Monthly Archives: August 2016

Penilaian Webometrics (Bonus 5%) eLPPT Staf Akademik

Semua staf akademik di Fakulti, RA dan CoE digalakkan untuk melengkapkan laman web peribadi masing-masing untuk mendapatkan bonus 5% untuk ELPPT tahun 2016.
Berikut adalah pautan kepada Panduan mengisi Online Penilaian Webometrics (Bonus 5%) eLPPT Staf Akademik : http://www.utm.my/webometrics/
Skema Pemarkahan bagi tahun 2016 adalah seperti berikut (berdasarkan jumlah bilangan webpage milik staf di *.utm.my/* yang berjaya diindeks oleh Google search engine):
1. 2000 dan ke atas = 5%
2. 1000 – 1999 = 4%
3. 500 – 999 = 3%
4. 250 – 499 = 2 %
5. 100 – 249 = 1%
6. 100 dan ke bawah = 0%
Perhatian: Alamat selain *.utm.my tidak akan dinilai Selain itu, staf boleh mengisi sehingga 5 item maksimum dan akan dinilai secara kumulatif per individu.
Contoh:
Ali bin Rashid
1. civil.utm.my/alirashid – 100 pages
3. ikg.utm.my/alirashid – 500 pages Jumlah = 800 = 3% bonus eLPPT bagi Ali bin Rashid.
Sebarang masalah bagi mengisi online, saudara/i boleh merujuk kepada Laman Rasmi Webometrics UTM di pautan berikut:
Harap maklum. Terima kasih.

The 16th International Conference on Intelligent Systems Design and Applications (ISDA’16)

The 16th International Conference on Intelligent Systems Design and Applications (ISDA’16) —
http://www.mirlabs.org/isda16
http://www.mirlabs.net/isda16

— The 6th World Congress on Information and Communication Technologies (WICT’16) —
http://www.mirlabs.org/wict16
http://www.mirlabs.net/wict16

** Important Dates **
———————————-
Special sessions/Track/workshop proposals: August 20, 2016
Acceptance of special sessions: August 31, 2016
Paper submission due: September 20, 2016
Notification of paper acceptance: October 15, 2016
Registration and Final manuscript due: October 30, 2016
Conference: December 14 – 16, 2016

About ISDA’16 :
————————-
The International Conference on Intelligent Systems Design and Applications (ISDA) is a major international conference bringing together researchers, engineers, and practitioners who work in the areas of intelligent systems and its applications in industry and the real world. Every year, ISDA attracts authors from over 30 countries. The conference will include workshops, special sessions and tutorials, along with prominent keynote speakers and regular paper presentations in parallel tracks. All accepted and registered papers will be included in the conference proceedings to expected be published by Springer.

Topics ( not limited to )
—————————–
Intelligent Systems Architectures and Applications
Intelligent Image and Signal Processing
Intelligent Internet Modeling
Intelligent Data mining
Intelligent Business Systems
Intelligent Control and Automation
Intelligent Agents
Intelligent Knowledge Management
Innovative Information Security
Innovative Networking and Communication Techniques
Web Intelligence
Intelligent Software Engineering

About WICT’16 :
————————-
WICT ‘16 aims to provide an opportunity for the researchers from academia and industry to meet and discuss the latest solutions, scientific results and methods in the usage and applications of ICT in the real world. The conference programme includes workshops, special sessions and tutorials, along with prominent keynote speakers and regular paper presentations in parallel tracks. In the past century, our society has been through several periods of dramatic changes, driven by innovations such as transportation systems, telephone etc. Last few decades have experienced technologies that are evolving so rapidly, altering the constraints of space and time, and reshaping the way we communicate, learn and think. Rapid advances in information technologies and other digital systems are reshaping our ecosystem. Innovations in ICT allow us to transmit information quickly and widely, propelling the growth of new urban communities, linking distant places and diverse areas of endeavor in productive new ways, which a decade ago was unimaginable. All accepted and registered papers will be included in the conference proceedings to expected be published by Springer.

Topics ( not limited to )
—————————–
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Computer Graphics and Virtual Reality
Data Mining
e-Learning
e-Business
e-Government
Artificial Intelligence
Web Services and Semantic Web
Grid and Cloud Computing
Ambient Intelligence
Body Sensor Networks
Computational Finance and Economics
Cybercrime (Legal and Technical Issues)
Computer Network Security
Data Mining for Information Security
Academic Integrity, Plagiarism Detection and Software Misuse
Intrusion Detection and Forensics
Scheduling For Large Scale Distributed System
Nature Inspired Optimization Algorithms and Their Applications
The Role of Technology in Education and Health
Data Management
Collaborative Design in Knowledge-based Environment
Software Engineering

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Submission Guidelines:
——————————————————
Submission of paper should be made through the submission page from the conference web page. Please refer to the conference website for guidelines to prepare your manuscript.

Paper format templates:
http://www.springer.com/series/11156

Proceedings are expected to be published by the Advances in Intelligent and Soft Computing, which is now indexed by ISI Proceedings, DBLP. Ulrich’s, EI-Compendex, SCOPUS, Zentralblatt Math, MetaPress, Springerlink Proceedings will be made available during the conference. Expanded versions of selected papers will be published in special issues of internationally referred journals (indexed by SCI) and edited volumes.

ISDA’16 Submission : https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=isda2016
WICT’16 Submission : https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wict2016

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

* Organizing Committee *
———————————-

General Chairs :
Ana Maria Madureira, Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto, Portugal
Ajith Abraham, Machine Intelligence Research Labs (MIR Labs), USA

Technical Committee (Please refer website ) :
http://www.mirlabs.net/isda16/committees.php
http://www.mirlabs.net/wict16/committees.php

For technical contact:
———————————-
Ajith Abraham
Email: ajith.abraham@ieee.org<mailto:ajith.abraham@ieee.org>

MAJLIS PERHIMPUNAN BULANAN BERSAMA YBHG. DATUK NAIB CANSELOR (OGOS 2016)

Dengan segala hormatnya perkara di atas adalah dirujuk.

Universiti dengan hormatnya menjemput YBhg. Tan Sri/Datuk/Datuk Seri/Puan Sri/Datin/Prof./Prof. Madya/Dr./Ir./Sr./Ar./saudara hadir ke Majlis Perhimpunan Bulanan Ogos 2016 seperti butiran berikut:

Tarikh : 10 Ogos 2016 (Rabu)

Masa : 7.45 pagi

Tempat:

Dewan Sultan Iskandar, UTM Johor Bahru

Dewan Tan Sri Ainuddin Wahid, UTM Kuala Lumpur  [SECARA LINTAS LANGSUNG]

Pakaian :  Korporat 

 

Program:
7.45 pagi : Ketibaan Staf
8.00 am : Ketibaan YBhg. Naib Canselor
: Lagu Negaraku
: Bacaan Doa
: Amanat Bulanan oleh YBhg. Naib Canselor

: Slot /Penghargaan khas (jika berkaitan)
: Penyampaian Sijil, kenaikan pangkat, bersara, cenderahati dll (JB & UTMKL)

: Keunggulan Terbilang
: Program Tamat

Sekian, kehadiran dan kerjasama YBhg. Tan Sri/Datuk/Datuk Seri/Puan Sri/Datin/Prof./Prof. Madya/Dr./Ir./Sr./Ar./saudara dalam perkara ini amatlah dihargai dan didahului dengan ucapan terima kasih.

Wind Orchestra

The following video is the performance of the winning wind orchestra team at the recent Wind Orchestra Finale organized by the Ministry of Education Malaysia.

Wind orchestra is a performing ensemble that is composed of the woodwind, brass, and percussion families of instruments.

Read this article to know more about the differences between Wind Ensemble, Wind Orchestra and Symphonic Band.

Wind ensembles and wind orchestras tend to play more advanced literature and may include extra instruments, like the cello, typically not found in a band setup. Each ensemble serves it’s own purpose, but provides a different overall effect due to differences in density and timbre. Typically, a wind ensemble is a lighter version of a symphonic band and can be thought of as a soloist ensemble.

In both the wind ensemble and the wind orchestra,  individual sections are out in the open and each players part is more transparent to the audience. Wind ensembles and wind orchestras are perfect for lighter, more technically difficult works while a symphonic band works well for marches, majestic works, and music compositions that require a great deal of instrumental power.

The Wind Orchestra

It’s not quite a wind ensemble and it’s not a symphonic band. The wind orchestra is more of a concept than an actual ensemble. In a wind orchestra, the style of playing is the most important element. Wind orchestras often have a small string section; however, it is much more than the addition of string instruments that makes this ensemble a wind orchestra.

The manner of playing in a wind orchestra is supposed to be different than that of a wind ensemble and symphonic band. Wind orchestra members are instructed to let the sound travel further and play in a style that mimics the continuous and flexible sound of the orchestra. Because of this, a good wind orchestra can create a unique sound where the tail ends of each note last just a little longer than with a traditional wind band.

The articulations and phrasing are smoother and instrumentalists attempt to imitate the variety of articulations available in the orchestra. A casual observer to a wind orchestra rehearsal may notice that the conductor asks the ensemble to play a piece with an up-bow or down-bow type of sound to get the right feel in specific sections.

Woodwind Section

The woodwind section consists of piccolos, flutes, clarinets, oboes, saxophones, and bassoons. Each one of these instruments creates their own unique timbre. In a wind ensemble or symphonic band, these instruments typically take on the melody or play the more virtuosic background parts since there are typically no string instruments.

Woodwind instruments have the capability of playing softer than any other instrument, but their dynamic range is not as wide as a brass instrument. Because of this, the composer must take care to orchestrate the woodwind section in a way that allows for the individual section colors to come through. A composer wouldn’t want to bury the flutes and clarinets in a sea of trumpets. One way around this is to have one section play the melody, while another section takes on the harmony parts.

woodwindfamily

Brass Section

The brass section is the most powerful section of the wind ensemble and symphonic band. The brass section contains a collections of trumpets (sometimes cornets), trombones, euphoniums, French horns, and tubas. While there is generally a similar orchestration to what you might find in an orchestra, a wind ensemble or symphonic band has many more players.

It’s not uncommon to find six or more trumpet players, four French horns, three trombones, two euphoniums, and two tuba players in a wind ensemble. Symphonic bands have additional members as well. The wind ensemble is all about color, while the symphonic band focuses on sheer power. Because of this, the wind ensemble and less frequently, the symphonic band, brings in less common instruments like the flugal horn to play solo parts. Composers must blend the brass section equally with the woodwind section to get a full, robust, and balanced sound.

The-Brass-Family-The-Bird-Feed

Percussion Section

The percussion section in a wind ensemble or symphonic band is typically very large compared to an orchestra. Often, the wind ensemble and symphonic band will have four timpani, huge bass drums, xylophones, vibraphones, marimbas, and various artillery drums to counteract the massive symphonic forces. When writing for the percussion section, composers can be somewhat flexible in the notation.

There are many experimental percussion instruments in the percussion section that don’t have a standard method of notation. Because of this, composers are encouraged to use traditional percussion notation techniques and when in doubt, write in the part specifically how they want the percussionist to play a particular section.

The InfoVisual.info site uses images to explain objects.

The InfoVisual.info site uses images to explain objects.

Composing Band Music

When writing for band, composers need to have a solid understanding of how each instrument group in the ensemble works together. Each section can be combined with other sections to get new sounds. Combining a Euphonium with a Bassoon provides you with a sound that is almost string-like in nature. It’s a great combination for dark and brooding sections that need to have a bit of melody.

A basic orchestration course can help composers to learn to orchestrate more effectively, and while many of the same principles that apply to the orchestration of an orchestra, there are some wind ensemble and symphonic band specific methods of orchestrating that a composer needs to learn about. One of the best ways to learn to orchestrate involves getting an ensemble to run through your piece. However, this can be difficult for composers not affiliated with a university or college.

Sampling Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band Music

A suitable alternative is not the use of sampled sounds. Sampled sounds can help a composer that already knows how to orchestrate effectively, but for young composers that have little experience, sampled sounds give an unrealistic expectation of what to expect. Without a real understanding of how the wind band sections fit together, it’s not really possible to write a realistic sampled band demo without understanding the relationship between the instrument sections.

Even the best, most balanced samplers don’t provide the overtones that a real ensemble provides. Something that sounds clean coming from a sampler may sound muddy and unintelligible when played by a real concert band.