Donald J. Leonard

Donald J. Leonard (born July 11, 1933) is an American electrical engineer and AT&T executive, who received the 1996 IEEE Simon Ramo Medal.[1]

Biography

Born in New York City, Leonard studied Electrical Engineering at the New York University in the 1950s, where he received his BEE in 1956 and his MEE in 1960.[2]

After graduation Leonard started his career as researcher at the New York University Research Lab.[3] After working for the New York Telephone Company some time, he joined AT&T Bell labs in 1956. Here he started his lifelong career at AT&T working on the further development of the Transmission System 1 (T-1), which were introduced by Bell Labs in 1962. He later supervised the development of a Pulse-code modulation for the Telstar. In 1963 he moved to Bell Labs in Merrimack Valley, where he was director of the Transmission Technology Laboratory from 1968 to 1970. In 1970 he moved to Indianapolis to direct the Telephone Laboratory. From 1977 to 1980 in Columbus he was executive director of Crossbar and Switching Operations, and from 1980 to 1982 at Western Electric he was Vice President of Corporate Engineering.[2] In 1982 he returned to Bell labs, where he succeeded William O. Fleckenstein[4] as Vice President, Switching Systems,[5] and where in 1991[6] he was appointed Vice President, Quality, Technology, and Process Research. In 1994 he retired and got succeeded by Arun Netravali.[7]

Leonard has been awarded an honorary doctorate from Midwest College of Engineering;[3] the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Award in 1992 by the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers;[3] and in 1996 the IEEE Simon Ramo Medal for his "engineering leadership in design and development of intelligent networks, digital electronic switching, transmission and signaling systems, and network databases."[1] Pn In 1997 he was awarded an EMMY by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for his work on High Definition TV.

Selected publications

  • Andre, S. N. and Leonard, D. J., “An Active Retrodirective Array for Satellite Communication”, Trans. IEEE, Vol. AP-12, Mar. 1964, pp. 181–186.
  • Donald J. Leonard. "Local switching: on the leading edge of technology", Bell Laboratories Record. Vol. 60. (7). September 1982. pp. 181–184.

Patents

gollark: ++delete your family
gollark: So you can ping event participants?
gollark: You should have had people upload their entire calendar.
gollark: I'm reporting you to the SCP Foundation.
gollark: Spontaneous tuberous transfiguration? Sounds anomalous.

References

  1. IEEE Simon Ramo Medal Recipients Archived 2013-10-04 at the Wayback Machine ieee.org/documents. Accessed October 1, 2013.
  2. "Donald J. Leonard, Vice President, Switching Systems, AT&T Bell Laboratories" in: Hispanic Engineer & IT Vol. 6, nr. 4 (1990). p.900
  3. "Donald J. Leonard Vice President, Quality, Technology, and Process Research AT&T Bell Laboratories" Hispanic Engineer & IT Vol. 8, nr. 4 (1992). p. 60
  4. Leonard A. Schlesinger, American Telephone and Telegraph Company (1987) Chronicles of corporate change: management lessons from management lessons from AT&T and its offspring. p. 225
  5. Bell Laboratories Record Vol 61-62 (1983). p. 47
  6. Hispanic Engineer. Vol 7-8 (1991). p. 92
  7. "Dr Netravali, Digital Pioneer For Television Promoted" in Newspaper Thursday, August 25, 1994. p. 16 (online Archived October 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine)
  • Donald J. Leonard Vice President, Quality, Technology, and Process Research AT&T Bell Laboratories, 1993
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