General > General Technical Chat
IEEE Senior Membership
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rsjsouza:
I am a member of IEEE and see value in it, although in recent years the nature of my work did not demand the type of information they had - i kept renewing for my own interest. Now that I changed jobs with something more advanced than what I was doing, the usability of their work will be professionally more applicable.
EEVblog:

--- Quote from: SiliconWizard on September 11, 2020, 04:34:24 pm ---With these 3 and your background, your access to the Senior status should be pretty straightforward.

--- End quote ---

Should be. You just need the three references and 10 years of experience, with 5 years recent I think. So unless they somehow don't count the EEVblog as a "real engineering" job then should be straightforward.
EEVblog:

--- Quote from: Bud on September 11, 2020, 03:04:05 pm ---What is the point to publish a paper and have access to it locked , restricted to one single group in IEEE. The problem with IEEE is access to the materials, and by the way, the quality of materials is not always good.
--- End quote ---

Do you somehow sign over copyright or sign an exclusive publishing deal?
If not, then why couldn't you just post the paper on your own site minus any IEEE references?
Kerlin:

--- Quote from: EEVblog on September 10, 2020, 01:04:51 am ---I guess no one is an IEEE member  ;D

--- End quote ---
Non degree Engineers with experience have become favored.
mawyatt:

--- Quote from: Bud on September 11, 2020, 03:04:05 pm ---What is the point to publish a paper and have access to it locked , restricted to one single group in IEEE. The problem with IEEE is access to the materials, and by the way, the quality of materials is not always good.

--- End quote ---

It's not locked nor restricted access to a specific IEEE group, you can purchase papers if you are not an IEEE member I believe. I've included the IEEE referenced Invited Paper we did back in 2005 (actually dates back to a closed paper in 2000 when we proposed a wafer scale phased array SoC in IBM 7HP SiGe BiCMOS process for a USG agency, later we were allowed to discuss very limited aspects of such and thus the IEEE paper).

The electrical performance of the modern instruments we have are directly related to the advanced semiconductor chips inside. The performance per cost metric is outstanding IMO, from the advanced ADCs, DACs, Amplifiers, FPGAs, uPs, SoCs and so on have paved the way for these modest cost, high performance instruments, and they are compact.

These advanced chips can be traced back to advanced semiconductor processes and in some cases new type circuits and algorithms, all likely described in the past IEEE journals in some form.     

Please provide a reference for electronics related that has better quality material than the IEEE Journals, I'm not aware of anything in general.

Best,

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