Alan B. Mead,
an American electrical engineer, co-founder, chairman and CEO of Applied Concepts Inc. (dba Stalker Radar), founded in March 1977 [1]. Alan Mead holds a BSEE from University of Kansas (1968), and was engineering manager at Kustom Signals, Inc.[2][3] (1970 - 1975), and founder and president of Technology Development, Inc. (1975). Along with John Aker and others, Alan Mead holds various patents [4] concerning Doppler complex FFTpolice radar, which is now the primary business of Applied Concepts [5].
^Patent Application filed 2nd March 1978 Inventors: Rod Barclay, John A. Cunningham, Alan B. Mead, Joseph T. Spaits
for Applied Concepts, Inc. from Patents from Chess Computer UK by Mike Watters
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Alan B. Mead,
an American electrical engineer, co-founder, chairman and CEO of Applied Concepts Inc. (dba Stalker Radar), founded in March 1977 [1]. Alan Mead holds a BSEE from University of Kansas (1968), and was engineering manager at Kustom Signals, Inc. [2] [3] (1970 - 1975), and founder and president of Technology Development, Inc. (1975). Along with John Aker and others, Alan Mead holds various patents [4] concerning Doppler complex FFT police radar, which is now the primary business of Applied Concepts [5].
Boris
Alan Mead was involved in designing the hardware [6] of the first Boris machine [7] [8] , which was manufactured from early 1978, short after the foundation of Applied Concepts. Alan Mead is further mentioned as representative of Boris Experimental in the ACM 1980 [9] and ACM 1981 booklets, in 1981 along with John Aker, Terry Fredrick, John Jacobs, David Slate and Larry Atkin [10].External Links
References
for Applied Concepts, Inc. from Patents from Chess Computer UK by Mike Watters
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