Call for Proposals- Research University Grant (Tier 1) Phase 1/2016

Assalamualaikum & Salam Sejahtera,

 

Dear all UTM researchers

 

Call for Proposals – Research University Grant (Tier 1) Phase 1/2016

We are pleased to announce the opening of the application for Research University Grant (Tier 1) Phase 1/2016. The application period is from 15 Apr 2016 to 15 May 2016.

 

All applications must be submitted online through RADIS System https://radis.utm.my before the deadline of 15 May 2016 (Sunday, 5.00pm).
__________________________________________________________________

Criteria :

 

Tier 1

The criteria for Tier 1 application is as follows :

–       The Researchers must be UTM permanent /contract academic staff.

–       The minimum number of members is two ( 2 ) academic staff including Project Leader

–       Maximum budget is RM 50,000.00

–       The application should be solving industry problems/concerns industrial needs

–       Application must attach proof of collaboration i.e. official letter from industry/international partner

–       Industry/international partner is encouraged to contribute cash or in-kind

–       Project start date is 1st July 2016

–       Project period : 12 – 24 months

Please be informed that evaluation will be conducted online through the RADIS system, starting from 1st– 14 June 2016. During this period, please pay attention to RADIS notification emails, revise your application according to panels’ comments, and resubmit without delay.

For more details about criteria, please go to www.rmc.utm.my/downloads

Regards,

Prof. Madya Dr. Shukor Abd Razak

Timbalan Pengarah Pengurusan Projek
Pusat Pengurusan Penyelidikan
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
Tel:(6)07-5537803
Fax:(6)075566177
http://www.rmc.utm.my – RMC Portal
https://radis.utm.my – Research and Development Information System

 

CFP: 2016 International Conference on Electrical, Electronic, Communication and Control (ICEECC2016)

Call for Papers
2016 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ELECTRICAL ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION AND CONTROL 

unnamed

 
Date: 18 & 19 December 2016
Venue: Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Johor Bahru

Official website: 
http://www.fke.utm.my/ICEECC2016/

 

Conference Aims

ICEECC 2016 aims to bring together researches, academicians, doctoral students and practitioners to exchange and share their experiences, new ideas, and research results about in Electrical Engineering research work.
Topics

Potential participants are invited to submit their full papers in any of the following areas (but not limited to):

 

  1. Electrical Power Engineering
  • Power Generation, Transmission and Distribution
  • Power Quality and Grounding
  • Distribution System Planning and Reliability
  • Flexible AC Transmission Systems
  • Renewable Energy Sources
  • Energy Storage
  • Smart-grids Technologies & Applications
  • Power Electronics
  • Electrical Machines and Adjustable Speed Drives
  • High Voltage Engineering and Insulation Technology

2. Electronic and Computer Engineering

  • Nanotechnology
  • Semiconductor Technology
  • VLSI Circuit Design
  • Digital Signal Processing
  • Computer Vision, Image and Video Processing
  • Embedded Systems and Hardware
  • Analog and Digital IC Testing and Design
  • Biomedical Instrumentation and Electronics
  • Microcontroller and Microprocessor Systems
  • Multimedia and Network

3. Control and Mechatronic Engineering

  • Optimal Control & Optimization
  • Sensors & Actuators
  • Micro-electromechanical Systems (MEMS)
  • Identification & Estimation
  • Industrial Process Control and Automation
  • Computer Integrated Manufacturing (CIM)
  • Artificial Intelligence & Soft Computing
  • Mechatronics & Robotics
  • Real-time & Embedded Systems
  • Automotive Control
  1. Communication Engineering
  • Acoustic and Sensor technology
  • RF/Microwave Circuit and System
  • Optical Devices, Sensor, Network and Communication
  • Wireless Sensor Network, Protocol, Cross layer
  • 4G/5G Technology
  • Satellite & Mobile Communication
  • Radar and Sonar Technology
  • Internet of Things (IoT)
  • Cognitive Radio
  • Antenna, Propagation and SAR

Manuscripts Submission

All submissions are to be made via EDAS submission system. Please visit conference website for submission details.

Important Dates

Full paper Submission Deadline: 31st July 2016

Notification of Acceptance: 30th September 2016

Final Paper Submission Deadline: 15th October 2016

Registration Deadline for Authors: 15th November 2016

Publication Opportunities
Accepted and registered papers  will be published in SCOPUS indexed.

We look forward to seeing you in December 2016.

Sincerely,

Secretariat ICEECC2016

SOFT REMINDER: Workshop : Characteristic of A Good Literature Review (13th April 2016)

Assalamu’alaikum and Good day,
Dear registered participants for the following academic workshop.
Please take note that the time started change from 9.00am to 10.00 am.
Workshop : Characteristic of A Good Literature Review and SLR
Date : 13th April 2016 (Wednesday)
Time :10.00 am – 4.30 pm 
Venue : General Lab, Level 4, Menara Razak, UTMKL
Best Regards,
 
PGSS AIS Committee
Advanced Informatics School
————————————————————–
Level 5, Menara Razak,
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia,
Jalan Sultan Yahya Petra (Jalan Semarak),
54100 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
————————————————————

Why Tesla May Have the Keys to the Electric Vehicle Market

The following article originates from here.

“The Week that Electric Vehicles Went Mainstream,” is how Tesla Motors headlined its blog post last week, citing more than 325,000 pre-bookings for the Model 3 electric car it launched on March 31. “[That] corresponds to about $14 billion in implied future sales, making this the single biggest one-week launch of any product ever,” the company boasted. Deliveries are set to begin in 2017.

Tesla may well be on the way to mainstreaming the electric vehicle market for itself and its competitors. In addition to the wide appeal the Model 3 seems to command, several other aspects point to a potential journey away from a niche market for Tesla. The car’s $35,000 price tag is half the price of the Model S ($75,000) and the Model X ($80,000). Bookings for the Model 3 have surprised even Tesla’s founder and CEO Elon Musk, coming at a time when gasoline prices are low.

“Electric vehicles increasingly are being seen not necessarily as green or as a way to save on fuel costs, but as incredibly powerful, with amazing acceleration, and fun to drive,” said Wharton management professor John Paul MacDuffie, an automobile industry expert. In fact, he noted that the organizers of the Formula One auto races (Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile, or FIA) have launched a separate series for electric vehicles called the Formula E. Even the Formula One cars are all hybrids, combining the high acceleration of electric vehicles with traditional engines, he noted.
Wesley R. Hartmann, marketing professor of management at Stanford University, said the Model 3 “is the make or break for whether the electric vehicle market will take off and whether Tesla will be a critical part of it, as opposed to being a niche player.”

MacDuffie and Hartmann discussed Tesla’s Model 3 and the challenges the firm faces in tapping the mainstream market on the Knowledge@Wharton show on Wharton Business Radio on SiriusXM channel 111. (Listen to the podcast at the top of this page.)

Kudos Flow In

MacDuffie said it was “telling” that Carlos Ghosn, chairman and CEO of Nissan of Japan and Renault of France, has welcomed the Model 3 bookings, “because it suggests a growing and enthusiastic market for these vehicles.”

MacDuffie also noted that bookings have been strong despite low gas prices, indicating that gas prices are not the primary driver of demand for electric vehicles. “People buying a $70,000 to $110,000 car aren’t worried about what they pay out at the gas pump,” he said. “If the demand exists even with gas prices being low, it is [because] of that repositioning away from just an environmental pitch.”

Hartmann said the enthusiasm for the Model 3 “speaks to what Tesla has been able to communicate to the market in terms of the products they can develop and how much people would want those.” He likened it to “people lining up to get” the latest Apple iPhones.

“Electric vehicles increasingly are being seen not necessarily as green or as a way to save on fuel costs, but as incredibly powerful [and] fun to drive.”–John Paul MacDuffie

MacDuffie put the pre-bookings for the Model 3 in perspective. The $1,000 down payment that Tesla requires is not an order commitment and is a refundable deposit, he noted. “But it is an extraordinary interest-free loan to Tesla to get in the queue and to have the bragging rights of being early to get a hot product,” he said.

Braving New Competition

If other automakers are keenly watching the progress of the Model 3, they would want to jump in, too. “What if competitor products are available earlier and they are good [and] well-priced?” asked MacDuffie. That could affect Tesla’s bottom line, he noted, but “if it’s a growing market, there should be room for everybody.”

Wharton marketing professor Americus Reed is optimistic for Tesla. “Tesla will be fine because it is a strong brand that is positioned as and is seen as very different from the other car manufacturers’ attempts at creating an electric car,” he said.

Reed added that Musk’s own brand image has also helped build a moat around Tesla. “Part of [Tesla’s] brand is a clear futurist visionary who himself is changing the world,” Reed noted, referring to Musk’s other roles as the founder of space transportation company SpaceX and co-founder of solar power company SolarCity.

“[Musk] is this larger-than-life character who makes you think of — in the computer industry — Steve Jobs, but [also] in the early auto industry history someone like Henry Ford,” said MacDuffie. “[Their] charisma and the boldness of their vision had an influence on people.”

Even so, questions persist about whether Tesla can pull it off, MacDuffie added. “The big question is: Can they really scale it up? What will the model look like when [the Model 3] hits the market at that price point? Will the price stay put or edge up?”

MacDuffie noted that Tesla has been a niche, low-volume producer, and the Model 3 would put it much more into the mass-market, mass-production range. “They haven’t done that before,” he said. “But they have learned to do other stuff that they didn’t know how to do, and so it would be risky to bet against them.”

The Model 3 “is the make or break for whether the electric vehicle market will take off and whether Tesla will be a critical part of it, as opposed to being a niche player.”–Wesley R. Hartmann

Reverse Route

The Model 3 would also benefit from the luxury brand image of Tesla’s earlier models. MacDuffie noted that most automakers have historically started with inexpensive vehicles as they established their reputations, manufacturing capabilities, supply chains and dealer networks. They moved up-market at a later stage, sometimes by introducing new brands — as with the Lexus from Toyota, he explained. “Tesla did it exactly the opposite way; it established itself at the luxury end,” he said. “Obviously, it will benefit from the way in which that luxury brand cachet will rub off on the Model 3.”

MacDuffie noted that Musk has attributed to “hubris” his decision to move from the original Model S to a more expensive car with the Model X ($80,000 and upwards). “That suggests a willingness to learn from a mistake,” he said. “In a way, designing a lower cost car is a big design and engineering challenge.”

Rather than Tesla’s luxury brand cachet rubbing off on the Model 3, “the more interesting question is the reverse,” said Reed. “What will happen to the brand as a unique luxury high end vehicle if suddenly it is ubiquitous in the mass market? What will a high-wealth individual who paid $70,000 or more think when he sees these $35,000 versions?”

Value Proposition

Hartmann said that with the Model 3, Tesla may have hit upon a winning idea. It would have an electric vehicle for customers who cannot afford $70,000 but also don’t want to buy some other low-end vehicles in the market. “Most people expect that they’re probably not going to get half the car [with the cheaper model, but] a lot more than that — something somewhere in between,” he said. “That seems to offer an awful lot of value.”

The value proposition could get better for customers with the federal tax credit of $7,500 on each vehicle, but that has its limits. The tax credit scales back once a company has sold 200,000 electrical vehicles, said MacDuffie. Tesla has thus far sold 110,000 vehicles, which means the next 90,000 tesla buyers would get the full tax credit, he explained. The tax credit is subsequently scaled back, and it will disappear at some point, he added. “It is meant to prevent the big companies that have introduced electric vehicles from scooping up all the rebate monies; it is [meant to] encourage startups like Tesla.”

Hartmann expected Tesla to live up to the expectations built around the Model 3. He said customers of Tesla’s Model S “are incredibly happy with them.” Tesla had admitted that it had overreached in designing the Model X, and has tried to build a simpler vehicle with the Model 3, said Hartmann.

Challenges of Scale

As Tesla ramps up deliveries of the Model 3, it could find its current distribution model inadequate, MacDuffie suggested. “Tesla has tried to avoid setting up traditional dealer franchises,” he said. “Nobody likes buying cars from a dealer, but dealers also traditionally sell used cars, do servicing [and] provide parts and financing.” Dealers also invest in the inventory of vehicles and thereby absorb some of the risk if sales fall short of expectations, he noted.

Tesla so far has outsourced repairs and maintenance, and sales of used cars, but that model may work for a startup and not a company that grows bigger, said MacDuffie. “One speculation is Tesla is fighting hard against the franchise dealer model now, but once — and if — it grows big, it may find [itself] yearning for some of the [benefits] that the franchise dealer model provides,” he added. Hartmann agreed, and said that at some point Tesla may decide to go down that route. 

Musk explained Tesla’s model of company-owned stores and service centers in a blog in 2012 that may hold true even today. “In many respects, it would be easier to pursue the traditional franchise dealership model, as we could save a lot of money on construction and gain widespread distribution overnight,” he wrote. “[However], existing franchise dealers have a fundamental conflict of interest between selling gasoline cars, which constitute the vast majority of their business, and selling the new technology of electric cars. It is impossible for them to explain the advantages of going electric without simultaneously undermining their traditional business. This would leave the electric car without a fair opportunity to make its case to an unfamiliar public.”

Reed did not expect Tesla to be forced to change its strategies and embrace the dealer model as it scales up. “These customers will acquiesce to whatever Tesla wants them to do,” he said, betting on the company’s customer loyalties.

APSEC 2016 23rd Asia-Pacific Software Engineering Conference

6th-9th December 2016, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand

 

Software has been increasingly utilised to improve the quality of lives and, subsequently, to change the world in a myriad of unforeseeable ways. Software systems have evolved to meet the changing needs of society, while society has in turn evolved in response to the use of innovative and omnipresent software systems. The emergence of contemporary software for the evolving world has posed unprecedented challenges to software engineering professionals and their community. The 23rd Asia-Pacific Software Engineering Conference (APSEC 2016) provides an excellent opportunity for software engineering researchers and practitioners around the world to exchange ideas on how to address these challenges.

 

Important Dates

Paper Submissions: 15 July 2016

Acceptance Notification: 12 September 2016

Camera Ready Copy Due: 10 October 2016

www.apsec2016.org