Charity

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While everyone was selling merchandise to the thousands of visitors, this good guy was investing for the eternal life by giving out free bread and dates.  May Allah bless him and send him to Jannah.  Aamiin.

Calling for papers – International Journal of Real Estate Studies (INTREST)

It is our great pleasure to announce that our International Journal of Real Estate Studies (INTREST) are calling for papers for our next issue.

 

Alhamdu Lillah issue 1 (backdated) of volume 9 of International Journal of Real Estate Studies was just uploaded by CRES, FGHT, UTM.

After a short nape and a bit of struggle to reclaim access thereto, we just wanted to move the engine with three papers. We are intending to publish the second issue before 31 December 2015. This is hoped to be achieved through a boot camp of review and revision session that may take a whole day within CRES compound.  Target day is Wednesday 23 Dec 2015.

 

Call for papers, reviewers and editors

 

Call for papers: The International Journal of Real Estate Studies is calling for papers for the issue No 2 of Volume 9, 2015, and others.

All Real Estate related papers having the quality of teachable material, or research findings (literature reviews, empirical studies) are qualified for acceptance in English (75%) and Malay (25%). Papers with minimum revision or no revision at all, at the judgment of the authors, could be sent for the boot comp issue 2015, and others for 2016 issues.

We hope that with cooperation from your good self we may be able to publish online continuously. All reviewed / revised papers would be uploaded the moment it is finalized and without wait for other papers. With this authors may publish as soon as they finalize their part and after basic editing.

 

Appointment of Reviewer: The task includes review of papers as and when request is made. Ad hoc membership (ability to review papers within a period of a month) and regular membership (able to review papers within a day and/or a month) could be opted for.

 

Appointment of Editor: The main expectation is to work with Permanent Editors, CRES members. The tasks will include: overseeing the refereeing process; writing/co-writing Editorials; promoting the work of the Journal to the academic community; representing the Journal at relevant events and conferences, and development and implementation of editorial strategy, to shape the future direction of the Journal and its contribution.

 

All request could be directed to the following email.

intrest.utm.my – for paper submission

cres@utm.my – for reviewers & editors application

We appreciate if you could kindly disseminate this information to your staff and colleagues. We look forward for your participation. Your participation is highly appreciated.

SITI ZULFARINA BINTI FADZLI


Pegawai Penyelidik,
Centre of Real Estate Studies (CRES)

Institute For Smart Infrastructure & Innovative Construction (ISIIC)

Universiti Teknologi Malaysia.

No. Tel: 07-5557701, Fax: 07-5557702

Primary email: zulfarina@utm.my, Secondary email: sitizulfarina.fadzli@gmail.com

Lines company Orion spending ‘hundreds of thousands’ on electric car-chargers

A second provider of chargers for electric vehicles (EVs) is coming to Canterbury.

Orion chief executive Rob Jamieson said it would install up to five fast-chargers and more standard chargers around Christchurch and surrounding areas by the end of 2016.

The announcement comes less than two weeks after Charge.net.nz announced it would install an electric car charging station at Z Energy on Moorhouse Ave by the end of February.

The company is installing one new station around New Zealand every two weeks, with 100 already built. Its website maps where these stations are being installed over four years.

Jamieson said Orion’s new charging stations would cost the lines company “several hundred thousand dollars”. Its fast chargers might be installed near cafes, while slower chargers might go into car parks near shopping malls or busy parks.

Electric vehicles were the future and Orion had taken a “build and they will come” approach, Jamieson said. It hoped to do the “seeding” for other investors considering building their own charging stations, he said.

Orion has not yet decided its charging rate. It knew existing electric vehicle drivers could charge their cars more cheaply overnight at home but it wanted people to “have the freedom to go where they want, when they want”.

The source of this article can be found here

Nissan, BMW Partner To Provide More Fast-Charging For Electric Cars

This article is written by Stephen Edelstein and can be retrieved at this link

Many automakers are working to add public DC fast-charging stations for their electric cars.

But not all stations can be used by all cars. In fact, there are currently three different fast-charging standards.

There’s the CHAdeMO standard used by the Nissan Leaf, Mitsubishi i-MiEV, and Kia Soul EV. Then there’s the Combined Charging Standard (CCS) preferred by most U.S. and German manufacturers, and finally Tesla Motors’ own unique Supercharger standard.

bmw-and-nissan-electric-car-fast-charging-station_100539354_m

Now, two carmakers that use different standards are cooperating on a program of fast-charging expansion in selected areas of the United States.

BMW and Nissan claim to have helped make available new fast-charging stations at 120 locations across 19 states, networked using the Greenlots standard.

These are dual 50-kilowatt stations with a CHAdeMO connector that can accommodate Nissan’s Leaf electric car, and a CCS connector for BMW’s i3.

bmw-and-nissan-electric-car-fast-charging-station_100539353_m

The stations can recharge most electric cars’ batteries to about 80 percent capacity in 20 to 30 minutes.

States covered by the buildout include California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and Wisconsin.

Drivers can locate stations using their cars’ navigation systems, as well as the BMW i Remote and Nissan EZ-Charge smartphone apps.

All stations are also compatible with the Nissan EZ-Charge card, which grants drivers access to stations across multiple networks without the need for an array of network-specific cards and fobs.

While both CHAdeMO and CCS have their champions, development of infrastructure for each has not proceeded at the same pace.

Nissan has promoted DC fast-charging pretty much since the launch of the Leaf five years ago, and now claims there are around 10,000 CHAdeMO stations available to its drivers worldwide.

But the first CCS station did not open until October 2013, and the first CCS-equipped car–the BMW i3–didn’t start to become widely available until the middle of 2014.

Even though more manufacturers are backing CCS, fewer cars actually use it today, and the buildup of CCS sites in the U.S. lags that of the CHAdeMO network.

More recently, though, BMW has been more aggressive about promoting fast charging.

It previously partnered with Volkswagen to install 100 CCS stations on heavily-traveled East and West Coast corridors.

Dual-standard DC fast-charging stations are now fast becoming the standard for new installations and even retrofits.

Some municipalities include wording in permitting or licensing documents requiring that stations are able to charge using all “published global standards,” meaning CHAdeMO and CCS but not Superchargers (a proprietary protocol limited to Teslas).

Putting a charge into travel: Where to put electric-vehicle charging stations in Canandaigua?

By Mike Murphy
mmurphy@messengerpostmedia.com

Posted Dec. 22, 2015 at 2:01 AM

CANANDAIGUA — Are electric vehicles in Canandaigua’s future?

Perhaps, but not without places to charge them. And that’s what a planning group is trying to do — identify locations and seek out grants and private investments to make it happen.

David L. Keefe, coordinator of the nonprofit Genesee Region Clean Communities, has approached City Council as well as several key leaders in the community about potential locations. Funding and installing are steps down the road.

“I think it’s a no-brainer,” Keefe said.

The organization is in the midst of preparing for a planning grant, which is expected to be completed in February 2016 and submitted to New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), which says electric vehicles can save drivers on fuel costs and reduce air pollution by driving greener.

The group also is looking for private investment in the chargers as well — the North Face store in Victor is one site that has a charger, Keefe said.

The chargers for electric vehicles are like a gas station for petroleum-consuming vehicles. The city of Rochester has 40 such stations, more than half of which received some funding from NYSERDA, Keefe said.

Canandaigua is considered a key location for chargers for many reasons, said Keefe, who is a Canandaigua resident. The city, plus some locations outside the city border, fit in with a potential electric vehicle transportation corridor.

And Canandaigua is a destination spot, for businesses and shops downtown as well as the lake and other tourism locations, Keefe said.

Canandaigua is among several other communities listed in a top five for electric vehicle chargers. They include Batavia, Victor, Brockport and Geneseo.

“It’s a viable area,” Keefe said. “We want to put stations where they will be used and where there aren’t stations now.”

A few of the key locations for chargers include downtown, the New York Wine and Culinary Center, Parkway Plaza, Kershaw Park, Wegmans and Finger Lakes Community College, Keefe said.

Several other locations also would work.

“We’re not going to come in and say ‘this is where they need to go,’” Keefe said. “We are seeking input.”

A preliminary presentation before City Council drew some support for the idea, including from Mayor Ellen Polimeni.

“This is something I think is needed in Canandaigua,” Polimeni said.

Members of the group, which include representatives from Rochester Institute of Technology, University of Rochester, the state Department of Transportation and other transportation planners, try to think of someone who has an electric vehicle and where that person may want to travel, Keefe said.

The source of this post can be found here

The CASFEST Extended Deadline is Upcoming

The CASFEST 2016 deadline for paper submission is extended to Dec 28 2016 (FINAL DEADLINE).  Please submit your papers to www.epapers.org/iscas2016-casfest.
CASFEST 2016 will highlight the topic of “Lab on CMOS Systems” and will take place in conjunction with ISCAS 2016 in Montreal.  Many CAS researchers have embraced the emerging concept of directly integrating active electronics into traditional passive lab-on-chip (LOC) systems, creating a new class of lab-on-CMOS (LOCMOS) systems – highly integrated multiphysics lab on chip systems that integrate instrumentation in intimate contact with sensing and actuation capabilities.
Most lab-on-chip systems are based on passive substrates and are limited to use as passive chips in labs.  These chips in labs must typically be used in conjunction with large benchtop equipment for sensing and control, missing the opportunity for systems with a smaller footprint and a instruments with their integrated circuit equivalents.  In such systems, the CMOS components are often used for sensing purposes and sometimes for signal processing, detection, and actuation as well.  This reduces the need for external instrumentation, leading to overall systems with significantly smaller size and also the potential for completely novel measurements that cannot be performed using traditional approaches.
The integration of active chips into lab-on-chip systems poses a number of distinct and vexing specifically attributable to biological and fluidic domains (including electrochemistry, packaging, surfaces, sterilization, microfabrication, and microfluidics), and new versions of classical challenges in system-on-chip integration.
Date: Thursday, May 26, 2016
Location: Polytechnique Montréal
Four-page submissions due Dec 28, 2015 (FINAL DEADLINE).  Notification of acceptance Feb 10, 2016.
The program will feature invited and contributed papers as well as panels on technical challenges and future applications of LOCMOS systems.  Anticipated registration cost is approximately $50 and will be available by mid-January 2016.  Papers will appear in CASFEST 2016 Proceedings in IEEE Xplore and extended versions will be invited to a future special issue of JETCAS.

Best regards,
Pamela Abshire
University of Maryland, College Park
pabshire@umd.edu
(301) 405-6629

Jennifer Blain Christen
Arizona State University
jennifer.blainchristen@asu.edu
(480) 965-9859

Pedram Mohseni
Case Western Reserve University
pedram.mohseni@case.edu
(216) 368-5263

iscas2016.org

Global Higher Education Forum 2016: Calling for Papers & Participation

5th Global Higher Education Forum 2016 (GHEF 2016)
Date: 5 – 7 April 2016
Venue: St Giles Wembley Hotel, Penang
Theme: The Role of Higher Education in Developing Societal Resilience and Sustainability
Organizers: Ministry of Higher Education, Universiti Sains Malaysia in collaboration with UNESCO Bangkok, LH Martin Institute, Commonwealth Tertiary Education and Management and Science University.
The Global Higher Education Forum (GHEF) in its 2016 edition seeks to continue the tradition of engaging a wide range of stakeholders through dialogue and debate to examine the role of higher education in developing resilience and ensuring sustainability. Scholars, representatives and professionals from government agencies, higher education institutions, humanitarian and civil bodies, private business entities, nongovernmental organisations and media will congregate in this biennial forum to discuss and share experiences of developing various facets of sustainability and resilience, including societal and economic resilience, through case studies of specific countries and how academic intent is translated into action. While the higher education community has a role to play in developing societal and economic resilience and sustainability, the ability of higher education to cope with the changes and disruptions internally and externally is equally vital. Hence, another thematic focus of GHEF 2016 will focus on understanding how higher education systems, universities and the academic community responds to these ever present changes and disruptions. Participants will be able to draw from each other’s experiences and adapt best practices in strategising for the future.
Forum
 
Forum 1: Higher Education and Resilience: From Ideas to Practice
This presentation will focus on various country perspectives based on actual experiences of stakeholders in sustaining peace and coping with conflict situations. Speakers will discuss the ways in which considerations such as voice, trust, human rights, social and economic inclusion as well as good economic governance and sound institutions can play a role in cultivating a resilient society and economy.
Forum 2: Higher Education and Its Resilient Future
This forum will focus on resilience within the backdrop of higher education. It will focus on the role of academia in building egalitarian, just, democratically free and cohesive societies as well as highlight the role of academic freedom in such endeavours. Speakers will also discuss the ways in which higher education institutions and the academic community can be more resilient to internal and external changes and disruptions.
Forum 3: Peaceful, Resilient and Inclusive Societies for Sustainable Development
The main focus of this session will be on inclusive sustainable development. This inclusiveness is a goal that attempts not only to ensure the participation of all levels and groups of current society, but also to extend sustainability to the future generations. Therefore, our development should not be at the expense of future generations. The inclusive participation receives benefits and contributes to sustainable development.
Forum 4: Global Partnership for Sustainable Development
This session focuses on forging meaningful collaboration and partnerships in higher education to impact sustainable societal development and capacity building. Local and international cooperation among all stakeholders is essential in being proactive in the face of an increasingly transient higher education landscape. Deliberations will reveal the strategies and approaches in higher education networking and building on expertise, while also respecting the policies and practices of the individual nations in overcoming adversity.
There will also be a conference session related to higher education.
Key Dates
Submission of abstract: 1 Jan 2016
Notification of acceptance: 15 Jan 2016
Submission of full paper: 1 Mar 2016
Closing date for registration: 15 Mar 2016
Registration fees (Local – International)
Early bird (before 15 Feb 2016): RM 1,200 – USD 400
Normal rate: RM 1,200 – USD 400
Group rate per person (3 or above from same organization): RM 1,200 – USD 400
Student: RM 750 – USD 250
Further details can be obtained from http://www.gheforum.usm.my/ or
GHEF 2016 Secretariat
National Higher Education Research Institute (IPPTN)
Universiti Sains Malaysia, Block C, Level 2, sains@usm,
No. 10, Persiaran Bukit Jambul, 11900 Bayan Lepas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia.
Tel: 604-6535755/5763/5754/5758

 

Visiting Faculty Positions in Computer Science and Software Engineering

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology – Visiting Faculty Positions in Computer Science and Software Engineering for 2016-2017

The Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology invites applications for visiting faculty positions for 2016-2017. The department offers B.S. degrees in computer science and in software engineering, as well as an M.S. in software engineering. Both undergraduate programs are ABET accredited and the graduate program is based on the Graduate Software Engineering Reference Curriculum. Enrollment in the department has doubled over the past six years; so, we continue to expand our faculty.

Ranked #1 among undergraduate engineering colleges by US News and World Report for the 17th consecutive year, Rose-Hulman is a highly selective, primarily undergraduate college of engineering, science and mathematics (www.rose-hulman.edu). Rose-Hulman professors are outstanding teachers.

We are looking for outstanding candidates from all areas of computer science and software engineering, including those with industry experience. An earned M.S. or Ph.D. in computer science or software engineering, or equivalent industry experience, is required.

Essential job functions include teaching and advising students, continued professional development, and service to the department, institute and professional community. Applicants should submit a cover letter, a curriculum vita or resume, a statement on their teaching philosophy, and a statement on their professional development goals to https://jobs.rose-hulman.edu. Three recommendation letters must be submitted by the applicant’s references through the above website.

Detailed information is available from J.P. Mellor, Head of Computer Science and Software Engineering at mellor@rose-hulman.edu or 812-877-8085 and http://www.rose-hulman.edu/csse/faq. Initial review of applications will begin immediately.  Applications will be accepted until the positions are filled.

Source obtained from here