The cost of disengagement in Australia is $33.5 billion p.a. and the personal impact includes social and health issues So the question is, as managers and leaders, how do we discover talent? How do we develop it? How do we give people the opportunity to use it to do what they do best at work, so that they are engaged?
The cost of disengagement in Australia is $33.5 billion p.a. and the personal impact includes social and health issues So the question is, as managers and leaders, how do we discover talent? How do we develop it? How do we give people the opportunity to use it to do what they do best at work, so that they are engaged?
Please send catalogers : metadata staffing in the 21st centuryJennifer Liss
This presentation addresses the ways in which traditional catalogers are uniquely positioned to make valuable contributions to the linked library data future and outlines competencies for performing metadata work.
In November 2015, we will be launching Strategic Doing at the Sunshine Coast Futures Conference. One of the top three innovative regions in Australia, the Sunshine Coast includes civic leaders wiling to experiment with new approaches to getting things done. The University of the Sunshine Coast is partnering with Purdue University to move Strategic Doing to Australia.
Química dos Elementos de Transição Experimental - Experimento I - Heranitrito...Dharma Initiative
Roteiro da primeira prática da disciplina Química dos Elementos de Transição Experimental - Heranitritocobaltato (III) de sódio, traduzido por mim...
UFSCar - 2012
The skeletal implementation pattern is a software design pattern consisting of defining an abstract class that provides a partial interface implementation. However, since Java allows only single class inheritance, if implementers decide to extend a skeletal implementation, they will not be allowed to extend any other class. Also, discovering the skeletal implementation may require a global analysis.
Java 8 enhanced interfaces alleviate these problems by allowing interfaces to contain (default) method implementations, which implementers inherit. Java classes are then free to extend a different class, and a separate abstract class is no longer needed; developers considering implementing an interface need only examine the interface itself.
In this talk, I will argue that both these benefits improve software modularity, and I will discuss our ongoing work in developing an automated refactoring tool that would assist developers in taking advantage of the enhanced interface feature for their legacy Java software.
Raffi Khatchadourian is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Systems Technology (CST) at New York City College of Technology (NYCCT) of the City University of New York (CUNY) and an Open Educational Resources (OER) Fellow for the Spring 2016 semester. His research is centered on techniques for automated software evolution, particularly those related to automated refactoring and source code recommendation systems. His goal is to ease the burden associated with correctly and efficiently evolving large and complex software by providing automated tools that can be easily used by developers.
Raffi received his MS and PhD degrees in Computer Science from Ohio State University and his BS degree in Computer Science from Monmouth University in New Jersey. Prior to joining City Tech, he was a Software Engineer at Apple, Inc. in Cupertino, California, where he worked on Digital Rights Management (DRM) for iTunes, iBooks, and the App store. He also developed distributed software that tested various features of iPhones, iPads, and iPods.
Please send catalogers : metadata staffing in the 21st centuryJennifer Liss
This presentation addresses the ways in which traditional catalogers are uniquely positioned to make valuable contributions to the linked library data future and outlines competencies for performing metadata work.
In November 2015, we will be launching Strategic Doing at the Sunshine Coast Futures Conference. One of the top three innovative regions in Australia, the Sunshine Coast includes civic leaders wiling to experiment with new approaches to getting things done. The University of the Sunshine Coast is partnering with Purdue University to move Strategic Doing to Australia.
Química dos Elementos de Transição Experimental - Experimento I - Heranitrito...Dharma Initiative
Roteiro da primeira prática da disciplina Química dos Elementos de Transição Experimental - Heranitritocobaltato (III) de sódio, traduzido por mim...
UFSCar - 2012
The skeletal implementation pattern is a software design pattern consisting of defining an abstract class that provides a partial interface implementation. However, since Java allows only single class inheritance, if implementers decide to extend a skeletal implementation, they will not be allowed to extend any other class. Also, discovering the skeletal implementation may require a global analysis.
Java 8 enhanced interfaces alleviate these problems by allowing interfaces to contain (default) method implementations, which implementers inherit. Java classes are then free to extend a different class, and a separate abstract class is no longer needed; developers considering implementing an interface need only examine the interface itself.
In this talk, I will argue that both these benefits improve software modularity, and I will discuss our ongoing work in developing an automated refactoring tool that would assist developers in taking advantage of the enhanced interface feature for their legacy Java software.
Raffi Khatchadourian is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Systems Technology (CST) at New York City College of Technology (NYCCT) of the City University of New York (CUNY) and an Open Educational Resources (OER) Fellow for the Spring 2016 semester. His research is centered on techniques for automated software evolution, particularly those related to automated refactoring and source code recommendation systems. His goal is to ease the burden associated with correctly and efficiently evolving large and complex software by providing automated tools that can be easily used by developers.
Raffi received his MS and PhD degrees in Computer Science from Ohio State University and his BS degree in Computer Science from Monmouth University in New Jersey. Prior to joining City Tech, he was a Software Engineer at Apple, Inc. in Cupertino, California, where he worked on Digital Rights Management (DRM) for iTunes, iBooks, and the App store. He also developed distributed software that tested various features of iPhones, iPads, and iPods.