42,223 research outputs found
Assessing technical candidates on the social web
This is the pre-print version of this Article. The official published version can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2012 IEEEThe Social Web provides comprehensive and publicly available information about software developers: they can be identified as contributors to open source projects, as experts at maintaining weak ties on social network sites, or as active participants to knowledge sharing sites. These signals, when aggregated and summarized, could be used to define individual profiles of potential candidates: job seekers, even if lacking a formal degree or changing their career path, could be qualitatively evaluated by potential employers through their online
contributions. At the same time, developers are aware of the Web’s public nature and the possible uses of published information when they determine what to share with the world. Some might even try to manipulate public
signals of technical qualifications, soft skills, and reputation in their favor. Assessing candidates on the Web for
technical positions presents challenges to recruiters and traditional selection procedures; the most serious being the interpretation of the provided signals.
Through an in-depth discussion, we propose guidelines for software engineers and recruiters to help them interpret the value and trouble with the signals and metrics they use to assess a candidate’s characteristics and skills
The performance of Seventh District food processing
Federal Reserve District, 7th ; Food industry and trade
U.S. agriculture: challenges for the twenty-first century
Agriculture ; Farm produce ; Exports
On the complete integrability of the discrete Nahm equations
The discrete Nahm equations, a system of matrix valued difference equations,
arose in the work of Braam and Austin on half-integral mass hyperbolic
monopoles.
We show that the discrete Nahm equations are completely integrable in a
natural sense: to any solution we can associate a spectral curve and a
holomorphic line-bundle over the spectral curve, such that the discrete-time DN
evolution corresponds to walking in the Jacobian of the spectral curve in a
straight line through the line-bundle with steps of a fixed size. Some of the
implications for hyperbolic monopoles are also discussed
Developing Mathematics Enrichment Workshops for Middle School Students: Philosophy and Sample Workshops
This paper describes our approach to organizing enrichment activities using advanced mathematics topics for diverse audiences of middle school students. We discuss our philosophy and approaches for the structure of these workshops, and then provide sample schedules and resource materials. The workshops cover activities on the following topics: Graphing Calculators; The Chaos Game; Statistical Sampling; CT Scans–the reconstruction problem; The Platonic and Archimedean solids; The Shape of Space; Symmetry; The Binary Number System and the game of NIM; Graph Theory: Proof by Counterexample
Interactions of Tollmien-Schlichting waves and Dean vortices. Comparison of direct numerical simulation and a weakly nonlinear theory
Direct numerical simulation is used to evaluate a weakly nonlinear theory describing the interaction of Tollmien-Schlichting waves with Dean vortices in curved channel flow. The theory and the simulation agree for certain combinations of parameters, but the two approaches give conflicting results for other combinations. Some possibilities for these discrepancies are discussed
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