On 1 January 2008, the Member and Geographic Activities (MGA) Board replaced the Regional Activities Board (RAB) as the organization responsible for membership and member development at IEEE. The Core Training presentations explained the impetus for the transition underway and provided a view of what MGA success will look like. The MGA Board is a complete change from RAB and a shift in focus to the member. Sections are now part of an organization focused solely on the member and designed to inspire members participation in IEEE.
The first core track training session was presented by Joe Lillie VP, Member and Geographic Activities; and Ed Palacio, Vice Chair of MGA Strategic Management. This session highlighted the MGA Board's transformation from the Regional Activities Board (RAB). This shift in focus will allow MGA to be the primary touch point for IEEE members, engaging them throughout their careers and providing them with what they need, when they need it, to be successful in their profession.
This IEEE.tv technical tour takes the viewer on a visit to the Intel Mobility Group. Uday Keshavdes, an engineer at Intel, gives an overview of the Intel Atom processor for the Mobile Internet Devices (MID's) that enable users to enjoy entertainment or access the full Internet while on the go.
In this program, IEEE-USA's Senior Legislative Representative for Grassroots Activities, Russ Harrison, discusses the intersection between public policy and engineering. In 2009, Congress focused on engineers and technology more than at any other point during the past 50 years, perhaps ever. Your elected officials have been debating major changes to US policy in fields that employ or affect IEEE members including energy, space, education, intellectual property law, immigration, and broadband. This attention gives us, as professionals, opportunities, but also poses risks. Learn what IEEE-USA is doing in Washington to try to make sure Congress gets it right. And learn some simple things that you can do to influence your own elected officials.
President John F Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas in November of 1963. Although an investigation soon concluded that only one gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, shot at President Kennedy, there is a community of skeptics that exist to this day who think that there was another gunman. Thirteen years later, the US Congress Select Committee on Assassinations reopened an investigation of the President's assassination. The Committee learned about some recordings of the Dallas Police radio traffic, and they speculated that somewhere on these recordings there might be the sounds of gunfire, perhaps even allowing investigators to determine how many shots had been fired. In 1982, the investigation was reopened yet again. Mr. Charles Rader, an IEEE member, served on the Committee on Ballistic Acoustics. Our program is based on the science of "Signal Processing" and discusses the findings of this committee.
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This program provides an overview of career possibilities in IT. IT professionals and engineers from large and small companies discuss the nature of their work.
This video introduces you to the IEEE Standards Association's new VuSpec Series of browser-based standards products.
This program provides a bird-eye view of career possibilities in electrical and computer engineering. Engineers working for large and small employers discuss the nature of their work.