Grewe Scanner Interface Professional Resume

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HP Labs All of HP UShp journal - online issues»»»»»»»»,To search the index, use the Find function of your web browser.1998Cover: a reflective look at communications appliances used in the past contrasted with those used todayWireless Comnunications: A Spectrum of Opportunities.the tremendous growth in the consumer market for wireless communications products, such as celluar and cordless telephone, has created a parallel growth in research and development for higher-performance components for these products, by William J. McFarland, pg 6-9The IrDA Standards for High-Speed Infrared Communications.as more data communications products, such as printers and laptop PCs, are released with infrared capability, support for a core set of IrDA standards has strong support from many manufacturers because, among other things, they want to ensure that their products will interoperate in a transparent and user-friendly manner, by Iain Millar, Martin Beale, Bryan J. Donoghue, Kirk W. Lindstrom, and Stuart Williams, pg 10-26RF Technology Trade-offs for Wireless Data Applications.rapidly evolving wireless system standards and applications are placing demands on RF semiconductor manufacturers to produce highly specific and optimized RFIC solutions for specific growth segments including wireless data terminals, by Kevin J. Negus, Bryan T. Ingram, John D. Waters, and William J.

McFarland, pg 27-360.1-um Gate-Length AlInAs/GaInAs/GaAs MODFET MMIC Process for Applications in High-Speed Wireless Communications.to ensure high performance of MODFETs used in HP's high-speed communications applications, their high-frequency signal, noise, and power characteristics must be optimized, by Hans Rohdin, Avelina Nagy, Virginia Robbins, Chung-Yi Su, Arlene S. Wakita, Judith Seeger, Tony Hwang, Patrick Chye, Paul E. Gregory, Sandeep R.

Bahl, Forrest G. Kellert, Lawrence G. Studebaker, Donald C. D'Avanzo, and Sigurd Johnsen, pg 37-38An Enhancement-Mode PHEMT for Single-Supply Power Amplifiers.to address the growing handset power amplifier needs for the emerging Personal Communications Services (PCS) markets, a 3-volt, single-supply, enhancement-mode pseudomorphic high-electron-mobility transistor (E-PHEMT) has been developed. The device exhibits +33 dBm output power and 65% drain efficiency at 1.88 GHz, by Der-Woei Wu, John S. Wei, Chung-Yi Su, Ray M.

Parkhurst, Shyh-Liang Fu, Shih-Shun Chang, and Richard B. Levitsky, pg 39-51Direct Broadcast Satellite Applications.one of the main reasons for the popularity of direct broadcast satellite (DBS) service is the small size of the parabolic dish antenna. The key to the small-size dish is a low-noise GaAs transistor used in the low-noise block of the DBS receiver system. One of HP's efforts in this area has been to develop an AllnAs/GaInAs device fabricated on a conventional GaAs substrate that has a lower noise figure, higher gain, and lower cost - Page 52, by Shunichiro Yajima and Antoni C. Niedzwiecki, pg 52-55Pager Testing with a Specially Equipped Signal Generator.this paper reviews current trends in the paging industry, describes typical pager designs, presents the test requirements of modern pagers, and discusses the contribution to pager testing of the HP 8648A signal generator with Option 1EP, the paper signaling option, by Matthew w.

Bellis, pg 56-65HP CaLan: A Cable System Tester that is Accurate Even in the Presence of Ingress.today, cable system operators have to deal with bidirectional traffic from sources such as pay-per-view television, high-speed Internet access, and two-way telephony. A cable testing system is described that can handle bidirectional traffic even with RF noise (ingress) on the return path,by Daniel D. Van Winkle, pg 66-83Cover: examples of 3D graphics images that can be rendered with HP workstations using the VISUALIZE fx graphics hardware.An API for Interfacing Interactive 3D Applications to High-Speed Graphics Hardware.the OpenGL specification defines a software interface that can be implemented on a wide range of graphics devices ranging from simple frame buffers to fully hardware-accelerated geometry processors, by Kevin J.

Lefebvre and John M. Brown, pg 6-8An Overview of th HP OpenGL Software Architecture.OpenGL is a hardware-indepent specification of a 3D graphics programming interface.

This specifications has been implemented on many different vendors platforms with different CPU types and graphics hardware, ranging from PC-based board solutions to high-performance workstations, by Kevin J. Lefebvre, Robert J. Casey, Michael J.

Phelps, Courtney D. Goeltzenleuchter, and Donley B. Hoffman, pg 9-18The DirectModel Toolkit: Meeting the 3D Graphics Needs of Technical Applications.the increasing use of 3D modeling for highly complex mechanical designs has led to a demand for systems that can provide smooth interactivity with 3D models containing millions or even billions of polygons, by Brian E. Cripe and Thomas A.

Gaskins, pg 19-27An Overview of the VISUALIZE fx Graphics Accelerator Hardware.three graphics accelerator products with different levels of performance are based on varying combinations of five custom integrated circuits. In addition, these products are the first ones from Hewlett-Packard to provide native acceleration for the OpenGL API, by Noel D. Scott, Daniel M. Olsen, and Ethan W. Gannett, pg 28-34HP Kayak: A PC Workstation with Advanced Graphics Performance.world-leading 3D graphics performance, normally only found in a UNIX workstation, is provided in a PC workstation platform running the Windows NT operating system. This system was put together with a time to market of less than one year from project initiation to shipment, by Ross A.

Cunniff, pg 35-40Concurrent Engineering in OpenGL's Product Development.time to market was reduced when tasks that had been traditionally serialized were completed in parallel, by Robert J. Leonard Lindstone, pg 41-45Advance Display Technologies on HP-UX Workstations.multiple monitors can be configured as a contiguous viewing space to provide more screen space so that users can see most, if not all, of their applications without any special windown manipulations, by Todd M.

Spencer, Paul M.Anderson, and David Sweetser, pg 46-50Delivering PCI in HP B-Class and C-Class Workstations: A Case Study in the Challenges of Interfacing with Industry Standards.in the highly competitive workstation market,m customers demand a wide range of cost-effective, high-performance I/O solutions. An industry-standard I/O subsystem allows HP workstations to support the latest I/O technology, by Ric L. Lewis, Erin A. Handgen, Nicholas J. Ingegneri, and Glen T.

Grewe Scanner Interface Professional Resume Free

Robinson, pg 51-61Linking Enterprise Business Systems to the Factory Floor.information is the fuel that drives today's business enterprises. The ability to link different components in the enterprise together in a user-friendly and transparent manner increases the effectiveness of companies involved in manufacturing and production, by Kenn S. Jennyc, pg 62-73Knowledge Harvesting, Articulation, and Delivery.harnessing expert knowledge and automating this knowledge to help solve problems have been the goals of researchers and software practioners since the early days of artifical intelligence.

A tool is described that offers a semiautomated way for software support personnel to use the vast knowledge and experience of experts to provide support to customers, by Kemal A. Delic and Dominique Lahaix, pg 74-81A Theoretical Derivation of Relationships Between Forecast Errors.this paper studies errors in forecasting the demand for a component used by several products. Because data for the component demand (both actual demand and forecast demand) at the aggregate product level is easier to obtain than at the individual product level, the study focuses on the theoretical relationships between forecast errors at these two levels, by Jerry Z. Shan, pg 82-88Strengthening Software Quality Assurance.increasing time-to-market pressures in recent years have resulted in a deterioration of the quality of software entering the system test phase. At HP's Kobe Instrument Division, the software quality assurance process was reengineered to ensure that released software is as defect-free as possible, by Mutsuhiko Asada and Pong Mang Yan, pg 89-97A Compiler for HP VEE.with the addition of a compiler, HP VEE programs can now benefit from improved execution speed and still provide the advantage of an interactive interpreter, by Steven Greenbaum and Stanley Jefferson, pg 98-99Cover: the 150-MHz-bandwiddth membrane hyrophone is described. The signal is generated by a 20-MHz focused ultrasound transducer driving water into a non-linear state.A 150-MHz-Bandwidth Membrane Hydrophone for Acoustic Field Characterization.to measure the beam parameters of intravascular ultrasound imaging transducers with operating center frequencies exceeding 20 MHz and beamwidths below 200 um, a hydrophone with a spot diameter less than 50 um and a bandwidth greater than 150 MHz is required.

The hydrophone described in this article is a step towards meeting these requirements, by Paul Lum, Michael Greenstein, Edward D. Verdonk, Charles Grossman Jr., and Thomas L. Szabo, pg 6-16Units, Traceability, and Calibration of Optical Instruments.this article presents a short and comprehensive overview of the art of units measurement and calibration. Although the examples focus on optical instruments, the article may be of interest to anyone interested in metrology, by Andreas Gerster, pg 17-29Techniques for Higher-Performance Boolean Equivalence Verification.the techniques and algorithms presented in this paper are a result of six years experience in researching, developing, and integrating Boolean equivalence verification into the HP Convex Division's ASIC design flow. We have discovered that a high-performance equivalence checker is attainable through careful memory management, the use of bus grouping techniques during the RTL-to-equation translation process, hierarchical to flat name mapping considerations, subequivalence point cone partitioning, solving the false negative verification problem, and building minimal binary decision diagrams, by Harry D. Foster, pg 30-38On-Chip Cross Talk Noise Model for Deep-Submicrometer ULSI Interconnect.a simple closed-form model for calculating cross talk noise on signal lines in deep-submicrometer interconnect systems has accuracy comparable to SPICE for an arbitrary ramp input rate.

Interconnect resistance, interconnect capacitance, and driver resistance are all taken into account. The model is suitable for rapid cross talk estimation and signal integrity verification, by Samuel O. Nakagawa, Dennis M. Sylvester, John G. McBride, and Soo-Young Oh, pg 39-45Theory and Design of CMOS HSTL I/O Pads.to control reflections, the impedence of integrated circuit output pad drivers must be matched to the impedance of the transmission lines to which the pads are connected. HP's HSTL (high-speed transceiver logic) controlled impedence I/O pads use an on-chip impedence mathcing network that compensates for process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variations, by Gerald L.

And Robert B. Manley, pg 46-52A Low-Cost RF Multichip Module Packaging Family.these packages provides much lower cost than traditional high-frequency packaging, shielding, and interconnects, while still providing low-reflection transitions and high electrical isolation, by Lewis R. Dove, Martin L. Guth, and Dean B. Nicholson, pg 53-60Testing with the HP 9490 Mixed-Signal LSI Tester.the tester's features include a timing interval analyzer for statistical analysis of clock periods, synchronous generation of arbitrary waveforms with respect to master digital clocks, and a library of digital signal processing routines. These features have been applied to production measurements of key parameters like AGC loop bandwidth, phase-loced loop timing jitter, and ADC signal-to-noise ratio and distoration parameters, by Matthew M.

Brog and Kalwant Singh, pg 61-70Reliability Enhancement of Surface Mount Light-Emitting Diodes for Automotive Applications.preencapsulation drying eliminates broken stitch bonds and reduces inconsistent reliability performance. A new casting epoxy formulation stops epoxy cracking, and optimization of the die-attach epoxy cure schedule solves lifted die-attach and delamanation problems, by Koay Ban-Kuan, Leong Ak-Wing, Tan Boon-Chun, and Yoong Tze-Kwan, pg 71-80Engineering Surfaces in Ceramic Pin Grid Array Packaging to Inhibit Epoxy Bleeding.bleeding of epoxy resin around surfaces undergoing bonding during electronic packaging assembly has long caused sporadic yield loss. Previously, it was thought that vacuum baking reduced the yield loss resulting from surface contaminants.

Although vacuum baking inhibits epoxy resin bleeding, it also produces coatings of hydrocarbons, which affect surface wettability and surface energy. Surfactant coating results in a surface chemistry similar to vacuum-baked substrates but it a better alternative because of its controllability, by Ningxia Tan, Kenneth H. Lim, Bernard Chin, and Anthony J. Bourdillon, pg 81-90Cover: the lower-left pictures shows the SnapLED emitters that are attached to a clinch frame to make up the fully assembled SnapLED array shown in the upper-right picture.

The other pictures show two more configurations of fully assembled SnapLED arraysHP SnapLED: LED Assemblies for Automotive Signal Lighting.decreased packaging cost and improved performance have helped LEDs gain acceptance as light sources in automative applications such as signal lighting. An assembly technique is described that allows the creation of thin taillamps that can be customized to conform to the shape of a particular vehicle, by James W. Stewart, pg 1-12OTDR APIs Enable Customers to Build Their Own Systems.in the past few years, OTDRs have evolved from being used only as standalone measurement instruments with limited functionality to become key instruments for servicing and characterizing global fibert-optic communication links. This trend has spurred the creation of standard file formats for OTDR data and standard software interfaces to control OTDRs remotely, by Torsten Born and Peter Thoma, pg 13-20Updating a UNIX Application Suite for the Windows NT World.a project team learned some useful lessons in porting a real-time software platform for industrial applications to an environment that typically runs desktop applications such as word processors, database programs and spreadsheet applications, by Thomas W.

Hutchinson and Ronald R. Derynck, pg 21-25Integrating Real-Time Systems with Corporate Information Systems.integrating distibuted systems involves more than just connecting different communications techologies.

It also involves connecting different information environments, by Ronald R. Derynck and Thomas W. Hutchinson, pg 26-28New Approaches to Creating and Testing Internationalized Software.creating high-quality software that runs in any language is a big challenge. By changing our development process to stress early defect detection and by using the World Wide Web as a collaboration tool, we have dramatically improved the quality of our internationalized software, by Harry J.

Robinson and Sankar L. Chakrabarti, pg 29-36Comparison of Finite-Difference and SPICE Tools for Thermal Modeling of the Effects of Nonuniform Power Generation in High-Power CPUs.this paper describes a thermal study of junction temperature variation across the surface of a large CPU resulting from nonuniform power generation. Results from Flotherm finite-difference thermal analysis software were compared to results from a SPICE simulation. Both simulations provided results close to measured values. Each tool offered strengths and benefits in different areas, by Jeffrey L.

Grewe scanner interface professional resume free

Deeney and C. Michael Ramsey, pg 37-45A Low-Complexity, Fixed-Rate Compression Scheme for Color Images and Documents.based on one-dimensional differential pulse code modulation, the coder is multiplication-free, codes each pixel as soon as it is available, and outputs a fixed number of bits for each pixel.

Hence, there is no need for any buffering of the input image or coder output bitstream. The compression scheme is visually lossless and yields a modest compression ratio of 3 to 4. Because of its simplicity, it is useful when hardware is limited and coding delays cannot be tolerated, by Nader Moayeri, pg 46-521997Cover: the neonatal version of a family of sensors used for monitoring oxygen saturation levels in a patient's bloodSoftBench 5.0: The Evolution of an Integrated Software Development Environment.the vision and objectives of the original SoftBench product have enabled it to continue to be a leader in the integrated software development market. For example, since SoftBench 1.0 over 80 third-party software tools have been integrated with SoftBench, by Deborah A.

Lienhart, pg 6-11Applying a Process Improvement Model to SoftBench 5.0, by Deborah A. Lienhart, Scott Jordan, pg 8The C SoftBench Class Editor.the C SoftBench class editor adds automatic code generation capabilities to the class graph of the SoftBench static analyzer. Novice C programmers can concentrate on their software designs and have the computer handle C's esoteric syntax. Experienced C programmers benefit from smart batch editing functionality and by having the computer quickly generate the program skelton, by Julie B.

Wilson, pg 12-15The SoftBench Static Analysis Database.the static analysis database supports the SoftBench static analyzer and the C, C, FORTRAN, Pascal, and Ada programming languages. The underlying data is isolated by a complier interface and a tool interface, by by Robert C. Bethke, pg 16-18CodeAdvisor: Rule-Based C Defect Detection Using a Static Analysis Database.C SoftBench CodeAdvisor is an automated error detection tool for the C language. It uses detailed semantic information available in the SoftBench static database to detect high-level problems not typically found by compliers. This paper describes CodeAdvisor and identifies the advantages of static over run-time error checking, by Timothy J. Duesing, John R. Diamant, pg 19-21Using SoftBench to Integrate Heterogeneous Software Development Environments.migrating from mainframe-based computing to client/server-based computing can result in a heterogeneous collection of machines that do not interoperate, forcing software developers to deal with unfamiliar system commands and systems that cannot share data.

A SoftBench control daemon is described that enables developers to integrate heterogeneous computing systems into efficient, tightly coupled software development environments with consistent, easy-to-use graphical user interfaces across all machines, by Stephen A. Williams, pg 22-27The Supply Chain Approach to Planning and Procurement Management.the supply chain approach models stochastic events influencing a manufacturing organization's shipment and inventory performance in the same way that a mechanical engineer models tolerance buildup in a new product design. The objectives are to minimize on-hand inventory and optimize supplier response time, by Gregory A.

Your can be one of the most important parts of your resume. Especially in combination and functional resume formats, be sure to make this a central section. Customer Service and CommunicationAn important part of your work as a Delivery Driver will be to interface with the recipients of the items you’re delivering. Being friendly, understanding, and willing to listen will get you a long way.Sometimes problems pop up, and you have to act as the intermediary between your store or warehouse and the customer. Being able to clearly describe issues and problem-solve is important. Licenses and Driving ProficiencyObviously, as a professional driver, you will need to have top notch driving skills.

We don’t mean racing skills though – you will need to drive safely and have a good understanding of local laws. Also having is very important to make sure you don’t get fined and your company doesn’t get in trouble.

Grewe scanner interface professional resume examples

Many states require special commercial licenses. Furthermore, if your van or truck is over a certain size, you will need to be certified to drive it.If you have any of these added certifications or skills, it also means you can ask for higher pay.There are other examples of driving certifications. Some states require that you have HazMat certification to transport various materials.

Others require specific training. If you have any of these added certifications or skills, it also means you can ask for higher pay. So be sure to list the right certifications for the job you want!. Basic Auto Inspection, Maintenance, and RepairAs a delivery driver, your car, van, or truck is your best friend and most important tool. If it’s not in tip top condition you could run into trouble or lose money. To ensure a hiring manager that you can keep your vehicle in good repair, be sure to list the following skills: Check engine oilCheck engine coolantAir filterCheck automatic transmission fluidBatteryWipersTiresTire rotationCleaning and minor problems.

Soft skillsThere are a number of soft skills that will also be valuable as a Delivery Driver. While these might not always sound like the most important, listing a few of them on your resume will ensure your future boss you have the right touch for the position. Here are a few solid ones for Delivery Drivers: Attention to detailPatienceHardworkingSelf-starterGood judgementCalm under pressureAttentiveStrong troubleshooterGood memory3. Wrapping UpNow that you have the tools to write your resume, you should make sure you get all the right sections on the document. Always start with your name and contact information. You can also include a resume introduction, with an overview of your qualifications or a career objective. Next, depending on what format you chose, put your work history (for chronological) or certifications and skills (for combination).

After that, place the opposite section depending on your format. At the bottom of the document you can list your education, but keep this section short.Be sure the text is different for job titles and job duties. Make more important information, like your name and company names, larger than more detailed items like bullet points. Consider using lines to break up the different sections.If you follow these steps, you should have a great looking resume ready to send out.

If you need more help, see our resume, and, or look at our sample above for reference.

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