
Moore's Lobby: Where engineers talk all about circuits
Our Moore's Lobby Podcast serves an elite global audience of engineers, technologists, and executives with a goal to educate, empower, and entertain. We discuss the technologies and engineering behind the hottest industry trends as host Daniel Bogdanoff guides you through the human stories behind the world's most inspiring organizations and leaders. Tune in monthly for new episodes.
All episodes(25)
- StandardSummaries onlySensors Insights: Bridging Hardware Collection and Software Analysis
Published Apr 21, 2026
Sensors InsightsThe "old school" way was simple: a sensor sees a part, tells the controller, and the actuator moves. It was pure hardware logic, and it worked. But in today's smart factories, that's only half the story. Modern sensors aren't just on/off switches anymore—they are eyes and ears, and sometimes even the brains, of the automation. However, surprisingly few engineers really understand both the hardware and software sides of machine data. In this episode of the Moore's Lobby podcast, Control.com's Dav
- StandardSummaries onlyIndustrial Sensors: The Building Blocks That Lead to Process Optimization
Published Mar 17, 2026
Industrial SensorsAutomation engineers have heard a lot about condition monitoring in recent years as one of the most common examples of how AI and digital transformation are actually hitting the ground with real results for industry. Sensing is certainly the foundation of the process, but it requires the proper mix of equipment and know-how to move from a simple project to a fully scaled-up implementation. In this episode of the Moore's Lobby podcast, Control.com's David Peterson visits Salim Dabbous, the Direct
- StandardSummaries onlyPowering EVs: Microgrids & DC Charging Solutions
Published Aug 19, 2025
In this episode of the Moore's Lobby podcast, we sit down with Antonio Di Vaira, Senior VP for Power Product of Schneider Electric to discuss the massive shifts happening in the world of energy distribution. The conversation kicks off by exploring how the explosive growth of electric vehicles and energy-hungry technologies like AI are pushing traditional power grids to their breaking point. He also explains that while building out new grid capacity is part of the long-term solution, the industry
- StandardSummaries onlyMaterial Science in Motion: How 3M is Powering EV and Grid Advancements
Published Jul 22, 2025
Technologists and leaders will be interested in hearing Mike explain how 3M's R&D culture that emphasizes collaborative problem-solving. They continue to leverage their "15% time" philosophy to fosters creative solutions that are being applied to our rapidly electrifying world. If you're passionate about how fundamental material science is enabling breakthrough innovation in the electrical engineering world, this is an episode you don't want to miss. : -The Surprising Role of Adhesives and Tapes
- StandardSummaries onlyAligning Passion With Purpose: A Journey to Electrification and Sustainability
Published Jun 17, 2025
Aligning Passion With PurposeDr. Mital Kanabar is the Senior Director of Innovation, Grid Automation, Grid Solutions at GE Vernova. He joins our podcast to discuss the explosive electricity demand driven by electric vehicles, AI data centers, and the general electrification of industries. This increased demand puts a strain on an aging infrastructure, necessitating new solutions to ensure a reliable and resilient power supply. Check out this engaging conversation that touches on a number of important topics, including: Deca
- StandardSummaries onlyGenerative AI for Dirty Jobs—The Next Industrial Revolution?
Published May 20, 2025
Christopher Savoie, the founder and CEO of Zapata Computing, has had a fascinating career journey. After beginning as a young programmer working with early computers, he switched gears to immunology and biophysics in Japan and is now founding AI companies. Along the way, he was also involved in creating the foundational technology for Apple Siri, working on early language models embedded in agents to solve complex natural language problems. In this interview with our host, Daniel Bogdanoff, Savo
- StandardSummaries onlyCreating Next-Gen Microcontroller Developer Tools and Equipping the People Who Use Them
Published Apr 22, 2025
In this interview, our Moore's Lobby host, Daniel Bogdanoff, chats with Rodger Richey, Vice President of Development Tools and Academic Programs at Microchip Technology. Rodger shares how his passion for engineering began with childhood curiosity, dismantling and repairing devices like a microwave. Those early hands-on experiences laid the foundation for his electrical engineering career, which started with designing underwater electronics for the U.S. Navy. Rodger discusses the evolution of dev
- StandardSummaries onlyNavigating the AI Revolution in Education, Workforce Development, and Government
Published Mar 18, 2025
The interview explores K S Venkatraman's journey in technology, NVIDIA's growth, and the future of AI. Venkatraman reflects on his academic upbringing and early experiments with electronics. He reflects on his that began at Intel and eventually transitioned to NVIDIA after a brief startup venture. In this conversation with our Moore's Lobby host, Daniel Bogdanoff, Venkatraman delves into pivotal technological advancements. This includes the development of GPUs for AI and the role of hardware-sof
- StandardSummaries onlyGaN Powers Up in AI, Robotics, and Our Lives
Published Feb 18, 2025
In this fascinating interview, Alex Lidow discusses his early exposure to semiconductors through his father and grandfather, who founded International Rectifier. Initially pursuing aeronautical engineering at Caltech, he shifted to solid-state physics, igniting a lifelong career. He shares his role in developing HexFETs, a groundbreaking transistor technology, highlighting the creativity and persistence required for innovation. After being unexpectedly dismissed from International Rectifier, Ale
- StandardSummaries onlyTechnology and AI Leap Ahead, While Societal Institutions Race To Catch Up
Published Jan 21, 2025
Discover the fascinating journey of Amar Gupta, a technologist and educator at MIT, as he shares insights into his groundbreaking work across industries. In this interview with our host, Daniel Bogdanoff, Gupta reflects on his early passion for innovation, which included the development of electronic check-processing systems that revolutionized global banking. Gupta's contributions to telemedicine are equally compelling. Hear how he saw the potential of remote healthcare decades before it became
- StandardSummaries onlyQSPICE Circuit Simulation: A Spicy Discussion with Mike Engelhardt
Published Jul 30, 2024
Mike EngelhardtIf you are interested in electronics, history, or simple amazing stories, you will enjoy this podcast interview with our Moore's Lobby host, Daniel Bogdanoff. Mike Engelhardt has been developing simulation tools since 1975. He is best known for creating LTspice, which is believed to be the most widely distributed and used SPICE analog electronic circuit simulator in the world. Recently, he realized that he could take advantage of the massive improvements in both hardware and software to develop
- StandardSummaries onlyImproving Electronic Design Collaboration by Shifting Left and Right
Published Jul 16, 2024
Ananth Avva is "a big believer that if you give human beings the right type of information and you contextualize it, they will make the right decision ultimately for the organization." In his current role at Altium as the Senior Vice President and General Manager of Cloud Platform, he is leading efforts to improve and accelerate collaboration because "collaboration trumps everything else" as it drives speed to market, lower costs, and more efficient development. He has seen companies attempt to
- StandardSummaries only5G and IoT: What Will It Take for Them to Get Along?
Published Jul 2, 2024
Thomas Keller is the Director of Platforms and Core Technology at u-blox. He learned early in his career that technology development does not always progress in a perfectly straight line. During his PhD studies, he worked on Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (OFDM) as a candidate technology for 3G cellular network deployment. OFDM lost that initial tech battle to Code-Division Multiple Access (CDMA) but later returned in LTE cellular systems. In this fascinating conversation, Keller dis
- StandardSummaries onlyLooking Down to Go Forward: Ground Penetrating Radar for Autonomous Vehicles
Published Jun 18, 2024
If you enjoy hearing passionate people talk about jobs they love and technology that fascinates them, you are in for a treat. Noah Gedrimas grew up with a love of vehicles—cars, tractors, construction equipment, and snowmobiles. In college, he built a one-fifth-scale car and then programmed it to self-park, which led him to a "newfound respect for mechatronics" and its ability to support really complex maneuvers. In this interview, Gedrimas reflects with enthusiasm on his time at Continental Aut
- StandardSummaries onlyChanging the World One Wireless RF Chip at a Time
Published Jun 4, 2024
After beginning his career with Hewlett-Packard, David Su met a friend for lunch to learn about a new startup called Atheros. He was so excited by the vision to develop world-changing products that Su "went for lunch and never left." At Atheros, Su had a "front-row seat" developing wireless WAN technology that transitioned from novelty to necessity while Atheros grew from a startup to a billion-dollar behemoth. That little startup was eventually acquired by another company you may have heard of:
- StandardSummaries onlyCan Silicon Photonics Solve the Bandwidth Bottleneck in AI Data Centers?
Published May 21, 2024
Steve Klinger, Vice President of Product, joins the Moore's Lobby podcast to discuss how LightMatter is using silicon photonics to improve speed and reduce power consumption in AI data centers. With two previous $1B+ startups under his belt, Klinger knows a thing or two about identifying successful technology solutions to current industry challenges. While compute performance continues to grow rapidly, interconnect has not been able to keep pace. In this episode, Klinger explains how LightMatter
- StandardSummaries onlyFreeing EEs to Design Like Tony Stark
Published May 7, 2024
While leading the system design of new head-word displays for fighter pilots, Tomide Adesanmi was most excited when he got a chance to innovate. However, like most electronics design engineers, he found that the majority of his time was spent searching distributor sites for components, drawing symbols, and working with spreadsheets. Engineers can also relate to the anxiety he felt, worrying that he might have made a silly mistake by missing a tiny detail on "page 243 of the datasheet" for a micr
- StandardSummaries onlyCooperation and Competition Behind the Scenes in the RISC-V Community
Published Apr 23, 2024
Over the course of his fascinating career, Mark Himelstein has worked on several significant computing technologies at historic companies like MIPS and Sun Microsystems. He has also worked as a consultant in various roles that include architect, VP of engineering, and advisor. However, RISC-V may have a greater impact on the computing field and our world than any of those previous efforts. Himelstein gives us an insiders view on the open standard process that is often "cooperation and competitio
- StandardSummaries onlyAt Silicon Labs, Wireless IoT is Only The First Step in Rethinking Product Design
Published Apr 9, 2024
Daniel Cooley started his career in RF chip design at Silicon Labs and now leads technology and product development at "the number one wireless supplier" for the Internet of Things. In this thoughtful interview, Cooley explains why adding wireless connectivity is only the first step to completely rethinking product designs and features. He noted that "the home run cases aren't where wireless is the feature; it's where wireless made that product better." Cooley explains that Silicon Labs' primary
- StandardSummaries onlyPragmatic Semi is Breaking the Rules and Bending Silicon Electronics
Published Mar 26, 2024
While Moore's Law scaling has driven incredible advancements in computing, AI, and smartphones, many applications don't need or benefit from the most advanced semiconductor nodes. From its inception, Pragmatic Semiconductor's goal has been to take a…well, pragmatic…approach to develop an ultra low-cost, fast cycle time alternative to traditional silicon processing. Oh, and did we mention that the resulting chips and wafers are also flexible? You will definitely want to check out this Moore's Lob
- StandardSummaries onlyState of the Industry: Semiconductor Insiders Discuss the Ambitions and Realities of the CHIPS Act
Published Mar 12, 2024
The chip shortage made us all think about the precarious semiconductor supply chain. In response, the US government has moved to bolster the domestic industry. The CHIPS and Science Act was signed into law in August 2022, but we are still waiting to see its impact on US semiconductor manufacturing. In this podcast, we are joined by three industry insiders: Rich Simoncic, EVP of Microchip Technology. Russ Garcia, CEO of Menlo Micro. Michael Knight, President & CEO at Endries International. They w
- StandardSummaries onlyLeading the RISC-V Revolution, SiFive Aims to Take the Computing Industry Throne
Published Feb 27, 2024
During his fascinating career, Jack Kang has had the opportunity to work on iconic, massively successful products like the Microsoft Xbox Kinect and Nintendo Switch. Today, as one of the founding members of SiFive, Kang works alongside several of the creators of the RISC-V ISA to bring new products to market. SiFive is developing products based on the open RISC-V standard to deliver high-performance, low-power density processors for applications from wearables to data centers, edge computing, an
- StandardSummaries onlyQuantum Computing: Sci-Fi Technology Requires Real-World Engineering
Published Feb 13, 2024
Quantum ComputingA decade after demonstrating the first entanglement of semiconducting spin quantum bits, or qubits, Oliver Dial and IBM Quantum are developing the ICs, cryogenic systems, error mitigation techniques, and software tools that will identify solutions to problems beyond the scope of classical computers. Recently, the IBM Quantum team announced the Heron 133-qubit and Condor 1,121-qubit quantum processors, and Dial joins us to talk about a subject that he loves. The highlights of this conversation be
- StandardSummaries onlyEnergizing the Future: Real-Time Precision in Renewable Energy Management
Published Jan 30, 2024
Optimizing energy generation and consumption requires accurately measuring currents and voltages. In addition, to maximize overall efficiency, that data must be shared in real-time or near real-time. The highlights of this conversation between Henrik Mannesson of Texas Instruments and host Daniel Bogdanoff include discussing: -The differences between power management in the home or small factory and power management at the grid. -The evolution from smart metering to energy management. -The impor
- StandardSummaries onlyStepping Outside the Metaverse to Discuss Next-Gen Hardware Development
Published Jan 16, 2024
About three decades after the term "metaverse" was coined, Facebook rebranded as Meta as they increased their focus on building virtual and augmented reality platforms. Today, Agustya Mehta helps lead Meta's development of the next generation of XR products in his role as their Director of System Platforms for Reality Labs Hardware. In this episode of the Moore's Lobby podcast, Agustya and host Daniel Bogdanoff discuss building tomorrow's AR/VR systems using today's technology. Agustya also shar