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3-day course on designing and monitoring real-time software systems

Feb 6, 2003 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — views

(PR excerpt) — TimeSys has opened registration for a three-day course entitled “Real-Time Architecture Assurance through Analysis,” to be held at its Pittsburgh, PA, headquarters on Feb. 18-20, 2003. The course is aimed toward software architects and engineers, project managers, and lead software designers involved in embedded real-time system development.

The course will cover the key principles fundamental to assuring an appropriate real-time architecture. Attendees will also participate in an exercise in which they'll define the architecture of a specific system using the principles presented throughout the course, including structural and timing analysis of the system.

Participants will leave with a thorough understanding of analytical frameworks and decomposition techniques for designing and monitoring real-time architectures throughout the entire project lifecycle.

The course will be taught by Dr. Doug Locke, Vice President of Technology at TimeSys. Doug has spent more than 35 years intimately involved in a wide variety of real-time systems for aerospace, industrial controls and automotive applications with companies such as Lockheed Martin, IBM Corporation and TimeSys. He has authored numerous papers, has taught dozens of course on real-time architectures, and has served on various real-time standardization committees, including the Real-Time Specification for Java, POSIX, Real-Time CORBA and Real-Time UML. Doug is currently the maintenance lead for the RTSJ. He holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science (with a dissertation on real-time systems) from Carnegie Mellon University.

The cost of the three day course is $3,000 and includes all course materials.

 
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