| AAAEA Illinois Newsletter |
June 2008
Issue 6 Vol 1
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| In This Issue |
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Chicago ARABESQUE
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Education Commetti Letter
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Web Designer WANTED |
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Newsletter Committee |
Luai
AbuHilal - Chair Amro
Kudssi - CoChair Jamal Grainawi - Memeber Bilal
Almasri - Memeber
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| Print a hard copy |
President Hasan Algholeh's
Message
Dear Members and Engineers,
On behalf of the executive board I
would like to thank all the members of AAAEA for giving us
their vote and their trust. I want to thank all the previous
executive boards for the hard work and the remarkable
achievements in all areas of this associations. Each executive
board has made it a challenge to the one who comes after it to
keep up with the same level of energy and hard work to
maintain the growth of this association. This board is taking
the challenge and it will prevail. This board with the help of
board of trustees and all the active members will lead
this association to a more prospers future. There will be a
lot of hard work. I will be reaching out to all engineers who
are members and the ones who aren't members to come
forward and participate in our committees and our activities.
It should be an honor to all engineers to volunteer their time
and their effort to the benefit of this association and
ultimately to the benefit of this
community.
We are the professionals,
with that comes a great responsibilities. The question
is are we up to handling these responsibilities, to lead and
achieve our goals or are we just followers who need to
be lead. I say we are leaders, we can handle any task and I
extend my invitation to all Arab engineers to work with this
executive board and with this association to be an example to
all who follows.
We have the talent, the resources
and the expertise to achieve the impossible; all what we need
is to work together for one reason and one reason only which
is the continuing success of this association. We have come a
long way and still a lot more to go and a lot more to achieve.
I am humbly reaching out for all the engineers to be active
members and to volunteer some of their time to this noble
cause.
you can reach out anyone of
the newly elected executive board and offer your help
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Hasan Algholeh |
President |
312-719-3896 |
gholeha@Aol.com |
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Nabeel Address |
Vice President |
815-252-2799 |
nabeel.aldr@gmail.com,
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Suha Saber |
Secretary |
312-409-8560 |
aa@aaaea.org |
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Anas Alkhatib |
Treasurer |
630-915-5223 |
khatia@yahoo.com |
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Amro Kudssi |
IT Officer |
312-479-3887 |
amr@aaaea.org |
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Mousa Issa |
Education Committee Chairman |
708-717-4836 |
moussa.issa@hbmengineering.com
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Mohammad Mikbel |
Membership Committee Chairman
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773-759-8363 |
mikemik@hotmail.com |
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Nabil Rafae |
Activity Committee Chairman |
630-248-7523 |
nre@dsnworldwide.com |
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Raghad Adeis-Dahan |
Publication Committee Chairman
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773-582-0557 |
zdahh@comcast.net
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Ghazi Sadat |
Career Enhancement Committee Chairman
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847-637-7829 |
gmsa@concordiawireless.com
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All your input, participation,
involvement, volunteering will be greatly appreciated. If you
ever have any questions or problems, please feel free to
contact me anytime!
Thank You, Hasan Algholeh, P.E. AAAEA
President | |
Illinois News
CHICAGO ARABESQUE 2008 Fact Sheets:-
Summary: Chicago Arabesque offers a
dynamic journey through the food, music, arts, and cultures of
the Arab World in downtown Chicago. Representing over twenty
Arab countries, the Chicago Arabesque festival seeks to
introduce Americans to the hospitality and rich diversity of
the Arab World through games, story-telling, dance,
calligraphy, carpet-weaving, music, cultural products, and
food. Located in the heart of Chicago’s downtown
"Loop", at the doorstep of the city’s main public buildings,
shopping areas, and easily accessible by public
transportation, the festival site is a great opportunity to
reach a diverse audience, including a significant professional
target. The four-day festival has two main target
populations: 1) the weekday lunch crowd and downtown
business-people and tourists who pass through Daley Plaza, and
2) Chicagoland’s large and diverse Arab-American population.
Date: June 25-28, 2008 (Wednesday
through Saturday) Location: Daley
Plaza (corner of Dearborn and Washington Streets, Chicago)
Crowd Estimate: In 2007, Chicago
Arabesque drew over 50,000 people.
A Letter from the Education Commitee:
Dear Members,
We would like to thank all of you for your
support during the last years. The Education Committee is
indebted to your hard work, enthusiasm, suggestions and your
continuous participation in our activities. The original idea
behind creating the Education Committee, many years ago, was
to organize the creative ideas, suggestions, and efforts of
our professional members and supporters. The collaborative
effort of both the Education Committee and our members had led
to many success stories and set an example of what AAAEA
stands for.
As part of the education planning effort, the
Education Committee was formed on Sunday 6/8/2008 to discuss
the future plans and activities during the 2008/2009 year. The
Education Committee members are:
1-Dr. Mousa Issa (Chair) 2-Dr. Wael
Alkasawneh (Co-Chair) 3-Dr. Ghafar Kazkaz
(Member) 4-Jamal Grainawi (Member) 5-Dr. Ahmad
Hammad (Member) 6-Dr. Soliman
Khudaira (Member) 7-Bilal Almasri (Member)
The Education Committee endorsed the following
Education Plan for the 2008/2009 year:
1-One full day conference 2-Hold a one-day
conference 3-EIT review courses from January to
April. 4-Bi-monthly seminars/lectures 5-SE and/or PE
review courses as requested. 6-ACT review courses for our
community students from January to April. 7-Improve the
Math and Science services to our community
students. 8-Introduce our Arabic Schools to the Junior
Achievement program.
The above ambitious plan is intended to
generate more creative ideas and suggestions by our members.
The variable backgrounds and expertise of our members are the
essence of the Education Plan success. Please feel free to
share you thoughts with the Education Committee to better
serve our community and members.
Together we can serve better!
On behalf of the Education Committee: Dr.
Mousa Issa Dr. Wael Alkasawneh
Web Graphics Designer is Needed:
AAAEA executive board is seeking the help of a
Web Graphics Designer for working with the IT
officer on refreshing the AAAEA's Website. If you have (or
know someone that have) Adobe Photoshop, Flash and/or
equivalent Graphics designing experience please contact Amro
Kudssi, AAAEA IT Officer at amr@aaaea.org.
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Tech
Article: What's new in Java Platform -by Amro Kudssi, MS.
Software Engineering.
This month Technical Article is in
the field of Information Technology, a little twist from
previous articles. Since I am specilized in Java platform and
the open source community I like to talk about Whats new in
Java Platform. Lots of new and cool features coming up to the
Java Platform Word. While I like to talk in-depth about some
of these feature I know the majority of the AAAEA members are
not from the IT world. So I will try to keep it simple and
informative to both IT Professionals and hobiests. If
you are not one of those you can skip to the social section
:)
The New Java Runtime Environment
(JRE) Version 1.6 update 10 is formaly known as the Consumer
JRE is focused on two areas. The desktop Applications and the
Mobile devices. After stabling the Server side Sun
Microsystems' (the company behind Java) main foucs now is how
to increase the market share of Java on the computer desktops
and on the mobile devices.
The JRE
on the desktop is the engine that runs all Java standalone
applications and the Java applets (those that run inside the
browser). So on the desktop many new features are
coming with the new Consumer JRE. Here are
some:
Performance: Sun's
JRE has been steadily getting faster over the years, and this
is no exception. The Key performance improvements with this
release is the introduction of Java Quick Starter, which will
substantially improve Java cold start time on most systems,
and a new graphics pipeline on Windows. The
Java cold start time is the time when you start a Java based
application the very first time when you do not even have JRE
installed on you machine. This is what causes the perception
that java startup is slow. The new improvement here is
“sub-setting” approach, breaking up the monolithic Java
platform into discrete chunks of functionality that get
downloaded and installed according to what any specific
application needs, but to then stream down the rest of the
platform in the background. The order of the download of these
chunks may vary between different setups but it follows the
following rules:
- Download base functionality that every application needs
(VM, garbage collector, security, classloader, and
enough basic networking functionality to be able
to download the rest of the bits)
- Download additional dependencies that this application
specifies
- Download any "Class not found" exception culprits as
needed
- Download the rest of the JRE in parallel until the
entire release exists on the user's system
Also on the startup performance, Sun introduced
“Java Warm Startup” this is when you already have the JRE
installed on the PC and you just needed to start a Java
Application. Well the JRE itself is over 40MB and reading it
from the hard is technically slower than reading it form the
memory. On the other loading the whole JRE in the memory is a
waste for the OS resource and the end user who might not run a
Java App for the entire session. So the solution is to take
advantage of the disk cache to make sure that the memory pages
on disk that Java must read at startup have already been
loaded before it needs them. These can pre-load at
some earlier time, such as Windows boot or login time.
And these pages can be kept warm in the disk cache as machine
and memory conditions allow. The OS can still swap them out
when cache disk is needed for something else.
Graphics performance: The
default graphics pipeline on Windows has been re-written to
take advantage of Direct3D for performing everything from
simple rectangular fills and copies, which is what you get now
by default, to translucency, gradients, arbitrary
transformations, and other more advanced 2D operations. Swing
applications simple and complex should benefit from much
better runtime performance on Windows as a result. Swing
performs its rendering through Java 2D, and is therefore
dependent upon the graphics rendering speed of Java 2D for
fast Swing performance. And, unlike previous 3D pipelines
which were not robust enough to be enabled by default, the new
pipeline is rock-solid and used by default in This Consumer
JRE.
Next-Generation Java
plug-in:Java Plug-In technology, which is included in
the Java Runtime Environment, enables Java applets to run in
web browsers on the desktop. The next-generation Java Plug-In,
new in Consumer JRE, provides powerful new capabilities to
applets in the web browser, while improving the overall
reliability and functionality of applets in a
backward-compatible manner. The next-generation Java
Plug-In offers a completely redesigned architecture. Instead
of executing applets in the same operating system process as
the web browser, the new plug-in runs one or more Java virtual
machine instances ("JVMs") which connect back to the browser
for full interoperability with the surrounding web page. This
architectural change offers many advantages and enables
several new features.
- Improved reliability. The JVM running
the applet is isolated from the web browser at the operating
system level. If something should go wrong while running the
applet, or if an uncooperative applet refuses to shut down,
the new Java Plug-In detects and handles the error condition
gracefully; the web browser is unaffected.
- Built-in JNLP support. The new plug-in
offers the capability to launch applets directly from JNLP
files, unifying deployment of Java content both in the
browser and out of the browser (via Java Web Start).
- Per-applet command-line arguments. JVM
command-line arguments may be specified on a per-applet
basis, providing fine-grained control over options such as
the heap size and Java 2D hardware acceleration features.
JNLP-launched applets simply incorporate the command-line
arguments and/or system properties into the JNLP file.
Old-style applets can embed these arguments in the HTML of
the web page.
- Multiple Java Platform version support.
Each individual applet instance may request a different Java
Platform version on which to run. This feature is designed
for enterprise customers which prefer to qualify their
applets against either a particular Java Platform version or
a particular Java Platform family. Both selection of a
specific Java Platform version, or any in a particular
family, are supported in the new plug-in.
- Improved Java/JavaScript communication.
The bridge between the JavaScript engine in the web browser
and the Java programming language has been completely
reimplemented. The new implementation is backward-compatible
and features improved reliability, performance and
cross-browser portability, for both Java calling JavaScript
as well as JavaScript calling Java.
- Improved user experience. The new Java
Plug-In starts applets in the background, so the web browser
always remains responsive. Applets appear on the web page as
they become ready to run.
- Improved applet lifecycle management.
Calls to the applet lifecycle methods init, start, stop, and
destroy are more deterministic and cross-browser behavior
has been improved. The applet class loader cache and the
legacy applet lifecycle, required for backward
compatibility, are fully supported and the behavior of both
has been improved.
- Better large heap support.
Historically, the maximum heap size that could be specified
for applets via the Java Control Panel has been limited.
This limitation is fixed in the new Java Plug-In; applets
can now utilize as much heap space as command-line
applications.
- Better Windows
Vista support.
Signed applets running in Protected Mode Internet Explorer
on Microsoft's Windows Vista now have the same privileges as
normal user applications, eliminating a portability barrier
to this platform.
New Look and Feel for Swing
applications is called “Nimbus”. The Metal look & feel
from previous versions was good in its day. And Ocean was a
decent theme for Metal, especially given the
backward-compatible constraint of maintaining the metrics
used by the UI components. But these cross-platform look &
feels are, frankly, dated, and developers need a more modern
look for Swing. Of course there are other look & feels out
there, some quite good. But in the meantime, Java Swing should
provide a decent default for Swing developers in the core
platform. Nimbus will be that new look & feel
In summary, this is a small subset of the
features that will be rolled out in the third quarter of this
year, It has lots a promises for the Desktop. Wheather it will
start dominating the desktop market like Java Enterprise
Edition (JEE) is dominating the enterprise market is yet to be
found out in the next couple years.
References:
Introducing Java SE 6 update 10 Beta
JavaOne Online Technical
Sessions
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Interview with Chairman Jamal Grainawi, P.E., S.E.
Q1-How was your impression about the Illinois
General election that was held last month?
I have very positive impressions
about this election. AAAEA has always conducted annual
elections since its inception and congratulations to the AAAEA
on its 12th election. This year, the 2008 election was
held and carried out in a very professional manner. The
By-laws amendments were presented by Mr. Ayoub Talhami. A
motion to amend each section was presented to the members. All
modifications to the by-laws were accepted as presented or
amended and accepted during the meeting. Mr. Ahmad
Basrawi oversaw the election and introduced the new elected
board members. I was very happy to see long-time members
as well as some new faces elected to the executive
board.
Q2- As the past AAAEA
president, what was AAAEA main achievement in the past two
years? During the past two years, AAAEA
conducted and carried out all previous programs and introduced
several new programs such as the AAAEA Essay/Poster Contest,
the E-Week Expo, the Community Outreach, and the AAAEA
Golf-Outing. Our main achievement has been our conferences and
seminars where we exceeded any previous year and introduced
our association to the engineering community in addition to
our members.
Q3- What will be your
recommendation to the new elected board members?
Firstly, I would like to extend my
congratulations to the elected board members. Secondly, my
recommendations for them are as follows: Plan ahead;
communicate with each other- one on one and as a group; be
inclusive; carry previous programs and introduce new programs
that benefit our members and the engineering community at
large; and don’t be shy to ask for help when needed. Thirdly,
as I said before, joining an association is not enough. To be
a truly effective association, members must have an active
part and feel that they are getting something useful out of
their membership. We must make all members feel that they are
receiving more than a newsletter or a chance to attend dinner
meetings. The association must be there for the members, and
at the same time the members must be there for the
association. AAAEA depends entirely on the willingness of
individuals to work together for a better association.
Q4- As the board of trustees’ Chairman,
how shall the board of trustees interact with the AAAEA
elected board? The Board of Trustees is
created to act as an advisory body to the Association (AAAEA).
The primary duties of the Board of Trustees shall be to assist
in insuring that all activities of the Executive Board are in
conformance with the By-Laws of the Association. The duties
also include the execution of any assignment given by the
Executive Board as well as provide clarifications to any
request for consultation and/or advice.
Q5- Where you like to see AAAEA 2 years
from now? 2010 is very significant
year for our association as we will be preparing for the
formation of our National association in 2011 as per our
5-year plan. I would like to see our association very
successful in all its programs. Play very important role in
our young students future and very active in our community. I
like to see us active in IEC and the Chicago-Land Engineers
Week Committee and promote them to honor one of our engineers
and choose and add an ARAB engineer to Illinois Engineering
Hall of Fame and engineer of the year.
Q6-What is your advice to our new members?
Volunteer. Believe me; it pays to be
involved in associations and societies. The benefits are
limitless. If you want to advance in your career and get to be
known beyond your work place, network with other professional,
then consider volunteering a few hours per month to contribute
to one of our committees: Activity, Education, Membership,
Publication, Career Enhancement, National Outreach and Women
Engineer. Consider writing an article for our newsletter.
Consider encouraging others to join AAAEA and let AAAEA know
your opinion so they can accurately represent your concerns.
The only way they can successfully do this is with your
involvement. | |
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Members Corner
AAAEA is pleased to welcome New Memebers :
Mohammad Okab (student-UIC)
Ahmed Shalabi (student-UI)
Mohammad Al Bataineh (student-IIT)
Joseph Hussein Zaghal
Ahmed Lemghari
Ismail Attallah
Zaki Abdelrahim
Alia Mohammad
Mustafa Abdel Rahim
Congratulations :
To Omar Alsharbini for passing the PE
exam this week.
To Mohammad Dasoqi on his new palace he build. It
is structurally sound, huge, and beautifully
design/constructed.
To Walid Elffrangi on his daughter's marriage and
best of luck.
To Suha Saber on her marriage and best of luck.
Our best wishes to our colleague Dr. Hibal
Abdalla on landing her new job in the Arab Gulf.
Thank you for all you contribution, we will miss you.
Our best wishes to the father of Dr. Hosam Abdu for
speedy recovery,and wishes to Hosame of a safe trip to Egypt
to see his father.
With regret and sorrow,we inform you about the death
of Dr. Usama Fayyad's father. Our sincere
condolences to you and the family,and may Allah bless him and
you all.
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Jokes of the
Month
A programmer had been
missing from work for over a week when finally someone
noticed and called the cops. They went round to his flat and
broke down the door. They found him dead in the still
running shower with an empty bottle of shampoo next to his
body. Apparently he'd been washing his
hair. The instructions on the bottle
said: 1. Wet hair 2. Apply shampoo 3. Lather
4. Rinse 5. Repeat
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There was an engineer
who had an exceptional gift for fixing all things
mechanical. After serving his company loyally for over 30
years, he happily retired. Several years later his company
contacted him regarding a seemingly impossible problem they
were having with one of their multi-million dollar machines.
They had tried everything and everyone else to get the
machine fixed, but to no avail. In desperation, they called
on the retired engineer who had solved so many of their
problems in the past.
The engineer reluctantly took
the challenge. He spent a day studying the huge machine. At
the end of the day he marked an "x" in chalk on a particular
component of the machine and proudly stated, "This is where
your problem is." The part was replaced and the machine
worked perfectly again.
The company received a bill
for $50,000 from the engineer for his services. They
demanded an itemized accounting of his charges. The engineer
responded briefly:
One chalk
mark..................$1
Knowing where to put
it.........$49,999
It was paid in full and the
engineer retired in
peace.
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