Word: computingã
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QR20 (“Computers and Computing??)—and graduating—have taught me that happiness demands being bold enough to do things badly...
...review by the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) before construction can begin on the complex this fall. Harvard will file its draft project impact report to the BRA in June. The completed complex is slated to house the Harvard Stem Cell Initiative and Harvard’s Initiative in Innovative Computing??a research and development center dedicated to using computing tools to accelerate scientific discoveries—among other science-oriented programs. In a detailed traffic analysis presentation, Chris Conklin, Harvard’s traffic consultant from Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc., outlined multiple options for how Harvard?...
...Sensorium: Embodied Experience, Technology, and Contemporary Art,” running from Oct. 12 to Dec. 31 at MIT. According to the exhibition’s brochure, the artists featured seek to evaluate whether “technological advances in digital smell, haptic technologies, and embodied computing?? will be able to replace “vision’s long held-dominance over the other senses.” Tolaas’s exhibition explores how the body uses varying physiological states to communicate different moods—focusing on body odor elicited by fear. According to Vadim...
...group projects?), unless you’re bad at quantitative reasoning, in which case, no matter how well you kept up with the problem sets and the course notes (there is no textbook), the final will bite you in the ass. QR 20, “Computers and Computing?? is the QR that caters to those with a mind to get rich quick. The class is curved to high heaven, but watch out for the slide back down. This is a class people FAIL; Professor William Bossert feels compelled to confess this on the first day. Oh sure...
...professors reported instances of cheating during fall semester midterms.William H. Bossert ’59, then-McKay professor of applied mathematics, investigated allegations that several students had cheated on weekly homework assignments, The Crimson reported on Nov. 4, 1980. Bossert, whose course Natural Sciences 110, “Automatic Computing?? was the second-largest class at the College, reported the names of a few of the suspected cheaters to their senior tutors and advisers.Only a week later, 13 students in Science B-16, “The History of the Earth and Life,” taught...
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