scholarly journals PENERAPAN KONSEP PERENCANAAN SISTEM INFORMASI AKADEMIK PERGURUAN TINGGI

Teknologi ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdul Faqih

ABSTRAK Adanya perkembangan ICT yang akan menjadi lebih cepat, dan meluas dimasa-masa akan datang, maka perlu upaya untuk mempelajari, memanfaatkan dan mengembangkan ICT tersebut secara kreatif, inovatif dan produktif. Hal ini  agar karya-karya yang dihasilkan bisa menjadi kenyataan dan dapat mendorong perkembangan ilmu pengetahuan dan teknologi. Di era manajemen sistem informasi maka pengolahan data dapat dilakukan dalam waktu yang singkat, cepat dan akurat. Kata kunci: ICT, sistem informasi, akademik   ABSTRACT The development of ICT which will be faster, and extends in times to come, it is necessary to attempt to learn, utilize and develop the ICT in creative, innovative and productive. This is so that the resulting works could become a reality and can encourage the development of science and technology. In the era of the information systems management data processing can be done in a short time, quickly and accurately. Keywords: ICT, information systems, academic

2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 17-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Travis

Drawing upon previous theoretical and practical work in historical and qualitative applications of Geographical Information Systems (GIS), this paper, in Giles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's terminology, conceptualizes GIS as ‘an abstract machine’ which plays a ‘piloting role’ which does not ‘function to represent’ something real, but rather ‘constructs a real which is yet to come.’ To illustrate this digital humanities mapping methodology, the essay examines Irish writer Patrick Kavanagh's novel The Green Fool (1938) and epic poem The Great Hunger (1946) and their respective contrasting topophilic and topophobic renderings of landscape, identity and sense of place under the lens M.M. Bakhtin's ‘Historical Poetics’ (chronotope) to illuminate GIS's ability to engage in spatio-discursive visualization and analysis. The conceptualizations and practices discussed in this paper reconsider GIS software/hardware/techniques as a means to engage subjects of concern to literary and cultural studies commensurate with the recent strong interest in the geographical and spatial dimensions of these cognate areas.


Author(s):  
Pramila Gupta ◽  
James A. Sykes

We would like to believe that early in the new millennium the practice of conceptual modeling will rest on a sounder theory base than it does at present. Although a great deal of valuable research in information systems and conceptual modeling has been done during the last twenty years or so, the results in many cases have not yet sufficiently influenced other research work or found their way into current practice. Reasons for this might include the inaccessibility of much of the work and the time pressures on practising analysts. We think that inadequate consolidation of reported results is also a factor. Without consolidation, it is difficult to obtain an overall picture in a short time, and it can be hard to see the value of individual contributions. While it is easy to see the need for consolidation, achieving it is harder. Reviews and surveys can help, but do not by themselves provide the necessary linking of individual research efforts into some larger framework. This chapter draws on theories from philosophy, linguistics, cognitive science, conceptual modeling and information systems in order to develop such a framework. Its goals include improving our understanding of conceptual modeling as a process and relating the different representations of concepts that can occur during conceptual modeling. To illustrate some of its benefits, the framework is applied to the case of object-role modeling in its intended use as a conceptual modeling method and notation at the ontological level of a universe of discourse. The framework is applicable to other modeling methods and notations that may view the universe of discourse at a different level (e.g., epistemological). It assists analysts assessing and working with the techniques that have emerged in the late twentieth century. It provides the sound theory base we need for the new millennium.


1950 ◽  
Vol 7 (25) ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jocelyn Otway-Ruthven

The problems set by the Norman conquest of Ireland which began under Henry II cannot be properly appreciated if they are viewed in isolation. Similar problems had been set by the Norman conquest of England only a hundred years earlier; similar problems existed in Wales. In England, however, the conquest had been both rapid and complete, and problems which were to last throughout the middle ages in Ireland were solved in England by the merging of the two peoples in a relatively short time. Moreover, in England no such clash of laws as was to come about in Ireland had followed the conquest: the Anglo-Saxons had possessed a well-developed system of local administration which was taken over with little or no modification by the Norman kings.


1959 ◽  
Vol 63 (586) ◽  
pp. 581-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. V. Poulston ◽  
A. Thomas

Air dissolves in aircraft fuels to an extent directly proportional to the ambient pressure, so that when fuel which has been stored at sea-level atmospheric pressure is taken up to a high altitude, there is a tendency for air to come out of solution. In certain circumstances, which are later described in detail, air bubbles can be liberated very violently from fuels in aircraft tanks at high altitude and a thick foam can form on the surface for a short time.The production of fuel foams by degassing has posed a certain problem; foams, being intimate mixtures of air and fuel, may well be inflammable; furthermore, the rising of air bubbles through fuel can result in the accumulation of electrical charge in the foam giving rise to the possibility of a source of ignition.


1975 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 187-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald F. Rabideau ◽  
Rickie H. Luk

In this paper, a computer algorithm for the design and optimization of workplace layout is presented. Known as WOLAP ( Workplace Optimization and LAyout Planning), this algorithm attempts to include many, if not all, relevant human factors variables and design-constraining factors, and it utilizes a unified Monte Carlo approach. The results obtained to date with WOLAP appear to be as valid and accurate as those obtained with other promising approaches. One obvious advantage of WOLAP is that many quantitatively optimized solutions can be obtained at the same time. This permits designers to consider and evaluate various mathematically optimal alternatives against any pertinent qualitative criteria, e.g. human engineering principles of arrangement, to come up with the best possible and technically feasible design in a relatively short time. Currently, WOLAP is capable of handling up to thirty instrument-components. Its program and data can easily be handled by most small computers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-74
Author(s):  
A. V. Skyba ◽  
V. I. Baranov
Keyword(s):  
To Come ◽  

The article is devoted to the ceramic complex from the inner moat of the Pastyrske hill-fort (plot, investigated in 2017). At the site fragments are at least 20 ceramic vessels — 16 hand-made vessels and 4 whell-made vessels. Chronological indicators found on the object allow to determine the chronological date of creation of the complex within the middle of the 7th — the middle of the 8th century. The nature of the layer in which the ceramics was found indicates that the ditch was purposefully filled in a short time after the fire on the territory of the settlement. This ceramic crockery is most likely to come from structures located on the territory of the «citadel» of the settlement and were destroyed during a fire.


Author(s):  
Riki Afriansyah

KThe existence of a school website is very important to disseminate information needed for schools, teachers, students and the community. With the website, information can be easily managed by the school. For example, important announcement information, the school operator can input the information through the website portal so that the public can read the information effectively and efficiently without having to come to school. In addition, the public can communicate with school operators through the chat feature and download the required documents via the web. Another feature is the photo album and video activities carried out by the school as a promotional media as well as the features that are connected to social networking services namely Instagram. The results of the final interview this activity was obtained that this website provides many benefits for the community as well as ease in managing information systems by operator.


Author(s):  
Novi Yulianto ◽  
Fahraini Bacharuddin

Now the need for access to information is very important because the information obtained can specify or provide comfort and ease in performing daily activities. One example is to use gadgets such as smartphones, notebooks, tablets and others, we can easily find out information directly without having to come to the venue. This system aims to design information systems in the parking lot. This technology can provide an idea of ??the amount of available parking spots has been filled or empty. By accessing the IP address given earlier, then we will know the availability of parking space directly. From the test results, it can be said that this system has the advantages of easy to use, the application is simple and can help improve the comfort / convenience for users of the car park. But this system also has the disadvantage of a webserver which is used has a very small memory that can not be accessed by many concurrent users in one time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 53
Author(s):  
Annamaria Amura ◽  
Alessandro Aldini ◽  
Stefano Pagnotta ◽  
Emanuele Salerno ◽  
Anna Tonazzini ◽  
...  

Digital images represent the primary tool for diagnostics and documentation of the state of preservation of artifacts. Today the interpretive filters that allow one to characterize information and communicate it are extremely subjective. Our research goal is to study a quantitative analysis methodology to facilitate and semi-automate the recognition and polygonization of areas corresponding to the characteristics searched. To this end, several algorithms have been tested that allow for separating the characteristics and creating binary masks to be statistically analyzed and polygonized. Since our methodology aims to offer a conservator-restorer model to obtain useful graphic documentation in a short time that is usable for design and statistical purposes, this process has been implemented in a single Geographic Information Systems (GIS) application.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 495-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey S. Adler

At 5:45 p.m. on Thursday, June 17, 1943, New Orleans police patrolman John Licali fatally shot 29-year-old Felton Robinson, an unemployed presser. A few minutes earlier, a neighbor had heard a disturbance in the backyard of Robinson's Loyola Street home and had alerted the Twelfth Precinct police station, which dispatched officers Licali and Emile Eskine to investigate. When they arrived, however, they found no signs of disorder. The policemen asked “was there any trouble,” and Robinson answered “no” and invited the officers to come to the back of the small house and “see my wife.” Veola Robinson, who was casually ironing clothes, explained that she and her husband (both of whom were African-American) had argued a short time earlier about purchasing an automobile. Felton Robinson, the woman added, suffered from “spells” and the effects of a “nervous breakdown,” and he had been “cursing and getting boisterous,” prompting the neighbor to summon the police. But the argument had quickly subsided. Licali and Eskine found Robinson to be quiet and peaceful, and the officers, persuaded that the minor domestic quarrel had ended, left the house. As Eskine entered the patrol car, Licali, a few steps behind his partner, turned to Robinson and admonished him “to keep quiet [because] if he talked loud again some of the neighbors might think he is fighting with his wife and call the police again, and they would have to come back again.” Then, according to the officers' report, “without provocation Felton Robinson suddenly attacked Patrolman John Licali,” grabbing the policeman's right arm, dragging him back into the house, hurling him to the floor, and throwing a glass bowl at him. When Robinson “went to the dresser and opened a drawer,” Licali believed that the violent, deranged man was securing a weapon, and the policeman drew his .38 caliber service revolver and fired three shots. In his report, Licali explained that he “was forced to shoot Felton Robinson in defense of his own life.”


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