Electrical Engineers

In PCB design, an Electrical Engineer is a highly skilled professional who specializes in designing electrical circuits using schematic capture software. They are responsible for researching, selecting, and procuring parts for circuits, as well as simulating results to ensure optimal performance. Depending on the size of their team, some Electrical Engineers may also handle PCB layout, create component libraries, and generate PCB documentation.

Electrical Engineers in PCB design may also be referred to by other job titles, such as Electronics Engineer, Senior Electrical Engineer, or Electronics Designer. These titles reflect the broad range of skills and expertise required for success in this role, from circuit design and simulation to PCB layout and documentation. Overall, Electrical Engineers play a critical role in the PCB design industry, ensuring that products meet necessary standards and are delivered to customers on time and with the highest level of quality and functionality.

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9:02 Version Control System 9 min Videos Electrical Engineers PCB Design Engineers Project Leads Electrical Engineers Electrical Engineers PCB Design Engineers PCB Design Engineers Project Leads Project Leads This video demonstrates the version control system in Altium 365. In this system, projects are available in the web interface in folders. Sharing rights are set up per folder or per project, and can be set by editor, or by viewer. A new project template is created in Altium Designer and saved to the Altium 365 Workspace, and the Altium 365 version control system is enabled to view the project history. In Altium Designer, the project is created locally on the C Drive for quick access, and it is saved to Altium 365. A schematic is opened and two parts are placed with an annotation and saved to the server. The project history in the version control is opened, and the history of the project is discussed. A tag is created, and a comparison of the tag to a previous commit is made. Other options in the history are discussed as well, including reverting to a previous version. Likewise, a where used for components feature is demonstrated to trace parts across a project, and the process to prevent users from making duplicate conflicting changes is also shown. These history changes are also available on the web on Altium 365. Next, the process to create a personal version control server via a template on an SVN server is demonstrated. The project is committed to the SVN locally and moved into Altium 365 to utilize the web viewer and Altium 365 capabilities. However, this disables web viewer history visibility. Finally, the local version control system is migrated to the Altium 365 git version control to once again view the full project history. Read Article