Hi Dan,

If a keynote speaker is needed, I have a keynote talk that is both 
technically interesting and also will keep them laughing on the floor. 
The funny part is titled "Funny Airport Stories" and involves some 
interesting airport stores, a few of them acted out in a skit. This can 
be mixed with technical content or alone as a light talk with no thought 
required.

Doug

On 3/1/10 12:49 PM, Dan Roman wrote:
> Anybody know Dr. Griffin at SIU or have contacts at SIU?  He might make a
timely keynote speaker for the Boston Symposium or perhaps one of his students
could do a paper at the Symposium.  (See previous email with subject "[PSES]
FW: [LF] Expert recreates Toyota sudden acceleration")
>
> Dan
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Brian O'Connell [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 12:25 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [PSES] Toyota
>
> Please ignore my earlier (snide) comments about s/w vs h/w reliability. This
is an important topic that will probably become a recurring theme. Someone
needs to give a seminar at a PSES symposium for testing
microprocessor-controlled systems. And I am not talking about another
standards conformity recipe class. It causes me great pain to say this, but we
should probably look for an academic with applied experience to present this
subject.
>
> We, as a community of safety and EMC professionals, should be concerned that
that I continue to surprise and amaze safety agency/NCB assessment engineers
with my test technique for a box with an embedded micro-controller.
>
> Perhaps the nature of the 'Toyota' discussion should have been the effect of
hardware faults on a firmware-controlled system vs white box vs black box
tests.
>
> Brian
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of Waterloo EMC
Services
> Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2010 11:27 AM
> To: '[email protected]'
> Subject: RE: [PSES] Toyota
>
> Group
> After reading this string, I tried putting my Camry Hybrid into neutral
while accelerating with the result that the engine immediately dropped to idle
and the car coasted freely. In this case the transmission (continuously
Variable) is software controlled as is the throttle.
>
> John Mowbray
> Waterloo EMC Services
> 519 581 7170
> email: [email protected]
> Web: www.waterlooemcservices.ca
>
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Pettit, Ghery
> Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2010 11:06 AM
> To: [email protected]; Bob Richards
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: RE: [PSES] Toyota
>
> That's properly called a Dynaflush transmission.  J   I know, my first car
was a 1954 Buick Special.  J
>
> Ghery S. Pettit
>
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Doug Smith
> Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 9:18 PM
> To: Bob Richards
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [PSES] Toyota
>
> The early 50s Buicks had a Dynaflow transmission with infinite gear ratios
(variable pitch turbines instead of gears). You could shift into reverse at
any speed. The more you pressed on the gas, the quicker the car stopped and
then started in the opposite direction (backwards).
>
> Doug
>
> On 2/17/10 5:42 PM, Bob Richards wrote:
> I shifted from neutral to reverse once, while going about 60mph forward.
(Non-intentional, I must add). It actually went into reverse. The rear tires
locked up, but I was able to quickly shift back to neutral and coasted to a
stop on the side of the road. I expected to see transmission fluid leaking
out, a bent drive shaft, etc. Nothing wrong. Cranked back up and continued on
my way. This was in a Plymouth Arrow (I believe it was a Mitsubishi product),
circa 1980.
>
> Bob R.
>
> --- On Wed, 2/17/10, McInturff, Gary<[email protected]>  wrote:
>
> Oh transmission aren't all that invulnerable. I thought it was
> impossible to get a transmission into part while doing about 60. An old
> girlfriend proved me wrong about that - *(*#REN#Y$I&243()(@$)(@!!
> Anybody want some smooth gears and a pile of scrap metal
>
> Gary McInturff
> 208 635 8306
>
> -
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>    

-- 

     ___          _       Doug Smith
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