Stellar turnout for #WISEAcadia Coffee & Conversation at the @IrvingCentre . Before the social time, there was a short update about WISE Acadia & WISE Acadia student activity. Thanks to Alison, Glenys, Laura & Melanie for their organization and for hosting the event!
#WISEAcadia Camp Registration is OPEN! The camp, for girls entering grades 7-9, is from July 24-28. Don’t miss the chance to engage in learning activities, stay in one of @AcadiaU residences, eat in the Dining Hall, meet university student mentors & get to know other campers 🌱🔭
Come work with us! We are hiring a tenure-track faculty member in Software Development. Details on the position and how to apply can be found here: https://t.co/wbRIXUmKwn
#AcadiaU#Wolfville
The Keys to Diversifying Computer Science - A lunch time discussion in collaboration w/ #WISEAcadia & @AcadiaCompSci on Mar 29, 11:45am-1:15pm in Patterson 207. Please RSVP by Wed, Mar 22 if attending so we can plan for lunch numbers. Hope to see you there!
There are 6 positions @AcadiaU for African Nova Scotian/Canadian scholars (3) and Mi'kmaw or Indigenous scholars (3) in any dept at any level (Assistant, Associate, Full). And several other TT positions (incl. SOCI). Please apply, please share widely. https://t.co/V0lFQgdUy6
@AcadiaU has six "open call" tenure-track positions:
3 for African Nova Scotian/Canadian scholars and 3 for Mi'kmaw or Indigenous scholars. Apply to any unit at any level (Assistant, Associate, Full). We look forward to working with you! https://t.co/sLAcXXN2Zw
Help welcome Dr Amir Eaman to the #Acadia family. Amir will join the Jodrey School of Computer Science, bringing exceptional insight to the field of software engineering. When asked what excited him about Acadia, Amir noted the “open & collaborative environment.” #LikeNowhereElse
A year-long search for a lost video game pioneer comes to a happy conclusion today.
It is our honor and privilege to introduce you to Van Mai, the innovator who brought female representation to home video games 40 years ago.
https://t.co/v9d6Gl1T6b
2 narratives in higher education are emerging for a post-pandemic world. 1st insists we will go back to normal. The argument rests on risk reduction and believes discomforts are caused by COVID. The 2nd (rarer) insists we must change & that risk reduction requires innovation 1/6
Javascript and Swift apparently disagree about when January 1, 1 AD was. (Both numbers in milliseconds-since-1970)
JS:
-62135596800000
Swift:
-62135769600000
These two numbers are exactly 48 hours apart. Can anyone explain what’s going on here?