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Dr. Charles Proteus Steinmetz Memorial Lecture Series
Dr. Charles Proteus Steinmetz
(1865-1923) is one of the greatest contributors to the growth of the
electrical industry in the United States. As a former national president
of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and as a distinguished
engineer who performed his work in Schenectady New York, it is fitting
that the Schenectady Section of the Institute of Electrical
& Electronics Engineers should commemorate him.
Dr. Steinmetz came to the United States in 1890, completely unknown and
impoverished, and in a span of 33 years became world renowned for his
contributions to the electrical industry. Engineers will remember him best
for his investigations in the fields of machine design, lighting, and the
symbolic method of alternating current calculations.
Dr. Steinmetz's many friends and admirers created the Steinmetz Memorial
Lecture Endowment Fund in 1925. Since then, more than sixty eminent
scientists and engineers have presented public lectures on the Union
College campus in Schenectady, New York in honor of Charles Proteus
Steinmetz.
Steinmetz Memorial Lecturers include such leaders and innovators as Robert
A. Millikan, Igor I. Sikorsky, Irving Langmuir, Arthur H. Compton, Simon
Ramo, Lillian M. Gilbreth, Claude E. Shannon, Vice-Admiral H.G. Rickover,
William Shockley, Jay W. Forrester, Hans A. Bethe, Benoit B. Mandelbrot,
and Ray Dolby.
This Year's Lecture
The History of the Steinmetz Memorial Lectures
The GE Years of Steinmetz |
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The 2007 Lecture
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Tod
Machover, Professor of Music and Media at MIT, delivers the 69th
Steinmetz Memorial Lecture
"Enabling Music
Expression for Everyone"
Monday, October 15, 2007
7:30
PM
Memorial Chapel
Union
College
Schenectady, New York
Music is one of the most powerful
forms of human expression, and is increasingly recognized as a
profound source of health and well-being far beyond its
entertainment value. But music works its magic most fully
through active engagement – rather than through the passive,
background listening described in the “Mozart Effect” – and this
requires new tools and environments that enable people of all
ages, backgrounds and skill levels to participate.
Hyperinstruments, initially invented at the MIT Media Lab to
increase the performance virtuosity of great musicians from
Yo-Yo Ma to Prince, have evolved into the Hyperscore composing
software for kids as well as the smash hit video game Guitar
Hero. Such technologies are now being further extended to give
“voice” to seniors and the disabled, including specially
designed “Personal Instruments” that adapt to anyone’s
individual skills and limitations. A recent performance using
such an instrument will be shown, and a sneak preview will be
given of an opera-in-progress that demonstrates the power of
music for “personal identity archiving” in the physical and
virtual worlds. (For
more information about the event, go to:
http://www.ewh.ieee.org/r1/schenectady/events.html )
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The 2006-2007 Lecture
Dr.
William Wulf, President,
National Academy of
Engineering, delivers the 68th Steinmetz Memorial
"Engineering
as part of a Liberal Education?"
Monday, April 16, 2007 at 7:30 PM in the Memorial
Chapel on the Union College campus, Schenectady, New York
Bill Wulf received the first Computer Science Ph.D.
ever awarded at the
University of Virginia in 1968. He then joined
Carnegie-Mellon University as Assistant Professor of
Computer Science, becoming Associate Professor in 1973 and Professor
in 1975. In 1981 he left Carnegie-Mellon and founded Tartan
Laboratories and served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
until 1988. In 1988-1990 he was Assistant Director of the
National Science Foundation. In 1990 he returned to the
University of Virginia as AT&T Professor and University Professor.
Bill Wulf is a Fellow of the National Academy of Engineering, a
Fellow of
ACM, a Fellow of the
IEEE, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
In 1997 he was elected
President of the National Academy of Engineering, which operates
under a congressional charter and presidential executive orders that
call on it to provide advice to the government on issues of science
and engineering. He has directed over 25 Ph.D. theses and is the
author or co-author of three books, two patents and over 100 papers.
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The 2005 Lecture
Dennis
Woodford,
President of Electranix, delivers the 67th Steinmetz Memorial Lecture on:
Engineers and the Strength of Our National Communities
Monday, October 24, 2005 at 7:30 PM in the Nott Memorial on the Union College campus, Schenectady, New York
Dennis Woodford was born in Melbourne, Australia ('45) and graduated from
the University of Melbourne ('66), and the University of Manitoba with a
Master of Science ('73). He was Special Studies Engineer in Transmission
Planning of Manitoba Hydro where he worked on the Winnipeg - Twin Cities
500 kV interconnection and the Nelson River HVDC project. He is the
original developer of the PSCAD/EMTDC simulation software, which he
started in 1975 while at Manitoba Hydro.
He joined the Manitoba HVDC Research Centre as Executive Director
('86-'91) and is now President of Elextranix Corporation, a consulting
company based in Winnipeg. He is a registered Professional Engineer with
the Province of Manitoba and an Adjunct Professor at the University of
Manitoba. He is
the recipient of the IEEE Power Engineering Society Uno Lamm Award. He
is Chairman of the IEEE Subcommittee on HVDC and FACTS, and is active in
CIGRE. An
individual can have a profound and everlasting impact on our society,
and engineers cannot be left out in this regard. This lecture will
explore how engineers have influenced us and set paths that have
strengthened our roles as pillars of our nations. |
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The 2003 Lecture
Dr. Paul M. Horn,
IBM Senior Vice President and Director of Research, delivers the 66th Steinmetz Memorial Lecture on:
The Future of Information Technology
Monday, October 13, 2003 at 7:00 PM in the Memorial Chapel on the Union College campus, Schenectady, New York
Dr. Paul M. Horn oversees the world's largest and most prolific research organization dedicated to information technology, with 3,000 researchers at eight labs worldwide. Under Horn's leadership as senior vice-president and director,
IBM Research has produced an unmatched string of technological breakthroughs, including the chess-playing supercomputer Deep Blue, the world's first copper chip, the giant magneto-resistive head (GMR) and strained silicon (a discovery that allows chips to run up to 35%
faster). A solid state physicist by training, Horn has also led IBM Research into a distinctly cross-disciplinary Grand Challenge with project Blue
Gene - a $100 million dollar effort to build the worlds first petafolp-scale computer for the express purpose of helping to understand how human proteins fold.
In addition, Horn has implemented a unique management system which views as inextricably linked the need to conduct exploratory research and the delivery of marketplace-ready technology. As a result, IBM Research consistently speeds the flow of innovation through
IBM's product groups to the market while pursuing research areas likely to yield groundbreaking or even disruptive technologies in a number of key areas including semiconductors, data management, servers and middleware.
Horn is currently focusing the division on several crucial areas of research: the ongoing grand challenge for the I/T industry to build autonomic computing
systems, delivery of the technologies to support IBM's e-business on demand strategy, the establishment of Services Research as a cutting-edge area of bona fide scientific inquiry, and the exploration of novel modes of storage, processing and computing, such as nanomechanical devices, atomic-scale manipulation, carbon nanotube structures and so-called superhuman speech systems.
Autonomic Computing seeks to define and build computing systems that reduce I/T complexity for users by functioning in a manner similar to our bodies, adapting automatically to a wide range of circumstances, but without conscious intervention. Such an approach, along with technologies that allow business processes to be modeled and optimized in real-time, will support the flexibility inherent in the vision for on demand enterprises.
In 2002, Horn announced the formation of On Demand Innovation Services, an organization with
IBM's Research division where scientists work directly with customers as consultants to gather real-word requirements and problems to fuel research projects. Horn views this as the vanguard for the next exciting area of I/T research.
Horn was previously vice president and lab director of IBM Researchs Almaden Research Center in San Jose, where he was credited with tightly linking research innovation with the corporations storage development operation.
Horn graduated from Clarkson College of Technology and received his doctoral degree in physics from the
University of Rochester in 1973. Prior to joining IBM in 1979, Horn was a professor of physics in the
James Franck Institute and the Physics Department and at the
University of Chicago. Dr. Horn is a Fellow of the
American Physical Society and was an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow from 1974-1978. He is a former Associate Editor of
Physical Review Letters and has published over 85 scientific and technical papers.
Horn has received numerous awards including the 1988 Bertram Eugene Warren award from the
American Crystallographic
Association, the 2000 Distinguished Leadership award from the New York Hall of
Science, the 2002 Hutchison Medal from the University of Rochester, and the 2002 Pake Prize from the American Physical
Society. In 2002 he was also named as one of Americas top technical leaders by
Scientific American Magazine. He is also a member of numerous professional committees including the Clarkson Industry University Board of Trustees, the
UC Berkeley Industrial Advisory Board, the
Gallaudet University Advisory Board, and is a trustee of the New York Hall of Science and the Committee for Economic Development.
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The History of the
Steinmetz Memorial Lectures
1925 - Dr. Michael I. Pupin
"Law, Description
and Hypothesis in the Electrical Science"
1926 - Dr. Ernest J. Berg
"The Solution of
Transient Phenomena by Elementary Mathematics"
1927 - Dr. Robert A. Millikan
"Spectroscopic
Prediction"
1928 - Dr. Max Mason
"Substitutes for
Experience"
1929 - Dr. Dexter S. Kimball
"Modem Engineering
Economics"
1930 - Dr. William E. Wickenden
"Discipline of
Discipleship"
1932 - Dr. Karl T. Compton
"The Battle of the
Alchemists"
1934 - Dr. C. E. Kenneth Mees
"Scientific Thought
and Social Reconstruction"
1935 - Dr. Robert E. Doherty
"An Undeveloped
Phase of Engineering Education"
1936 - Dr. Gerard Swope
"An Engineering View of and from Steinmetz"
1937 - Dr. Harold G. Moulton
"Engineering Progress and Economic Progress"
1938 - Mr. Igor I. Sikorsky
"Science and the Future of Aviation"
1939 - Dr. Frank B. Jewett
"The Technical Significance of the First Transcontinental Telephone
Line"
1941 - Dr. Frank Howard Lahey
"Modem Medicine and Surgery-Its Progress and Place in the Community"
1942 - Dr. Comfort Avery Adams
"Cooperation vs. War"
1943 - Dr. Harold Willis Dodds
"Postwar World and the American Tradition"
1944 - Dr. Stephen S. Wise
"Man Moves Forward"
1945 - Dr. Irving Langmuir
"Science and Postwar Incentives"
1946 - Dr. Sanford A. Moss
"Because I Know It's True"
1947 - Dr. Arthur H. Compton
"The Birth of Atomic Energy and Its Human Meaning"
1948 - Dr. Philip Sporn
"Potentialities of the Electrical Industry in Shaping the Destiny of
America"
1949 - Dr. Kirtley F. Mather
"Natural Resources and Human Progress"
1950 - Dr. Charles E. Wilson
"The Moral Aspects of Scientific Progress"
1952 - Dr. Hollis L. Caswell
"The Great Reappraisal of Public Education"
1953 - Dr. Harold S. Osborn
"What Is Coming in Tele-Communications"
1954 - Dr. Charles Allen Thomas
"Science, Progress and the Human Mind"
1955 - Dr. Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam
"The Nature of the Contemporary Crisis"
1956 - Dr. Cornelius Packard Rhoads
"The Social and Economic Significance of Medical Research"
1957 - Admiral William Morrow Fechteler, Ph.D.
"The Professional and Technical Requirements of the Armed Forces"
1958 - Dr. Joseph Allen Hynek
"Man's Satellites: Doorway to Space"
1959 - Dr. Simon Ramo
"Space Conquest and the New Technical Age"
1960 - Dr. Lillian M. Gilbreth
"Management and Men"
1962 - Dr. Claude E. Shannon
"The Third Frontier of Science"
1963 - Vice-Admiral H.G. Rickover
"Then individual in a Free Society"
1964 - Dr. J. Herbert Hollomon
"The Changing Role Science and Technology Play in the National
Well-Being"
1965 - Mr. Walker Lee Cisler
"Expanding Horizons in Electric Power"
1966 - Dr. William Shockley
"Mental Tools for Scientific Thinking"
1967 - Dr. Edward C. Welsh
"Benefits of the Aerospace Revolution"
1968 - Dr. Ralph W. Sockman
"Computer Age Morality"
1969 - Mr. J. Erik Jonsson
"From the Heart"
1970 - Mr. Lelan F. Sillin, Jr.
"Changing Values in a Technological Society"
1971 - Mr. Patrick E. Haggerty
"The Productive Society"
1972 - Prof. Harold W. Bibber, Mr. Emil J. Remscheid, & Mr. Joseph S. Hayden
"Recollections of Charles P. Steinmetz"
1973 - Dr. John Bardeen
"Solid State Physics: Accomplishments and Future Prospects"
1975 - Dr. Richard W. Roberts
"Energy: From Steinmetz to the 70’s"
1976 - Dr. Jay W. Forrester
"Dynamics of Social Systems"
1977 - Dr. Hans A. Bethe
"The Necessity of Fission Power"
1978 - Dr. Merril Eisenbud
"The Human Environment: Past, Present, and Future"
1979 - Dr. Myron Tribus
"Seven Commandments for the Survival of a Technological Society"
1980 - Mr. Reginald H. Jones
"Needed: A Renaissance in Technical Creativity"
1983 - Dr. Margaret N. Maxey
"America's Energy Odyssey; Between Energy and Entropy"
1984 - Dr. Roland W. Schmitt
"The Next Scientific Revolution: The Conquest of Complexity"
1985 - Mr. Erich Bloch
"Basic Research and Economic Health: The Coming Challenge"
1986 - Dr. Ivar Giaever
"Pathological Science II"
1987 - Dr. Ernest L. Boyer
"College: Making the Connections"
1988 - Dr. Benoit B. Mandelbrot
"Fractals: From Geometry to Physics and On to Art"
1989 - Dr. Robert M. White
"Technology and Global Environment"
1990 - Dr. Eleanor Baum
"Defying Stereotypes: Training the Next Decade of Engineers"
1991 - Dr. Walter L. Robb
"Imaging the Human Body -The Schenectady-Milwaukee Miracle"
1992 - Dr. Andrew C. Kadak
"The Atom and Human Values"
1993 - Dr. Ray Dolby
"The Quest for Recording Quality"
1994 - Dr. Jerrier A. Haddad
"The Engineering Community - Pressure, Evolution, Opportunities,
Problems"
1995 - Dr. Edward A. Parrish
"Engineering Education for a Changing Engineering Profession"
1996 - Dr. William W. Hogan
"The Revolution in the Electricity Industry"
2001 - Dr. Charles Concordia
"Engineering and Society: Logic and Politics"
2003 - Dr. Paul M. Horn
"The Future of Information Technology"
2005 - Dennis Woodford
"Engineers and the
Strength of Our National Communities"
2007 - Dr. William Wulf
"Engineering as Part of a
Liberal Education?"
2007 - Dr. Tod Machover
"Enabling Music Expression for Everyone"
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