Friday, March 15, 2019

A Friday Story - Enjoy! This guy sounds a Lot like me in the early days....

This is from ECN Magazine.  If you have a story contact Jennifer at the address below.

Link to story is below, I have included the text part in case you don’t want to read online.
Just click on the link.

This week’s story comes to us from ECN reader Sudipto Bose, general manager, automotive and time domain solutions, Tektronix.


Sudipto Bose- general manager, automotive and time domain solutions, Tektronix


Growing up in a small town in India, I always knew I’d become an engineer. The same way you support a certain sports team: you don’t decide, you just know.

This was probably due to my father who was a chemical engineer. He would say, “This is the school you’ll go to, this is the degree you’ll get, this is the company you’ll work for.”

And luckily, it all made sense to me. I liked math. I liked physics. I liked analytics. And I liked being able to take all those skills and use them to create something. I’m the first to admit there was just a little pressure at play too.

When I look back now, I don’t know if it was my love of math or fear of my dad that made me an engineer. Perhaps both helped.

When I was fifteen, I decided to take my key chain apart. It had six buttons, each with a different sound. For my classmates and me, the best (and most irritating) sound was, of course, the ambulance siren. We’d wait until a serious, silent moment in a lesson and suddenly set it off—our favorite prank.

Anyway, we liked this noise, but we had a problem: it wasn’t loud enough for us. It was a little annoying, sure, but we were aiming for ultimate irritation. We wanted window-shaking levels of noise.

So, I started tinkering. I converted the battery system to run from the wall socket. I changed the voltage, rerouted the wires, flicked the switch and—yep, it blew up in my face. Maybe that was karma.

After that, I set off a few more explosions before deciding to settle on a safer area of engineering: microelectronics. Things still blow up, and okay, that can get expensive—but you’re not likely to start any fires (which is probably a good thing, considering my track record).

Most engineers have a “when I blew this up” story. It’s par for the course when you’re trying to create something new. And that skill—creating something new—is part of what has always drawn me to engineering. You get to combine these really rational disciplines (analytics, math, physics) with this ability to solve problems—even bigger problems than “this annoying noise isn’t annoying enough.”

Problem solving is a big part of what I have done throughout my career as a semiconductor engineer and now as general manager for automotive and time domain solutions at Tektronix.

That’s why I admire Elon Musk. He’s solving problems too, but tomorrow’s problems—like space travel. At Tektronix, we work in a similar way: just look at what we’re doing in automotive power, which is the area I lead. We’re already planning how to get ahead, not just for the next seven years, but the next seventy.

We’re solving tomorrow’s problems too (and only very occasionally blowing things up).

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And "Letting The Smoke" out & trying to put it back in too!

All For Now Coments Are Invited

 
WØNQX - AKA DrSm0ke

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Sent from the edge of the galaxy, by sm0ke signal🔥


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