A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z All
Singh, Jorawar
- Time Travel and the Cosmos
Authors
Source
International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, Vol 2, No 3 (2013), Pagination: 641-649Abstract
From the recent years time travel has been considered as a very well known ingredient of a science fiction novel or movie. The famous science fiction writer H.G. Wells first introduced the concept of time travel. From then until now many scientist and theoretical physicists have been trying to achieve this target and since then they are coming closer and closer to achieve the goal. In this paper we are trying to combine the theories of relativity and cosmology and formulate a combine theory. As, it is always said to know the future, one has to know what has happened in the past. In this case also we shall learn about the birth of the universe, the concept of dark energy, dimensions and we will try to go beyond the fourth dimension. Einstein once said "If u can't explain it simply you have not understood it well." Therefore our main focus is that all the concepts are easy to understand from the perspective of beginners as well as the masters of this field.- TSP (Team Software Process)
Authors
Source
International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, Vol 2, No 5 (2013), Pagination:Abstract
As quoted by the CIO journal December 2003 issue, “By the numbers available, the software quality stinks.” The Standish Group reported in 1999 that 74% of all projects were not successful.
According to a survey by Standish Group in 2002, only 34 % of the software development is successful. Around 38 billion US dollars are lost every annum due to software failure and one of the major reasons for this high failure rate is poor software quality. Typical software projects are often late, over budget, of poor quality, and difficult to track. Engineers often have unrealistic schedules dictated to them and are kept in the dark as to the business objectives and customer needs. They are required to use imposed processes, tools, and standards, and often take shortcuts to meet schedule pressures. Very few teams can consistently be successful in this environment. As software systems get larger and more complex, these problems only get worse. The best projects are an artful balance of conflicting forces. To balance these conflicting forces, teams must understand the complete context for their projects.