Dear Professor,
Greetings from Infosys Campus Connect Team!!!
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Infosys : Insights
In 60 percent of occupations, 30 percent or more of the work could be automated. As many as 375 million people worldwide would need to change their area of work by 2030. And everyone will have to get used to having intelligent machines as co-workers.
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INFYTQ
Infosys Certification : Course Modules
1. Programming Fundamentals using Python
2. OOP using Python
3. Data Structures & Algorithms using Python
4. Learning DBMS and SQL
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Please find below links for the information related to latest technology and trends. This could help your faculty members and/or your college students.
Tech News for the Day
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The Chameleon Theory and theories of modified gravity are now under threat.
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Developer comes up with a new method of funding open-source projects. Community reaction not entirely favorable.
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A couple of weeks back, researchers from cybersecurity firm Eclypsium revealed that almost all the major hardware manufacturers have a flaw which helps gaining direct access to firmware and hardware.
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Programmer News for the Day
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In this course, you’ll learn how to take a C-style (Java, PHP, C, C++) loop and turn it into the sort of loop a Python developer would write.
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Frustrated by programming language shortcomings, Guido van Rossum created Python.
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Validating ONLY with tests is basically flying the plane on instrumentation, versus being able to look out the windshield.
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Web Developer News for the Day
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Interact with and control an embedded Vimeo Player.
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Libraries of geodesy functions implemented in JavaScript
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By default, Humanize Duration will humanize down to the second, and will return a decimal for the smallest unit. It will humanize in English by default.
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Word for the Day
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sporadic adjective
spo·rad·ic | \ spə-ˈra-dik \
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: occurring occasionally, singly, or in irregular or random instances
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This year we had sporadic monsoon.
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Puzzle for the Day
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Post Office Puzzle
After a local Post Office burglary, five suspects were being interviewed.
Below is a summary of their statements.
Police know that each of them told the truth in one of the statements and lied in the other.
From this information can you tell who committed the crime?
Blake said:
It wasn't Chris
It was Alex
Drew said:
It was Chris
It wasn't Alex
Chris said:
It was Blake
It wasn't Emery
Alex said:
It was Emery
It wasn't Blake
Emery said:
It was Drew
It was Alex
Solution (Previous Puzzle):
Dale fell off the very bottom rung of the ladder.
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Innovation of the Day
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In 1831, Michael Faraday demonstrated the first electrical transformer.*
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In 1885, the first motorcycle was patented by Gottlieb Daimler in Germany.*
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In 1901, a dust removing suction cleaner patented was filed by Hubert Cecil Booth, a bridge engineer (U.K. No. 17,433).
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Video for the Day
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Podcast for the Day
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Brute computing force alone can’t solve the world’s problems. Data mining innovator Shyam Sankar explains why solving big problems (like catching terrorists or identifying huge hidden trends) is not a question of finding the right algorithm, but rather the right symbiotic relationship between computation and human creativity.
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For a while now, the expression 'man flu' has been controversial. Many men say their illness is real, while many women say they are just being weak. But why is it that some men seem to suffer, or complain, more when they get sick than women? A recently published study may have the answer. Can science prove that men really do suffer more, or do they just moan instead of getting on with it? Dan and Neil teach six items of vocabulary and discuss the issue.
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Idiom for the Day
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Black Out
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When all the electricity fails and the lights go out.
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We had another blackout last night. The whole city was so quiet and peaceful.
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Quote for the Day
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“The achievement of one goal
should be the starting point of
another.”
Alexander Graham Bell
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Thanks & Regards,
Team Campus Connect,
Infosys Limited
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