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#50 Reply
Posted by
tesla500
on 20 Feb, 2010 02:56
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Hi, I'm David, A 23-year-old from Vancouver, BC.
I got into electronics and making things way back, probably when I was about 5 or 6. My dad showed me how to make counters using 74* series logic chips. And just like Dave, I always annoyed my parents taking things apart
Throughout high school, I was always building projects such as electric powered bicycles and go karts, and high voltage devices like Tesla coils.
After high school, I took Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology at BCIT. I now regret that, I should have taken an engineering degree program, but that's another story. During my free time a friend and I converted a Pontiac Firefly to electric drive.
Now, I work as a power electronics engineer at Delta-Q Technologies. They make battery chargers for golf carts and industrial vehicles like scissor lifts.
Lately my projects have been building a high power AC inverter for an electric car drive system, and a high-speed video camera
David
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#51 Reply
Posted by
Emyr
on 21 Feb, 2010 16:58
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With a BSc Computer Science under my belt and slowly becoming a zombie at my first programming job (one of two young webdevs at a small firm of solicitors) I recently purchased an Arduino starter kit to keep me busy. Coupled with an interest in cars, bikes and guitars I already have a few ideas to work on.
My first idea is to use the Arduino as glorified ADC feeding into my Asus eeePC to make an electronic dash for my Peugeot 306 TD (no ECU, no ODB port...)
Here's my first bit of soldering since school:
Copier fix'd!
Plus the accountant reimbursed me for the soldering iron
I've since replaced the switch with a nice red pushswitch mounted in a square of cardboard (that switch and the leads are from my starter kit). The card means it should deter cavemen from breaking it and it's east to swap it for a fresh piece if it goes...
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#52 Reply
Posted by
teebooEET
on 25 Feb, 2010 07:42
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Im TEE,
Im from milwaukee Wi. i studying electronic engineering at MATC. i know that electronic can be hard sometime but im determine to study hard and finish my school with an electrical engineering degree. i hope that you guy can help answer some of the question i may have.
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#53 Reply
Posted by
PetrosA
on 26 Feb, 2010 04:34
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Hello, I'm Peter and I'm an electrician at the moment. I was one of those kids who bought 25 cent radios at the flea markets and tried to fix them, but I never really got very advanced at it. Later I started doing electrical work for a few years, then moved to Poland for 14 years and ran a coffee house, translated a few books and came back to the US. I'm interested in increasing my understanding of various aspects of my work and tools as an electrician, as well as just learning new stuff for the hell of it
This is attempt #4 at posting this. I keep getting timed out errors on attempts to post. Also had this reply show up as a new post in the General chat section on the first attempt. Is Firefox 3.6 having any known issues with this forum software?
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#54 Reply
Posted by
VK3DRB
on 28 Feb, 2010 03:52
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G'Day. I am an engineer who has been into the industry for 30 years... mainframes, analogue and digital electronics design & manufacturing, instrument design, embedded, Labview, C etc. Dave's blogs rock. I am also a Dave.
cheers,
Dave
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#55 Reply
Posted by
GeekGirl
on 28 Feb, 2010 04:46
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G'Day. I am an engineer who has been into the industry for 30 years... mainframes, analogue and digital electronics design & manufacturing, instrument design, embedded, Labview, C etc. Dave's blogs rock. I am also a Dave.
cheers,
Dave
Is this some evil experiment ? Is Dave cloning himself
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#56 Reply
Posted by
PetrosA
on 03 Mar, 2010 02:46
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G'Day. I am an engineer who has been into the industry for 30 years... mainframes, analogue and digital electronics design & manufacturing, instrument design, embedded, Labview, C etc. Dave's blogs rock. I am also a Dave.
cheers,
Dave
Is this some evil experiment ? Is Dave cloning himself
Probably more like copying and pasting himself
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Hey everyone,
I am 21, studying Electrical Engineering and Business Management at RMIT. I found EEVBlog through the hackaday post and have since become much more interested in electronics engineering.
I joined the forum to see what other people are doing and to get ideas and feedback on my own future projects.
Cheers
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#58 Reply
Posted by
Squirrel
on 03 Mar, 2010 15:04
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I'm 30 year old electrician. I trust Fluke's multimeters.
I live in Finland, here we meet polar bear and ashes in the middle of streets and need fight with bear for food in the woods.
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Howdy!
I'm John, currently in school for a degree as an Engineering Technician (can't quite afford college for real engineering, maybe one day.) Primary interest is RF, though I have a special place in my heart for digital. Love playing with test equipment (Scopes, service monitors, spectrum analyzers, network analyzers, etc.) and generally fixing things (seems related to Dave's latest video blog.)
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Vincent from San Jose California. Working for a large semiconductor manufacturer. I develop chips that go in harddisks. Started with electronics when i was about 8 years old. Been working in semiconductors for 16 now.
Main interests : FPGA (Altera / verilog), 8051 , Cortex , Arm7, analog stuff , mixed signal stuff.
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#61 Reply
Posted by
JimBeam
on 12 Mar, 2010 06:45
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Hello everybody,
my name is Andreas and I come from northern germany (Delmenhorst near Bremen). I was born in Berlin and have lived there for over 40 years.
My interests are electronics (of course and for more than 20 years now...), music (actively and passive) and my family.
Main interests in electronics are:
- microcontrollers, I started with 8051 and PIC, now mostly ATMEL AVRs
- firmware for the above
- audio/video and mixed signal electronics, i.e. I developed a teletext generator, that meanwhile is used by quite a lot smaller and larger broadcast stations in germany, austria and swiss.
- measurement circuits
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Hi, I'm from Mexico City.
I studied Robotics Engineering and now I'm finishing a Masters in Computing Engineering.
I like the eevblog videos since because they have so many tricks and tips that could come in handy some day.
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#63 Reply
Posted by
mzacharias
on 17 Mar, 2010 11:22
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Mark Z. from Wichita, KS. USA. I'm an audio and video repair technician, and I collect multimeters, some old, some new. I have had a Fluke 85III for going on 5 years and I have to admit I couldn't help picking up an 87V after continually seeing it treated as a de facto reference meter in the video blogs.
I also like old Simpsons ( I own several) AVO's (have 2) and I have a couple AN/PSM-37 military types. The guys at work think I'm crazy but as Dave says, any well equipped bench has at least 5 of these things, right?
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Hi,
I live in San Francisco, have a background in finance & dabble in embedded systems.
-Tony
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Hi, I'm from Mexico City.
I studied Robotics Engineering and now I'm finishing a Masters in Computing Engineering.
I like the eevblog videos since because they have so many tricks and tips that could come in handy some day.
What career can Robotics Engineering lead? Could the things you learnt be self taught I understand the college provides with the materials to use and experiement with. It sounds interesting but I cannot afford college fees
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Hi, I studied in a public university in Mexico, so fees were no problem.
My robotics major included some general courses: electronics, programming, hydraulics, neumatics, mechanic, etc.
Most of those things can be self taught, specially electronics and programming since the material you need to practice is easy to acquire.
A robotics engineer can work anywhere he wants considering the broad knowledge he can get. I love electronics and programming and I am looking forward to finding a job which includes those areas.
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"Most of those things can be self taught, specially electronics and programming since the material you need to practice is easy to acquire."
Thank you for the reply, tell me where to look please?
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Well, I don't know where you are from, but there should be electronics stores around you.
There are lots of basic electronics and programming tutorials online, I'm sure that if you use Google you'll find some. You can also go to a library and look for some books.
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#69 Reply
Posted by
jyrgen
on 29 Mar, 2010 19:13
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Hello! My name is Patrik and I'm a recently graduated Robotics Engineer in Sweden. My main subject is electronics and in the robotic company I work in I'm designing a few pcb:s at the moment. I love this blog!
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Hello! My name is Patrik and I'm a recently graduated Robotics Engineer in Sweden. My main subject is electronics and in the robotic company I work in I'm designing a few pcb:s at the moment. I love this blog!
Hi!
It seems that we studied the same major
. What were the requirements they asked in your current job?
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#71 Reply
Posted by
jyrgen
on 30 Mar, 2010 09:45
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migsantiago: Hello! Nice to see that there are other countries with robotics as master! After I graduated I looked at many different jobs in Sweden but unfortunately all jobs were either work only with electronics or only software. I then started to search for jobs outside Sweden and I found a few that I applied for but I guess that is really hard to get hired in an other country with no working experience. It seemed like the only solution for me were to start my own business so that's what I'm now working on along with one of my classmates and a professor at our school. We are developing a robot but I can't tell you what it is at the moment. I love this job even though I currently don't get any salary.
I hope that answers your question!
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migsantiago: Hello! Nice to see that there are other countries with robotics as master! After I graduated I looked at many different jobs in Sweden but unfortunately all jobs were either work only with electronics or only software. I then started to search for jobs outside Sweden and I found a few that I applied for but I guess that is really hard to get hired in an other country with no working experience. It seemed like the only solution for me were to start my own business so that's what I'm now working on along with one of my classmates and a professor at our school. We are developing a robot but I can't tell you what it is at the moment. I love this job even though I currently don't get any salary.
I hope that answers your question!
Ohh that's great. I wish you success on your self employed job.
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Doin' the newbie chime in:
Been doing chip design for a number of years. Has become "just a job", so recently started working up the hobby lab. I mean come on, you can arrange flops and AND and OR gates in only so many ways!
Computer Engr by degree, but have just about completely forgotten all the EE related background I got in school. So yeah, I'll be spending my share of time in the "Beginner" section.
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#74 Reply
Posted by
csadzuki
on 02 Apr, 2010 09:46
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Hello everyone,
Newbie here from Japan
I'm a Software Engineer with a strong interest in Electronics.
Hoping to learn many things and have some fun here in the forum.
- Csadzuki