IEEE Young Professionals Happy Hour

4729 Burnet Rd, Austin, Texas, United States

Join IEEE Young Professionals for a networking happy hour event! 4729 Burnet Rd, Austin, Texas, United States

ERCOT Odessa Disturbance Events IEEE PI2 March Tech Meeting

Bldg: Building R, Lupe Tortilla, 10515 N MoPac Expy, Austin, Texas, United States, 78759, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/351509

IEEE PI2 Austin, March 28th, 2023, Tech Meeting via WebEx and In-Person 6 PM Central / 7 PM Eastern at Lupe Tortilla off MoPac. - New Location: Lupe Tortilla, 10515 N MoPac Expy, Austin, Texas Dinner (Fajitas) and soft beverages will be provided for those with reservations. If you do not have a reservation you will not be able to eat. Cost, to defray the room, dinner and refreshments cost. Thank you in advance: - All Attendees: In-person Choices: - $25.00 Paypal from your card when registering - you do not need a Paypal account to use it. Click through to the credit/debit page. - $25.00 credit/debit with Square at the meeting. Please resister in advance (skip the payment) - YOU MUST REGISTER FOR THE OPTIONS ABOVE - $30.00 cash at the meeting - On-Line- $5.00 Paypal (you don’t need to have an account to pay) - IEEE Student Members - free (must register in advance with your IEEE member number) The WebEx information will be emailed to you the day of the event. Contact [email protected] if you have any questions or do not receive the WebEx details. For PDH hours, please email the PI2 Secretary, Haley Hirschfield at [email protected] or [email protected]. Abstract This talk will provide an overview of two major Inverter Based Resource (IBR) events occurring on May 9th, 2021 and June 4th, 2022, originating in West Texas, informally known as the “Odessa Events”. These events resulted in the tripping of numerous inverter based generators in West Texas on the ERCOT system. The scope of this discussion will include: - Details concerning the origin and impact of each event - Causes of each solar PV reduction on the ERCOT system - Explanation of each inverter fault code - Corrective actions determined by discussions between ERCOT and inverter Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) - Summary of ERCOT activities in response to Odessa Events Speaker(s): Julia Hariharan, Agenda: Mixer/Food-Refreshments/Sign-In: 6:00 PM to 6:30 PM Program: 6:30 PM to 7:45 PM Networking: 7:45 PM to 8:00 PM Bldg: Building R, Lupe Tortilla, 10515 N MoPac Expy, Austin, Texas, United States, 78759, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/351509

Space Communications, a Review

Bldg: Ingram School of Engineering, 601 University Dr., San Marcos, Texas, United States, 78666

We are pleased to invite Distinguished Speaker T. Scott Atkinson to Austin and be part of a special program prepared for IEEE Central Texas Austin member community. The event is sponsored by several chapters IEEE CTS ComSoc/SP/CTSoc, Computer/EMBS, LM, CTCN, ComSoc/SP of Lone Star section. In-Person Location: Ingram School of Engineering, San Marcos University Date: March 30, 2023 Time: 11:30 am – 1:30 pm Including Networking and F&B Cost: none Talk Title: Space Communications, a Review Distinguished Speaker: Scott Atkinson, Treasurer, IEEE Lone Star Section, Chair, Life Members Affinity Gp, IEEE Lone Star Section, Chapter Treasurer: San Antonio Com/SP, Computer & TEMS Abstract: NASA’s reliable space communications and navigation (SCaN) networks are the backbone of all of NASA’s space missions, providing the critical communications services for all earth, space science, and human space missions. This includes all the telemetry, tracking, and commanding required by each spacecraft to transfer key data to the ground systems to manage space operations. Bio: T. Scott Atkinson, IEEE Life Senior Member, ComSoc Life Senior Member, Computer Society Life Senior Member and Technology Engineering and Management Society Life Senior Member, has been a member of the IEEE Communications Society since 1968. Over the years he has attended and participated in over 20 ComSoc Flagship conferences and was Executive Chair of the Globecom 2014 in Austin. In his career, he was initially in the U. S. Air force, serving as a Communications Officer. His next position was as a Communications Engineer working for Lockheed Electronics Company at the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center near Houston. He worked on the Apollo Command Module/Lunar Module Communications system testing with primary focus on the Data Storage Equipment (DSE) essentially the black Box of the Command and Lunar Modules. Next, he served 14 years as a Communications Engineer and Project Manager for a Houston based company called Tenneco. Finally, before retirement, he worked for the San Antonio based United Services Automobile Association (USAA) as a senior Tech Support Engineer on their Worldwide Communications system. The main focus was on their telephone switching systems and voice/data integration. In retirement, he became an independent Telecommunications Consultant working for USAA and several other major clients before retiring completely in 2009. At that time, he became a full-time volunteer at IEEE for the Communications Society, Region 5 and the Member Geographic Area Board. His held two significant positions: Chair of the IEEE Geographic Unit Operations Support Committee and chair of the Life Members Committee. He occasionally provides presentations to IEEE units on Space Communications, major world telescopes and Home Automation. He is also on the ComSoc History Committee where he performs Oral Histories and supports their IEEE Milestone applications. He and his wife Margaret have two adult daughters and currently lives in San Antonio. If help is needed, please connect with: Prof. Semih Aslan, [email protected]. or Fawzi Behmann, [email protected] Agenda: Agenda 11:30 am 11:35 am introduction 11:35 am - 12:35 pm Talk & Q& A 12:35 pm - 1:00 pm Membership 1:00 pm - 1:30 pm Recap & Networking Bldg: Ingram School of Engineering, 601 University Dr., San Marcos, Texas, United States, 78666

Space Communications, a Review

Bldg: Ingram School of Engineering, 601 University Dr., San Marcos, Texas, United States, 78666

We are pleased to invite special guest speaker T. Scott Atkinson to Austin and be part of a special program prepared for IEEE Central Texas Austin member community. The event is sponsored by several chapters IEEE CTS ComSoc/SP/CTSoc, Computer/EMBS, LM, and CTCN In-Person Location: Ingram School of Engineering, San Marcos University Date: March 30, 2023 Time: 11:30 am – 1:30 pm Including Networking and F&B Cost: none Talk Title: Space Communications, a Review Presenter: Scott Atkinson, Treasurer, IEEE Lone Star Section, Chair, Life Members Affinity Gp, IEEE Lone Star Section, Chapter Treasurer: San Antonio Com/SP, Computer & TEMS Abstract: NASA’s reliable space communications and navigation (SCaN) networks are the backbone of all of NASA’s space missions, providing the critical communications services for all earth, space science, and human space missions. This includes all the telemetry, tracking, and commanding required by each spacecraft to transfer key data to the ground systems to manage space operations. Bio: T. Scott Atkinson, IEEE Life Senior Member, ComSoc Life Senior Member, Computer Society Life Senior Member and Technology Engineering and Management Society Life Senior Member, has been a member of the IEEE Communications Society since 1968. Over the years he has attended and participated in over 20 ComSoc Flagship conferences and was Executive Chair of the Globecom 2014 in Austin. In his career, he was initially in the U. S. Air force, serving as a Communications Officer. His next position was as a Communications Engineer working for Lockheed Electronics Company at the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center near Houston. He worked on the Apollo Command Module/Lunar Module Communications system testing with primary focus on the Data Storage Equipment (DSE) essentially the black Box of the Command and Lunar Modules. Next, he served 14 years as a Communications Engineer and Project Manager for a Houston based company called Tenneco. Finally, before retirement, he worked for the San Antonio based United Services Automobile Association (USAA) as a senior Tech Support Engineer on their Worldwide Communications system. The main focus was on their telephone switching systems and voice/data integration. In retirement, he became an independent Telecommunications Consultant working for USAA and several other major clients before retiring completely in 2009. At that time, he became a full-time volunteer at IEEE for the Communications Society, Region 5 and the Member Geographic Area Board. His held two significant positions: Chair of the IEEE Geographic Unit Operations Support Committee and chair of the Life Members Committee. He occasionally provides presentations to IEEE units on Space Communications, major world telescopes and Home Automation. He is also on the ComSoc History Committee where he performs Oral Histories and supports their IEEE Milestone applications. He and his wife Margaret have two adult daughters and currently lives in San Antonio. If help is needed, please connect with: Prof. Semih Aslan, [email protected]. or Fawzi Behmann, [email protected] Agenda: Agenda 11:30 am 11:35 am introduction 11:35 am - 12:35 pm Talk & Q& A 12:35 pm - 1:00 pm Membership 1:00 pm - 1:30 pm Recap & Networking Bldg: Ingram School of Engineering, 601 University Dr., San Marcos, Texas, United States, 78666

Feed Your Mind – Highly-Efficient Machine Learning Without Neural Networks

Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/352167

Thanks to electronic enabling technologies, machine learning (ML) has gained momentum to get a pervasive paradigm in many applications due to the unquestionable results achieved. Yet, ML appears as a misused buzzword for attracting scientific interest and curiosity. The main problem of ML is the vastity of the tools and techniques mostly linked to neural network architec-tures. In this presentation, I will show how a niche of ML, based on statistical inference, could achieve highly reliable predictive models on reduced da-tasets. Instead of increasing the architectures to follow the algorithmic com-plexity, I will show a reverse approach, where the simplicity of the predictive models could be embedded in simple, low-power architectures. The main ad-vantages of these techniques are first to avoid complex elaborations, being suitable for edge computing, and secondly to develop tools on a robust mathe-matical background, such as multivariate analysis helping the developers to a critical understanding of the raw data. I will show results on different appli-cations based on spectral sensing information processing in precision agricul-ture and structural engineering and how this approach could be extended to any kind of spectral sensing (microwave, mm-wave, terahertz radiation, ultra-sound, optical, infra-red, mass spectroscopy). Speaker(s): Marco Tartagni, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/352167

Faculty Seminar: Viktor Podolskiy

MER Building #160, 10100 Burnet Road, Austin, Texas, United States, 78758

Viktor Podolskiy presents on "Unlocking diffraction: diffractive optics for generating and characterizing sub-wavelength information" MER Building #160, 10100 Burnet Road, Austin, Texas, United States, 78758

Space Communications, a Review

Room: #8, Asian American Resource Center, 8401 Cameron Road, Austin, Texas, United States, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/352775

We are pleased to invite Distinguished Speaker T. Scott Atkinson to Austin and be part of a special program prepared for IEEE Central Texas Austin member community. The event is sponsored by several chapters IEEE CTS ComSoc/SP/CTSoc, Computer/EMBS, LM, and CTCN In-Person Location: AARC - 8401 Cameron Rd, Room #8, Austin, TX (easy to reach from I35) Virtual connection will be offered to those who can't make it and select virtual in registration. Date: March 30, 2023 Time: 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm Including Networking and F&B Cost: none Talk Title: Space Communications, a Review Distinguished Speaker: Scott Atkinson, Treasurer, IEEE Lone Star Section, Chair, Life Members Affinity Gp, IEEE Lone Star Section, Chapter Treasurer: San Antonio Com/SP, Computer & TEMS Abstract: NASA’s reliable space communications and navigation (SCaN) networks are the backbone of all of NASA’s space missions, providing the critical communications services for all earth, space science, and human space missions. This includes all the telemetry, tracking, and commanding required by each spacecraft to transfer key data to the ground systems to manage space operations. Bio: T. Scott Atkinson, IEEE Life Senior Member, ComSoc Life Senior Member, Computer Society Life Senior Member and Technology Engineering and Management Society Life Senior Member, has been a member of the IEEE Communications Society since 1968. Over the years he has attended and participated in over 20 ComSoc Flagship conferences and was Executive Chair of the Globecom 2014 in Austin. In his career, he was initially in the U. S. Air force, serving as a Communications Officer. His next position was as a Communications Engineer working for Lockheed Electronics Company at the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center near Houston. He worked on the Apollo Command Module/Lunar Module Communications system testing with primary focus on the Data Storage Equipment (DSE) essentially the black Box of the Command and Lunar Modules. Next, he served 14 years as a Communications Engineer and Project Manager for a Houston based company called Tenneco. Finally, before retirement, he worked for the San Antonio based United Services Automobile Association (USAA) as a senior Tech Support Engineer on their Worldwide Communications system. The main focus was on their telephone switching systems and voice/data integration. In retirement, he became an independent Telecommunications Consultant working for USAA and several other major clients before retiring completely in 2009. At that time, he became a full-time volunteer at IEEE for the Communications Society, Region 5 and the Member Geographic Area Board. His held two significant positions: Chair of the IEEE Geographic Unit Operations Support Committee and chair of the Life Members Committee. He occasionally provides presentations to IEEE units on Space Communications, major world telescopes and Home Automation. He is also on the ComSoc History Committee where he performs Oral Histories and supports their IEEE Milestone applications. He and his wife Margaret have two adult daughters and currently lives in San Antonio. If help is needed, please connect with: Fawzi Behmann, [email protected] or Kai Wong, [email protected] Agenda: Agenda 5:30 pm - 6:00 pm Arrival on site & networking 6:00 pm - 6:10 pm Update & Introduction 6:10 pm - 7:15 pm Talk and Q&A 7:25 pm - 7:40 pm Recap & Networking 7:45 pm Adjourn Room: #8, Asian American Resource Center, 8401 Cameron Road, Austin, Texas, United States, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/352775

IEEE CTS Monthly Conference Call

Zoom, Austin, Texas, United States

Monthly CTS Exec Committee Phone Call - via Zoom. An email with reminder Zoom information will be sent to you before the call. Agenda: Proposed Agenda 1.Roll Call 2.Officers Update a. Chairman: - Sections Congress b. Vice Chair: c. Secretary: Chapter/Affinity Groups reporting & L31 d. Treasurer - Budget as of end of previous month 3. Special Events Update - PI2 Workshop on National Electric Safety Code 4. Students Brief Update: a. Student Branch Activities (Larry) b. Outreach Community Projects (Semih) 5. Chapters/Affinity groups & Chapter Vitality a. Life Members (Bill Martino) b. Consultants Network (Luis Bast) c. WIE (Leslie Martinich) d. YP (Haley Hirschfield) 6. Standing Committees/Coordinators Update a. Member Development (James) b. Newsletter/Website (Dennis , Martha) c. Sr. Member Upgrade (James) d. Finance (James) e. STEM (John Purvis), f. PACE (Norma), g. P&P (Tom) Zoom, Austin, Texas, United States

IEEE YP Officer Meeting 04/06/2023

Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/355996

Officer meeting to discuss tasks and scheduling of future events. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/355996

IEEE 802.11be/Extremely High Throughput (EHT)

Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/353460

IEEE 802.11be, which is also known as Wi-Fi 7, is the next amendment to the IEEE 802.11 standard for wireless local area networks (WLAN). This amendment is anticipated to greatly enhance the performance of indoor and outdoor WLAN operations at both stationary and pedestrian speeds in the 2.4, 5, and 6 GHz frequency bands. Wi-Fi 7, also called Extremely High Throughput (EHT), is set to provide multi-gigabit Wi-Fi with faster speeds, less interference, and better performance for high-bandwidth online activities. The new standard is expected to achieve a theoretical maximum speed of 30 Gbit/s, which is a significant improvement from the previous standard, IEEE 802.11ax. In this talk, Laurent Cariou will deliver a high-level overview of the features that are defined in the upcoming standard. Additionally, he will briefly introduce the next activity in 802.11, known as Ultra High Reliability (UHR), which is expected to become Wi-Fi 8. Biography Laurent Cariou earned his Ph.D. in electronics from the National Institute of Applied Sciences in Rennes, France in 2003 and 2006, respectively. He has spent over a decade working in IEEE 802.11 and currently serves as Intel's principal engineer and technical lead for mainstream Wi-Fi in 802.11. Cariou played a key role in establishing the High-Efficiency WLAN (HEW) group that eventually led to the development of 802.11ax and Wi-Fi 6. Recently, he also initiated the Extremely High Throughput (EHT) activity. Currently, Cariou holds the position of vice-chair for the 11be/EHT task group (Wi-Fi 7) and is also the chair for the Ultra-High Reliability (UHR – Wi-Fi 8) study group. At the time of the meeting join us at https://simnet.zoom.us/j/92929670021?pwd=TDBXeFVOUTBkQUkxbW5jTGx0eis1UT09 Co-sponsored by: Pradeep Kumar Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/353460