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1 avril 2014 2 01 /04 /avril /2014 01:03

The Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) is hosting its annual Conference and Exhibition<http://tac-atc.ca/en/conference> this year in Montreal, Quebec from September 28 to October 1st. We are anticipating over 1400 delegates and partners.

This year marks the Association’s 100th anniversary and we would like to take this opportunity to tell you a little about what we have to offer that may be of interest to you and your students.

The conference program will feature more than 70 sessions, panels and workshops with a wide variety of technical, professional and networking events over three and a half days, including special events celebrating TAC's centennial anniversary, featuring components from the Transportation 2014<http://www.transportation2014.ca/> campaign, a Showcase, alumni event and more.

The preliminary program and registration rates will be posted online at www.tac-atc.ca<http://www.tac-atc.ca> shortly and full-time registered students’ basic registration is FREE!  A student registration option including meals and events is also available for $449.

In addition to this, the Soils and Materials and Pavement Standing Committees are co-hosting a student essay competition:

A Student’s Perspective: Vision into Pavements of the Future
This student essay competition will serve to highlight a student’s vision of pavements over the next 100+ years. Six (6) students will be selected to present at the TAC Conference in a podium session. Essays that are not selected may be invited to submit a poster to the student poster competition at the conference.

Essays must be between 2-4 pages including figures and tables.

To submit an essay, create a profile and upload your essay online<http://events.decorporate.ca/myabstract>. Deadline to submit is April 30, 2014

More information is available on the TAC Call for Submissions website page<http://tac-atc.ca/en/call-papers>.

Contact Katherine Presz at kpresz@tac-atc.ca<mailto:kpresz@tac-atc.ca> for questions.

Please take a moment to forward this email or information about the student essay to your colleagues and students.

Thank you for your time, we hope to see you in September!!


[JA Maltais - English]<http://www.tac-atc.ca/>

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22 mars 2014 6 22 /03 /mars /2014 14:08

Around the world: this events calendar presents some important robotics events:

 

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14 décembre 2011 3 14 /12 /décembre /2011 06:25

ACE CONFERENCE 2012
15 - 16 March 2012, Dexter House, London, UK

DOWNLOAD BROCHURE >> Register by 13/01/12 to save £200

 

At theACE conferenceyou will gain insight into how control, automation and
instrumentation specialists in the oil, gas and power generation industries are:

  1. Managing, updating and replacinglegacy control systems
  2. Extending the life of ageing systems
  3. Rationalising alarms to reduce the risk ofalarm floods
  4. Implementingvirtualisationsoftware andwireless transmission systemsfor smoother operations
  5. Managing and modernisingSafety Instrumented Systems
  6. Improving design and implementing new technologies toreduce human error

50% discount for delegates from Power Utilities and Oil & Gas Operators.(Please email Stephanie Brown on stephanie.brown@informa.com if you want to apply for this discount.)

Find out what other Energy companies are doing to optimise their systems, including contributions from:

  • EDF Energy
  • Total E&P UK
  • Scottish Power, UK
  • GDF Suez, Netherlands
  • Scottish and Southern Energy, UK
  • Britannia Operator Limited, UK
  • Laborelec, GDF Suez, Belgium
  • Maersk FPSOs, Denmark
Offers and group discounts:

Interested delegates are urged to make the most of our early bird discounted prices in this cost-constrained world: book by 13 January 2012 & SAVE £200,quoting yourVIP Code: (user.vipcode).

Register here.

Also, to facilitate team learning, we offer discounts to groups of three or more. I look forward to seeing you there.

Regards,
Stephanie Brown, Conference Producer, IBC Energy

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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5 novembre 2011 6 05 /11 /novembre /2011 12:38

CHATILA CHOSEN TO LEAD RAS IN 2014-15
AdCom Pick Raja Chatila as RAS President-Elect 2012-13

At their October 1 meeting the RAS AdCom chose Raja Chatila of the French
National Institutute LAAS-CNRS to serve as President Elect during 2012-13
and to assume the presidency in January 2014.

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5 octobre 2011 3 05 /10 /octobre /2011 19:45

Tesla Model S Beta 1: A glimpse of the future from the passenger seat

 

By:

 

Tesla Model S

This Model S is referred to as a Beta 1 by Tesla, yet is completely drivable.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

 

At events over this last weekend and the following Monday, Tesla gave its customers and a group of journalists an opportunity to see the beta of its Model S, the new electric sedan it intends to put into production early next year. I joined this happy few, but knew going in that, unlike with most automotive model introductions, I wouldn't actually get to drive the car.

 

 

Getting into the passenger seat, one of the first things I noticed, along with every other journalist present at this event, was that the stalk-mounted drive selector was the same as found in new Mercedes-Benz cars. Apparently, the electric power steering unit and associated steering gear, which includes column and stalk controls, were provided by automotive equipment maker ZF. Jim Dunlay, vice president of power train engineering, assured me that, by production, Tesla would have its own drive selector, along with any other controls that might share sourcing with another automaker.

And that shifter illustrates what Tesla means by calling this Model S a beta, and why I wouldn't get my hands on the wheel, not this day. Tesla made much of its transparency, of how other automakers would never let you see a model in this early stage of development. The car was one of five in this early run, built at a contracted plant in Detroit. The next phase, the Beta 2, will be built in Tesla's new Fremont, Calif., factory. Fifty of these cars will be built starting this month. The Beta 2 model will not only help Tesla employees further refine the car, but it will also test the new production facility.

Not that this Beta 1 Model S wasn't quite far along. Electric drivetrain, check. Steering wheel, check. Tires, check. Nicely finished interior, check. The car, referred to as Beta 1 by Tesla, even had a basically working infotainment system in the center stack and a fully digital instrument panel. There were still many details to work out, such as the shifter, infotainment interface programming, and tuning, but this Beta 1 was a working car.

 

Proof is in the drive

 

As Tesla employee Graham Sutherland piloted the Model S Beta 1 through a short slalom, the first part of the course laid out for this ride-along, he explained how the low-slung battery contributed to excellent stability. As I'd seen the unique layout of the car in cutaway fashion, he didn't need to tell me, relegated to the passenger seat, how that weight distribution and the big, flat battery assembly would help the car handle. As Sutherland is responsible for the car's suspension he was privy to much more interesting information.

Noticing a bit of sway in those first maneuvers, I began asking him about the suspension tuning, currently a work in progress. According to Sutherland, Tesla CEO Elon Musk wants the Model S to have the handling of a Porsche and the comfort of an Audi. Those are fairly high bars to set, especially given the conventional suspension technology supporting the car, double wishbones in front and a multilink configuration in back. No air suspension, no magnetic ride technology.

 

Tesla Model S

The Model S is driven by this electric motor on the rear axle.

(Credit: Wayne Cunningham/CNET)

But the ride quality did feel quite smooth, that sensation probably enhanced by the car's lack of a combustion engine. Take out the rumble of repeated explosions occurring right in front of the passenger compartment, and the car already has a huge advantage on the luxury front.

The next section of the course was a straightaway, where Sutherland made real use of the accelerator. The Model S, although much bigger than the Roadster, delivered the push. I was pressed into the seat as the car quickly hit 60 mph, then 70, and up to 80 before we had to slow down.

As I've experienced in other electric cars, acceleration was smooth and inexorable, unhampered by gears and engine speed changes. The only surprise here was how well Tesla's electric drive technology scaled up to the bigger car. The Roadster, which takes some contortions to get into, has a battery pack that looks like a refrigerator and a motor the size of a watermelon.

The Model S, on the other hand, has its batteries in a flat, approximately 4-inch-thick assembly bolted underneath the car. The motor, sitting on the rear axle, is a little bigger than that of the Roadster. Still using what are essentially lithium ion laptop batteries, Tesla packs enough of them into the flat casing, along with a liquid cooling system, to produce 85 kilowatt-hours, or a 300-mile range for the car.

The electric motor is rated at 362 horsepower and 306 pound-feet of torque, that latter number available from zero to 7,000rpm. It gets the Model S to 60 mph in 5.6 seconds. At the weekend unveiling, Elon Musk revealed that Tesla would also create a sport version of the Model S, which gets to 60 mph in less than 4 seconds.

I had no trouble believing that Tesla's drive configuration for the Model S would work, but it was nice to feel it pushing the car down the test course. Tesla replaced faith with proof. Sutherland finished the course with a few fast loops on Tesla's own factory test track, which includes banked turns.

 

Luxury right out of the gate

 

The cabin of this Model S looked far nicer than I would expect of a first beta. It had a glass roof with a retractable portion. The leather-covered seats felt comfortable. All of the doors closed with a reassuringly soft click.

 

Tesla Model S

This large touch screen hosts most of the infotainment controls.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

But really striking about the interior was its simplicity. The dashboard and other surfaces lacked the switchgear I am used to used to seeing in most cars. Sure, there were window controls in the doors, a couple of clickable scroll wheels on the steering wheel spokes, and the drive selector. But most of the cabin controls appeared on the large center touch screen, a big infotainment interface which Musk likened to an iPad.

Brennan Boblett, in charge of the interface design, showed off a number of the system's features. A row of icons at the top allowed access to vehicle functions, such as phone, navigation, and the stereo. The upper half of the screen could show navigation, courtesy of Google Earth, with the bottom showing music, phone, or other functions. Or navigation could be moved to the lower half, with a Web browser on top. The demonstration also showed how the map could take up the entire screen.

Boblett demonstrated Slacker radio integration, although cautioned that Tesla had not finalized any deals with app developers. The system is supposed to store music locally, and include advanced voice command that lets you select music by saying the name of an artist, similar to Ford's Sync.

With the car's data connection, it downloads Google Earth imagery to show the car's location. As it downloads a chunk consisting of 300-mile radius around the car, more than the car's own range, it should always have satellite imagery available. But Tesla will also include a standard navigation system licensed from Navigon.

Linux underlies this infotainment system, and only takes up 35MB, according to Boblett. And powering it is a Tegra2 chip from Nvidia, a graphics processor no bigger than a dime, but hugely powerful. By the time the Model S hits production, it should be using the Tegra3 chip.

A separate Tegra2 chip powers the car's instrument panel. Tesla does away with analog gauges completely, settling for a flat pane of glass behind the steering wheel with virtual representations of gauges for speed, range, and other useful information. Both infotainment interface and instrument panel will undergo tweaking up until the time the software needs to be loaded onto the first Model S to roll off the production line.

 

The electric world

 

The obvious progress Tesla has made on the Model S assures the company will hit its production plan, which is actually very modest. Only 5,000 units of the Model S are slated for the first year's production, despite the fact that Tesla has already logged 6,000 orders. The following year the company goes into full production, yet still only plans 20,000 cars per year, which is the capacity of its planned production line working a single shift each day.

With a base price of $57,400, before any credits, the Model S looks like a good value proposition. However, a base model will only have a range of 160 miles. Tesla estimates that the 300-mile-range version will cost about $77,400. Tesla has not suggested any other content differences besides range for the different versions.

Tesla has already announced it is working on a second car for its model lineup, the Model X, which will take the form of a crossover. It is expected to be more affordable than the Model S.

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27 septembre 2011 2 27 /09 /septembre /2011 10:56

UK Eyes European Electricity Supergrid

 

by Energy Matters

Europe electricity supergrid
A report into the future deployment of renewable energy in the UK from the government's Energy and Climate Change Committee has recommended swift action on establishing a European "super" power grid, which would help ensure the country meets its commitment to generate 15% of energy from renewables by 2020.
   
The plan would involve linking the UK’s electricity system with neighbouring European countries, allowing the national power grid to better manage supply and demand from renewable energy sources, which are intermittent by nature.
    
According to the report, the UK is a virtual electricity island, and warns the infrastructure and construction costs of developing an offshore grid would be high. 
  
Committee Chair Tim Yeo MP says while the scheme may be a gamble, when weighed against the cost of individually connecting large-scale renewable energy projects, particularly offshore wind farms - a resource the UK government is banking on as a truly viable energy alternative to foreign oil and gas into the future – the plan could be an opportunity for Britain to become a net exporter of clean energy.
   
"The UK’s electricity system is the least interconnected of all European Countries - but we also have vast offshore resources of renewable energy. In fact, we potentially have enough wind, wave and tidal energy to more than match our North Sea oil and Gas production and transform the country from a net energy importer to a net energy exporter.”
   
With plans to build between 80 and 280 new wind farms through the 2020s, the committee points out government needs to take control of what is currently a "haphazard" method of planning and connecting offshore wind farms to the mainland.
   
"A European supergrid would enable the National Grid to balance supply and demand using foreign electricity sources as well as UK ones. This will become increasingly necessary as polluting yet flexible fossil fuel generation is phased out, in favour of clean but intermittent sources of renewable energy," the report states.

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19 mai 2011 4 19 /05 /mai /2011 09:38

Not only America, but also Europe.
Andrea Rossi's Cold Fusion coming to the world.
This is maybe the most important invention of the last 100 years. 

 

http://beforeitsnews.com/story/643/540/Cold_Fusion_E-Tiger_Coming_to_America.html

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1 mars 2011 2 01 /03 /mars /2011 10:11

Engineering for Change Needs You!


BY KATHY KOWALENKO

 

After several years of defining its humanitarian role by developing a number of diverse projects, IEEE is partnering with ASME (the American Society of Mechanical Engineers) and Engineers Without Borders (EWB-USA) on the Engineering for Change project, to build a community of engineering and technology professionals, designers, scientists, nongovernmental organizations, and community advocates to solve humanitarian problems. The joint E4C initiative is charged with developing technical, locally appropriate, and sustainable solutions to humanitarian challenges.

 

“IEEE and ASME were simultaneously working on new approaches to humanitarian engineering as another way to engage members,” says Matt Loeb, staff executive for IEEE Corporate Strategy and Communications, the area that is overseeing the initiative. “Together with EWB-USA, our organizations recognized the value of joining forces rather than competing.”

 

“In discussions with ASME and EWB-USA, we found greater strength in the collaboration of our organizations as partners,” adds Bill Walsh, the 2010 IEEE Humanitarian Committee co-chair. “We complement each other in terms of capabilities and infrastructure, which were always challenges when going it alone. We now present a coordinated effort not only to be better equipped to implement our projects but also to attract funding for our efforts.”

 

“The scope of these challenges is far greater than any one organization can address independently,” says Noha El-Ghobashy, ASME’s director of technical programming and development and president of E4C. “IEEE, along with EWB-USA, are ideal partners for ASME for addressing multidisciplinary challenges. The depth of IEEE’s commitment to innovation and excellence in engineering, along with its global reach, provides us all with wonderful opportunities to leverage our collective resources to advance this critically important initiative.”

For its part, EWB-USA, a nonprofit humanitarian organization, gets more volunteers to help to carry out its mission of designing and implementing sustainable engineering projects around the world.

 

ONE-STOP SITE

 

A key component of the program is the Engineering for Change website, launched in January. It is a repository of reference information on seven key areas of interest: water, energy, health, agriculture, sanitation, structures for housing, and information systems. In each of the seven categories are case studies, news articles, publications, blogs from nongovernmental agencies, upcoming conferences, tools, and other references. The site is aimed at members of the three organizations, but anyone can use it. A low-bandwidth version is in the works to involve people in places where Internet access is difficult.

 

The site offers ways for individuals and communities to get involved. By clicking on the E4C Resources tab on the home page, you can offer your assistance on the bulletin board. If your community needs help with a project, you can post information about it there. If you’re looking to lend a helping hand with an ongoing project, check out the Solutions Library.

 

You can search for projects in your region or area of expertise. And the Workspace section lets registered users discuss new ideas with others, share technical information, and provide feedback on new concepts.

Under the Learning Center tab are engineering design principles as well as a list of publications and on-campus and online training programs with a humanitarian bent.

 

“This site, and the collaboration it brings together, is much more robust than anything IEEE has ever done in this area,” Walsh says. “Our most important resources are our capabilities as engineers and scientists. I encourage members to register at E4C and create a profile so we can build a repository of those who are expert in an area and match them with the needs of a community.”

 

THE FUTURE

 

E4C is also working with the academic community and college students by pursuing partnerships with MIT, Stanford University, Villanova University, the University of California at Berkeley, and other institutions. The partnerships are expected to include a commitment from the schools to use the E4C site as part of their curricula or to assign a challenge from the site for students to solve. E4C is also trying to arrange partnerships with other professional and technical organizations, as well as NGOs such as the Peace Corps, UNESCO, and UNICEF.

 

“IEEE has an opportunity to be bold and lead in the humanitarian area—which is what our members, especially our younger members, want,” Walsh says. “I believe that engagement in E4C, as individuals and groups at all levels within IEEE, will prove to be a very successful endeavor for our organization.”

 

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21 février 2011 1 21 /02 /février /2011 10:00

********************************************************************
Call for Papers
RoboCup International Symposium 2011
Istanbul, Turkey
July 5-11, 2011
http://www.robocup2011.org/
********************************************************************

 

OVERVIEW

 

The 15th annual RoboCup International Symposium will be held in
conjunction with RoboCup 2011. The Symposium represents the core
meeting for presentation and discussion of scientific contributions to
a variety of research areas related to all RoboCup divisions
(RoboCupSoccer, RoboCupRescue, RoboCup@Home, and RoboCupJunior). Its
scope encompasses, but is not restricted to, research and educational
activities within the fields of Robotics and Artificial Intelligence.

Due to its interdisciplinary nature, the symposium offers a unique
venue for exploring various and intimate connections of theory and
practice across a wide spectrum of research fields. The experimental,
interactive, and benchmark character of the RoboCup initiative
presents the opportunity to disseminate novel ideas and promising
technologies, which are rapidly adopted and field-tested by a large
(and still growing) community.

 

SUBMISSION

 

We solicit submissions of papers reporting on high-quality, original
research with relevance to the areas mentioned below. All researchers
working in these areas, even if not actively participating in RoboCup
teams, are urged to submit their work. Both papers describing real-
world research and papers reporting theoretical results, as well as
combinations thereof, are welcome. We also encourage the submission of
high-quality overview articles for any field related to the general
scope of RoboCup.

The proceedings of the RoboCup International Symposium are published
and archived within the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Artificial
Intelligence (LNAI) series. Submitted papers are limited to 12 pages
formatted according to the LNAI requirements and must be
electronically submitted through the symposium web site. All
contributions are peer-reviewed by at least three reviewers using a
blind review process.

IMPORTANT DATES

* Submission of full papers: Feb 27, 2011 (hard deadline, midnight GMT
- 10)
* Notification to authors: Apr 10, 2011
* Submission of camera-ready copies: May 8, 2011
* RoboCup 2011 Symposium: July 11, 2011

SYMPOSIUM CO-CHAIRS

* Thomas R=C3=B6fer, DFKI Bremen, Germany
* Ulu=C3=A7 Saranl=C4=B1, Bilkent University, Turkey
* Michael Mayer, Nat'l Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
* Jesus Savage, UNAM, Mexico

AREAS OF INTEREST

* Robot Hardware and Software
     - mobile and humanoid robots
     - sensors and actuators
     - embedded and mobile devices
     - robot construction and new materials
     - robotic system integration
     - robot software architectures
     - robot programming environments and languages
     - real-time and concurrent programming
     - robot simulators

* Perception and Action
     - distributed sensor integration
     - sensor noise filtering
     - real-time image processing and pattern recognition
     - motion and sensor models
     - sensory-motor control
     - robot kinematics and dynamics
     - high-dimensional motion control

* Robotic Cognition and Learning
     - world modeling
     - localization, navigation, and mapping
     - planning and reasoning
     - decision making under uncertainty
     - reinforcement learning
     - complex motor skill acquisition
     - motion and sensor model learning

* Multi-Robot Systems
     - team coordination methods
     - communication protocols
     - learning and adaptive systems
     - teamwork and heterogeneous agents
     - dynamic resource allocation
     - adjustable autonomy

* Human-Robot Interaction
     - human-robot interfaces
     - speech synthesis and natural language generation
     - visualization

* Education and Edutainment
     - Robotics and Artificial Intelligence education
     - educational robotics
     - robot kits and programming tools
     - robotic entertainment

* Applications
     - disaster rescue information systems
     - search and rescue robots
     - robotic surveillance
     - service and social robots
     - robots at home

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15 février 2011 2 15 /02 /février /2011 10:03
Automation and Control for Energy Conference 2011
10 - 11 May 2011, Manchester, UK
Delivering operational excellence and ensuring commercial availability

ACE 2011 - Find out what other Oil & Gas and Power Generation companies are doing to optimise their control systems

  

Website: http://www.informaglobalevents.com/event/ACE

 

This major event will bring together C&I specialists from the Oil & Gas and Power Generation industries to share operational and technical knowledge.

Case studies, presentations and discussions will give you new insight into how C&I engineers in similar organisations to yours:

  • optimise legacy systems for greater reliability, higher throughput and less outage time
  • protect control systems from cyber attack with minimal disruption
  • construct an effective business case for investment in control systems and equipment

Join likeminded engineers in your industries and areas of interest:

  • Choose from Oil & Gas or Power Generation streams
  • Cross-sector benchmarking: Sabic and Total Petrochemicals share their new approaches to cyber security and improving the human machine interface (HMI)
  •  

Take a look at the Automation & Control for Energy Conference Agenda

Who will attend?

Engineers and managers from the Oil, Gas, Conventional Power Generation and Renewables industries, in the areas of:

  • Control and Instrumentation
  • Automation
  • Control Systems
  • DCS
  • SCADA
  • Electrical Engineering
  • Industrial Controls
  • Process Control
  • Operations
  • Functional Safety
  • Asset Management
  • Project Engineering
  

Master class: Life extension and efficient running of legacy control systems: Managing obsolescence, system optimisation and minimising maintenance

  

Monday 9 May 2011

This one-day masterclass will address:

  • Determining which structures and components require replacement or repair
  • Apportioning risk to equipment failure and losses they will incur
  • Minimising the business impact of replace/repair work
    Predictive maintenance and intelligent monitoring/testing techniques to extend the life of hardware
  • Making tweaks for ‘low hanging fruit’ efficiency gains
  • Getting the most out of suppliers to support your system
  • Estimating the future need for spare parts
  • Sourcing and adapting components on obsolete equipment
  • Identifying and dealing with cyber security risks invovled in legacy system

Masterclass leaders include C&I experts from the InstMC and GDF Suez.

 

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