Features of Teacher’s Professional Competence Development

2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 12-19
Author(s):  
Молокова ◽  
Anna Molokova

The article raises the issue of training and retraining in the context of the development of teacher demanded competencies. Examples of mainstreaming and implementation in practice of interactive tools and techniques of this process, including the web-technology and the Internet are given.

2012 ◽  
Vol 50 (No. 6) ◽  
pp. 243-248
Author(s):  
Z. Havlíček

Web technology is a major element of the Internet. The various and inexpensive possibilities to use this technology allow for the minimisation of differences between rural and urban areas. This article focuses on the use of www technology for creating web sites. It outlines theoretical starting points for planning web sites, as well as practical methods, which are utilised for setting up the web presentation of a farm.


Author(s):  
Manjunath Ramachandra

The data transactions over a web based supply chain are prone to security threats as the internet is involved all the way. The internet happens to be an open forum easily accessible to the general public. It is quite possible that the data gets hacked or faked resulting in financial losses. Worse, it may not reach the intended recipient at all, defeating the purpose of the usage of the web. However, it should not be a cause of concern. With appropriate pre processing of the information getting uploaded on to the web, it should be possible to see that the data does not fall in to the wrong hands and reaches the intended recipients. The required tools and techniques are introduced in this chapter.


Author(s):  
Richard A. Halapin

The World Wide Web has exhibited the most explosive growth of any technology ever invented. Two events occurring in the 1992-93 period provided the foundation. First was the decision by Congress to open the Internet to commercial exploitation. The second was the adaptation of hypertext concepts to the Internet, which led to the Web. Fueled by commercial exploitation, the Web grew in just 6 years, to over 40 million linked computers. Time to such maturity for older communication technologies was measured in decades. The growth has “left in the dust” the development of commercial, civil, and criminal law needed to secure the social benefits of Web technology. Similarly, “Law Enforcement” has been unable to adapt to the Web over such a short period. While Congress struggles with a new “contract law” for Web commercial transactions, national awareness is growing about undesirable consequences of Web technology. Fraud, pornography, and violence, are exposing the threat potential of the Web. It is clear that “Law Enforcement” must plan for and take action to meet these potential threats. Methods and procedures for countering threats require that law enforcement officials understand the mechanisms of the Web along all links from user to resource. These officials must also advise legislative bodies on their enforcement needs during “catch-up” with the Web.


Author(s):  
Charles Anderson ◽  
Yan Zhuang ◽  
Ken Goldberg

Abstract Digital communication over the Internet offers advantages in terms of speed, efficiency and automation. Fortunately, new geometric algorithms for design, simulation, and manufacturing have been developed and reported in the research literature. Unfortunately, the impact of these advances on the manufacturing community has been limited since implementations are difficult to port from one platform to another. As an example of how the Web can facilitate interactive design, we focus on one specific application area: modular fixture design. We have substantially extended our previous fixture design service, FixtureNet (Wagner et al., 1996), and added interactive tools to allow the user to build a deeper, more intuitive understanding of the fixtures found by FixtureNet. The first tool allows the user to simulate the effects of forces applied to the part in the fixture. Our second tool enables the user to consider changes to a part and verify in real-time that the fixture will still immobilize the modified part. Our tools balance the tasks between the Web client and a central server, performing fast user interactions in the client while running compute-bound fixture design jobs on the server. The implementation of this work can be found online at: http://riot.ieor.berkeley.edu/riot/Applications/FixtureNet.


Author(s):  
Santosh Kumar T.S.

<div><p><em>        Machine Translation has been an area of linguistic research for almost more than two decades now. But it still remains a very challenging task for devising an automated system which will deliver accurate translations of the natural languages. However, great strides have been made in this field with more success owing to the development of technologies of the web and off late there is a renewed interest in this area of research.  </em></p><p><em>       Technological advancements in the preceding two decades have influenced Machine Translation in a considerable way. Several MT approaches including Statistical Machine Translation greatly benefitted from these advancements, basically making use of the availability of extensive corpora. Web technology web3.0 uses the semantic web technology which represents any object or resource in the web both syntactically and semantically.  This type of representation is very much useful for the computing systems to search any content on the internet similar to lexical search and improve the internet based translations making it more effective and efficient.</em></p><p><em>       In this paper we propose a technique to improve existing statistical Machine Translation methods by making use of semantic web technology. Our focus will be on Tamil and Tamil to English MT. The proposed method could successfully integrate a semantic web technique in the process of WSD which forms part of the MT system. The integration is accomplished by using the capabilities of RDFS and OWL into the WSD component of the MT model. The contribution of this work lies in showing that integrating a Semantic web technique in the WSD system significantly improves the performance of a statistical MT system for a translation from Tamil to English.</em></p></div><em>       In this paper we assume the availability of large corpora in Tamil language and specific domain based ontologies with Tamil semantic web technology using web3.0. We are positive on the expansion and development of Tamil semantic web and subsequently infer that Tamil to English MT will greatly improve the disambiguation concept apart from other related benefits. This method could enable the enhancement of translation quality by improving on word sense disambiguation process while text is translated from Tamil to English language. This method can also be extended to other languages such as Hindi and Indian Languages.</em>


Author(s):  
Petar Halachev ◽  
Victoria Radeva ◽  
Albena Nikiforova ◽  
Miglena Veneva

This report is dedicated to the role of the web site as an important tool for presenting business on the Internet. Classification of site types has been made in terms of their application in the business and the types of structures in their construction. The Models of the Life Cycle for designing business websites are analyzed and are outlined their strengths and weaknesses. The stages in the design, construction, commissioning, and maintenance of a business website are distinguished and the activities and requirements of each stage are specified.


Think India ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 174-187
Author(s):  
Harmandeep Singh ◽  
Arwinder Singh

Nowadays, internet satisfying people with different services related to different fields. The profit, as well as non-profit organization, uses the internet for various business purposes. One of the major is communicated various financial as well as non-financial information on their respective websites. This study is conducted on the top 30 BSE listed public sector companies, to measure the extent of governance disclosure (non-financial information) on their web pages. The disclosure index approach to examine the extent of governance disclosure on the internet was used. The governance index was constructed and broadly categorized into three dimensions, i.e., organization and structure, strategy & Planning and accountability, compliance, philosophy & risk management. The empirical evidence of the study reveals that all the Indian public sector companies have a website, and on average, 67% of companies disclosed some kind of governance information directly on their websites. Further, we found extreme variations in the web disclosure between the three categories, i.e., The Maharatans, The Navratans, and Miniratans. However, the result of Kruskal-Wallis indicates that there is no such significant difference between the three categories. The study provides valuable insights into the Indian economy. It explored that Indian public sector companies use the internet for governance disclosure to some extent, but lacks symmetry in the disclosure. It is because there is no such regulation for web disclosure. Thus, the recommendation of the study highlighted that there must be such a regulated framework for the web disclosure so that stakeholders ensure the transparency and reliability of the information.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document