Monday, May 7, 2007

•The AIAA Computer Systems and Software Systems TCs have created a track featuring standardized, Testing, COTS and plug and play technologies and applications which should blend well with other parts of Infotech
•Architecture and Standards for Autonomous Systems Panel
•Intelligent Systems Tracks
•Sensor Systems Track
•UAV Application Tracks
These are our sessions that start today with the name of the session chair:

•Monday 1:30 PM – Testing and Evaluation of Aerospace Systems
•Kevin Carbajal, NASA Ames Research Center
•Monday 3:45 PM – Hardware Processing and Computing Applications
•Lyle Long, Pennsylvania State University
•Tuesday 10:00 AM – COTS Guidebook (for Mission Critical Applications)
•Fred Briggs, Wyle Laboratories
•Tuesday 1:30 PM – Plug & Play Breadth and Approaches across Industries
•Joe Marshall, BAE Systems
•Tuesday 3:45 PM – Standardized and Responsive Space Electronics Hardware
•Tom Woodall, Raytheon
•Wednesday 8:00 AM – Plug and Play Hardware Interfaces
•Nick Sramek, The Aerospace Corporation
•Wednesday 10:15 AM – Plug and Play and Other Software Architectures
•Ron Kohl, SEI
•Wednesday 1:30 PM – Responsive Mission Software Tools & Architectures
•Barry Hamilton, Red Canyon Software
•Wednesday 3:45 PM – Plug and Play Applications, Missions and Future
•Geoffrey Hintz, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

Plug In, Explore, Network and Play!
•Please attend and explore our sessions and papers and interact with other related sessions and papers
•There should be plenty of interesting related tangents and opportunities between the tracks to add value to your participation here
•Please provide any of us feedback so we can make 2008 better
•If you like our track, the topic areas we have covered or have ideas/areas for related or future meetings, you are welcome to attend our joint Computer System and Software System Technical Committee meetings later this week (membership is not required):
•Wednesday evening: 7-10 PM - COTATI Room
•Thursday morning: 8 AM – noon - Salon II

Joe

1 comment:

last.improvements.of.people said...

I think that the aerospace market is one in which lots of opportunities for small business abound. There are just too many planes from different decades and different manufacturers for a large company to monopolize the OEM or the MRO markets. When I joined Aerotech Alloys, they were a 3-4 personnel company, but quickly grew to a much larger company. The same stands for TKX or Thyssen Krup. I think a little hard work can turn a small company with a vision into a major player. Thanks!

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