Registered Electrical Engineer Board Exam Result MAY 2010

The successful examinees who garnered the ten (10) highest places in the REGISTERED ELECTRICAL ENGINEER Licensure Examination are the following:

RANK NAME SCHOOL RATING(%)
1 REY KINDAR VILLARINO CALE JR MAPUA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 88.00
2 GE BRYAN BAJAN ESCABAL MINDANAO STATE UNIVERSITY-MARAWI CITY 87.75
LORWIN FELIMAR BARAOIDAN TORRIZO UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES-LOS BAÑOS 87.75
3 JEY YBURAN DE LOS REYES CEBU INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 87.00
4 OHVID BARTOCILLO GRANADEROS UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES- LOS BAÑOS 86.70
5 JAN MIKHAIL DE GUZMAN VILLARINO CEBU INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 86.45
6 HARROLD KING CATUIZA HAYANA TARLAC STATE UNIVERSITY (TARLAC COLLEGE OF TECH.) 86.30
7 RONNEL JHON BACUS BUSTAMANTE CEBU INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 86.05
8 JARVIN CASSIDY BALONAN CO UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES-DILIMAN 85.85
9 HERBERT ANEFEL REVITA GODORNES MINDANAO STATE UNIVERSITY-ILIGAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 85.25
10 WARREN LUALHATI ASENDIDO UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES- LOS BAÑOS 84.45

Check www.prc.gov.ph for the complete list of successful examinees in the LICENSURE EXAMINATION FOR REGISTERED ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS held on May 25 & 26, 2010.

C2 Green Tea & Krispy Kreme Encourage Voting

P10 C2 500ml for Voters

The C2 Green tea brand advocates a cool and clean elections this coming May 10 with their campaign “I keep my Vote Cool and Clean!”. It intends to heighten awareness and encourage Filipinos to vote and promote honest elections.

C2 Cool and Clean Elections!

C2 Cool and Clean Elections!

C2 Green Tea products and some exciting premium items will be made available to voters at C2 booths located in selected voting precincts around Metro Manila on May 10, 2010.

C2 500ml bottles of any flavor would also be available for voters only at P10 in any 7-Eleven and Ministop stores simply by presenting the indelible ink marked on their fingers.

Through the campaign, C2 Green Tea maker aims to empower Filipinos to keep their votes cool and clean while making the voting experience a more meaningful and affirmative experience.

Krispy Kreme Free Orange You Glad Chillers for Voters and KK Friends

Join Krispy Kreme’s Promo and wait for your corresponding email. On Election Day, bring a print out of the “VOTE” email you will receive (similar to the one below) and visit any Krispy Kreme branch in the Philippines.

Krispy Kreme Encourages Voters!

Krispy Kreme Encourages Voters!

Present the email print out and show your finger with the indelible ink and enjoy a free Krispy Kreme Orange You Glad Chiller. Let’s DOugh Our Part and Vote!

Electronics Engineering Board Exam Result April 2010

Top 10 Board Passers

RANK NAME SCHOOL RATING(%)
1 GODOFREDO III CABUS ARNAIZ ATENEO DE NAGA 93.20
2 DEVIN TAPIC METANTE CEBU INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 93.10
3 DANIELLE ANNE CERENO BAUTISTA POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES-MAIN-STA MESA 92.90
4 VAL LESTER CHUA OCAMPO TAN DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY-MANILA 92.50
5 JAIME CATIMBANG TIONG, JR DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY-MANILA 91.70
6 ANDREW DONOVAN LU YU DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY-MANILA 91.30
7 ROBERT BAQUERO RITA EASTERN VISAYAS STATE UNIVERSITY (LIT)TACLOBAN 90.50
8 FRANCIS ERIC TONGOL BONDOC DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY-MANILA 89.90
KIM ANGELO SERRANO HONRADO DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY-MANILA 9.90
9 JAMES BRYAN BEDRIO LABERGAS DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY-MANILA 89.50
AMALYN ALQUIZALAS TAGO UNIVERSITY OF SAN CARLOS 89.50
10 ALDREEN MANUMBALE QUIRIT MAPUA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 89.20

The complete list of board passers is posted on this link:

http://www.pinoyboardresults.co.cc/2010/04/electronics-engineer-board-exam-result.html

Electronics Engineering Licensure Exam for 2010

Date: April 12 – 13, 2010

(Monday & Tuesday)

Venue: Manila, Baguio and Cebu City

Deadline for filing: March 23, 2010

God bless to all ECE board exam takers! :)

Are You Ready to Get Licensed?

UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES
Institute of Electronics and Communication Engineers
of the Philippines

presents

GET LICENSED 2010

PLDT Multimedia Lecture Hall,
Electronics and Electrical Engineering Institute Building,
University of the Philippines-Diliman
10:00am – 5:00pm
Saturday, February 27, 2010

Lunch will be served

(http://getlicensed2010.wordpress.com)

Plane that will Fly Under the Sea

Courtesy: Virgin Limited

NEW YORK — Virgin unveiled the latest addition to Richard Branson’s luxury fleet on Friday: an underwater plane that will fly riders into the depths of the Caribbean Sea.

(source: www.yahoo.com)

Laptop Troubleshooting Seminar

Microwave Design – Sangley Point

2010 New Technology: Nuclear battery

Are you tired of your short laptop battery life with only a few hours? Would you like the charge of your mobile phone to last a couple of months? Well, the answer to your “prayers” might be the nuclear batteries, which are been developed at the University of Missouri. They are designed especially for providing a lasting source of energy. And some people think these batteries could replace the current ones, including those used by the electrical cars. According to the creators, a nuclear battery has a very enormous capacity to generate electricity when compared to a regular one.

The batteries have always been the Achilles’ heel of the mobile devices. Usually, the designers of electronic devices for mass consumption (like laptops or media players) use small displays or screens that are not very bright in order to save the scarce energy resources that are provided from the regular batteries. But the new nuclear battery would bring a solution based on a liquid semiconductor (rather than a solid semiconductor) that will produce a much longer lifetime for the battery. The reason is the solid semiconductors are attacked constantly by some radioactive elements used by other types of batteries, while the liquid semiconductor is quite resistant  to these attacks. Although the term “nuclear” can be a little perturbing, the fact is that these batteries are not very different from those batteries used in, for example, medical pacemakers.

The new radioisotope battery has the size of a penny and provides much more power than the traditional ones because, according to the researches, its capacity is very superior. Jae Kwon, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Missouri, said that the radioisotope battery “can provide power density that is six orders of magnitude higher than chemical batteries”. That is to say, it provides no less than a million times more charge than any “normal” battery.

Kwon and his research team have spent enough time working to solve many problems that they have encountered when developing this type of battery. One important thing is the batteries need to be small and thin in order to be practical and useful; this way, they could be used to power watches and small electronic devices. As mentioned before, the prototype (which you can see in the picture below) has the size and thickness of a penny, but the researchers think they can achieve a thinner battery. In order to do this, Kwon has required the collaboration of another professor: J. David Robertson (chemistry professor and associate director of the MU Research Reactor). Together, they hope to maximize the power of the nuclear batteries as well as reduce the size and test other materials to make additional improvements. Kwon thinks that the final battery, which would be used in commercial gadgets, could be thinner than a human hair. For the moment, the research team have required a provisional patent in order to protect the exclusive right to use this invention.

The new radioisotope battery has the size of a penny and provides much more power than the traditional ones because, according to the researches, its capacity is very superior. Jae Kwon, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Missouri, said that the radioisotope battery “can provide power density that is six orders of magnitude higher than chemical batteries”. That is to say, it provides no less than a million times more charge than any “normal” battery.

Kwon and his research team have spent enough time working to solve many problems that they have encountered when developing this type of battery. One important thing is the batteries need to be small and thin in order to be practical and useful; this way, they could be used to power watches and small electronic devices. As mentioned before, the prototype (which you can see in the picture below) has the size and thickness of a penny, but the researchers think they can achieve a thinner battery. In order to do this, Kwon has required the collaboration of another professor: J. David Robertson (chemistry professor and associate director of the MU Research Reactor). Together, they hope to maximize the power of the nuclear batteries as well as reduce the size and test other materials to make additional improvements. Kwon thinks that the final battery, which would be used in commercial gadgets, could be thinner than a human hair. For the moment, the research team have required a provisional patent in order to protect the exclusive right to use this invention.

(source: www.myddnetwork.com)