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Sterling
Davis and Jack Sellmeyer to Receive
2009 NAB Engineering Achievement Awards
NAB presents
its Radio and Television Engineering Achievement Awards each year
at the NAB Show in Las Vegas. The awards, first established in
1959, are given to individuals for their significant contributions
which have advanced the state of the art of broadcast engineering.
This year's winners, Jack Sellmeyer (Radio) and Sterling Davis
(Television) will be honored at the Technology Luncheon on Wednesday,
April 22 in the Barron Room of the Las Vegas Hilton.
TV
Engineering Achievement Award Winner
Sterling Davis
Sterling
Davis is vice president, Engineering for Cox Broadcasting, a veteran
with over 40 years of broadcasting experience. He has been involved
with every step of TV engineering, from production to distribution,
and has been a prime force in helping to move the television and
radio industry into the digital age. He has demonstrated time
and again the ability to successfully balance his energy and drive
to reach organizational goals, with the necessary diplomacy required
to build consensus across a variety of represented businesses
and organizations.
Sterling began
his broadcasting career as an audio engineer for the ABC network
and was then with KTTV in Los Angeles, California for five years.
Following 3 years as operations manager for the Vidtronics Company,
he returned to Metrotape (KTTV) as chief engineer responsible
for operational and production responsibilities for six network
sitcoms per week.
In early 1978
Sterling became vice president, operations, for one of the original
post-production houses in Hollywoodthe Vidtronics Company
division of Technicolor. Later in 1978 he joined Telemation Productions
in Seattle, where as chief engineer he designed and rebuilt their
facility. In 1982 he joined Cox Broadcasting's VU in Oakland as
director of operations, managing all aspects of engineering and
production including ENG, editing, and traffic. He also began
producing and was the executive producer for the MDA and Easter
Seal Telethons, Giants' Baseball, and the Chinese New Years Parade.
Promoted in 1998 to vice president of engineering for Cox Broadcasting
in Atlanta, he assumed responsibility for 15 television and 80
radio stations.
Along with
the daily responsibilities of overseeing engineering for Cox,
Sterling holds the leadership role of key decision maker in advancing
the group towards file-based newsgathering as well as automated
news production. He also is responsible for shepherding Cox's
transition to digital for both television and radio stations.
Another leadership
role for Sterling has been in the advancement of broadcast engineering
standards and technologies vital to the evolution of the broadcasting
industry. Since its formation in April 2007, he has been chairing
the technical activities group of the Open Mobile Video Coalition
(OMVC), and is also currently the chair of MSTV's Engineering
Committee. For three years, he chaired the ATSC Planning Committee,
studying the next stages in the evolution of DTV.
Sterling is
an elected member of the ATSC Board of Directors and participates
in several technical committees, most notably the ATSC Specialist
Group on Mobile/handheld DTV (TSG-S4). He has been active in the
in-band/on-channel (IBOC) digital radio standardization efforts
of the National Radio Systems Committee (NRSC). He is also a member
of IEEE, SMPTE, AES, RTNDA and SBE.
Radio Engineering
Achievement Award Winner
Jack Sellmeyer
Jack
Sellmeyer is a professional engineer and principal engineer for
Sellmeyer Engineering, broadcast engineering consultants. He has
spent his 50-year career devoted to the development of radio engineering.
He is the consummate radio broadcast engineer, who began his career
working in radio stations then moving to the manufacturing side
of the business designing products for the radio industry. He
then combined these aspects of his career to become a consulting
engineer handling all aspects of radio engineering from FCC applications
to transmitter plant design and construction supervision, broadcast
studio facilities planning and construction and AM directional
antenna design and adjustment and measurements.
Jack began
working in broadcasting while in high school and his first position
was as a board operator and transmitter operator for radio station
KPBM in Carlsbad, New Mexico. He received a Bachelor of Science
in Electrical Engineering from Arizona State University in 1965.
By that time, he had overseen the construction of an addition
to the studio/transmitter building, construction of new studios
and the installation of a new 5 kW transmitter for station KGRT
in Las Cruces, New Mexico, and served as Chief Engineer at station
KRUX in Glendale, Arizona, among various other pursuits too numerous
to mention here.
While at the
Gates Radio division of Harris Intertype, Jack was a senior design
engineer of FM products. He developed a new Modulator and Automatic
Frequency control module for the TE-1 Solid State FM Exciter to
correct frequency stability problems. He worked for the Collins
Radio Division of Rockwell International as Senior Engineer in
FM exciters and on the 5 kW and 1 kW pulse-width modulated transmitters.
Jack worked with Forest Cummings to design low-level solid state
circuit boards used in the Collins 828E-1 pulse width modulated
5 kW AM transmitter. Collins received three patents on technology
used in this transmitter and he was listed as co-inventor on the
patent covering automatic modulation sensitivity control.
In November
of 1980, when Collins closed its doors after 50 years in the broadcast
equipment business, Jack formed Sellmeyer Engineering, where he
remains to this day. He has lectured at and helped NAB organize
NAB technical seminars and workshops dealing with AM directional
antennas and he has published numerous articles. Jack is a member
of a number of industry professional societies including AFCCE,
IEEE, NSPE, SBE and TSPE.
2009 NAB
Broadcast Engineering Conference Opening Keynote
2020 Why I Cant Wait
Gary Arlen, President, Arlen Communications Inc.
April 19, 2008 9:00AM - 9:30AM
Keynote
Abstract: Our business and personal lives are going through a
period of accelerated change, fueled by technology and economic
factors that often seem beyond our control. Broadcasting has been
in the center of these changes and will continue to be affected
by breakthroughs and new developments in diverse technologies.
That puts greater demands on TV and radio engineers to be ready
for the next opportunities. For broadcasters, confirming our role
in the media mix depends on creative, innovative use of the new
palette of technologies and especially their applications.
Gary Arlen,
a veteran communications and futures analyst, will focus on breakthrough
technologies in key sectors. He will identify tactics that broadcasters
can use to spot trends and validate effective new technologies.
With his focus on the interesting future (5 to 10
years out), Gary will look at ways that broadcasters can prepare
for and be ready to use the technologies that will bring even
greater changes along with productivity and enjoyment
to the ways we live and work.
For a complete
list and summaries of each paper that will be presented at the
63rd NAB Broadcast Engineering Conference, April 18 23
in Las Vegas
click here. For additional conference, housing and registration
information visit the NAB Show Web page at www.nabshow.com.


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