SicnarFranciS wrote:You are indeed correct, but what about those individuals who have no ideas and knowledge about this things that we are talking about? I think they should be the one who needs to know this information. In the first place this should be the right thing to do, but then I guess it would depends on individuals thoughts.
Viva Mapua! Is that a name of a School/University?
No, Viva Mapua is not the name of the school. It's a common practiced expression that a Mapuan says to another Mapuan as a sign of greeting couple up with a bit of pride.
Let me share an enlightenment:
Mapúa Institute of Technology - Name of the School
"Best Engineering School in the Philippines" - as always quoted by the press
When you are a Mapuan, the companies in the Philippines prioritize you to be hired in engineering positions.
When you are a Mapuan, in the Philippines, you always gets a reaction "wow, you're a Mapuan"
If you are interested, below is a good source of information of some of our Mapúa graduates.
Mapúa Grad Designs Engine Harness for Luxury Cars Jaguar and Land Rover
Mapúa Institute of Technology Mechanical Engineering graduate Jose Ronaldo C. Roque, is the designer of the routing of electrical engine wiring harness (including the fixing and position) for the XKR and XJ models of luxury car manufacturer Jaguar.
The XKR was hailed as the European Car of the Year in 2006 when it was first unveiled to the public. Aside from the Jaguar models, Roque is also behind the designs of the Land Rover, Range Rover and Discovery 3 engine harnesses for the 2006 and 2007 models.
Even as a student in Mapúa, he already showed particular interest in engine and wire harnesses, with his graduate thesis being on “Wiring Harness Manufacturing”. After graduation, Roque first trained in Yazaki-Torres Manufacturing Inc., Philippines before he was sent to the US Atlanta branch of the same company to work for a year. The aforementioned design is his first engine harness assignment in the Yazaki Company. Jaguar commissioned Yazaki for this project.
Currently, Roque is based in Coventry, considered as the car manufacturing center in the United Kingdom, where he has been working as a design engineer for six years.
During a phone interview with Roque’s father Generoso, likewise a Mapúa graduate majoring in Electrical Engineering, the latter said that he was extremely proud of his son’s accomplishments.
*********Renowned Mapuans************
1. DR. LEON CHUA
A professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of California at Berkeley, Dr. Leon O. Chua is widely recognized as the father of nonlinear circuit theory and cellular neural networks (CNN). The CNN architecture is the only one implemented into a practical fully-programmable chip for solving ultra-high-speed pattern recognition and image processing problems. The CNN universal machine chip is capable of a thousand times greater performance in speed, weight and power consumption than related technologies. Dr. Chua also invented a five-element circuit for generating chaotic signals. Aptly named the Chua Circuit, it is used by many researchers to design secure communications systems based on chaos.
An IEEE Fellow, he is a past president of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society and former editor of the IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems.
Dr. Leon Chua, (BSEE)- Former Dept Chair, University of California, Berkeley, Electrical Engineering. First recipient of the 2005 Gustav Kirchhoff Award---the highest IEEE Technical Field Award for outstanding contributions to the fundamentals of any aspect of electronic circuits and systems; recipient of the IEEE Neural Networks Pioneer Award in 2000, the IEEE Browder J. Thompson Memorial Prize in 1972, the IEEE W. R. G. Baker Prize in 1978, the Frederick Emmons Award in 1974, and the M. E. Van Valkenhurg Award in 1995 and 1998; holder of 7 US patents and 8 honorary doctorates and recognized by the Institute of Scientific Information as one of the top 15 most-cited authors in all fields of engineering during 1991-2001.
Education:
Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urban-Champaign, 1964MSEE.,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1961
BSEE, Mapua Institute of Technology, 1959
The applet shows a simulation of Chua's circuit, plotting the voltage measured across C1 against the voltage measured across C2. This corresponds to the display on an X-Y oscilloscope with probes connected across these capacitors. The initial values of the parameters used in the applet correspond to the component values in the circuit diagram, and show a simple periodic orbit (oscillation). The transition to chaotic dynamics can be found by carefully decreasing R or C1, (e.g. decrease R in steps of 0.01 to 1.2K). The simulation compares well with what is actually seen on an oscilloscope. Chaos seems to develop via a subharmonic cascade.
If you do not have access to an oscilloscope, you can use the voltage across C1 or C2 as the input to a high input impedance audio amplifier (with the component values shown the frequency of the oscillations is in the audio range). It turns out that the ear is very sensitive to the development of a weak subharmonic. The subharmonic becomes the fundamental an octave below the original tone, and the ear hears the note drop an octave even when the intensity of the new fundamental is very weak. The first two or three transitions in the subharmonic cascade route to chaos, and the onset of chaos (noise!) are very audible.
2. DR. DIOSDADO BANATAO
Chairman, Managing Partner
Tallwood Venture Capital
Engineer / Inventor
His contributions to the computer industry include: the first single-chip, 16-bit microprocessor-based calculator (while at Commodore in 1976); the first single-chip MicroVAX for Digital Equipment; the first 10-Mbit Ethernet CMOS with silicon coupler data-link control and transreceiver chip; got 3Com into the Ethernet PC add-in card business (while at Seeq in early 1980s); the first system logic chip set for the PC-XT and the PC-AT in 1985; and the first enhanced graphics adapter chip set among many others.
Dado Banatao is the managing partner of Tallwood Venture Capital. With his past experiences as an entrepreneur, Dado provides Tallwood with a unique perspective. As an engineer, he is credited with developing several key semiconductor technologies and is regarded as a Silicon Valley visionary. As an investor, he has a keen sense of trends and opportunities involving technology solutions for computing and communications.
Prior to forming Tallwood, Mr. Banatao was a venture partner at the Mayfield Fund. He has co-founded three technology startups, S3 (SBLU), Chips & Technologies (INTC), and Mostron. He has also held positions at National Semiconductor, Seeq Technologies, Intersil, and Commodore International. In 1997, he was honored with the prestigious Master Entrepreneur of the Year Award sponsored by Ernst & Young, Inc. Magazine, and Merrill Lynch Business Financial Services.
Mr. Banatao serves as Chairman for SiRF Technology (SIRF) and current Tallwood portfolio companies. He also served as Chairman and led investments in Marvell Technology Group (MRVL), Acclaim Communications, acquired by Level One (INTC), Newport Communications, acquired by Broadcom (BRCM), Cyras Systems, acquired by Ciena (CIEN), and Stream Machine, acquired by Cirrus Logic (CRUS). He holds a B.S.E.E., cum laude, from the Mapua Institute of Technology in the Philippines and an M.S. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from Stanford University.
Banatao is most known for introducing the first single-chip graphical user interface accelerator that made computers work a lot faster and for helping develop the Ethernet controller chip that made Internet possible. In 1989, he pioneered the local bus concept for personal computers and in the following year developed the First Windows accelerator chip. Intel is now using the chips and technologies developed by Banatao. He now runs his own semiconductor company, Mostron and Chips & Technology, which is based in California's Silicon Valley.
Considered as the Bill Gates of Asia.
3. DR. ARTURO ALCARAZ- MAPUA
Arturo Pineda Alcaraz
ARTURO PINEDA ALCARAZ was born in Manila, the Philippines, on March 21, 1916, the second child of Conrado Alcaraz and Paz Pineda. As a government auditor the elder Alcaraz moved frequently, so his five children attended schools in a number of different towns. ARTURO completed elementary school at Lucena, Quezon Province, in southern Luzon, in 1929. His father was then transferred to Camarines Norte, where ARTURO took his first year of high school, and then to Baguio City.
Going to high school in the cool hills of Baguio, which was then a pleasant small town, was a "wonderful experience" for the boy. In the early 1930s the region was enjoying a mining boom and Leopoldo Faustino, a cousin of his father and one of the first Filipinos to earn a doctorate in geology, was then Head of the Division of Mines of the Bureau of Science. He spoke so highly to the young man of mining as a career that when ALCARAZ graduated at the top of his class from Baguio City High School in 1933, he sought to prepare for that profession. Since there was no school of mining in the Philippines, he entered the College of Engineering, University of the Philippines in Manila. A year later when Mapua Institute of Technology, also in Manila, offered a degree in mining engineering, ALCARAZ transferred there, receiving a Bachelor of Science in Mining Engineering from Mapua in 1937.
Arturo Alcaraz - Volcanologist: Doctor Arturo Alcaraz is a volcanologist specializing in geothermal energy development. In 1967, Arturo Alcaraz and team powered an electric light bulb using steam-powered electricity, Power coming from a Volcano near the town of Tiwi. This was the first geothermal power generated in the Philippines.
ALCARAZ is the First Prominent expert in the field of Geothermal Energy and Mining.
....there are more, but it will take the whole site to post it! hahahahah
---so that's Mapua!
....next time you want to hire someone? Hire a Mapuan!
...but then most of them doesn't really run out of jobs...ofcourse, as always, there are exceptions to the rule.