Subscribe to EDN

Guest blog: John McGehee

November 23, 2009

Today’s guest blog is by John McGehee. John is a independent consultant in Silicon Valley, specializing in EDA application development, design methodology and Japan.  He blogs about these topics at www.voom.net.  Prior to starting his consulting career, John was an AE at Avanti, Cadence Japan and Daisy Systems Japan.

How I got to Japan

The PA system at work announced that I had a call. It was from Dr. Steve Butner, my graduate advisor at UC Santa Barbara. He was very excited. “John, I just got some information about this program that was just made for you.” He explained that the American Electronics Association was sending electrical engineering and computer science graduate students to an intensive Japanese language course, and then on to work as an engineer in Japan. The goal of the program was to balance the exchange of engineering students between Japan and the US.

I had already taken two years of Japanese classes. I dreamed of applying the language at work in Japan, but I had no way to actually make this happen. The American Electronics Association Japan Research Fellowship was the opportunity of a lifetime to realize my goal. I applied, and was accepted. Had the program never found me, my dream would have just quietly faded away.

The fellowship was a full ride: airfare, room and board, tuition at Cornell, and a job as a chip designer at Intel Japan. All of this was a tremendous gift for which I am eternally grateful. Only the power of a major industry association could make something like this happen.

I too was going to pay. This episode of my life was like a card game in which I held a great hand, but nonetheless discarded graduate school, my girlfriend, job, friends and Santa Barbara, retaining only my electronic engineering card. Then I was dealt new cards I could not even recognize. How would I assemble them into a winning hand?

The program started with the Cornell University FALCON Japanese language summer session. This was superb. I was very serious and studied hard. When I started, I had an understanding of Japanese grammar, writing and vocabulary, but I could not really hold a conversation. Just nine weeks later, I could carry on relationships with people entirely in Japanese. I have never learned so much so quickly.

I vividly remember seeing Japan for the first time from the air. All this preparation, and I had never even been there. I hired a taxi and chatted with the driver in Japanese along the way to my destination. Using a new language in country for the first time is the most exhilarating of experiences.

I arrived in Tsukuba, where a tiny apartment awaited me. It had a murphy bed, a basic kitchen, a bathroom and a television, which was to be my language teacher and only friend for quite a while. My private apartment was a palace compared to the barracks provided to the other AEA Japan Research Fellowship participants. Intel even gave me a new Toyota Corona to drive.

My job at Intel Japan was verification and circuit simulation for the 8253 counter/timer portion of a microprocessor. As you might expect, many signals described a count. Engineers and programmers usually abbreviate this common word as “cnt”, but the Japanese designer chose to delete only the “o” in “count”. It made for the most profane RTL and netlist I have ever seen.

Intel Japan is based in Tsukuba, a “Silicon Valley” created artificially by the government. These are the same people who brought you Narita Airport, located an hour away from the city it serves. Tsukuba is in Ibaragi-ken, which is famous for backwardness. The nearest train station was 30 minutes away by car. In Japan, a city without a train station is nowhere. I hated living there, and so did many others. All the foreigners at Intel Japan were plotting their escape to Tokyo. Some Tsukuba residents escaped in a more tragic way. The suicide rate was so high that Tsukuba had its own trademark method of suicide–Tsukuba diving, throwing oneself off Tsukuba Tower.

Instead, I threw myself into improving my language skills, the goal for which I had sacrificed so much. This meant using exclusively Japanese. It also meant extreme isolation, as I was not a particularly engaging conversationalist. Still, I was good enough to carry out my duties at Intel in Japanese, speaking English only to my boss (a wise compromise). In an EE Times interview I declared, “I’m known as hardcore about not speaking English in the office. I am definitely looking at getting very good at Japanese.” Ah, such youthful bravado. Hardcore indeed.

My colleagues at Intel were more sophisticated than the locals, and they were kind to me. In the winter, we went skiing almost every weekend. I made some good friends at Intel Japan. After about six months, the loneliness and culture shock started to subside.

Originally my internship was six months, but I was just starting to get the hang of things, so I extended to one year. Intel Japan was good to me, but they only had engineering work in Tsukuba. As the end of my year came to a close, I conducted a job search, and landed a position in Tokyo. After a few years, I returned to finish graduate school at UCSB, then set out for Japan again. The AEA Japan Research Fellowship had succeeded in its goal of turning me into an engineer who could navigate Japan.

Posted by Paul McLellan on November 23, 2009 | Comments (15)

February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Beverlycgx commented:

very useful post. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you guys learn that some chinese hacker had busted twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Debracgm commented:

great post. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you hear that some chinese hacker had busted twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Christinacgp commented:

nice read. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you know that some chinese hacker had hacked twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Anncgs commented:

quite interesting article. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you know that some chinese hacker had busted twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Katherinecgz commented:

interesting read. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you guys hear that some chinese hacker had hacked twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Pamelacgo commented:

great post. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did anyone learn that some chinese hacker had hacked twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Tammycgk commented:

very useful article. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did any one learn that some chinese hacker had busted twitter yesterday again.


February 8, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Judithcgn commented:

great post. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you know that some chinese hacker had busted twitter yesterday again.


January 18, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Marie commented:

interesting article. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did any one know that some chinese hacker had hacked twitter yesterday again.


January 18, 2010
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Dorothy commented:

quite interesting read. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you hear that some chinese hacker had busted twitter yesterday again.


December 18, 2009
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Nicole commented:

nice post. I would love to follow you on twitter. By the way, did you guys learn that some Iranian hacker had hacked twitter yesterday.


November 29, 2009
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Michelle commented:

brilliant blog, just thought to let you know that your page looks broken on Blazre Brow ser


November 29, 2009
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Trackback : Cellphone GPS » Amazin commented:

(...) is one another interesting source on this subject(...)


November 29, 2009
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Trackback : loans Rates » How can commented:

(...) is one useful source on this subject(...)


November 28, 2009
In response to: Guest blog: John McGehee
Trackback : Pets Adoption » Adopt commented:

(...) is another great source of tips on this topic(...)

POST A COMMENT
Display Name
captcha

Before submitting this form, please type the characters displayed above. Note the letters are case sensitive:

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
About EDN   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Subscription   |   RSS
© 2012 UBM Electronics. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Please visit these other UBM Canon sites

UBM Canon | Design News | Test & Measurement World | Packaging Digest | EDN | Qmed | Pharmalive | Appliance Magazine | Plastics Today | Powder Bulk Solids | Canon Trade Shows