Sunday, July 6, 2014

IT Special Project: System Update

    Yohoho! mga readers, Kung meron man...
   
    Dahil nakapagpasa na kami ng proposal, nagumpisa na din kaming gumawa ng design para sa system. Hindi kami gaanong natuto sa mga steps ng pagdedevelop dahil mga "alams na" na prof. XD, kaya ang style namin ay kangaroo procedure. In other words, pataluntalon ng steps.

    Ang ang mga title na ipinasa namin ay:

  1. Computer Aided Instruction in Math For Grade 1 of Angelus Academy
  2. Educational Game in Math for Grade 1
  3. Saving Doodle Planet -2d Game
Habang naghihintay ng results ng evaluation of title, gumawa na kami ng mga resources tulad ng main menu design. Pinagbotohan namin ang final design ng logo kagabi July 6,2014 sa facebook:
Logo Face Off
Ang napili na Official logo ng aming System ay yung nasa kaliwa.

Kinaumagahan, July 7,2014 , ginawa ko yung Main Menu Design. Sinubukan kong pagdikit dikitin yung mga images at buttons na ginawa ko:
Main Menu Design

    Hindi pa napagbotohan kaya baka hindi pa yan ang aming main menu official design. Ang balak kong style diyan ehh gumagalaw ang background (scrolling from right to left), gumagalaw yung mga character(yung idle state animation ang gagamitin) at yung dalawang panel sa gitna ay lalagyan ng rigid body at chain component habang hinahangin para hindi boring yung itsura.

    Pinili namin yung unity na Game engine dahil libre at sa tingin namin ay mas madaling gamitin kaysa sa VB.net. Mas marami kasing ability ang unity sa animation kumpara sa mga programming language na alam namin(self study, hindi naman kasi naituro nang maayos).

    Mga kapwa namin IT students, pag natapos namin tong system namin, you can hire me to create interface design. Hahaha mura lang naman ang singil ko XD kahit Php100.00- Php500.00, full set na yun, panels, buttons,backgrounds, etc. mas mura kung pakakainin nyo ako ahahaha!

   Anyways, Goodluck sa lahat ng may IT Special Project! GAMBATTE MINA!!


Friday, July 4, 2014

IT Special Project








One night,suddenly we saw a post in our ITproject Group:


"Please be advised that you need to pass 3 titles of your proposals together with the ABSTRACT to be submitted tomorrow afternoon. Please indicate the members of your group."


BOOM panes! ahahahaha Good luck sa amin na mga BSIT Students... Wagas mambigla ang STI XD buti na lang ready kami... kahit papaano. Napansin ko, kawawa yung mga walang contact kaya narealize ko na dapat pala talaga eh kuhanin natin ang mga contact number ng mga kaklase natin.


Anyways, Ito yung Guide sa paggawa ng Abstract:






What is an abstract?


An abstract is a one-paragraph summary of a research project. Abstracts precede papers in research journals and appear in programs of scholarly conferences. In journals, the abstract allows readers to quickly grasp the purpose and major ideas of a paper and lets other researchers know whether reading the entire paper will be worthwhile. In conferences, the abstract is the advertisement that the paper deserves the audience's attention.
Why write an abstract?


The abstract allows readers to make decisions about your project. Your sponsoring professor can use the abstract to decide if your research is proceeding smoothly. The conference organizer uses it to decide if your project fits the conference criteria. The conference audience (faculty, administrators, peers, and presenters' families) uses your abstract to decide whether or not to attend your presentation. Your abstract needs to take all these readers into consideration.
How does an abstract appeal to such a broad audience?


The audience for this abstract covers the broadest possible scope--from expert to lay person. You need to find a comfortable balance between writing an abstract that both shows your knowledge and yet is still comprehensible--with some effort--by lay members of the audience. Limit the amount of technical language you use and explain it where possible. Always use the full term before you refer to it by acronym [DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs), for example]. Remember that you are yourself an expert in the field that you are writing about--don't take for granted that the reader will share your insider knowledge.
What should the abstract include?


Think of your abstract as a condensed version of your whole project. By reading it, the reader should understand the nature of your research question. Like abstracts that researchers prepare for scholarly conferences, the abstract you submit for the Undergraduate Research Conference will most likely reflect work still in progress at the time you write it. Although the content will vary according to field and specific project, all abstracts, whether in the sciences or the humanities, convey the following information:
The purpose of the project identifying the area of study to which it belongs.
The research problem that motivates the project.
The methods used to address this research problem, documents or evidence analyzed.
The conclusions reached or, if the research is in progress, what the preliminary results of the investigation suggest, or what the research methods demonstrate.
The significance of the research project. Why are the results useful? What is new to our understanding as the result of your inquiry?


Whatever kind of research you are doing, your abstract should provide the reader with answers to the following questions: What are you asking? Why is it important? How will you study it? What will you use to demonstrate your conclusions? What are those conclusions? What do they mean?
Stylistic considerations


The abstract should be one paragraph and should not exceed the word limit. Edit it closely to be sure it meets the Four C's of abstract writing:
Complete — it covers the major parts of the project.
Concise — it contains no excess wordiness or unnecessary information.
Clear — it is readable, well organized, and not too jargon-laden.
Cohesive — it flows smoothly between the parts.
The importance of understandable language


Because all researchers hope their work will be useful to others, and because good scholarship is increasingly used across disciplines, it is crucial to make the language of your abstracts accessible to a non-specialist. Simplify your language. Friends in another major will spot instantly what needs to be more understandable. Some problem areas to look for:
Eliminate jargon. Showing off your technical vocabulary will not demonstrate that your research is valuable. If using a technical term is unavoidable, add a non-technical synonym to help a non-specialist infer the term's meaning.
Omit needless words—redundant modifiers, pompous diction, excessive detail.
Avoid stringing nouns together (make the relationship clear with prepositions).
Eliminate "narration," expressions such as "It is my opinion that," "I have concluded," "the main point supporting my view concerns," or "certainly there is little doubt as to. . . ." Focus attention solely on what the reader needs to know.
Before submitting your abstract
Make sure it is within 150-200 words. (Over-writing is all too easy, so reserve time for cutting your abstract down to the essential information.)
Make sure the language is understandable by a non-specialist. (Avoid writing for an audience that includes only you and your professor.)
Have your sponsoring professor work with you and approve the abstract before you submit it online.
Only one abstract per person is allowed.






-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


source:http://undergraduateresearch.ucdavis.edu/urcConf/write.html






Kung gusto nyo ng Samples, nadiyan na din...










GOOD LUCK TO ALL STI BSIT STUDENTS HAVING THEIR IT SPECIAL PROJECT! :)


GAMBATTE NE MINA!!!