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Fiche descriptive du cours Gestion de Projet SI
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Ce cours s’adresse aux étudiants de 3ème année en sciences informatiques. Ce cours est orienté vers la maîtrise d’œuvre et donne une initiation à la gestion de projet des SI. Nous aborderons entre autres les objectifs d’un projet, le triangle de projet, les acteurs d’un projet SI et leur rôle, le cycle de vie de projet et la démarche de création d’u projet SI et la gestion des risques.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Lecture Notes
Date Added:
11/22/2019
Field Engineer
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Field Service Management has a crucial role in maintaining Network Field Engineer as they are responsible for planning, installing, testing, and maintaining the equipment to run a proper communication network. Their general duties include the maintenance and repair of equipment and construction of towers to ensure optimal performance. A telecom engineer’s job involves the use of various tools such as interconnect devices, network facilities, and radios. A field engineer also works with engineers from other fields for equipment installation and then report to the upper management. 

Subject:
Computer Science
Material Type:
Assessment
Author:
willsmith willsmith
Date Added:
05/06/2020
Fill-in-the-blank Abi Persona
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CC BY
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Customizable GenderMag persona: Abi. Abi provides the strongest lens to find inclusiveness issues that disproportionately affect women users. If you choose to use only one persona and your primary motivation is inclusiveness to women, Abi is probably the best first choice. Abi provides the strongest inclusivity lens out of the 3 personas (Abi, Pat, and Tim).

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Primary Source
Author:
The GenderMag Project
Date Added:
02/07/2023
Fill-in-the-blank Pat Persona
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Customizable GenderMag persona: Pat. Pat touches (mostly) middle points in the facet ranges between the Abi and Tim GenderMag personas. If you want a third persona for additional coverage of the facets, Pat is a good third choice after Tim.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Primary Source
Author:
The GenderMag Project
Date Added:
02/07/2023
Fill-in-the-blank Tim Persona
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Customizable GenderMag persona: Tim. Tim represents the opposite end of the facet value ranges from the Abi GenderMag persona, so Tim helps to complete the "sweep" of considering a wide range of facet values. For full coverage of the spectrum, Tim is a good second choice after Abi.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Primary Source
Author:
The GenderMag Project
Date Added:
02/07/2023
The FinTech Explorer: A Comprehensive Guide to Case Studies, Course Notes, and Emerging Trends | Explorateur de projets FinTech : Un guide pratique pour études de cas, notes de cours, et nouvelles tendances
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This bilingual resource brings together a collection of student-authored case studies that explore how emerging technologies—Artificial Intelligence, Blockchain, Cloud Computing, and Big Data (ABCD)—can revolutionize the financial industry. Cette ressource bilingue rassemble une série d’études de cas rédigées par des étudiants qui explorent comment les technologies émergentes - intelligence artificielle, Blockchain, le Cloud Computing, et Big Data (ABCD) peuvent révolutionner le secteur financier.

Subject:
Applied Science
Business and Communication
Computer Science
Finance
Material Type:
Case Study
Provider:
eCampusOntario
Author:
Adelphe Ekponon
Qianru (Cheryl) Qi
Shaista Jaffer
Date Added:
10/13/2024
FinTech: Shaping the Financial World
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This course about financial technology, or FinTech, is for students wishing to explore the ways in which new technologies are disrupting the financial services industry—driving material change in business models, products, applications and customer user interface. Amongst the significant technological trends affecting financial services into the 2020’s, the class will explore AI, deep learning, blockchain technology and open APIs. Students will gain an understanding of the key technologies, market structure, participants, regulation and the dynamics of change being brought about by FinTech.

Subject:
Applied Science
Business and Communication
Computer Science
Engineering
Finance
Material Type:
Full Course
Provider:
MIT
Provider Set:
MIT OpenCourseWare
Author:
Gensler, Gary
Date Added:
02/01/2020
Final Project Assignment: Distributed Systems and Cloud Computing
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Final Project Assignment for the course: CSCI 49378: Intro to Distributed Systems and Cloud Computing. Delivered at Hunter College in Spring 2020 by Bonan Liu as part of the Tech-in-Residence Corps program.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Homework/Assignment
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
Hunter College
Author:
Bonan Liu
NYC Tech-in-residence Corps
Date Added:
07/17/2020
Final Working Session: Build My City Project
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Students plan their final working session together, then work in their project groups to make final changes, test their projects, and check their project against the design requirements.
Students reflect on what they want people to understand when they view their cities.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
NYC Computer Science for All
Date Added:
04/09/2021
Finding Balance: Collaborative Workflows for Risk Management in Sharing Cultural Heritage Collections Online
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Collaborative Workflows for Risk Management in Sharing Cultural Heritage Collections Online

Short Description:
Digitizing rare and unique historical documents so they can be shared online is mission-critical work for most cultural heritage institutions, but it can be difficult to complete this work, especially intellectual property rights management, at a scale that matches user demand. The authors of this open educational resource offer guidance for creating scalable, cross-functional workflows using a risk-management approach that increases efficiency and distributes responsibility for rights assessment work more equitably across stakeholders. It includes advice for navigating knowledge gaps, building an engaged team with the right skillsets, reimagining workflows, and rethinking traditional archival processing workflows to build capacity for rights analysis during arrangement and description. Each chapter includes a helpful exercise for implementing this guidance in your own institution.

Word Count: 28621

(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided as part of a bulk import process.)

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Law
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
University of Kansas
Author:
Carrie Hintz
Jody Bailey
Melanie T. Kowalksi
Sarah Quigley
Date Added:
02/01/2023
Finding Consensus Where There Is None: Building Library AI Teams
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Harley Rogers (University of Mississippi) present 'Finding Consensus Where There Is None: Building Library AI Teams' during the AI & Implementation session at the Fantastic Futures ai4LAM 2023 annual conference... This item belongs to: movies/fantastic-futures-annual-international-conference-2023-ai-for-libraries-archives-and-museums-02.

This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Item Tile, MP3, MPEG4, Metadata, PNG, Thumbnail, h.264 720P, h.264 IA

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
AI4LAM
Provider Set:
Fantastic Futures 2023 Conference Session Recordings
Author:
Harley Rogers
Date Added:
05/07/2024
Finite Automata
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CC BY
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A finite automaton (FA) is a simple idealized machine used to recognize patterns within input taken from some character set (or alphabet) C. The job of an FA is to accept or reject an input depending on whether the pattern defined by the FA occurs in the input. A finite automaton consists of:a finite set S of N statesa special start statea set of final (or accepting) statesa set of transitions T from one state to another, labeled with chars in CAs noted above, we can represent a FA graphically, with nodes for states, and arcs for transitions.We execute our FA on an input sequence as follows:Begin in the start stateIf the next input char matches the label on a transition from the current state to a new state, go to that new stateContinue making transitions on each input charIf no move is possible, then stopIf in accepting state, then accept

Subject:
Computer Science
Material Type:
Module
Author:
Deepika Dash
Date Added:
07/21/2016
A First Course in Electrical and Computer Engineering
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This book was written for an experimental freshman course at the University of Colorado. The course is now an elective that the majority of our electrical and computer engineering students take in the second semester of their freshman year, just before their first circuits course. Our department decided to offer this course for several reasons:

we wanted to pique student' interest in engineering by acquainting them with engineering teachers early in their university careers and by providing with exposure to the types of problems that electrical and computer engineers are asked to solve;
we wanted students entering the electrical and computer engineering programs to be prepared in complex analysis, phasors, and linear algebra, topics that are of fundamental importance in our discipline;
we wanted students to have an introduction to a software application tool, such as MATLAB, to complete their preparation for practical and efficient computing in their subsequent courses and in their professional careers;
we wanted students to make early contact with advanced topics like vector graphics, filtering, and binary coding so that they would gain a more rounded picture of modern electrical and computer engineering.
In order to introduce this course, we had to sacrifice a second semester of Pascal programming. We concluded that the sacrifice was worth making because we found that most of our students were prepared for high-level language computing after just one semester of programming.

We believe engineering educators elsewhere are reaching similar conclusions about their own students and curriculums. We hope this book helps create a much needed dialogue about curriculum revision and that it leads to the development of similar introductory courses that encourage students to enter and practice our craft.Students electing to take this course have completed one semester of calculus, computer programming, chemistry, and humanities.

Concurrently with this course, students take physics and a second semester of calculus, as well as a second semester in the humanities. By omitting the advanced topics marked by asterisks, we are able to cover Complex Numbers through Linear Algebra, plus two of the three remaining chapters. The book is organized so that the instructor can select any two of the three. If every chapter of this book is covered, including the advanced topics, then enough material exists for a two-semester course.

The first three chapters of this book provide a fairly complete coverage of complex numbers, the functions e^x and e^jand phasors. Our department philosophy is that these topics must be understood if a student is to succeed in electrical and computer engineering. These three chapters may also be used as a supplement to a circuits course. A measured pace of presentation, taking between sixteen and eighteen lectures, is sufficient to cover all but the advanced sections in Complex Numbers through Phasors.

The chapter on "linear algebra" is prerequisite for all subsequent chapters. We use eight to ten lectures to cover it. We devote twelve to sixteen lectures to cover topics from Vector Graphics through Binary Codes. (We assume a semester consisting of 42 lectures and three exams.) The chapter on vector graphics applies the linear algebra learned in the previous chapter to the problem of translating, scaling, and rotating images. "Filtering" introduces the student to basic ideas in averaging and filtering. The chapter on "Binary Codes" covers the rudiments of binary coding, including Huffman codes and Hamming codes.

If the users of this book find "Vector Graphics" through "Binary Codes" too confining, we encourage them to supplement the essential material in "Complex Numbers" through "Linear Algebra" with their own course notes on additional topics. Within electrical and computer engineering there are endless possibilities. Practically any set of topics that can be taught with conviction and enthusiasm will whet the student's appetite. We encourage you to write to us or to our editor, Tom Robbins, about your ideas for additional topics. We would like to think that our book and its subsequent editions will have an open architecture that enables us to accommodate a wide range of student and faculty interests.

Throughout this book we have used MATLAB programs to illustrate key ideas. MATLAB is an interactive, matrix-oriented language that is ideally suited to circuit analysis, linear systems, control theory, communications, linear algebra, and numerical analysis. MATLAB is rapidly becoming a standard software tool in universities and engineering companies. (For more information about MATLAB, return the attached card in the back of this book to The MathWorks, Inc.) MATLAB programs are designed to develop the student's ability to solve meaningful problems, compute, and plot in a high-level applications language. Our students get started in MATLAB by working through “An Introduction to MATLAB,” while seated at an IBM PC (or look-alike) or an Apple Macintosh. We also have them run through the demonstration programs in "Complex Numbers". Each week we give three classroom lectures and conduct a one-hour computer lab session. Students use this lab session to hone MATLAB skills, to write programs, or to conduct the numerical experiments that are given at the end of each chapter. We require that these experiments be carried out and then reported in a short lab report that contains (i) introduction, (ii) analytical computations, (iii) computer code, (iv) experimental results, and (v) conclusions. The quality of the numerical results and the computer graphics astonishes students. Solutions to the chapter problems are available from the publisher for instructors who adopt this text for classroom use.

We wish to acknowledge our late colleague Richard Roberts, who encouraged us to publish this book, and Michael Lightner and Ruth Ravenel, who taught "Linear Algebra" and "Vector Graphics" and offered helpful suggestions on the manuscript. We thank C. T. Mullis for allowing us to use his notes on binary codes to guide our writing of "Binary Codes". We thank Cédric Demeure and Peter Massey for their contributions to the writing of "An Introduction to MATLAB" and "The Edix Editor". We thank Tom Robbins, our editor at Addison-Wesley, for his encouragement, patience, and many suggestions. We are especially grateful to Julie Fredlund, who composed this text through many drafts and improved it in many ways. We thank her for preparing an excellent manuscript for production.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Engineering
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
Rice University
Provider Set:
OpenStax CNX
Author:
Louis Scharf
Date Added:
11/26/2019
First Semester in Numerical Analysis with Python
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CC BY-NC-SA
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The book is based on “First semester in Numerical Analysis with Julia”, written by Giray Ökten. The contents of the original book are retained, while all the algorithms are implemented in Python (Version 3.8.0). Python is an open source (under OSI), interpreted, general-purpose programming language that has a large number of users around the world. Python is ranked the third in August 2020 by the TIOBE programming community index, a measure of popularity of programming languages, and is the top-ranked interpreted language. We hope this book will better serve readers who are interested in a first course in Numerical Analysis, but are more familiar with Python for the implementation of the algorithms.

The first chapter of the book has a self-contained tutorial for Python, including how to set up the computer environment. Anaconda, the open-source individual edition, is recommended for an easy installation of Python and effortless management of Python packages, and the Jupyter environment, a web-based interactive development environment for Python as well as many other programming languages, was used throughout the book and is recommended to the readers for easy code development, graph visualization and reproducibility.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
Auraria Institutional Repository
Author:
Yaning Liu
Date Added:
11/18/2021