President’s Message/Message du Président Spring / Printemps 2018 27 IEEE Canadian Review - La Revue canadienne de l’IEEE is published by The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.’s Canadian unit. | All rights reserved. © 2018 by The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., 3 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10016-5997, U.S.A. | The editorial content of this magazine does not represent official positions of the IEEE or its organizational units. | Return Canadian undeliverables to: IEEE Canada, 685 Woodcrest Blvd, London, Ontario N6K 1P8 Member of / membre constituant de Engineering Institute of Canada l'Institut canadien des ingénieurs IEEECanadian Review La revue canadienne de l’IEEE Its principal objectives are: To inform Canadian members of IEEE on issues related to the impacts of technology, and its role in supporting economic development and societal benefits within Canada. To foster growth in the size and quality of Canada’s pool of technology professionals to serve our increasingly knowledge-based economy. The National Library of Canada ISSN 1481-2002 La Bibliothèque nationale du Canada The IEEE Canadian Review is published three times per year: mid March, end of June and mid October. Advertising Policy Organizations are invited to place corporate advertising in the IEEE Canadian Review. For information regarding rates and copy requirements, please contact the Advertising Manager. Circulation The circulation of the IEEE Canadian Review is the entire membership of IEEE Canada, plus external subscribers. Information for Authors Authors are invited to contribute submissions in electronic form to the IEEE Canadian Review. Please contact one of the editors. Responsibility for the content rests upon the authors and not the IEEE, nor its members, nor the editors of the Publication. Annual Subscription Price Free of charge to all IEEE members in Canada. For IEEE members outside Canada: $20.00/ year. Non-members: $35.00/year. Corporations and libraries: $37.50/year. Additional copies may be ordered at a cost of $7.50 each from the Administrator. Reprint Permission Abstracting is permitted with credit to the source. Libraries are permitted to photocopy for private use of patrons. Instructors are permitted to photocopy isolated articles for non-commercial classroom use without fee. For other copying, reprint or republication questions, please write to the Editor-in- Chief. The IEEE Canadian Review is printed in Canada, postage paid at Toronto, Ontario. Change of address •Do-it-yourself with MyIEEE: http://www.ieee.org/myieee •Email address.change@ieee.org •Tel 1 (800) 678-4333 •Mail IEEE Service Center, 445 Hoes Lane, P.O. Box 1331, Piscataway, NJ 08855-1331, USA IEEE Consumer Electronic Magazine is preparing a special issue for articles specifically related to Humanitarian Technology. Papers will highlight implementable technologies that benefit humanity as defined by the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations. Authors are invited to submit innovative research or descriptive articles on technologies that benefit and advance humanity. Submission Procedure: Submissions should follow the IEEE standard template (see http://ieeeauthorcenter.ieee.org/). Articles that have been previously published at a conference need to have at least 40% new material as clarified in the cover letter of the submission. The manuscripts need to be submitted online at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/cemag. The authors need to select “Special Section: Implementable Humanitarian Technology (IHT)” in Step-1 of the submission process to ensure the article is reviewed for this Special Call. For any questions, please contact guest editors: Schedule (Tentative): • Submission Deadline: May 31, 2018 • Author Notification: August, 2018 • Publication Date: Mid 2019 Topics include, but are not limited to: • Disaster management mitigation, relief, and recovery- technologies • Connectivity and communications technologies • Technologies for water and sanitation • Mobile health (mHealth), medical technology, and telemedicine • Data and personal security technologies for humanitarian and development applications • Energy technologies including micro grids, renewable energy, and smart power grids • Technologies for sustainable educational programs related to humanity • Community engagement; social and economic factors in humanitarian engineering • Food security, micro-farming, and urban agriculture • Technologies for the disabled and/or aged population • Social impact of technology Rozita Dara, University of Guelph, (drozita@uoguelph.ca) Xavier Fernando, Chair, IEEE Humanitarian Initiatives Committee, Ryerson University (xavier@ieee.org) Implementable Humanitarian Technology on: I I Impl lem SPECIAL ISSUE (IHT) re: Submissions should follow the http://ieeeauthorcenter.ieee.org/). ly published at a conference need to have rified in the cover letter of the submission. ble chnology CALLFORPAPERS