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William Torke Phones & Addresses

  • 3201 Duval Rd APT 1122, Austin, TX 78759
  • 3816 Lamar Blvd, Austin, TX 78704
  • College Station, TX
  • 399 Pope Bnd, Cedar Creek, TX 78612 (512) 303-7667
  • Indianapolis, IN
  • West Lafayette, IN
  • 364 Firehouse Pl, Indianapolis, IN 46204

Work

Company: National instruments Jan 2012 Position: Hardware engineer and modular instruments

Education

Degree: Master of Science, Masters School / High School: Texas A&M University 2009 to 2011 Specialities: Electrical Engineering

Skills

Fpga • Hardware Architecture • Pcb Design • Embedded Systems • Signal Integrity • Vhdl • Pxi • Debugging • Schematic Capture • Analog • Pcie • Analog Circuit Design • Labview • Circuit Design

Industries

Semiconductors

Resumes

Resumes

William Torke Photo 1

Hardware Engineer And Modular Instruments

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Location:
Austin, TX
Industry:
Semiconductors
Work:
National Instruments
Hardware Engineer and Modular Instruments
Education:
Texas A&M University 2009 - 2011
Master of Science, Masters, Electrical Engineering
Purdue University
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science, Electrical Engineering
Skills:
Fpga
Hardware Architecture
Pcb Design
Embedded Systems
Signal Integrity
Vhdl
Pxi
Debugging
Schematic Capture
Analog
Pcie
Analog Circuit Design
Labview
Circuit Design

Publications

Us Patents

Integrated Circuit With Authomatic Pin-Strapping Configuration

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US Patent:
20040098699, May 20, 2004
Filed:
Nov 14, 2002
Appl. No.:
10/295301
Inventors:
Frank Breejen - Tucson AZ, US
David Biven - Austin TX, US
William Torke - Cedar Creek TX, US
William Gardei - Derry NH, US
Assignee:
Cirrus Logic, Incorporated - Austin TX
International Classification:
G06F017/50
US Classification:
716/015000
Abstract:
An integrated circuit, in which one or more internal parameters may be automatically configured for a particular application, includes a plurality of program select pins, each being in a predetermined fixed state, and at least one configuration pin associated with a parameter to be adjusted. Jumpers on the system board to which the integrated circuit is mounted connect the mounting pad of each configuration pin with the mounting pad of a selected program select pin. Consequently, when the integrated circuit is mounted on the system board, each configuration pin receives a selected value which internal configuration circuitry detects and causes the corresponding parameter to be adjusted accordingly. Any of the program select pins may have functions in addition to the configuration function. When the system board is powered on or undergoes a reset, a processor internal to the chip scans each the configuration pin to determine its value. The processor then sets internal registers accordingly, completing the configuration process, and the chip may begin normal operation.
William J Torke from Austin, TX, age ~54 Get Report