Name:     Dave Koberstein Profession:     Manager of sales engineering at Proxim
Relationship:  New York Buffalo carlkobe line Country:     United States of America
Personal Home Page:

http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Congress/4725/

Welcome to the San Bruno Civil Defense Radio Club

[Image]K6PVJ[Image]

Club Officers

Packet Sysop- Dave Koberstein, N9DK

Proxim shrinks format of wireless-LAN client

Dave Koberstein, manager of sales engineering at Proxim, said that the RangeLAN2 6330 makes no compromises in range or frequency-hopping algorithms compared with the PC Card or ISA clients. The module uses an ISA electrical interface, which is mapped to a miniaturized 40-pin connector on the module. The 6330 can be integrated into a variety of embedded systems, handheld devices, and Windows CE handheld computers. New markets are being developed for using the 2.4-GHz wireless LAN in patient monitors, for wearable WLAN applications.


Linked in

Dave Koberstein

Location: San Francisco Bay Area 
Industry: Internet 
Current 
  Director of Software Applications at Mojix 
  Past Founder and CTO at Tribal Shout 
  VP Product Management at Proxim, Corp 
  Manager/Director/VP Customer Engineering Services at Proxim, Inc  
Education 
  The Ohio State University 
  University of Wisconsin-Madison


Mountain View Voice (California)

Friday, August 28, 2009, 12:00 PM

Unfinished business on Mountain View Ave.

Half-constructed homes behind McKelvey Park an eyesore, neighbors say

by Daniel DeBolt

Mountain View Voice Staff

"Neighbors had been excited to see construction seem to start again in 2007, but something killed the project for good that same year. Nothing has happened since, except occasional weed abatement.

The Water District initially showed interest in using the property to save money on its Permanente Creek flood protection project. Under an arrangement considered by the Water District, the city would have purchased the property for itself with Water District funds.

"It would have been ideal," said Saeid Hosseini, a project manager at the Santa Clara Valley Water District, who said the deal would have negated the need for expensive retaining walls around the baseball fields. "But it didn't seem affordable for the project."

Some neighbors say they would like to see the homes finished. But others believe the structures have probably suffered too much weather exposure by now.

"I wonder who would want to move in after the tar paper has been rained on?" asked neighbor Dave Koberstein.

Cutcomb and Koberstein recently found a notice of foreclosure posted on the fence, with an auction scheduled for Aug. 11 with a starting bid of $1.085 million to cover interest that had accrued on a loan of $719,000. Koberstein considered bidding on the property, until he realized it was for only one of the four homes."