Jim Williams (analog designer)
Appearance
Jim Williams | |
---|---|
Born | April 14, 1948 |
Died | June 12, 2011 | (aged 63)
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Electronics engineer |
James M. Williams (April 14, 1948 – June 12, 2011) was an analog circuit designer and technical author who worked for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1968–1979), Philbrick, National Semiconductor (1979–1982) and Linear Technology Corporation (LTC) (1982–2011).[1] He wrote over 350 publications[2] relating to analog circuit design, including five books, 21 application notes for National Semiconductor, 62 application notes for Linear Technology, and over 125 articles for EDN Magazine.
Williams suffered a stroke on June 10 and died on June 12, 2011.[3]
Bibliography (partial)
[edit]- Williams, Jim (Aug 1984), Understanding and applying the LT1005 multifunction regulator, Application Note, vol. 1, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (Sep 1987), Switching regulators for poets: A gentle guide for the trepidatious (PDF), Application Note, vol. 25, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (Feb 1988), Thermocouple measurement (PDF), Application Note, vol. 28, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (June 1990), Bridge circuits: Marrying gain and balance (PDF), Application Note, vol. 43, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim, ed. (1991), Analog Circuit Design: Art, Science and Personalities, The EDN Series for Design Engineers, Butterworth-Heinemann, ISBN 978-0-7506-9640-1
- Williams, Jim (Aug 1991), High speed amplifier techniques (PDF), Application Note, vol. 47, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim, ed. (1995), The Art and Science of Analog Circuit Design, The EDN Series for Design Engineers, Butterworth–Heinemann, ISBN 0-7506-9505-6,
MIT building 20 at 3:00 A.M./ Tek. 547, pizza, breadboard./ That's Education.
- Williams, Jim (Nov 1995), A fourth generation of LCD backlight technology (PDF), Application Note, vol. 65, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (Sep 1999), 30 nanosecond settling time measurement for a precision wideband amplifier (PDF), Application Note, vol. 79, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (May 2003), Slew rate verification for wideband amplifiers: The taming of the slew (PDF), Application Note, vol. 94, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (Mar 2010), 1ppm settling time measurement for a monolithic 18-bit DAC: When does the last angel stop dancing on a speeding pinhead? (PDF), Application Note, vol. 120, Linear Technology Corp
- Williams, Jim (Apr 2011), An introduction to acoustic thermometry (PDF), Application Note, vol. 131, Linear Technology Corp
For a complete bibliography, see.[2]
See also
[edit]- Paul Brokaw
- Barrie Gilbert
- Howard Johnson (electrical engineer)
- Bob Pease — analog electronics engineer, technical author, and colleague. Pease died in an automobile accident after leaving Williams' memorial.[4]
- Bob Widlar — pioneering analog integrated circuit designer, technical author, early consultant to Linear Technology Corporation
- Building 20 — legendary MIT building where Jim Williams had a design lab early in his career
References
[edit]- ^ Williams, Jim, ed. (1991), Analog Circuit Design: Art, Science, and Personalities, Butterworth-Heinemann, p. xi, archived from the original on 2012-11-08, retrieved 2017-09-09
- ^ a b Lundberg, Kent (July 31, 2011), A Bibliography of Jim Williams (PDF), MIT
- ^ Rako, Paul (June 13, 2011), Analog guru Jim Williams dies after stroke, EDN
- ^ Rako, Paul (June 20, 2011), Analog engineering legend Bob Pease killed in car crash, EDN
External links
[edit]- Archive of EDN articles.
- Video on how to measure temperature acoustically using a vintage TEK scope on YouTube.
- https://web.archive.org/web/20120319221312/http://www.centredaily.com/2011/06/15/2779140/linear-technology-staff-scientist.html
- Linear Technology - Staff Scientist Jim Williams Remembered
- Walker, Rob (2006). Interview with Bob Dobkin and Jim Williams (part of Stanford and the Silicon Valley Project[permanent dead link]). Recorded April 19, 2006.