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Scotland South West Local Network events calendar

 




Only events from Scotland South West Local Network are being displayed. To browse or search a complete list of IET events, IET training courses and other training providers, please visit our main Events Calendar.

 


November 2008

  • Nuclear Decommissioning - Separating the Myth from the Reality

    Hunterston A Power Station, located on a promontory of the Ayrshire coast near West Kilbride 30 miles South West of Glasgow, is a twin reactor Magnox power station now shutdown and being decommissioned. This presentation will summarise the remaining work of the strategy and provide a view on the future.

    Lecture 26 November 2008, Glasgow Caledonian University

December 2008

  • A lot of hot air - Christmas School Lecture 2008 - Glasgow

    This touring lecture will focus on our atmosphere and develop from a few simple concepts and practical demonstrations an appreciation of the forces and energy associated with the air around us.  The IET Scotland Christmas School Lecture is suitable for the 14-18 years old age group.

    Lecture 02 December 2008, Glasgow, UK

  • Lecture on IET Membership

    If you are a non-professionally registered member of the IET, on Wednesday 3rd December 2008, there is an opportunity to find out that gaining CEng, IEng or EngTech is easier than you think.

    Lecture 03 December 2008, Glasgow, Scotland

January 2009

  • Technical Visit Linn Products

    A visit to Linn Products their goal is to produce music and movie systems capable of delivering the full emotion of a live performance in your home.

    Visit 14 January 2009, Eaglesham, Scotland

  • 'The Future is Parallel' - Update of 2007 Christmas Lecture

    The 2007 IET Scotland Christmas Lecture entitled 'The Future is Parallel', was organised by the Manufacturing Technical Network and was given by Professor Jon Kerridge of the School of Computing, Edinburgh's Napier University.  Jon is a Fellow of the British Computer Society and has been active in parallel computing systems research and applications since 1980, including building parallel database machines for use in banking applications.  His current teaching and research interests are mainly devoted to making parallelism easier to understand and apply and that has recently led him into using parallelism to control robots as a fun venture.
    Lecture 21 January 2009, Teacher Building, Glasgow