David Comer

This article is about the American academic. For the New Zealand location scout, see Dave Comer.

David J. Comer received the MSEE degree from the University of California, Berkeley and the PhD from Washington State University. He spent five years with IBM's Advanced Systems Development Division before beginning his teaching career at the University of Idaho. He has taught at the University of Calgary and at California State University, Chico where he served as dean of the engineering program. Since 1981, he has been a professor at BYU, serving as department chair from 1990 to 1993.

Comer's areas of interest include passive and active filter design, MOS amplifier design, wideband amplifier design, operation of MOS stages in the weak inversion region, and high-speed chip-to-chip communications. Eight patents have been applied for in Professor Comer's name, two by IBM and six by Intel.

Comer was elevated to the grade of Fellow of the IEEE in 2005.[1] He has consulted in the field of circuit design for IBM, Intel, Lawrence Livermore National Labs, and Mobility Systems Inc. He has published twelve textbooks in the area of circuit design. He served on the California Engineering Liaison Committee for five years and as Chair of the Council of California State University Deans of Engineering.

Comer was voted Brigham Young University's outstanding electrical engineering teacher for the 2007-2008 academic year by the student body.

References

  1. "Fellow Class of 2005". IEEE. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
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