Tuesday, August 3
Dr. James Truchard
President, CEO, and Cofounder
National Instruments
Listen as Dr. James Truchard discusses the latest technologies, including timing and synchronization, streaming digital signal processor (DSP) design, and software-defined radios, to optimize graphical system designs around the world.
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John Graff
Vice President of Marketing
National Instruments
Watch as John Graff and NI R&D engineers unveil the latest products and technologies and explain why now, more than ever before, is the time to solve the world's most advanced and complex problems.
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Wednesday, August 4
Jeff Kodosky
Cofounder and Business and Technology Fellow
National Instruments
Join Jeff Kodosky, coinventor and "Father of LabVIEW" with more than 30 patented LabVIEW technologies, as he shares his vision for tackling challenging timing problems with LabVIEW, the future of graphical system design, and the possibilities it presents for engineers and scientists.
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John Pasquarette
Vice President of Software Product Marketing
National Instruments
Watch as John Pasquarette and NI R&D engineers explore cutting-edge products and technologies that enable new applications and change the way engineers and scientists design, build, and test complex systems.
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Thursday, August 5
Ray Almgren
Vice President of Software, Education, and Training
National Instruments
Join Ray Almgren and student teams from around the world as they showcase innovative solutions using graphical system design that tackle socially relevant engineering challenges.
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Dr. Michio Kaku
Theoretical Physicist
City College of New York
Physicist, professor, and author Dr. Michio Kaku holds the Henry Semat Professorship in Theoretical Physics at the City College of New York and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He also has taught physics at Harvard and Princeton. He is the cofounder of string field theory and has written doctorate-level textbooks that are required reading at many of the world's leading physics laboratories. He has also interviewed more than 300 top scientists to provide the most accurate description of the next 20 years.







