User:Jim.huggins

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Jim's outside interests include church life, piano playing, and geocaching.
 
Jim's outside interests include church life, piano playing, and geocaching.
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== Introduction to IRC Activity Responses (Stage 1, Part A, Number 5) ==
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# ''How do people interact?'' Informally. It appears everyone knows each other on a first-name basis.  Lots of references to people not in the chat.
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# ''What is the pattern of communication?'' Mostly linear, but with occasionall overlaps due to the nature of distributed chat.  (E.g. someone starts a new topic while an old topic is still underway.)
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# ''Are there any terms that seem to have special meaning?'' Lots of them ... mostly technical terms dealing with the project at hand.
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# ''Can you make any other observations?'' Darci seems to do a nice job of summarizing salient points and decisions made (as should happen in real meetings, even though it doesn't :) )

Revision as of 19:25, 25 July 2015

Jim Huggins is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Kettering University in Flint, Michigan.

Jim's research interests include formal methods, computer science education, computing history, and computing ethics. He is also involved with the AP Computer Science A and Computer Science Principles examination communities.

Jim's outside interests include church life, piano playing, and geocaching.

Introduction to IRC Activity Responses (Stage 1, Part A, Number 5)

  1. How do people interact? Informally. It appears everyone knows each other on a first-name basis. Lots of references to people not in the chat.
  2. What is the pattern of communication? Mostly linear, but with occasionall overlaps due to the nature of distributed chat. (E.g. someone starts a new topic while an old topic is still underway.)
  3. Are there any terms that seem to have special meaning? Lots of them ... mostly technical terms dealing with the project at hand.
  4. Can you make any other observations? Darci seems to do a nice job of summarizing salient points and decisions made (as should happen in real meetings, even though it doesn't :) )
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