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(1 - 13 of 13)
- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305: MyWay IPRO 305 Poster Sp06
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
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- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305: MyWay IPRO 305 Project Plan Sp06
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
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- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305: MyWay IPRO 305 IPRO Day Presentation Sp06
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
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- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305: MyWay IPRO 305 Midterm Report Sp06
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
Show less
- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305: MyWay IPRO 305 Abstract Sp06
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
Show less
- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
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- Title
- MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application (semester?), IPRO 305: MyWay IPRO 305 Final Report Sp06
- Creator
- Pope, Alex, Jastrzebski, Marcin, Gabel, Mike, Varshavskiy, Anton, Charles, Jodel, Gergees, Douglas, Kim, Kyu Hun, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Vijayan, Jeevan, Williams, Taylor, Orrison, Natalie, Siragusa, Jeri, Sutherlin, Emily
- Date
- 2006-05, 2006-05
- Description
-
The purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of...
Show moreThe purpose of this document is to define goals that the IPRO 305 team wishes to accomplish for the Spring semester of 2006 and the outline of teams that will accomplish these goals. At a later date a document will be produced detailing the exact requirements of each goal, build milestones (if necessary for a particular goal), and due dates. Outlining goals and team structures is very important to ensuring that the IPRO is kept on track and accountability is maintained.
Deliverables for IPRO 305: MyWay: A Pervasive Computer Application for the Spring 2006 semester
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- Title
- Building a Community Garden (semester?), IPRO 344: Community Gardening IPRO 344 Final Report S06
- Creator
- Chojnowski, Joeseph, Clemens, Natalie, Esparza, Saul, Gerges, Shahir, Hernandez, Veronica, Herrera, Stephanie, Hittie, Thomas, Lucid, Shannon, Peck, Edward, Pfau, Sara, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Samuels, Janina, Schaefer, Kristina, Siefkas, Kaylyn, Sweikert, Emma, Winter, Rachael
- Date
- 2006-07, 2006-07
- Description
-
IPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are...
Show moreIPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are sited in vacant lots that have been previously built upon. When the structures that once occupied these sites were demolished, the debris filled the basements of the structures, and was then covered by a shallow layer of nutrient poor dirt. The resulting vacant lots pose two problems for community gardening. First, the ground becomes tough and nearly impossible to manually prepare for gardening purposes. Second, the presence of lead and mercury from the paint and other construction materials has been incorporated into the soil, which can be harmful when transferred into plants which are then ingested. Since most community gardens in low-income neighborhoods do provide food, it became the aim of IPRO 344 to inexpensively grow plants which would be safe to eat in an urban community garden.
Deliverables for IPRO 344: Building a Community Garden for the Summer 2006 semester
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- Title
- Building a Community Garden (semester?), IPRO 344: Community Gardening IPRO 344 IPRO Day Presentation S06
- Creator
- Chojnowski, Joeseph, Clemens, Natalie, Esparza, Saul, Gerges, Shahir, Hernandez, Veronica, Herrera, Stephanie, Hittie, Thomas, Lucid, Shannon, Peck, Edward, Pfau, Sara, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Samuels, Janina, Schaefer, Kristina, Siefkas, Kaylyn, Sweikert, Emma, Winter, Rachael
- Date
- 2006-07, 2006-07
- Description
-
IPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are...
Show moreIPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are sited in vacant lots that have been previously built upon. When the structures that once occupied these sites were demolished, the debris filled the basements of the structures, and was then covered by a shallow layer of nutrient poor dirt. The resulting vacant lots pose two problems for community gardening. First, the ground becomes tough and nearly impossible to manually prepare for gardening purposes. Second, the presence of lead and mercury from the paint and other construction materials has been incorporated into the soil, which can be harmful when transferred into plants which are then ingested. Since most community gardens in low-income neighborhoods do provide food, it became the aim of IPRO 344 to inexpensively grow plants which would be safe to eat in an urban community garden.
Deliverables for IPRO 344: Building a Community Garden for the Summer 2006 semester
Show less
- Title
- Building a Community Garden (semester?), IPRO 344: Community Gardening IPRO 344 Abstract S06
- Creator
- Chojnowski, Joeseph, Clemens, Natalie, Esparza, Saul, Gerges, Shahir, Hernandez, Veronica, Herrera, Stephanie, Hittie, Thomas, Lucid, Shannon, Peck, Edward, Pfau, Sara, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Samuels, Janina, Schaefer, Kristina, Siefkas, Kaylyn, Sweikert, Emma, Winter, Rachael
- Date
- 2006-07, 2006-07
- Description
-
IPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are...
Show moreIPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are sited in vacant lots that have been previously built upon. When the structures that once occupied these sites were demolished, the debris filled the basements of the structures, and was then covered by a shallow layer of nutrient poor dirt. The resulting vacant lots pose two problems for community gardening. First, the ground becomes tough and nearly impossible to manually prepare for gardening purposes. Second, the presence of lead and mercury from the paint and other construction materials has been incorporated into the soil, which can be harmful when transferred into plants which are then ingested. Since most community gardens in low-income neighborhoods do provide food, it became the aim of IPRO 344 to inexpensively grow plants which would be safe to eat in an urban community garden.
Deliverables for IPRO 344: Building a Community Garden for the Summer 2006 semester
Show less
- Title
- Building a Community Garden (semester?), IPRO 344
- Creator
- Chojnowski, Joeseph, Clemens, Natalie, Esparza, Saul, Gerges, Shahir, Hernandez, Veronica, Herrera, Stephanie, Hittie, Thomas, Lucid, Shannon, Peck, Edward, Pfau, Sara, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Samuels, Janina, Schaefer, Kristina, Siefkas, Kaylyn, Sweikert, Emma, Winter, Rachael
- Date
- 2006-07, 2006-07
- Description
-
IPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are...
Show moreIPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are sited in vacant lots that have been previously built upon. When the structures that once occupied these sites were demolished, the debris filled the basements of the structures, and was then covered by a shallow layer of nutrient poor dirt. The resulting vacant lots pose two problems for community gardening. First, the ground becomes tough and nearly impossible to manually prepare for gardening purposes. Second, the presence of lead and mercury from the paint and other construction materials has been incorporated into the soil, which can be harmful when transferred into plants which are then ingested. Since most community gardens in low-income neighborhoods do provide food, it became the aim of IPRO 344 to inexpensively grow plants which would be safe to eat in an urban community garden.
Deliverables for IPRO 344: Building a Community Garden for the Summer 2006 semester
Show less
- Title
- Building a Community Garden (semester?), IPRO 344: Community Gardening IPRO 344 Poster S06
- Creator
- Chojnowski, Joeseph, Clemens, Natalie, Esparza, Saul, Gerges, Shahir, Hernandez, Veronica, Herrera, Stephanie, Hittie, Thomas, Lucid, Shannon, Peck, Edward, Pfau, Sara, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Samuels, Janina, Schaefer, Kristina, Siefkas, Kaylyn, Sweikert, Emma, Winter, Rachael
- Date
- 2006-07, 2006-07
- Description
-
IPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are...
Show moreIPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are sited in vacant lots that have been previously built upon. When the structures that once occupied these sites were demolished, the debris filled the basements of the structures, and was then covered by a shallow layer of nutrient poor dirt. The resulting vacant lots pose two problems for community gardening. First, the ground becomes tough and nearly impossible to manually prepare for gardening purposes. Second, the presence of lead and mercury from the paint and other construction materials has been incorporated into the soil, which can be harmful when transferred into plants which are then ingested. Since most community gardens in low-income neighborhoods do provide food, it became the aim of IPRO 344 to inexpensively grow plants which would be safe to eat in an urban community garden.
Deliverables for IPRO 344: Building a Community Garden for the Summer 2006 semester
Show less
- Title
- Building a Community Garden (semester?), IPRO 344: Community Gardening IPRO 344 Project Plan S06
- Creator
- Chojnowski, Joeseph, Clemens, Natalie, Esparza, Saul, Gerges, Shahir, Hernandez, Veronica, Herrera, Stephanie, Hittie, Thomas, Lucid, Shannon, Peck, Edward, Pfau, Sara, Procaccio, Vincenzo, Samuels, Janina, Schaefer, Kristina, Siefkas, Kaylyn, Sweikert, Emma, Winter, Rachael
- Date
- 2006-07, 2006-07
- Description
-
IPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are...
Show moreIPRO 344 investigated methods for safe, low-cost community gardening in the urban setting. Most community gardens within large cities are sited in vacant lots that have been previously built upon. When the structures that once occupied these sites were demolished, the debris filled the basements of the structures, and was then covered by a shallow layer of nutrient poor dirt. The resulting vacant lots pose two problems for community gardening. First, the ground becomes tough and nearly impossible to manually prepare for gardening purposes. Second, the presence of lead and mercury from the paint and other construction materials has been incorporated into the soil, which can be harmful when transferred into plants which are then ingested. Since most community gardens in low-income neighborhoods do provide food, it became the aim of IPRO 344 to inexpensively grow plants which would be safe to eat in an urban community garden.
Deliverables for IPRO 344: Building a Community Garden for the Summer 2006 semester
Show less