News Release from: National Instruments
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial Team on 27 January 2005
NI puts patent settlement to good use
National Instruments has donated $4 million worth of NI products and $1 million in cash to more than 100 universities in 25 countries for academic research and classroom projects.
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National Instruments has donated $4 million worth of NI products and $1 million in cash to more than 100 universities in 25 countries for academic research and classroom projects that improve science, technology, engineering and mathematics education. The contributions, which were funded with $2 million from a patent infringement settlement, are being used for teaching and research applications in areas such as signal processing, control systems and communications. 'The educational grant from National Instruments will provide critical hands-on experience with state-of-the-art software and equipment in a series of courses in mechanical and electrical engineering', said Dr George Johnson, a Professor from the University of California at Berkeley.
'It is particularly beneficial to have the same software for a sequence of upper division courses in circuits, controls, signal processing, instrumentation, design and system analysis'.
'This grant will permit our students to explore the behaviour of real systems in far greater depth than is possible now through the use of advanced analytical and data visualisation capability of LabView'.
Engineering programmes at leading educational institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Fudan University in China and Indian Institute of Technology now have access to cutting-edge NI products, including PXI-based RF modules and control hardware, NI Educational Laboratory Virtual Instrumentation Suites (ELVIS) and the new NI CompactRIO reconfigurable I/O embedded control systems.
With the donated equipment and the NI LabView graphical development environment, students can quickly put engineering theories into practice through easy-to-use interfaces and connectivity to thousands of measurement devices.
'National Instruments is dedicated to advancing engineering education by equipping leading universities with resources that give students hands-on experience with engineering concepts', said Ray Almgren, NI Vice President of Product Marketing and Academic Relations.
'With these grants, we fulfilled 150 proposals from top institutions around the world to add innovative graphical system design and development techniques into their research and teaching applications'. Request free introductory details about products from National Instruments....
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