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Our guest this week has been programming in LabVIEW since Version 3.1 in 1995 on Windows 3.11. Jeff DeBuhr is a Certified LabVIEW Architect and LabVIEW Champion and has worked for a variety of places. He started with Motorola where he was first introduced to LabVIEW, for places that focus on High Powered RF Amplifiers, created running software solutions for Prototype Beverage dispensers before working at his current employer working on test solutions for Garage doors.
Sam and Jeff talk about what it was like getting started in LabVIEW and how they determine if it is appropriate to rewrite or refactor code, pulling from many experiments throughout their careers.
If you’d like to learn more about Jeff:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-debuhr-0509559/
If you’d like to learn more about Sam:
https://www.sasworkshops.com/
If you’d like to read our blog:
https://blog.sasworkshops.com/
If you want to get in touch with us:
https://www.thelabviewexperiment.com/contact
Our guest this week has been programming in LabVIEW since Version 3.1 in 1995 on Windows 3.11. Jeff DeBuhr is a Certified LabVIEW Architect and LabVIEW Champion and has worked for a variety of places. He started with Motorola where he was first introduced to LabVIEW, for places that focus on High Powered RF Amplifiers, created running software solutions for Prototype Beverage dispensers before working at his current employer working on test solutions for Garage doors.
Sam and Jeff talk about what it was like getting started in LabVIEW and how they determine if it is appropriate to rewrite or refactor code, pulling from many experiments throughout their careers.
If you’d like to learn more about Jeff:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-debuhr-0509559/
If you’d like to learn more about Sam:
https://www.sasworkshops.com/
If you’d like to read our blog:
https://blog.sasworkshops.com/
If you want to get in touch with us:
https://www.thelabviewexperiment.com/contact