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UOP | IT | Software Engineering
Faculty of Information Technology holds a series of sessions to develop the skills of faculty members

Dr. Ghassan Issa, the Dean of Faculty of Information Technology, has opened the first session of a series of technical courses designed to develop the skills of faculty and administrative members in college. The opening was attended by Mr. Mohammad Orabi, the representative of Microsoft Company, and Mr. Solomon Battat, the representative of Ivantek Company. The session was attended by a number of faculty members and administrative staff in college. The session, which lasts for three weeks, includes many topics, such as: advanced Windows 2007, Microsoft.NET Platform Architecture & NET Framework, SQL Server 2008 , and Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010.

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Interface Oriented Design Book Excerpt: Inheritance and Interfaces (Chapter 5) By Ken Pugh
Finding commonality among classes makes for effective object-oriented programming. Often, programmers express that commonality using an inheritance hierarchy, since that is one of the first concepts taught in object-oriented programming. We're going to go to the other extreme in this chapter to explore the difference between using inheritance and using interfaces. An excerpt from Interface Oriented Design.
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Career Paths for Programmers By John Bennett, Jr.
The key to maintaining a good employment outlook in IT, it seems, is to move out of programming and up into more business-oriented IT positions such as systems analyst, business analyst, project manager, or systems architect. However, a computer programmer can't just decide to become a systems analyst or project manager overnight.
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Object Oriented CASE Tools: Lost Opportunities and Future Directions By Mario Van Damme
In this article the author explores the past and future of Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE) tools, from the "traditional" structured tools of years long past to today's "third generation" Object Oriented modeling and CASE tools--and beyond into possible futures. Ironically, the author finds that the future lies in the past.
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