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E-Scientia in Context Moshe Kam IEEE President and CEO 6 July 2011
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2 Outline A Brief History of IEEE Key Activities, Products, Services and Trends How does E-Scientia fit? Goals and expected outcomes
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3 It all starts in Philadelphia… AIEE In 1884 the Franklin Institute organized the International Electrical Exhibition in Philadelphia The Operator, 15 April 1884: “The…exhibition would be attended by foreign electrical savants, engineers, and manufacturers...it would be a lasting disgrace to American electricians if no American electrical national society was in existence to receive them with the honors due them from their co- laborers in the United States." Thomas Edison, Elihu Thomson, Edwin Houston, and Edward Weston AIEE’s First Technical Meeting 7-8 October 1884, the Franklin Institute
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5 Early Presidents Alexander G. BellElihu ThomsonCharles SteinmetzFrank Sprague
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6 A few more recent Presidents Leah Jamieson Joseph Bordogna Michael Lightner Pedro Ray
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7 AIEE IRE Established 1884 An American Organization Representing the establishment Rooted in Power Engineering and communications First computers working group –Now the Computer Society Established 1912 An international Organization Open to students, young professionals Quick to adopt advances in radar, radio, TV, electronics, computers Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers (January 1913) 1963: Merger of AIEE and IRE to create IEEE
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9 IEEE Today MEMBERS 400,000+ COUNTRIES 160 CONFERENCES 1000+ per year SOCIETIES/COUNCILS 38/7 World’s largest technical professional society Standards 1,300 Active Standards 10/29/20159 Advancing Technology for Humanity
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10 R9 – 16,931 (4.2%) R8 – 73,297 (18.0%) R10 – 90,593 (22.2%) R1 to 6 – 209,765 (51.4%) R7 – 16,955 (4%) IEEE Membership By Region 31 December 2010 TOTAL MEMBERSHIP – 407,541 10
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11 Membership -- Age 10/29/201511
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12 Membership -- Age 10/29/201512 IEEE’s age distribution remains more or less the same because we are geographically diverse
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13 Membership – Occupation
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14 Membership – Occupation In 15 years ‘industry’ and ‘government’ went down from ~75% to ~55%
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15 IEEE Revenues From Operations 1 1 Does not include Investment Returns 2010 Operating Revenue ~$367.1 Million
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16 IEEE Revenues From Operations 1 1 Does not include Investment Returns 2010 Operating Revenue ~$367.1 Million The value of membership to IEEE is not directly in income
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17 IEEE volunteers Key to IEEE success –About 40,000 individuals who give at least 4 hours a week to the organization Local Section Chair Associate editor of a Journal Member of the Financial Committee of a Major Board Chair of a committee that develops a Standard The organization is run by volunteers –From the President and CEO to the local Section Chair, major decisions are made by volunteers –An attempt to quantify the work done by volunteers each year: an estimated $2bn-$3bn
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18 Technical Activities Technical Activities Board Standards Association Initiation and coordination of technical activities, including IEEE technical societies, conferences and content development for IEEE publications
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19 Publications Technical Activities Board Standards Association Production and dissemination of IEEE publications and other products
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20 A few of IEEE’s Technical Societies 2010 Membership Computer Society75,156 Communications Society50,218 Power and Energy Society28,158 Circuits & Systems Society10,346 Computational Intelligence6,892 Product Safety Engineering964
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21 Our main publication vehicle: IEEE XPLORE Nearly 3 million articles More than 7 million downloads a month
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22 U.S. patent references from the top 25 patenting organizations in 2009 to top publishers Based on number of references to papers/standards/conferences from 1997-2009 33% of the sci-tech citations by the top 25 patenting organizations are to IEEE Source: 1790 Analytics 2010 IEEE Download the full report: www.ieee.org/patentcitations Technology Patent References to STM Publishers
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23 Member and Geographic Activities Board of Directors Management of geographical units such as local Sections and Student Branches Member and membership development
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24 IEEE USA Technical Activities Board Professional activities for members in the United States
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25 Standards Board of Directors Member and Geographical Activities IEEE-USA Publications Services and Products Development, maintenance and dissemination of technical standards
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26 IEEE Standards Are Pervasive A broad spectrum of technologies Aerospace Electronics Broadband Over Power Lines Broadcast Technology Clean Technology Cognitive Radio Design Automation Electromagnetic Compatibility Green Technology LAN/MAN Medical Device Communications Nanotechnology 29-Oct-1526 National Electrical Safety Code Next Generation Service Overlay Networks Organic Components Portable Battery Technology Power Electronics Power & Energy Radiation/Nuclear Reliability Transportation Technology Test Technology
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27 Education Coordination and development of educational programs in IEEE’s fields of interests
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28 IEEE Educational Activities Pre-university Education University-level education Continuing (post-university) Education Public understanding of Engineering Computing and Technology
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29 Preparing IEEE volunteers to work with school teachers 10/29/201529 Teacher In-Service Program (TISP)
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30 10/29/201530
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31 10/29/201531
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32 10/29/201532
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33 E-SCIENTIA 10/29/201533
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34 E-Scientia – General A new platform for education of young people using an attractive environment and hands-on experience –Suitable for museums, universities and community centers Represents a new field of activities for IEEE This is the first serious attempt of IEEE in decades to work with science and technology museums and community centers 10/29/201534
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35 General history This is roughly a two year project It was initiated by the IEEE Uruguay Section with backing of the IEEE Educational Activities Board It was conceived in cooperation of a local museum of science and technology (Espacio Scientia) and a local technological development entity, LATU So far two prototypes were created –One for Montevideo and one for Hyderabad
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36 Inauguration – July 2010
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37 E-Scientia in IEEE The idea came from the IEEE Uruguay Section (a geographical unit) The IEEE funding came from the IEEE Educational Activities Board, IEEE New Initiatives Committee, and the IEEE Foundation Additional financial and in-kind support came from corporations in Uruguay Labor came from IEEE volunteers in Uruguay 10/29/201537
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38 Local Support IBM Interamericana de Computos S.A.; Analisis de Sistemas Markel Engineers
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39 Basic Attributes A non-threatening engaging and clean hi-tech environment –The concept of a space ship –“Having fun” The flavor of a guided tour for a small group of students Option for a large number of tour scenarios and activities Opportunities to adapt the content to the needs of different groups and student ages Modular, transportable structure
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40 What are we trying to achieve in this meeting… Introduce E-Scientia to a group of IEEE volunteers and science/technology museum personnel Share the experience gathered in Montevideo Discuss the possible uses of the platform and further development needs Gauge interest in developing duplicates for additional sites Discuss logistics, operational environment and costs Plan the expansion of the E-Scientia exhibit
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41 The world before E-Scientia
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42 The world after E-Scientia
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43 Questions and comments
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