1,357,248 research outputs found
Anthony Stuckey
Anthony Stuckey is a member of the charter class and current Network Engineer for IMSA\u27s Information Technology Systems (ITS). He came to IMSA looking for a better and more academically challenging experience than his home school offered. He and his classmates lived in the main building at first, 24 students to a room, and they moved into the dorms in the spring of their first year. Stuckey felt unprepared for the rigor of the curriculum, not having had as much math as some of the other students. The teachers were supportive in helping him to catch up and feel more confident.
Stuckey quickly learned that he was interested in computer science and those classes were a formative experience. He decided to attend the University of Illinois and majored in computer science. The transition to college was made easier because many of his IMSA classmates attended U of I as well. He also felt well-prepared for his coursework there and tested out of some introductory level classes.
After graduating, he stayed in Champaign for eight years, and then moved to a job at Argonne National Laboratory. In May 2016 he started in his current role at IMSA. It\u27s a different sort of job than he had held previously, being a much smaller organization with a small IT staff, which leads to more day-to-day variety in types of work.
Compared to when he was a student, Stuckey feels IMSA now has a more explicit focus on career preparation. He also says the emphasis on diversity and multiculturalism has always been a feature of the IMSA experience and it has remained important. Personally, it exposed him to people from all over the state, from many different backgrounds, and speaking different languages. For the charter class, IMSA was still in process and experimental, and Stuckey reflects on how it is now at a different stage as a mature institution. Overall, he says IMSA taught him how to learn in a way that he didn\u27t even know he was missing before.
Interviewer: Sara Goek. Duration: 24:12.https://digitalcommons.imsa.edu/oral_histories/1023/thumbnail.jp
[Correspondence Between Doyle Stuckey and Barbara Jordan - July 16-19, 1974]
Correspondence between Doyle Stuckey and Barbara Jordan discussing a bill that would promote tourism
[Stuckey Architects]
Photograph of cars at a stop sign next to a building which houses Stuckey Architects in Weatherford, Texas. The street signs to the right mark the intersection of Church Street and Houston Street
Stuckey, J E, NX11243
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/419853Surname: STUCKEY. Given Name(s) or Initials: J E. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX11243. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 9416.244432
Item: [2016.0049.52114] "Stuckey, J E, NX11243
Discussion with Adreanne Stuckey
Tuesday, November 2, 2021 | 12:30 PM | Eck Hall of Law, Room 1140
The Notre Dame Black Law Students Association and the Program on Ethics, Compliance and Inclusion are happy to host a discussion with ND law alum Adreanne Stuckey. Stuckey graduated from ND law in 2014, and she has worked in private practice and now as an in-house attorney at Duke Energy. She will discuss her career path since graduating from Notre Dame, her current work at Duke Energy, and she will answer questions from students.
You may also watch via Zoom with the link.
Sponsors: Black Law Students Association Environmental Law Societyhttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/2103/thumbnail.jp
A Comparison of ArcGIS and QGIS for Animation
I compare two GIS programs which can be used to create cartographic animations—the commercial Esri ArcGIS and the free and open-source QGIS. ArcGIS implements animation through the “Time Slider” while QGIS uses a plugin called “TimeManager.” There are some key similarities and differences as well as functions unique to each plugin. This analysis examines each program’s capabilities in mapping time series data. Criteria for evaluation include the number of steps, the number of output formats, input of data, processing, output of a finished animation, and cost. The comparison indicates that ArcGIS has more control in input, processing, and output of animations than QGIS, but has a baseline cost of $100 per year for a personal license. In contrast, QGIS is free, uses fewer steps, and enables more output formats. The QGIS interface can make data input, processing, and output of an animation slower.</jats:p
Jann Stuckey interviewed by John McCulloch
John E.S. McCulloch OAM was a professional historian and feminist. He taught at the University of Queensland from 1972 to 1982, at Griffith University from 1996 to 1997, and the Queensland University of Technology from 1996 to 2006. His PhD thesis, 'Elizabeth Brentnall, 1830-1909: Educator, Feminist, Suffragist and Philanthropist' (University of Queensland, 2010), documented the life of the first president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union in Queensland. This collection of oral history interviews conducted with Queensland State and Federal women parliamentarians was used in his publication 'From Suffragists to Legislators: 100 Years of Women's Suffrage in Queensland' (Central Queensland University Press, 2005)
William Newland Stuckey in Master Mason Uniform
Copy negative of an artist's portrait of William Newland Stuckey dressed in a master mason uniform. He has a long beard and stands holding a cane in one hand
Xu Xing, "Variations Without a Theme" and Other Stories, traduit par Maria Galikowski et Lin Min
Stuckey Andrew, Jacquet Raphaël. Xu Xing, "Variations Without a Theme" and Other Stories, traduit par Maria Galikowski et Lin Min. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°57, 2000. pp. 103-104
Sequential Time Splitting and Bounds Communication for a Portfolio of Optimization Solvers
Scheduling a subset of solvers belonging to a given portfolio has proven to be a good strategy when solving Constraint Satisfaction Problems (CSPs). In this paper, we show that this approach can also be effective for Constraint Optimization Problems (COPs). Unlike CSPs, sequential execution of optimization solvers can communicate information in the form of bounds to improve the performance of the following solvers. We provide a hybrid and flexible portfolio approach that combines static and dynamic time splitting for solving a given COP. Empirical evaluations show the approach is promising and sometimes even able to outperform the best solver of the porfolio. © 2014 Springer International Publishing Switzerland
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