Tihamér Ádám
From 1970, he worked as an electrical engineer at the Northern Hungarian Electricity Supply Company (ÉMÁSZ) in Miskolc.
From 1972, he was a hardware engineer at the EMG 830 computer center of the Institute of Building Economics and Organization (ÉGSZI) in Miskolc. (Here, together with his colleague Béla Somosvári, he established a data transmission line between the computer center and the Felsőzsolca House Factory for the online processing of production data.)
From 1976, he worked at the Institute of Mathematics of the University of Heavy Industry (NME) in Miskolc, operating the ODRA 1304 computer, where he also carried out numerous developments with Béla Somosvári. As a result, measurement boards were built to teach basic hardware knowledge, demonstrating the operation of digital basic circuits, with measurement descriptions, sample tasks and exercises. To illustrate the operation of microprocessors, a demonstration microcomputer built into a bag was built, followed by an I8085-based microcomputer mounted in a case. The latter illustrated the operation of computers, internal and external peripheral data flows, broken down to the basic level (instruction retrieval, address processing, memory writing/reading, machine cycles, internal states). Electronics for a Videoton card reader were designed and built for ODRA to replace the card reader that had become inoperable, which extended the usability of the computer center by several years.
From 1986, he worked as an operations team leader in the newly established University Computer Center. He participated in the installation of a Siemens 7760 computer received from Germany in Miskolc, in the preparation of the Hungarian user manual for the computer and the BS2000 operating system, and in the construction of the university data transmission network. From 1989, he was a full-time lecturer at the Department of Electrical Engineering, then at the Department of Automation, of which he was the head from 2001 to 2009 - the university's name was Miskolc University (ME) from 1990. He taught subjects related to the control engineering and infocommunication applications of digital signal processors and microcontrollers. His research work was also focused on these areas, and he won and led several research projects.
In 2002 he received the István Széchenyi scholarship. From 1992 he was the Hungarian consultant for Texas Instruments (TI) digital signal processors for several years. He retired in 2010.
Association memberships: NJSZT, Hungarian Electrotechnical Association (MEE), Telecommunication and Informatics Scientific Association (HTE), Transylvanian Hungarian Technical Scientific Society (EMT).
- Married since 1970, has two children and two grandchildren. (2018 announcement.)
Created: 2015.12.06. 09:22
Last modified: 2025.02.17. 11:24
