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Joe
Trost hesitated as he faced his decision about attending
graduate school. Then this thought crossed his mind. He could
be a programmer with a computer science or even a business
master’s degree… and be one of millions, Or he
could earn a Master of Science in Telecommunications (MST)
and be one of a select few. He chose the MST program at Pitt
for its 50/50 blend of technical lab work and classroom learning.
He could see that at Pitt, hardware people and software people
came together to form a multidisciplinary experience that really
let students learn about entire systems, from the human factors
right down to the resistors and capacitors.
Joe Trost is flat out friendly. He’s the sort of good
guy that most people just naturally respond positively to.
As a student he hit it off with his Telecommunications instructors,
especially with Rich “Dr. T” Thompson. Matriculating
in the summer of 1991, but still scrambling to find housing,
Joe received an invitation to stay with the Thompson’s
temporarily… Mrs. Thompson once coined their home “Dr.
T’s Home for Wayward Youth!” In the classroom,
Joe initially struggled, but with Dr. T’s encouragement
he learned to “run, not just jog along,” and rose
to the top of his class. Trost and Thompson remain true friends
today.
Joe is a Director of Software Engineering for Ericsson. Ericsson is
headquartered in Sweden and is a leading manufacturer of
cellular infrastructure with a R&D campus located in
Warrendale, PA (20 minutes North of Pittsburgh). Joe’s
Team is focused on R&D work that will help Ericsson's
products further penetrate the North American Telecommunications
Market. He says that his MST gives him the technical
underpinning, which combined with his solid non-technical
and people skills, gives him a genuine niche.
Joe joined FORE Systems in January of 1995 when it was a
little known networking startup with about 320
employees. At the peak in 1999, when FORE was bought by Marconi,
about 2,300 were employed at the Warrendale Campus. Ericsson
purchased the global R&D facilities of Marconi in
2005 (including the Warrendale Campus). The resources
at Warrendale have been merged into the various organizations
within Ericsson. Though his many years of telecom
employment, Joe has always felt that his MST has given him
an edge over his competition and will remain valuable
long into the future. Over the years, Joe has maintained
an extremely active and close relationship with the Telecommunications
Program at Pitt. He considers his contributions of time and
money to be “interest payments on my MST education.” And,
he concludes, telecommunications is fundamental to the economy,
people and computers will be ever more densely networked
in the future.
The Ericsson home page:
http://www.ericsson.com
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