I'm an electrical engineer with experience in automotive electronics looking for contracts. I left full-time salary a few months ago but would be willing to go salary again if a good opportunity comes along.
Location: Novi, MI
Remote: If needed. I have basic lab equipment (oscilloscope, power supply, etc)
I paid* for and passed the cyber-security specialization from the University of Maryland. Overall I think it was worth it since I learned a lot and met some interesting people. Half of the courses were substantially less useful than the other half (Hardware Security / Usable Security were not as informative as Software Security / Cryptography). I added the specialization to my LinkedIn profile & Resume but I've never had anyone ask about it.
Coincidentally at my old job I was the cyber-security expert for my domain (HW), which only meant that I would be assigned to security relevant programs if we got any (we didn't), and they paid to send me to Defcon. They didn't even know I was taking the specialization, just that I like to talk about security.
*I say paid because I just got a refund since apparently there are some issues with migrating courses to a new format and not offering enough of them this year.
Altium does an amazing job with their integrated libraries. You create an integrated library, add a schematic library and a footprint library to it, and compile it like any other design project. You can also use supplier search to import part parameters from distributors.
Has KiCAD improved their schematic/footprint library management? Last time I tried to use it (2 or 3 years ago) it drove me crazy with how difficult it was to use.
I've used Diptrace, KiCad, Altium, and Cadence Allegro and KiCad was by far the worst of these for handling parts.
It appears that there are two issues that affect small parts of the captured datasets:
1) Colored character names are not handled properly. I looked for <th> tags, not <th bgcolor="beige"> tags.
2) Character names that start with a lower case character are not handled. This may have to do with other episodes using lower case prefixed table headers for stage directions, I have to double check.
That being said I still am a supporter of digital technical books. The information goes out of date too quickly for a physical book to be useful. However, if you want to read Homer's The Iliad, it may be better to have a physical copy you can read before bed and retain on your shelves for easy access.
Location: Novi, MI
Remote: If needed. I have basic lab equipment (oscilloscope, power supply, etc)
Willing to relocate: Yes
Technologies: Circuit design, PCB layout, Altium Designer 16, Python
Résumé/CV: http://mutantelectron.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Bob_Ada...
Email: [email protected]