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Using Net-Software in Design Education
INTERNATIONAL ENGINEERING AND PRODUCT DESIGN EDUCATION CONFERENCE 2-3 SEPTEMBER 2004 DELFT THE NETHERLANDS USING NET-SOFTWARE IN DESIGN EDUCATION Chris Baelus and Guido De Grande ABSTRACT In the early stages of the design process three major activities are involved: designing the concept, resolving the observed critical aspects and modifying the concept as a result of the previous step. This is a circular and iterative process until the final concept is ready for the detailed design phase. It is the purpose of every design method to minimize the total design time and produce well elaborated design concepts. The use of specialized software is of invaluable help in this attempt to reduce design time. A lot of different software is available on the Internet as downloadable freeware, shareware or demo versions. Most of this software has reduced capabilities; however, many software is excellent for educational purposes. We will call this software “Internet Software” or “net-software”. In this presentation two topics with respect to net-software will be discussed: 1. criteria for choosing net-software for educational purposes, and 2. the implementation of net-software in the new bachelor-master curriculum at the Higher Institute of Integrated Product Development (HIIPO) in Antwerp. A major activity in designing products is the early verification of the product concept with respect to structural, thermal and geometrical integrity. This typical verification net-software can be found in different flavours: for different applications, in different levels and with different user interfaces. Finding easy-to-use and efficient net-software is a rather straightforward task, integrating the software in the curriculum is a more difficult task. -
Electronic Circuit Simulation and PCB Design
COURSE CODE COURSE TITLE L T P C ELECTRONICS CIRCUIT SIMULATION AND PCB 1152EC239 1 0 4 3 DESIGN a. Course Category: Program Elective b. Preamble: The course is aimed at making the students to understand electronic circuit simulation process for better understanding and designing of cost effective Printed Circuit Boards. Emphasizing the students to understand how to design a PCB layout of given circuit using available circuit simulation and PCB layout design CAD tools (free or licensed) .This course helps the student to simulate the circuit, develop the complete hardware circuit on PCB and assemble the components using SMD soldering technique c. Prerequisite Courses: Nil d. Related Courses: Analog Electronics, Linear Integrated Circuits e. Course Outcomes : Upon the successful completion of the course, students will be able to: Skill Level CO Course Outcomes (Based on Dave’s Nos. Taxonomy) Simulate and perform various analysis for the given Electronic CO1 S3 Circuit. CO2 Design a PCB Layout for the given circuit S4 CO3 Fabricate the PCB and assemble the components. S2 f. Correlation of COs with POs PO1 PO2 PO3 PO4 PO5 PO6 PO7 PO8 PO9 PO10 PO11 PO12 PSO1 PSO2 CO1 L M H - H - - - M - - M H H CO2 L M H - H - - - M - - M H H CO3 L M H - H - - - M - - M H H g. Examination scheme Examination Scheme for practical dominated course Internal evaluation Semester end evaluation (40M) (60M) Laboratory experiment Model laboratory test Part-A Part-B (15M) (25M) (20M) (40M) Performa Result Viv Reco Performa Result Viv Theory Performa Result Viv nce in and a rd nce in and a questions nce in and a- conductin analys Voc (4) conductin analys Voc to evaluate conductin analys Voc g is e g is e the g is e experime (3 ) ( 3) experime (5) ( 5) knowledge experime (10) (5) nt nt and nt ( 5 ) ( 15 ) understand (25) ing (20) h. -
Metadefender Core V4.12.2
MetaDefender Core v4.12.2 © 2018 OPSWAT, Inc. All rights reserved. OPSWAT®, MetadefenderTM and the OPSWAT logo are trademarks of OPSWAT, Inc. All other trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names, and images mentioned and/or used herein belong to their respective owners. Table of Contents About This Guide 13 Key Features of Metadefender Core 14 1. Quick Start with Metadefender Core 15 1.1. Installation 15 Operating system invariant initial steps 15 Basic setup 16 1.1.1. Configuration wizard 16 1.2. License Activation 21 1.3. Scan Files with Metadefender Core 21 2. Installing or Upgrading Metadefender Core 22 2.1. Recommended System Requirements 22 System Requirements For Server 22 Browser Requirements for the Metadefender Core Management Console 24 2.2. Installing Metadefender 25 Installation 25 Installation notes 25 2.2.1. Installing Metadefender Core using command line 26 2.2.2. Installing Metadefender Core using the Install Wizard 27 2.3. Upgrading MetaDefender Core 27 Upgrading from MetaDefender Core 3.x 27 Upgrading from MetaDefender Core 4.x 28 2.4. Metadefender Core Licensing 28 2.4.1. Activating Metadefender Licenses 28 2.4.2. Checking Your Metadefender Core License 35 2.5. Performance and Load Estimation 36 What to know before reading the results: Some factors that affect performance 36 How test results are calculated 37 Test Reports 37 Performance Report - Multi-Scanning On Linux 37 Performance Report - Multi-Scanning On Windows 41 2.6. Special installation options 46 Use RAMDISK for the tempdirectory 46 3. Configuring Metadefender Core 50 3.1. Management Console 50 3.2. -
Alexis Rodriguez Jr
Alexis Rodriguez Jr. 701 SW 62nd Blvd - Apt 104 - Gainesville - FL - 32604 Cell: 305-370-8334 Email: [email protected] Education: University of Florida Gainesville, FL Current M.S. Computer and Electrical Engineering University of Florida Gainesville, FL 2018 B.S. Electrical Engineering - Cum Laude Miami Dade College Miami, FL 2013 A.A. Engineering - Computer Projects: FPGA Networking Research Current Nallatech 385a Communication Research Current Glove Controlled Drone Design 2 Fall 2017 32-bit ARM Cortex (TI MSP432) used to interpret hand gestures via sensors for drone flight, transmit user intended controls to the drone via RF communication, and detect and display communication errors and react accordingly for safety 32-bit MIPS Emulated Processor Digital Design Spring 2017 Altera Cyclone-III FPGA used to emulate MIPS processor via VHDL Guitar Tuner Design 1 Spring 2017 Microchip PIC18F4620 microcontroller and discrete analog components used to determine correct input frequency via analog filtering and DSP techniques Employment: University of Florida - ARC Lab Gainesville, FL Current Research Assistant - FPGA ❖ Research systems integration of Nallatech 385a FPGA card and its components including the Intel Arria 10 FPGA, Intel’s Avalon bus, and PCIe communication via Linux ❖ Create partial reconfiguration region for Nallatech 385a for general use in research lab ❖ Research cloud and network implementations of FPGAs Intel San Jose, CA Summer 2019/2020 Programmable Solutions Group Intern ❖ Assisted with Agilex Linux driver development ❖ ITU G spec testing compliance and characterization for IEEE 1588 on Intel N3000 ❖ Developed automated tools for ITU network timestamp testing ❖ System validation of IEEE 1588 for Wireless 5G technology and communicated need and data across many teams ❖ Developed Arduino workshop for hobbyists Alexis Rodriguez Jr. -
Altium's Journey and Its Vision of Industry Transformation
A Winning Strategy for Value-Creation ALTIUM’S JOURNEY AND ITS VISION OF INDUSTRY TRANSFORMATION 18 June 2021 Agenda 1 Altium’s Journey of Transformation 2 Uniqueness of Altium in the Engineering Software Ecosystem 3 Altium’s Confidence in its Ability to Execute 4 Our Flight Path to Dominance Outstanding Value-Creation Track-Record Over Time ALU Set in 2019 and confident of achieving $500M * Stock Price Revenue Target Set in 2016 and fell short with COVID, $189M ** Delivering Value for our Shareholders $200M is a Hallmark of Altium… Revenue Target • A history of setting and over-achieving Set in 2014 and overachieved, $110M $100M aggressive long-term financial targets Revenue Target • Eight consecutive years of double-digit revenue growth & expanding margin ? • Focused execution with the “ingenuity of and” A$41.60 delivering strong operating leverage A$10.15 • Transparency for stakeholders and all-in reporting (no capitalization of R&D expenses) A$4.36 • Value creation at every stage from leadership to dominance to industry transformation A$0.76 Performing Leading Dominating Transforming 2012 2015 2017 2020 2025 * The target revenue of $500M may include 10-20% from future acquisitions. 3 ** Three months out analysts’ consensus pointed to a revenue target of $208M for FY2020 Pursuing Dominance and Transformation from a Position of Strength Financial Altium Designer Altium 365 Performance Dominance Adoption Altium is the fastest growing EDA company Altium Designer is the most widespread The world’s first digital platform for with 8 consecutive -
Circuitmaker 2000 (The Symbol Will Be Replaced by a Rectangle)
CircuitMaker® 2000 the virtual electronics lab™ CircuitMaker User Manual advanced schematic capture mixed analog/digital simulation Revision A Software, documentation and related materials: Copyright © 1988-2000 Protel International Limited. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized duplication of the software, manual or related materials by any means, mechanical or electronic, including translation into another language, except for brief excerpts in published reviews, is prohibited without the express written permission of Protel International Limited. Unauthorized duplication of this work may also be prohibited by local statute. Violators may be subject to both criminal and civil penalties, including fines and/or imprisonment. CircuitMaker, TraxMaker, Protel and Tango are registered trademarks of Protel International Limited. SimCode, SmartWires and The Virtual Electronics Lab are trademarks of Protel International Limited. Microsoft and Microsoft Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Orcad is a registered trademark of Cadence Design Systems. PADS is a registered trademark of PADS Software. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Printed by Star Printery Pty Ltd ii Table of Contents Chapter 1: Welcome to CircuitMaker Introduction............................................................................................1-1 Required User Background..............................................................1-1 Required Hardware/Software...........................................................1-1 -
Getting Started with PCB Design
Getting Started with PCB Design This introductory tutorial is designed to give you an overview Summary of how to create a schematic, update the design information to a PCB and generate manufacturing output files. It also Tutorial investigates the concept of projects and integrated libraries TU0117 (v2.0) February 12, 2008 and provides a summary of the 3D PCB environment and creating 3D bodies for component footprints. Welcome to the world of Altium Designer – a complete electronic product development environment. This tutorial will get you started with creating a PCB project based on an astable multivibrator design. If you are new to Altium Designer then you might like read the guide Welcome to the Altium Designer Environment for an explanation of the interface, information on how to use panels and managing design documents. Creating a New PCB Project A project in Altium Designer consists of links to all documents and setups related to a design. A project file, eg. xxx.PrjPCB, is an ASCII text file that lists which documents are in the project and related output setups, eg. for printing and CAM. Documents that are not associated with a project are called ‘free documents’. Links to schematic sheets and a target output, eg. PCB, FPGA, embedded (VHDL) or library package, are added to a project. Once the project is compiled, design verification, synchronization and comparison can take place. Any changes to the original schematics or PCB, for example, are updated in the project when compiled. The process of creating a new project is the same for all project types. -
Kretskorsdesign
Kretskorsdesign Schema Nätlista Nätlista Layout Simulering Schema ● Beskriver grafiskt vilka komponenter som finns i kretsen och hur de är sammankopplade. ● Behöver inte ha någon koppling till hur kretsen ser ut fysiskt. Nätlista ● Länken mellan den grafiska beskrivningen i schemat och layout eller simulering. ● Mer eller mindre automatiskt genererad textfil med anslutningarna mellan komponenters pinnar. ● Nät kan ges beskrivande namn i schemat, tex ”GND” ● Nät med samma namn är sammankopplade. Kan användas för att få ett tydligare schema. Layout ● Fysisk beskrivning av kretsen. ● Får information om vilka komponenter(och vilken fysisk kapsel) samt anslutningar mellan dessa från nätlistan. ● Hur komponenterna placeras på kortet och hur de fysiska ledningarna ser ut är upp till den som gör layouten. Vilka program finns det? ● Det finns många alternativ... ● Eagle – Historiskt väldigt populärt. – Gratisversion upp till 2 lager och 80x100mm. – Större kort och/eller kommersiellt bruk numera endast via abonnemang. ● Diptrace – Begränsningar på antalet pinnar, 300 eller 500 för ”non-profit”. – 1000 pinnar för 125$ ”non-profit”, 395$ för motsvarande kommersiella version. Open source ● KiCad – Har utvecklats mycket senaste åren. – Fokus har varit på att förbättra layout-delen. – Nästa version kommer att innehålla b.l.a simulering(ngspice) och förbättringar i schema-delen. ● gEDA/PCB – Lite mer löst sammanhållna verktyg. – PCB är förmodligen det äldsta open-source layoutprogrammet som är aktivt, första versionen kom 1990 för Atari Online ● Easyeda – Schema/layout/simulering. – Tillverkar kort, men genererar även gerberfiler. ● Upverter ● Circuitmaker – Från Altium. – Installeras lokalt, men kräver att man är uppkopplad. Tillverkning Layout Gerber, borr-fil Gerber ● En fil per lager. – Filändelsen brukar indikera vilket lager det ska vara ● En eller två borrfiler(pläterade/opläterade hål). -
Module 11: PCB Design Flow, Transferring a Design and Navigation
Module 11: PCB Design Flow, Transferring a Design and Navigation Module 11: PCB Design Flow, Transferring a Design and Navigation 11.1 PCB design process....................................................................... 11-1 11.2 Transferring design information to the PCB.................................... 11-3 11.2.1 Design synchronization ................................................................................11-3 11.2.2 Resolving synchronization errors .................................................................11-4 11.2.3 Exercise – Transferring the design ..............................................................11-5 11.3 Using the PCB Panel ...................................................................... 11-7 11.3.1 PCB Panel....................................................................................................11-7 11.3.2 PCB Rules and Violations ..........................................................................11-14 11.3.3 Exercise – Browsing a PCB document ......................................................11-15 11.4 Project Navigation and Cross Probing ....................................... 11-16 11.4.1 Compiling the PCB project .........................................................................11-16 11.4.2 Navigating ..................................................................................................11-16 11.4.3 Cross probing from the schematic to the PCB...........................................11-17 11.4.4 Exercise — Navigation and Cross Probing................................................11-18 -
Tutorial and Design of Printed Circuit Board ”Big Blinky”
Paper ID #31292 An Electronics Lab Project—Tutorial and Design of Printed Circuit Board ”big blinky” Dr. Rod Blaine Foist, California Baptist University Rod Foist Professor (and IEEE student club advisor), Electrical and Computer Engineering, Gordon & Jill Bourns College of Engineering, California Baptist University, [email protected]. Dr. Foist received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Washington in 1982 and 1989, respectively. He earned his Ph.D. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of British Columbia in 2011, specializing in signal processing of spectroscopy data with secondary emphasis in system-on-chip implementation. His on-going research interests involve embedded processing using FPGAs and hardware acceleration of algorithms. In the fall of 2011, Dr. Foist joined the College of Engineering at California Baptist University. He is a U.S. Navy veteran who still strives to serve God and country. He has been happily married for 42 years and has four adult children and two grandchildren. Dr. John Butler, California Baptist University Dr. John Butler is currently an Assistant Professor in the department of Electrical and Computer En- gineering at California Baptist University. He received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of California, Riverside, in 2009, 2011, and 2014, respectively. In the fall of 2018 Dr. Butler joined the Gordon and Jill Bourns College of Engineering at California Baptist University as an Assistant Professor. Prior to this, he served as an Adjunct Professor since 2014. His re- search background includes nanoscale fabrication and characterization, particularly of magnetic thin films for data storage and logic devices. -
Senior Design I Report
© © hand and use every day. As the technology advances, we come up with new ways to make our lives safer and easier. Robotic systems are one of the very needs. One of the applications of these system deals with automatic detection of specific objects of interest. Object detection is mainly used for safety systems and military operations. In this project, our goal is to design an autonomous vehicle that is armed with a high-power laser gun. The robot is designed to detect balloons of specific color and eliminate them using a laser beam. This system is considered a prototype of a larger scale detection system that can be employed in a battle field. The possibility of elimination of human soldiers can save many lives, and it can also improve the performance of military operations in the field. In the design and implementation of our robotic system, we paid careful attention to three main components that make the robotic system function properly. In the image processing portion of the design, we have implemented a color-based detection algorithm that detects the colors that are very distinct and solid. We made sure that the color object detected is in fact a balloon by performing a validation test based on areas. Using the results of the image processing and the inputs from the distance measuring and obstacle avoidance sensors, the vehicle automatically approaches the target of interest. Our robotic system is very robust to changes in illumination of the environment to some extent, and the control unit of the robot is solely based on software that is interactive with the sensors outside of the robot. -
Designspark PCB PRO V10.0 Supplement 2 Designspark V10.0 Supplement
DesignSpark PCB PRO V10.0 Supplement 2 DesignSpark V10.0 Supplement Copyright Notice Copyright in the whole and every part of this software and manual belongs to RS Components and may not be used, sold, transferred, copied or reproduced in whole or in part in any manner or in any media to any person, without the prior written consent of RS Components. If you use this manual you do so at your own risk and on the understanding that neither RS Components nor associated companies shall be liable for any loss or damage of any kind. RS Components does not warrant that the software package will function properly in every hardware software environment. Although RS Components has tested the software and reviewed the documentation, RS Components makes no warranty or representation, either express or implied, with respect to this software or documentation, their quality, performance, merchantability, or fitness for a particular purpose. This software and documentation are licensed 'as is', and you the licensee, by making use thereof, are assuming the entire risk as to their quality and performance. In no event will RS Components be liable for direct, indirect, special, incidental, or consequential damage arising out of the use or inability to use the software or documentation, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. RS Components reserves the right to alter, modify, correct and upgrade our software programs and publications without notice and without incurring liability. DesignSpark is a Trademark of RS Components, Microsoft, Windows, Windows NT and Intellimouse are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.