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Case studies of real-world problem solving for students who excel in competitive programming. - Lecturer : Dr. NISHIO Hirokazu (Director, Cybozu Labo, Inc.) - Master of Science, Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST); Master of Technology Management (Professional), Tokyo Institute of Technology - Adopted by Unexplored Software Creation Project âUnexplored Youthâ in 2002 - Author of âTechnology Supporting Codingâ, âNatural Language Processing with word2vecâ, etc.
- Title : âSolving Real-World Problems with Algorithms
- Overview : What is the difference between solving a problem in competitive programming and solving a problem in the real world? The lecturer will use the truck delivery route optimization problem, for which he was involved in creating the algorithm, as a subject for explanation.
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Introducing case studies of problem solving with IT technology in the real world and how IT technology can change society for university students in the information field.
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Case studies of problem solving using IT technology in the real world and how IT technology is changing society for management students and working professionals.
- ⊠âHow Will AI Change Work?â as the theme.
- The type that does not just skim, but spends three times the number of pages to elaborate on a point.
- Aim to bridge the two fields by including both technical and managerial talks.
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For management students, especially those who are not necessarily programmers, the presentation will include examples of problem solving using IT technology in the real world and how IT technology can change society.
- ă Case studies of how ICT is changing society ă
- Is it the same as above?
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Omnibus lectures by guest lecturers including those who are in charge of the actual business of companies that are innovating their industries through ICT.
- We should include JA Miuraâs story.
- Information science is a cross-disciplinary force
- go
- The abstraction of âinformation.â
- The story of the Irodori system
- Not technically amazing, but removed barriers to communication.
- If we talk about the C part of ICT, it is the parallel work made possible by advances in groupware.
- No parallel work = red ocean
- There is a blue ocean near the boundary of the company.
- Lower costs - Decrease in activation barriers causes discontinuous change
This page is auto-translated from /nishio/æŒéĄăèăă using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. Iâm very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.