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2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 142
Author(s):  
I Komang Arya Ganda Wiguna ◽  
Desak Putu Diah Kumala Dewi ◽  
I Gede Iwan Sudipa

The government's role in the implementation of higher education in Indonesia is to provide a university database. It is hoped that the government and the public can participate in assessing and conducting surveillance with the database. Every tertiary institution must report everything related to the implementation of education, starting from lecturer data, student data, and lecture data. In its performance, a Dikti Feeder application has been prepared that can transmit data. Each university will adjust the data entry following the Dikti standards. As one of the higher education providers, STMIK STIKOM Indonesia has been able to report data well, but specifically for final assignments and work practices, it has not been maximized due to the development of a separate system from the academic system. For this reason, a suitable system will be developed to accommodate Thesis and Internship data related to reporting on the Dikti Feeder by applying the Online Analytical Processing (OLAP) method using the Cube JS modular framework. Some of the tests carried out are schema file testing, frontend and backend testing, cube client testing, querying testing and load request testing showing the data can be displayed correctly and the process is successful.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ayesha Ahmed Abdulla Salem Alsaeedi ◽  
Manar Maher Mohamed Elabrashy ◽  
Mohamed Ali Alzeyoudi ◽  
Mohamed Mubarak Albadi ◽  
Sandeep Soni ◽  
...  

Abstract In rapidly growing data-intensive workflow processes, one of the major challenges for engineers is to carry out the high-priority tasks aligned with the engineering and business needs of the organization. This paper presents an implementation methodology adopted to solve this problem and create a holistic action tracking system that is firmly integrated into the engineering practice and fosters improved communication within various engineering disciplines. The first step in creating the comprehensive action tracking workflow was to identify the engineering workflows that end with an actionable item. Afterward, a framework was created that integrates these action items with the corresponding workflow as per the organization structure active directory. Once these action items are created, the inbuilt reminder system notifies the user of the upcoming tasks based on the priority assigned to these items. The escalation mechanism also ensures that the manager gets a notification when actions passed the due date. Once the action items are closed, the action assignee and assigner both get a notification to close the action loop. One of the most significant benefits of such a process is that all the outcomes of the engineering workflows, such as the requirement to retest the well for production tests, allowable approval requirements, injection improvement recommendations, etc., are directly fed into the integrated action tracking mechanism. This way, the engineers do not need to use a separate system for assigning and tracking the actions. Once these actions are fed into an integrated action tracking system, the system maintains, expedites, and escalates the actions by itself. Another benefit realized by this action tracking system was that the organization structure was internally utilized within the online platform. Therefore, it helps in dynamically assigning the organization structure and creating an escalation item to the right person at the right time so that the integrity of the overall operation remains uncompromised. The business intelligence tool is integrated with the action tracking system to support monitoring and decision-making surveillance exercises of reservoir monitoring plans and allowable monitoring, for example, utilizing the inbuilt planning and performance dashboards. Another major objective achieved in this closed-loop action tracker was the improved system-based communication among various engineering disciplines as the actions are decided based on common business objectives and agreement within the digital platform One of the well-known gaps in modern production optimization solutions is integrating the engineering solutions with the actionable item. This system bridges this gap and provides a way forward for improved collaboration and fostering communication among various disciplines.


A system for monitoring an infant's health is developed and described in this paper. In this system, smoke detector, sound sensor, temperature and humidity sensor, are interfaced with the controller Node MCU-ESP8266. In the system, ThingSpeak Cloud is used for the data processing. ThingSpeak Cloud is connected to the Wi-Fi based microcontroller. The behavior and the problems that are being detected can be easily notified to the parents apart from the doctors and nurses, So, that even the nurses or the doctors misses out by chance, the parents can handle the scenario. The collected data can be taken out as in the form of the csv format. This data can be easily put into the Machine Learning Model in order to predict the various problems that a baby might be suffering from. These predictions have been done solely upon the data collected from the individual baby. Furthermore, separate system-based report would be facilitated by the model itself


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 1934
Author(s):  
Kristin Jenssen Sola ◽  
Jarle Tommy Bjerkholt ◽  
Oddvar Georg Lindholm ◽  
Harsha Ratnaweera

Infiltration and inflow water (I/I-water) is a big challenge in sewage systems in many countries. I/I-water above an acceptable level indicates that the sewage system is not functioning properly. I/I-water leads to increased pumping costs and increased sewage overflow, leading to increased pollution of the receiving waters. Many rehabilitation projects are driven by the need to reduce the share of I/I-water and common measures are to replace pipes and manholes. The share of I/I-water is predominantly driven by rainfall. This makes it difficult to document the efficiency of mitigating measures. One way to address this issue is to compare data from rehabilitation areas to areas where no measures have been implemented. Three rehabilitation areas in Asker Municipality, Norway, were successfully assessed by applying this approach. Asker has a 100% separate system. The strategy to reduce I/I-water in Asker Municipality was to rehabilitate sewage mains, either by full replacement or lining the old pipes, and replacement of manholes. The assessment shows that rehabilitation of selected municipal pipes, pipes proven to be in bad condition through closed circuit TV inspection, reduced the share of I/I-water only to a limited extent. Since the rehabilitation done was not a complete replacement of all pipes and manholes, the limited effects are assumed to be caused by the water finding other ways into the system. In separate systems other measures than renovations of pipes should be considered when aiming to reduce I/I-water.


2021 ◽  
pp. 088740342110235
Author(s):  
Michael Klein ◽  
Melissa A. Kowalski ◽  
Youngki Woo ◽  
Courtney Solis ◽  
Maria Mendoza ◽  
...  

Coronavirus has had a significant impact on daily life. Prisons are not exempt from the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Prisons are particularly at risk due to their secure environment and vulnerable inmate populations. We examine steps taken by the 50 state departments of correction and the Federal Bureau of Prisons to mitigate COVID-19 as reported on their websites. While states vary in their response to the virus, those responses do not appear to be related to regional or political differences. Few are testing or quarantining all inmates, and there are more proactive responses devoted to staff than inmates in their facilities. Findings demonstrate that prison systems’ policies regarding COVID-19 testing, quarantining, and provision of personal protective equipment for inmates do not fully align with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations. As a result, the steps prison systems are taking to mitigate the effect of COVID-19 may be more reactionary than proactive, which may be less effective overall.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Lahalih

[Introductory paragraph] : “Remembering is Our Munity”: An Examination of Exile, Memory, and Palestinian Identity in Salt Houses “[W]hat is true of all exiles is not that home and love of home are lost, but that loss is inherent in the very existence of both.”- Edward Said, “Reflection on Exile” (1984) Watan means homeland in Arabic. For exiled Palestinians, the politically charged term evokes a painful memory of home, loss, and expulsion from a land they were forced to flee in 1948. The 1948 Israeli-Arab War which led to the creation of the State of Israel, also resulted in the devastation of Palestinian society. This period is regarded by Palestinians as the nakba, or the catastrophe, which saw the displacement and expulsion of over 800,000 Palestinians from their communities (Gelvin 236). Approximately 80 percent of the Palestinians who lived in the major part of Palestine, upon which Israel was established, became refugees (Abu-Lughod and Sa’di 3). The minority of Palestinians who remained in the newly-minted state became “nominal citizens” and were subject to a separate system of “military administration” (3). In the same year, those who had stayed witnessed the systematic annexation of their lands (Abu-Lughod 3). Others became internally-displaced refugees and sought refuge in places like the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, which were under the control of Jordan and Egypt respectively (Gelvin 240). Thus, historic Palestine became “a society disintegrated, a people dispersed, and a complex and historically changing but taken for granted communal life was violently ended” (Abu-Lughod and Sa’di 3).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Lahalih

[Introductory paragraph] : “Remembering is Our Munity”: An Examination of Exile, Memory, and Palestinian Identity in Salt Houses “[W]hat is true of all exiles is not that home and love of home are lost, but that loss is inherent in the very existence of both.”- Edward Said, “Reflection on Exile” (1984) Watan means homeland in Arabic. For exiled Palestinians, the politically charged term evokes a painful memory of home, loss, and expulsion from a land they were forced to flee in 1948. The 1948 Israeli-Arab War which led to the creation of the State of Israel, also resulted in the devastation of Palestinian society. This period is regarded by Palestinians as the nakba, or the catastrophe, which saw the displacement and expulsion of over 800,000 Palestinians from their communities (Gelvin 236). Approximately 80 percent of the Palestinians who lived in the major part of Palestine, upon which Israel was established, became refugees (Abu-Lughod and Sa’di 3). The minority of Palestinians who remained in the newly-minted state became “nominal citizens” and were subject to a separate system of “military administration” (3). In the same year, those who had stayed witnessed the systematic annexation of their lands (Abu-Lughod 3). Others became internally-displaced refugees and sought refuge in places like the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, which were under the control of Jordan and Egypt respectively (Gelvin 240). Thus, historic Palestine became “a society disintegrated, a people dispersed, and a complex and historically changing but taken for granted communal life was violently ended” (Abu-Lughod and Sa’di 3).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasmina Lozanović Šajić ◽  
Sonja Langthaler ◽  
Sara Stoppacher ◽  
Christian Baumgartner

Abstract This paper presents the determination of the transfer function of the spreading pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 in different countries. The methodology of system identification, well known in control system theory, based on the number of infected was used. Appropriate hypotheses have been adopted to determine the transfer function of the system. Each country is viewed as a separate system, and comparisons of determined systems are given. The systems are also presented in the state space, the stability of the systems is analysed, and the matrices of controllability and observability are determined. After analysis, it is shown that the spread of the SARS-CoV-2, for each country, can be described with the same order of transfer function and differential equation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 277-293
Author(s):  
P.A. YAKUSHEV

The article examines the ontology of the autonomy of family relations and its impact on the independence of family law as a branch of law. It is proved that the independence of family law as a branch of law, due by the nature of family relations and their autonomy, determines the need to regulate family relations by an independent codified normative legal act containing material norms of law. Thus, it is concluded that the branch autonomy does not determine the existence of a separate system of courts for the settlement of disputes connected with application of norms of law and an independent justice. Since all family disputes can be considered by courts of General jurisdiction within the existing types of legal proceedings (claim proceedings, special proceedings, writ proceedings), the creation of specialized family courts in the Russian Federation is impractical. However, for the proper consideration and resolution of family disputes, based on the specifics of their subject composition, the subject of dispute, the nature of relationships, degree of procedural activity of the court, it is necessary to supplement Civil procedural code of the Russian Federation separate chapters containing the rules governing the procedural peculiarities of consideration of some categories of family disputes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Hampton ◽  
Kathryn M Weston ◽  
Louella R McCarthy ◽  
Tobias Mackinnon

Background: The current COVID-19 pandemic is not the first time New South Wales prisons have faced contagion. This paper examines the current responses in New South Wales prisons to the threat of COVID-19 to prisoner health, by contrasting contemporary activities with actions and policy developed during two historical epidemics: the influenza epidemic of 1860 and pandemic of 1919. Method: Epidemiological information relating to cases of disease in NSW prisons during the 1860 and 1919 influenza epidemics was obtained from the Comptroller-General’s reports for the specific outbreak years and for the preceding and succeeding five-year periods. Additional archival sources such as digitised newspaper reports and articles available through the National Library of Australia were analysed for closer detail. The management of these outbreaks was compared to current strategies to mitigate against risk from the COVID-19 pandemic in the NSW prison system. Results: Interesting similarities were discovered in relation to the management of the historic influenza outbreaks in NSW prisons and in the management of the current COVID-19 pandemic. An outbreak of influenza in mid-1860 impacted seven penal institutions in Sydney and Parramatta. Infection rates at these institutions were between 3.1% and 100%; the mean rate was 41.8%. The public health measures employed at the time included allowing ‘air circulation freely night and day’, and treatments that were ‘tonical and stimulatory’. In 1919, the attack rate of influenza infection for Sydney was 358 per 1,000 population, whereas for the two large penitentiaries in Sydney, it was only 26 per 1,000 population. Similarly, the reported death rates were much reduced for prisoners compared to the general community. The recorded measures in 1919 included: disinfecting of the gaol buildings; inoculation (experimental but of no value); the compulsory wearing of masks; the closure of the border between NSW and Victoria; fumigation and inhalation disinfection; daily examination with isolation for symptomatic staff; and quarantine of new arrivals. These are remarkably similar to current strategies. Discussion: While the past 100 or more years have brought huge progress in scientific knowledge, public health approaches remain the mainstay of outbreak management in prisons; and, as in 1919, the opportunity for Australia to observe the rest of the world and plan for action has not been wasted. Prisons pose a potential risk for pandemic spread but they also present a unique opportunity for reducing disease risk by ironic virtue of the ‘separate system’ that was recognised even 100 years ago as characteristic of these institutions.


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