Apple antenna engineer awarded prestigious Marconi Society honor
Apple RF engineer Dr. Ding Nie has been named by the Marconi Society as one of four Paul Baran Young Scholars for his work toward increasing throughput in wireless systems.

Source: The Marconi Society
Dr. Nie has been with Apple since July of 2016 working as a radio frequency engineer tackling issues related to multi-antenna systems. As technology has advanced, so has demand.
Integrating multiple antennas into mobile devices should theoretically increase data throughput, but applying such technology has proven difficult. Dr. Nie helped develop new bounds for multi-antenna systems that are leading to increased throughput and faster wireless communications, according to the Marconi Society.
"Ding is the kind of person that you can let loose on a problem with little guidance and he comes up with very original ideas for solutions," said Dr. Bertrand Hochwald, Nie's doctoral advisor at the University of Notre Dame. "He made a big advance in solving an open problem by coming up with new results that let us apply Bode-Fano bounds to multi-antenna systems"

Dr. Ding Nie
Other honorees include Dr. Di Che, a Member of Technical Staff at Nokia Bell Labs, Qurrat-Ul-Ain Nadeem, a doctoral candidate at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, and Rajalakshmi Nandakumar, a doctoral candidate at the University of Washington.
All four are being honored by the Marconi Society, an organization dedicated to "furthering scientific achievements in communications and the Internet."
Each will receive their awards at the Society's annual awards ceremony on Oct. 2, 2018, in Bologna, Italy.

Source: The Marconi Society
Dr. Nie has been with Apple since July of 2016 working as a radio frequency engineer tackling issues related to multi-antenna systems. As technology has advanced, so has demand.
Integrating multiple antennas into mobile devices should theoretically increase data throughput, but applying such technology has proven difficult. Dr. Nie helped develop new bounds for multi-antenna systems that are leading to increased throughput and faster wireless communications, according to the Marconi Society.
"Ding is the kind of person that you can let loose on a problem with little guidance and he comes up with very original ideas for solutions," said Dr. Bertrand Hochwald, Nie's doctoral advisor at the University of Notre Dame. "He made a big advance in solving an open problem by coming up with new results that let us apply Bode-Fano bounds to multi-antenna systems"

Dr. Ding Nie
Other honorees include Dr. Di Che, a Member of Technical Staff at Nokia Bell Labs, Qurrat-Ul-Ain Nadeem, a doctoral candidate at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, and Rajalakshmi Nandakumar, a doctoral candidate at the University of Washington.
All four are being honored by the Marconi Society, an organization dedicated to "furthering scientific achievements in communications and the Internet."
Each will receive their awards at the Society's annual awards ceremony on Oct. 2, 2018, in Bologna, Italy.
Comments
That's a pretty cool honour. Any idea what models he's working on? iPhones? MacBooks? All of them?
It could have been worse, it could have been the "Macarena Society"...OK, OK, I'm going.
Still, as stated above, it is pretty damn cool.
Dr Nie's PhD dissertation is available for free download from https://curate.nd.edu/show/jh343r09f94.
Notre Dame. I have lectured at our NDU and loved it. Bright, motivated students, great experience.
I wonder if he was an H1B (as I am by the way so not a criticism, in fact far from it)? We need more people like Dr. Nie here not less!