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A busy day at the office
(by Duncan, @ 4:31 PM)
It's been too busy so far today to update this site. Hopefully later tonight my time I'll redress the balance.
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Joel on Software Painless Bug Tracking
(by Duncan, @ 12:16 AM)
Joel on Software Painless Bug Tracking
Keeping a database of bugs is one of the hallmarks of a good software team. I never cease to be amazed at how few teams are actually doing this. One of the biggest incorrect facts that programmers consistently seem to believe is that they can remember all their bugs or keep them on post-it notes.
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Thinking of working for Intel?
(by Gordon Nelson, @ 12:26 AM)
A warning to students:
Help us save talents from exploitation. Please share this page with other friends, specially friends in other universities and colleges, Thank you!
http://www.faceintel.com/collegecorner.htm
G
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Seven LEAN Years
(by Duncan, @ 12:57 AM)
Seven LEAN Years
Unemployment among older American high-tech workers is skyrocketing. Engineers and software programmers, in particular, are theoretically the most in demand; yet engineers and software programmers over age fifty are destitute. If a person of this age group prefers to stay out of management and instead use their highly-trained skills and experience to do real work, this person is looked upon as some kind of a dinosaur, an ignorant buffoon who is socially inept and ready for the scrap-heap. Unemployment among this group of older workers is roughly one in five. Underemployment -- the condition of working in a low-wage job because no appropriate high-wage position is available -- is anywhere from 20% to 80% of this group. Age discrimination in the high-tech fields is now so pervasive that it has become an accepted cultural norm.
Call me a dinosaur if you like but I know that I would hate being in a management position - a 'suit'. I much prefer to avoid the Peter Principle trap. I guess that's why I returned to academia.
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I'm not worthy
(by Duncan, @ 10:48 AM)
I've just noticed that Dave has included a link to this site in the left navbar of Scripting News. I'm in illustrious company there. Boy!, this means the pressure's on to keep this site fresh and interesting. I'm not worthy ;-) Thanks Dave
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Joel on Software: UI Design for Programmers book
(by Duncan, @ 10:59 AM)
Joel on Software
I'm pretty psyched, because UI Design for Programmers's going to appear in print soon.
Good luck with the book Joel. With the extra chapters and a forward by Dave W coupled with your experience, enthusiasm, and writing style, it's sure to be a success. Could be one for the recommended reading list for my students.
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[52.223] LLP Practical #05
(by Duncan, @ 2:42 AM)
I'm up late having underestimated the time it would take to arrange the [52.223] LLP Practical #05 for my students. Oh well, at least it's done now.
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XO/2 - Introduction
(by Duncan, @ 2:59 AM)
XO/2 - Introduction
XO/2 is an object-oriented, hard-real time system software and framework, designed for safety, extensibility and abstraction. It takes care of many common issues faced by programmers of mechatronic products, by hiding general design patterns inside internal mechanisms or by encapsulating them into easy-to-understand abstractions. Careful handling of the safety aspects has been the criterion by which the system has been crafted. These mechanisms, pervasive yet efficient, allow the system to maintain a deus ex-machina knowledge about the running applications, thus providing higher confidence to the application programmer. The latter, relieved from many computer-science aspects, can better focus his attention to the actual problem to be solved.
XO/2 originates from the ETHZ Institute of Robotics. In the past couple of years I have had the pleasure of teaching and supervising several excellent ETH students when they were studying for a year at Strathclyde.
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BBspot - Linux Bashing Now Considered a Hate Crime
(by Duncan, @ 9:44 AM)
BBspot - Linux Bashing Now Considered a Hate Crime
BBspot is a satirical news and comedy source and meant to be funny. If you are easily offended or don't have a sense of humor we suggest you go elsewhere.
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Campus unplugged
(by Duncan, @ 3:43 PM)
Via LTSeek - Campus unpluggedWireless-enabled laptops, combined with a wireless Internet network, hold the promise of transforming American higher education by giving all students instant Internet access wherever they are on campus..... Students can also have ready and frequent interaction with their professors - not to mention the freedom to tap resources anytime, anywhere.
But not everyone is convinced the step is a good one. Along with quick access to academic resources comes the ability to play games constantly, surf the Web in class, and talk online to friends instead of seeing them face to face. Lost in the newly "instant" culture may be time for contemplation, or even unwired solitude.
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Boston Globe Online - Colleges target essay fraud
(by Duncan, @ 3:50 PM)
Also via LTSeek - Boston Globe Online - Colleges target essay fraud
Most of the essay topics on Duke University's application are the typical, window-on-your-soul-in-three-pages variety: What book has influenced you most? Describe a surprising intellectual experience. Name someone whom you admire but disagree with, and tell why.
This fall, however, Duke officials added an unusual question to end with: Is this writing your own?
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RE: JCIEL Plagiarism Detection Project
(by Duncan, @ 4:17 PM)
In Monday's edition of SiT David made some valuable recommendations on how assessments should be constructed in such a way to minimise the potential for plagiarism. Thanks David..
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