11. Programming Methodology Lecture 11
computer, science, technology, programming, software, variable, names, language, java, class, setters, methods, public, private, Gimages, Gobjects, Gcompounds, Gpolygons, mouse, resizing, add, run, keyboard events, breakout
13. Programming Methodology Lecture 13
computer, science, technology, programming, software, variable, names, language, java, strings, str, characters, processing, private, public, loops, char, function, replace, tokenizers, caesar cipher
10. Programming Methodology Lecture 10
computer, science, technology, programming, software, variable, names, language, java, class, constructors, instance variables, setters, methods, public, private, units, extending, string, acm. graphics, GCanvas, GArc, graphicsprograms, interface, Glabel,
8. Programming Methodology Lecture 8
computer, science, technology, programming, software, variable, names, language, java, cast, Double, integers, method, void, type, expression, return, parameters, functions, information hiding, private void, public void, run, instance variable, import, ra
3. Custom Classes, Object Lifecycle, Autorelease, Objective-C Properties (January 12, 2010)
Software engineering, application development, programming language, iPhone operating system, OS, objective c, cocoa touch, SDK, object oriented design, Apple, Macintosh, Xcode, phase, data, class, superclass, NSObject, public header file, private impleme
12 - Real Estate Finance and Its Vulnerability to Crisis
Real Estate is the biggest asset class and of great importance for both individuals and institutional investors. An array of economic and psychological factors impact real estate investment decisions and the public has changing ideas of real estate as a profitable investment. People's demand to buy a home by taking on long-term debt, called a mortgage, is often tied with the overall health of the economy and financial markets. In recessions, home buying tends to fall and the opposite holds in a
11 - Why no Revolution in 1848 in Britain
Revolutions occur when a critical mass of people come together to make specific demands upon their government. They invariably involve an increase in popular involvement in the political process. One of the central questions concerning 1848, a year in which almost every major European nation faced a revolutionary upsurge, is why England did not have its own revolution despite the existence of social tensions. Two principal reasons account for this fact: first, the success of reformist political
09 - Middle Classes
The nineteenth century in Europe is, in many ways, synonymous with the rise of the bourgeoisie. It is misleading, however, to consider this newly dominant middle class as a homogenous group; rather, the century may be more accurately described in terms of the rise of plural middle classes. While the classes comprising this group were united by their search for power based on property rights rather than hereditary privilege, they were otherwise strikingly diverse. Contemporary stereotypes of the
05 - The Enlightenment and the Public Sphere
While the major philosophical projects of the Enlightenment are associated with the names of individual thinkers such as Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Voltaire, the cultural transformation in France in the years leading up to the Revolution should also be understood in the context of the public sphere and popular press. Alongside such luminaries as those associated with Diderot's Encyclopédie were a host of lesser pamphleteers and libellists eager for fame and some degree of fortune. If the writin
Experts 2010 H - La proposition de règlement de l'Union Européenne
Lors du troisième colloque de la Compagnie des Experts de Reims Madame Le Professeur Céline MEYRUEIS du CEIPI (Centre d'études internationales de la propriété intellectuelle) nous présente un projet d'accord sur la juridiction du brevet européen et du brevet de l'Union européenne.
Pour aller plus loin :
Office européen des brevets : http://www.epo.org/
TALAT Lecture 2102.04: A Compressed Air Tank for a Lorry, Special Studies: Rolling, Deep-Drawing and
This lecture offers an example of product development. It imparts knowledge about rolling aluminium; deep-drawing aluminium; welding aluminium (MIG and TIG) and?choice of alloy - rolling/deep-drawing/welding. It provides insight into how to develop a product using the general specifications and the interaction between form, material and processing chain; the importance of being thoroughly familiar with the different design materials, their processing possibilities and properties. The lecture is
A Life in Documentary - Paul Watson
Paul Watson is a British Documentary superstar. His 1974 series “The Family” on the Wilkins of Reading, set off the “fly-on-the-wall” genre and is a seminal moment in British television history. He has not stopped since “Sylvania Waters” and “The Fishing Party” and his most recent success has been the 100 minute “Rain in My Heart” on BBC 2, tackling the subject of alcoholism. This is the starting point in this Coventry Conversation with John mair.
11.337J Urban Design Policy and Action (MIT)
Governments at every level assume a measure of responsibility for seeking good design. Some of that responsibility is exercised directly—through the design and construction of government buildings, for example. But most changes to our environments are neither designed nor built by governments. Rather, they are the result of the actions and investments of private individuals, institutions, corporations, joint ventures, or private/public collaborations. Yet, the actions of all of these actor
Subaltern Studies thirty years on: some unanswered questions
Dipesh Chakrabarty is currently the Lawrence A. Kimpton Distinguished Service Professor in History, South Asian Languages and Civilizations, and the College, University of Chicago. He is also a Faculty Fellow of the Chicago Center for Contemporary Theory, an Associate Faculty of the Department of English, holds a visiting position at the Research School of Humanities & the Arts at ANU and an Honorary Professorial Fellowship with the School of Historical Studies at the University of Melbourne, Au
Getting Away With Murder: State Violence and Impunity in Phatthalung, 1972-1975
In February 1975, student activists exposed a series of brutal murders of citizens by Communist Suppression Operations Command and other state security forces that had taken place two-and-a-half years earlier in Phatthalung province in mid-southern Thailand. The thang daeng, or 'red drum,' killings gained their name from the method of killing employed. Accused of engaging in Communist activities, or tacit support for them, citizens were arrested, or simply taken, in large sweeps across districts
21H.907 Trials in History (MIT)
This seminar examines a number of famous trials in European and American history. It considers the salient issues (political, social, cultural) of several trials, the ways in which each trial was constructed and covered in public discussions at the time, the ways in which legal reasoning and storytelling interacted in each trial and in the later retellings of the trial, and the ways in which trials serve as both spectacle and a forum for moral and political reasoning. Students have an opportunit
Why choose Concordia?
http://now.concordia.ca
New faculty talk about what brought them to teach at Concordia.
Amongst the crickets and fountains at the Botantical Gardens, listen to:
- Krista-Byers-Heinlein, Psychology
- Miriam Diaz, Classics, Modern Languages and Linguistics,
- Juan Carlos Castro, Assistant Professor, New Media and Digital Culture
- and Louellyn White, First Peoples Studies, School of Community and Public Affairs.
Anderson Parking Facility | University of St. Thomas
The Anderson Parking Facility opened in February 2009 after nine months of construction. With the ramp's completion, St. Thomas has more on-campus parking spaces than it has ever had.
Click on the tab above to view construction photos, or on MORE below to read details about this facility that serves students, faculty and staff members, alumni, and the public with parking for various university activities on the St. Paul campus.
A Life in Numbers - Bob Worcester. MORI
Sir Robert Worcester, KBE, is the founder of the MORI polling and research organisation, and a member and contributor to many voluntary organisations. He is a well known figure in British public opinion research. Here he talks about his life working with numbers, statistics and public opinion polls.
The History of Channel 4 - Channel 4 Day - Maggie Brown
Maggie Brown has been covering the media industry for over twenty years and has built a reputation as one of the countries most respected and highly regarded specialist media journalists. Granted access to Channel 4’s rich archive and frank interviews with the founders, chief executives and stars alike, she has recently completed a fresh British Film Institute history on the channel due out in November. Here she discusses the history of Channel 4.













