On-Campus Interviews ^ Circuit Design and Fabrication IMJUim ’SR Company specializing in SEMICONDUCTOR telecommunication products TriQuint designs, manufactures, and markets a broad range of high performance RF, analog, and mixed signal integrated circuits. The Company utilizes Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) semiconductor fabrication technology to produce a variety of high performance solutions for cellular, terrestrial, and satellite communication systems. We have two RF design and GaAs fabrication facilities: one located in Hillsboro, Oregon, the other in Dallas, TX. TriQuint has just over 1000 employees and is growing in revenue on average over 35% per year for the past 10 years. Opportunities for B.S, M.S, Ph.D. Engineering candidates at both plants include: 0 RF Circuit Design 0 Process Engineering OR&D 0 Applications Engineering 0 Product Engineering 0 Reliability 0 Software 0 Financial Analysts Sign up on our Pre-Select Schedules (Open 16 January) at the Career Center ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS IN KOLDUS: Tuesday 20 February MANDATORY INFORMATIONAL MEETING (CASUAL): Monday 19 February www. triquint, com PERFORMANCE TONIGHT NOW IN ITS 4TH KILLER YEAR ON BROADWAY MSC OPAS Isn’t it time you found out what all the screaming about? SlrfcALL 845-1234 9^dr toll-free 888-890-5667 FOR MATURE AUDIENCES? Mfp)(iag»9(n Season Media Partners wX He mm i Win free tickets online at opas.tamu.edu JANUARY 24 & 25 AT 7:30 P.M. • RUDDER AUDITORIUM You go to school to learn You come home to: Relax 2, 3 or 4 bedroom apartment homes Flay i Apartment Features: ii one. 103C Workout Individual lease by the bedroom uoy kef; Ethernet Service >Y e provided . 39b w/D in every unit J Monitored intrusion V alarms • Basic cable provided dr • Furnished units available • Microwaves included Study Community Features: ■ Sand volleyball court State of the art Multi-Media center Game room Fitness Center • On University Bus Route ■ Resort style pool w/jacuzzi (979) 696-5711 (979) 696-5661 - Fax Collegiate Residences 1 1 7 IfOLLEMAN DRIVE WEST www.suhvillage.com 1=1 Fafie 10 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Thursday, January 25,21)01 THE BATTALION Cellular Biology By Stuart Hutson The Battalion As dozens of students lined up to purchase their textbooks at a local bookstore last week, the low murmur of complaints about class schedules and overinflated prices was shattered by a digital Vendition of “Ode to Joy.” Immediately, more than half the students made a simultaneous mo tion to check a piece of electronic equipment that, in the Bryan-College Station community, has become as common a sight as a used textbook: the cellular phone. From the breadbox-size car phones in the ’80s to the sleek, cred- it-card-size phones of today, cellular technology continues to offer the ability to communicate with the world. Costas Georghiades, Texas A&M professor of electrical engi neering and a cellular technology ex pert, said the full potential of that ability has yet to be reached. How it works lular phones. This station sends the call through the appropriate base sta tion. The call may also be broadcast by several base stations covering the particular cellular phone’s usage area. Digital us. analog Those shopping for a new cellular phone may notice that cellular phones not boasting the catch word “digital" are in small supply. Phone suppliers claim that digital service is clearer and more dependable and will oitei more options. Georghiades agrees. Georghiades said cellular phones work with a network of base sta tions, large antennas that transmit signals to and receive signals from the phone. The area in which a phone can interact with a station i is called a cell. “The cell ranges of these sta- 1 tions depend upon the strength of m the signal and the geography of M the landscape,” he said. “When m you are moving out of a cell, the m base station will either hand m you over to another station or, m if there isn 't another station, it f will cut you off and give you | I People dre finding more wags to carrg with them ail the toots of the home computer, and then some." — Peine Catala telecommunications expert m Ott - ~|T the same way that the code is com pressed by a personal computer before being stored in a zip file. This compressed format is benefi cial to cellular phone companies be cause it allows several cellular phone users to carry on conversations in the place of one. When this digital format is re ceived, it is converted back into ana log signals that are carried to the speaker of the receiving phone. The resulting sound can be much clearer because additional noise is filtered out during the con version process. “With the analog signal, any interference caused by the atmosphere during transmis sion will show up in the product because what you are sending is what you are goingto hear,” Georghiades said. 1 with digital signals, the signal only has to be clear enough forthe computer to recognize a si meaning one or a signal meaning zero. It then interprets those signal: and reconstructs what you hear." Georghiades said another benefi; of digital technology is that it allows information to be passed easily be tween cellular phones and computer “They are both speaking the same language, so it is easy for them it talk,” he said. “This is probably one of the most exciting aspects forte future of digital cellular phones.” Th« 1 an ‘out of range’ or some other message.” The base stations con stantly emit a radio signal that indicates their pres ence. When a cellular phone user turns on the phone within range of a station, the phone re ceives this signal and then returns a signal of its own, basically telling the station that "it is ready to re ceive and send calls. This signal car ries a signature or number that iden tifies the phone. At this point, the reception indi cator on the phone (usually a bar sim ilar to the battery indicator) shows the strength of reception. Georghiades said that, when a call is made from a cellular phone, the base station receives the signal from the phone and then sends the call through the normal “wired” phone system. If the call is to another cellular phone, the call may be routed from the wired system to a main comput er station that monitors the connec tions between base stations and cel- A digital future The digital connection betweer cellular phones and computers allows wireless connections to thete temet and email, but Georghiades sot he expects new applications as boi the phones and the services improve “You have a computer chip in you phone that allows it to act as aconv i Joh i typi cian coui spec on a cons ing < on d publ use < John an al ure. MSb ing r peop prob jailf Accc ment and v anotf or pr< 1999 proxi the el It app ingto, the ac was ii numb one ir Th o cnmu admit failun The reason for this better service, he said, lies in the very difference be tween analog and digital signals. All cellular phone signals are ra dio waves, like the ones used by ra dios and television broadcasts. Ana log signals use these waves to carry sound patterns exactly as they are produced when sound enters the phone’s microphone. Digital phones, however, use a computer chip to con vert those sound patterns into the bi nary code of ones and zeros. This is the same code computers use. Before sending this information, the computer compresses the binary code, puter,” he said. “A major hindranci now is the screen not being ableli display the information that the ph® caii receive. But the ability to havet hologram or something like itonyw ^ ’ phone is not science fiction anymor: ' lllLS it is a science possibility.” As for the next few years, Pa Catala, a telecommunications exp. j said research is being donetoiittf prove the rate at which cellular phones can transfer information.Tte fastest laboratory speed is 144 kilo bits per second, or fast enough to tele conference. The fastest phone-lit modem for a personal computer is 5f j kilobits per second. Catala said the researchers hopete achieve a speed of 384 kilobits per®: ond in the next few years. He said! speed is comparable to a cable mode: “There is some fascinating stiij coming,” Catala said. “People c finding more ways to carry withtk all the tools of the home compule: and then some.” TAMU career center don't miss outJ Last year 1,266 employers came through the Career Center to meet and interview Aggies. V Hi s o tial e If the learn tion, cal p; boost of vo rent d future umbrt give s thoug U This year they could be looking for you. Register with the career Center by January 30,2001 to be ready for ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS and YOUR NAME WILL BE ADDED TO A DRAWING FOR $500! TAMU Career Center 845-5139 209 Koldus http://careercenter.tamu.edu A place to meet your next employer Gore i | son fo giance agree: beans Hiise.i numb GoPii His ^an-A Politic •n Anif to imir Politic ber of fegiste •ncreas iion to c al par this °n itsv Parties Gectioi 'tnd the c onven tt bit co . Des| ’n 200C Preside s Peaks c bose/ i Mth Hi Pronum