[Nfelsokt] részletes program - vendegeloadasok az ELTE-n a tavaszi felevben
HORVATH Zoltan
hz at inf.elte.hu
2008. Feb. 7., Cs, 16:01:30 CET
Tisztelt Kollégák!
Egy újabb vendégelõadással egészült ki az ELTE tavaszi programja.
Örömmel látjuk a társintézmények hallgatóit mind a négy
vendégelõadássorozaton (1-1 ECTS kredit).
Üdvözlettel,
Horváth Zoltán
---RÉSZLETES PROGRAM
(http://aszt.inf.elte.hu/~ceepush81/veloadas07_08.html)
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Prof. Dr. BÖSZÖRMÉNYI László (Univ. of Klagenfurt)
Title: Advanced Topics in Distributed Systems
Period: 11-14 February, 2008 Southern Block, Room 00-115
February 11, Monday 16:00-18:00, 18:00-20:00
February 12, Tuesday 16:00-18:00
February 13, Wednesday 16:00-18:00
February 14. Thursday 16:00-18:00
Course description:
-Introduction (rationale, notions, pros and cons)
-Processes and threads (optionally, using Java)
-Remote objects (Java RMI)
-Naming
-Synchronization (causality, mutual exclusion, election)
-Fault tolerant systems (groups, agreement, multicast)
-Replication (data and client based consistency models)
-Distributed file systems (NSF); CDN and P2P
-Mobile agents, mobile code
-CORBA (middleware standardization)
http://www-itec.uni-klu.ac.at/~laszlo/courses/DistSys_BP/index.htm.
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Prof. Dr. Baksay László, The Florida Institute of Technology
Title: Informatics and fundamental research - the case of physics
Period: every Tuesday, 15:00-16:00
Southern Block Room: 0-827
For decades informatics and fundamental research in the sciences have been
drivers of progress for each other. This is especially true for physics.
We will look in parallel at some developments in physics and informatics
and their relations. Starting from the 1960.s to the present we will
review example cases close to the author.s personal experience, especially
in high-energy physics research and technology development at laboratories
such as CERN, Stanford, Berkeley, NASA. We will among others discuss some
work at the giant detectors of particle physics as well as problems
related to the launch of the next generation manned space vehicle at the
Kennedy Space Center, all in the light of the relevance of informatics.
Some discussions with subject specialists at research centers abroad might
be included via video conferencing.
The interplay between physics and informatics has led to a substantial
flow of students trained in one field into the other. Both fields have
highly global mind-sets and bases of operation. Thus many opportunities
are opened up worldwide for graduates.
The course is not designed to give special detailed skills in some area of
informatics but to help students develop a .bigger picture. of the field
and to see connections to other areas. In addition to intellectual
satisfaction this will also help to create many professional
opportunities.
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Prof. Dr. Gerhard CHROUST (Univ. of Linz)
Title: The Human Side of Systems Engineering
Period: February 25-29, 2008 Southern Block, Room 00-115
February 25, Monday 16:00-18:00
February 26, Tuesday 18:00-20:00
February 27, Wednesday 16:00-18:00
February 28, Thursday 18:00-20:00
February 29, Friday 14:00-16:00
Course description:
This course focusses on human beings and their behaviour in relation to
the development and usage of software-intensive systems. Systems
Engineering is largely a human-centered activity. Its success depends
mostly on human involvement, ingenuity, motivation and team work. Systems
are designed by humans and are provided with interfaces which again
provide communications with humans. Both aspects by necessity are subject
to sociological and cultural influences. The course will create a basic
understanding of the issues involved in order to make both systems
development and system usage more human oriented.
The Course will be held in English using English foils and accompanying
handouts.
Overview of Topics
Part 1: Basics: human behaviour:
The Human as an Individual, Transactional Analysis, groups and teams,
Group Dynamics
Part 2: Cultural Differences:
Differences in different nations with respect to behaviour, social
Interaction and world view. Problems with respect to international
cooperative system development, adapting Software Products to different
cultures
Part 3: Human Aspects and system development processes:
Motivation, user-oriented development methods, evaluation and critique
Part 4: User-adequate software-intensive Systems: Consequences for user-
oriented development methods (e.g. agile methods)
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Mag. Dipl.-Ing. Dr. Michael SONNTAG (Univ. of Linz)
Title: Computer forensics
Period: February 25-29, 2008 Southern Block, Room 00-115
February 25, Monday 18:00-20:00
February 26, Tuesday 16:00-18:00
February 27, Wednesday 18:00-20:00
February 28, Thursday 16:00-18:00
February 29, Friday 16:00-18:00
Course description:
Lecture:
Day 1: Lecture on theory of computer forensics
Day 2: Lecture on data retention
Day 3: Lecture on privacy
Day 4: Lecture on file systems and data hiding
Day 5: Practice hard drive investigation: deleted files, file slack
Practical: In the practical part, the theoretical knowledge obtained in
the lectures will be applied to practical problems: A (binary) hard drive
image will be investigated for deleted and hidden files and data
otherwise not directly accessible, e.g. in the file slack or in unused
sectors.
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