1,067 research outputs found
Interior castle
Catalog of an exhibition held at Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, St. Kilda, Vic., 18 September - 17 October 2010.
"Edition 1000"--Verso cover
In support of open reviews; better teaching through large-scale data mining
The
Communications
Web site, http://cacm.acm.org, features more than a dozen bloggers in the BLOG@CACM community. In each issue of
Communications
, we'll publish selected posts or excerpts.
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Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogCACM
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Bertrand Meyer writes about his long-standing decision not to provide anonymous reviews. Greg Linden considers how educational practices could be improved through the data mining of students' schoolwork.</jats:p
Scientists, engineers, and computer science; industry and research groups
The
Communications
Web site, http://cacm.acm.org, features more than a dozen bloggers in the BLOG@CACM community. In each issue of
Communications
, we'll publish selected posts or excerpts.
twitter
Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogCACM
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Mark Guzdial discusses what scientists and engineers should know about computer science, such as Alan Kay's "Triple Whammy." Greg Linden writes about industry's different approaches to research and how to organize researchers in a company.</jats:p
Security advice; malvertisements; and CS education in Qatar
The Communications website
features more than a dozen bloggers in the
The BLOG@CACM
community. In each issue of Communications, we'll publish selected posts or excerpts. Follow us on
Twitter
. Greg Linden discusses security advice and the cost of user effort, Jason Hong considers the increase in malvertisements, and Mark Guzdial writes about gender and CS education in Qatar.
</jats:p
The chaos of the internet as an external brain; and more
The
Communications
Web site, http://cacm.acm.org, features more than a dozen bloggers in the BLOG@CACM community. In each issue of
Communications
, we'll publish selected posts or excerpts.
twitter
Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogCACM
Greg Linden writes about the Internet as a peripheral resource; Ed H. Chi discusses lessons learned from the DARPA Network Challenge; and Mark Guzdial asks if there are too many IT workers or too many IT jobs.</jats:p
The war against spam
http://cacm.acm.org/blogs/blog-cacm
The
Communications
Web site, http://cacm.acm.org, features more than a dozen bloggers in the BLOG@CACM community. In each issue of
Communications
, we'll publish selected posts or excerpts.
twitter
Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogCACM
Greg Linden asks if spammers have been defeated; Michael Bernstein discusses Clay Shirky's keynote speech at CSCW 2010; and Erika S. Poole writes about how the digital world can help parents cope with the death of a child.</jats:p
Economic Cost-Benefit Analysis of Smart LED Street Lights: Providing Free Public WiFi to the Linden Neighborhood
Course Code: ENR/AEDE 4567Cost-Benefit analysis of the provision of free WiFi into the Linden neighborhood through smart street lighting infrastructure.Academic Major: Environment, Economy, Development, and SustainabilityAcademic Major: Natural Resource Managemen
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Is There a Shortage of Engineering Talent in the U.S.?
This paper is based on research conducted for our forthcoming book, Change Is the Only Constant: How the Chip Industry Deals with Crisis. Clair Brown is professor of economics and director of the Center for Work, Technology, and Society (IRLE) at University of California, Berkeley; Greg Linden is senior research fellow at the Center for Work, Technology, and Society at UC Berkeley. Yongwook Paik provided excellent research assistance. The authors would like to thank the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment at UC Berkeley, and the Institute for Technology, Enterprise and Competitiveness (ITEC/COE) and Omron Fellowship at Doshisha University, Japan, for funding. We are grateful to Ben Campbell, Bob Doering, David Ferrell, Michael Flynn, Gartner Dataquest, Ron Hira, Dave Hodges, Rob Leachman, Daya Nadamuni, Elena Obukhova, Devadas Pillai, Semiconductor Industry Association, Chintay Shih, Gary Smith, Bill Spencer, Strategic Marketing Associates, Yea-Huey Su, Tim Tredwell, and C-K Wang for their valuable contributions. Melissa Appleyard, Hank Chesbrough, Jason Dedrick, Rafiq Dossani, Richard Freeman, Deepak Gupta, Bradford Jensen, Ken Kraemer, Frank Levy, B. Lindsay Lowell, Jeff Macher, Dave Mowery, Tom Murtha, Tim Sturgeon, Michael Teitelbaum, and Eiichi Yamaguchi, as well as participants at the NAE Workshop on the Offshoring of Engineering, the 2005 Brookings Trade Forum on Offshoring of White-Collar Work, the Berkeley Innovation Seminar, and the Doshisha ITEC seminar series provided thoughtful discussions that improved the paper. We are especially grateful to Gail Pesyna at the Sloan Foundation for her long-running support of, and input into, our research. The authors are responsible for any errors
The Linden Tree
A delightful fictional memoir about César Aira’s small hometown. The narrator, born the same year and now living in the same great city (Buenos Aires) as César Aira, could be the author himself. Beginning with his parents—an enigmatic handsome black father who gathered linden flowers for his sleep-inducing tea and an irrational, crippled mother of European descent—the narrator catalogs memories of his childhood: his friends, his peculiar first job, his many gossiping neighbors, and the landscape and architecture of the provinces. The Linden Tree beautifully brings back to life that period in Argentina when the poor, under the guiding hand of Eva Perón, aspired to a newly created middle class. As it moves from anecdote to anecdote, this charming short novella—touching, funny, and sometimes surreal—invites the reader to visit the source of Aira’s extraordinary imagination. Translated by Chris Andrews
BUS 479: Innovation and Integration in the Bakery Seminar in Experiential Learning
Innovation and Integration in the Bakery is an experiential learning course. This course has been designed to explore food based business models and the impact they potentially have on developing local communities. Students will explore these ideas while also learning introductory baking skills in order to more fully grasp the technical side of food production. Classes are structured in the following format: instruction, application, and reflection. Classes will utilize case studies in the Omaha area showcasing a variety of for-profit, non-profit, and socially driven business models. Using the bakery as one model, students will then be required to learn and execute baking production. Finally, through the reading and reflection of Fr. Greg Boyle’s Tattoos on the Heart, students must reflect on the necessary components of compassion, forgiveness, kinship, and advocacy that our Jesuit tradition urges businesses to explore
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