• iSENDu

    • iSENDu Videos
  • S-Cube

    • S-Cube Project
  • Event Seeker

    • volume.at
  • q·.:World

    • q·.:LAUNCHER
    • q·.:CARD
    • q·.:Generator
    • q·.:Specs
  • Home

    • Imprint
    • GTC
    • Sitemap
  • services
  • blog
  • help
  • about

ikangai.com

  • Search Blog

  • Pages

    • A Cross-Platform Software System to Create and Deploy Mobile Mashups
    • Apps using q·.:Codes
    • Concours Worldvision de la q·.:Launcher
    • expressFLOW
    • Prototype
  • Latest Entries

    • Writing Scientific Papers
    • Code Snippet of the Week: Using Quartz to draw the background of UIButtons
    • Concours Worldvision de la q·.:Launcher
    • Concours Eurovision de la Chanson
    • We’ve got mail from Apple
  • Categories

    • Code snippet (1)
    • Design (11)
    • Development (32)
    • Events (7)
    • Hardware (2)
    • iSENDu (39)
    • iTunes App Store (20)
    • News (13)
    • Science (7)
    • Software (18)
    • Sports (1)
    • Uncategorized (48)
    • University (2)
    • Website (4)
  • Archives

    • August 2010 (2)
    • July 2010 (7)
    • June 2010 (7)
    • May 2010 (6)
    • April 2010 (13)
    • March 2010 (11)
    • February 2010 (8)
    • January 2010 (8)
    • December 2009 (9)
    • November 2009 (6)
    • October 2009 (8)
    • September 2009 (13)
    • August 2009 (14)
  • Subscribe

    • Subscribe rss feed

Understanding People from Academia

February 19th, 2010 by Martin under Science, University

As already posted before, we are beginning a collaboration with the scientific community. Yes! We finally dare to work with the clever people :-) .
Of particular interest in this regard is the S-Cube project where a dozen universities from Europe collaborate. It’s a good opportunity for us to learn from academia. One of the project’s goals is to create a kind of a specialized knowledge wiki – dubbed S-Cube Knowledge Model – that explains the terminology that is used in the project. When you want to write a scientific paper with academia people, you need to understand what these people talk about and the S-Cube Knowledge Model is certainly a good point to look for answers. By the way, do you happen to know what Architectural Knowledge is? No? A hint: it has nothing to do with houses, at least in the area of computer science, so you cannot ask your architect :-) .

Your ikangai team

Bookmark and Share

Tags: Network of Excellence, S-Cube, S-Cube Knowledge Model


Leave a Comment

Click here to cancel reply.





Copyright © 2010 IKANGAI Solutions. Design by creativesyntax.at
IKANGAI Blog is powered by Wordpress | Login
Facebook It! Digg It! Stumble It! del.icio.us