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Recorded Webinar: Remote Sensing

Part 2 of the Special Series: How to Keep Your Projects on Track While Working Remotely

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Developing remotely can be a challenge in the age of social distancing. How can we get our jobs done effectively without the hardware and resources we’re used to? Join Stephen Olsen, who is a Senior Manager of Field Application Engineering at BlackBerry QNX with over 20 years of embedded development experience, for this special series on how to collaborate and develop while working remotely. This 30-minute session will provide practical (or hands on) tips and tricks for common challenges and include a live Q&A.

PART 2: REMOTE SENSING
When sensors aren’t physically available, it can be difficult for engineers to work on sensor fusion and data interpretation. In this webinar, we will focus on remote sensing and how one engineer with the embedded hardware can run the system through its paces, capture all the sensor data, store it in the file system, and then disseminate the captured data to all the engineers on the team. This will include:

  • Data collection
  • Data playback
  • Mounting multiple file systems

Stephen Olsen, Senior Manager, Field Application Engineering, BlackBerry QNX

 

Stephen Olsen is a noted embedded industry expert with extensive experience in embedded software development, thought leadership, product management, and communications. He is currently a Senior Manager of Field Application Engineering with BlackBerry QNX.  Prior to QNX, Stephen worked with several other real time operating system vendors in many roles, including product line manager, consultant, system architect, engineering manager and technical marketing. Outside of these companies, he co-chaired VSIA's Hardware dependent Software (HdS) design working group, worked on the MRAPI specification for the Multicore Association, and authored many papers on safety certifiable systems, system architecture, USB, multicore/multi-OS design, and power management. He was awarded a patent on debugging hardware accelerated operating systems.