Seminar in SEMANTIC SYSTEMS

We would like to draw your attention to the following course:

Seminar in Semantic Systems (LV-No. 627.500)
weekly MO, 12.00 – 14.00 h, SR-E 1.42 

The seminar will be offered for the first time this semester by Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Faber.

Course contents:
ontology-based data access
non-monotonic reasoning
hybrid knowledge bases
declarative languages
computational complexity

The course starts on Monday, 09.04.2018.

For interested people there is the possibility to register via Zeus.

Is a team composed of the best always the best team?

At the Olympic Games in Sochi 2014, Russia’s ice hockey “dream team”, programmed for gold, lost to Finland during the quarter finals following a series of disappointing games. They were eliminated even though the team was effectively comprised entirely of superstars, the most powerful individual players from all of the nation’s teams. Was it a simple coincidence, or is there a systematic explanation?

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Searching for APP DEVELOPERS – UNSER LAGERHAUS

For the programming of apps for e.g. customer card app or appointment reservation app etc. UNSER LAGERHAUS is looking for competent students with corresponding experience on the basis of work contracts.

Here you can find the job offer as PDF!

If you are interested, please contact DI Christian Schimik christian [dot] schimik [at] unser-lagerhaus [dot] at!

Guest Lecture by Sean Lovitt „Blueprints for a Long Hot Summer: The Speculative Fiction of Revolutionary Action Movement”

In context of the early 1960s Civil Rights Movement, the Black Nationalist aspirations of Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM) make the group seem ahead of its time. RAM developed a political program for African American autonomy in the Northern cities while much of the country was focused on the South and the struggle for integration. RAM’s “speculative fiction” encompasses their elaborate and prescient vision of things to come, including urban riots, armed self-defense groups, and other characteristics that came to be associated with the Black Power era. In his presentation, Sean Lovitt will examine this cultural production as a literary forerunner to Black Arts and Black Power, arguing that the habitual exclusion of RAM’s writing from the cultural history of the 1960s comes at the cost of a significant link between the Civil Rights and Black Power eras.

Bio:
Sean Lovitt is a PhD candidate in English Literature at the University of Delaware and the Graduate International Exchange Fellow at the University of Graz with research interests in the print culture of the Underground Press of the 1960s. His dissertation “Mimeo Insurrection” brings together the writings of an array of publications from the period, including Umbra, Black Panther Newspaper, Floating Bear, and Black Mask. More broadly, his interest in dissident writing extends across the long history of the book and printed ephemera from zines to avant-garde little magazines to black magic manuals.

 

Date and place:

April 24, 2018

HS 10, 12-13:00