User:Weibullguy

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Revision as of 14:49, 19 April 2007 by Weibullguy (talk | contribs)
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CBLFS Tools

Script to help you create a table of installed files to put in the Wiki. Requires InstallWatch to create the log file for input.

http://cross-lfs.org/~arowland/weibullwatch-0.3.tar.bz2

Who Is This Weibullguy?

Weibull - continuous distribution of a random variable proposed by Wallodi Weibull. Guy - male of the human species.

Me - Electrical Engineer undergraduate, Statistics graduate, work as a Reliability/Safety engineer at an aerospace/defense company. Previously worked as the same at a commercial nuclear plant. Current interests include repairable systems analysis, Kijima Type I and Type II models, and system optimization under imperfect repair.

I analyze failure and repair data to estimate parameters of the distribution(s) describing system and component failure times. This is often refered to as Weibull analysis (although there are many other distributions used). Hence, Weibullguy. Now you know.

In response to a post I saw on one of the mailing lists, "I don't have a clue who all the devs at CBLFS are. They all use some stage-names." Here is my abbreviated resume, none of which actually qualifies me as a software developer. Consider that the grain of salt with which to take my entries. If you stumbled across this page looking to hire a reliability engineer you can find my complete resume here.

Andrew Rowland

Work Experience

2006 - Present Reliability and Safety Engineer Smiths Aerospace, Digital Systems Grand Rapids, MI

1999–2006 Reliability Program Owner American Electric Power, Donald C. Cook Nuclear Plant Bridgman, MI

1996–1999 Electrical & Instrumentation Engineer Fort James Packaging Kalamazoo, MI

1990–1996 Reactor Operator United States Navy Various Exotic Locations

Education

B.S., Electrical Engineering Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, MI

M.S., Applied Statistics Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, MI

Libnotify Examples

libnotify is useful for generating pop-up notifications. These notifications are simple to implement using shell scripts or C/C++ code. Here is a Bash example. Here is a C example. As usual, there are no warranties explicit or implied.