TechTalk – The Most Common Mistakes in Test

Welcome!

To access the archive contents (presentation slides, videos, multimedia, etc.) sign in using your LinkedIn account by clicking the LinkedIn button to the right. Full Conference Attendees and Subscribers have access to all content now. FREE guests, once signed in, have access to the presentations after June 1, 2014.

------ This message is only displayed when you are not signed in. ------

TechTalk – The Most Common Mistakes in Test

During the process of test program development, characterization, and limit setting, there are some common mistakes that can be made by Product and Test engineers. Issues like ‘data that is too good to be true’, not understanding the limitations of using a Standard Deviation, passing devices with “0” values, and limits that allow for the ‘physically impossible’ such as negative supply currents. Examples of real products and real issues (including those with test tooling), with how limits were set, or how data was interpreted, are used to highlight some of the most common (and 100% avoidable) mistakes.

"The Most Common Mistakes in Test"
Jeffrey L. Roehr
Test and Data Analyst
Texas Instruments

Jeffrey Roehr has over 30 years of experience in Product and Test Engineering and Management for RCA, GTE, Analog Devices, Mediatek, and is now working for Texas Instruments (MCU/C2000) in Houston.

For the past 10 years his focus has been on developing algorithms for adaptive testing, outlier elimination, and statistical testing on very high volume production products.

Mr. Roehr has presented many papers, tutorials, and invited talks at IEEE events. He is a Senior Member of the IEEE, the Technical Program Chair of the IEEE DATA workshop, a member of the ITRS Adaptive Test working group, and is the founder and chairman of the Texas Instruments Data Analysis Workshop (DAW).

Part One

Video Player Goes Here

Sorry, you do not NOT have access to this file.

Part Two

Video Player Goes Here

Sorry, you do not NOT have access to this file.

Part Three

Video Player Goes Here

Sorry, you do not NOT have access to this file.

Part Four

Video Player Goes Here

Sorry, you do not NOT have access to this file.

 

Return to the 2014 BiTS Workshop Archive index page