need to cancel your registration, please contact us directly. |