New Member Orientation

From Earlham CS Department
Revision as of 17:41, 19 January 2014 by Ghcrows13 (talk | contribs) (Workspaces)
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I'm going to make no assumptions about you or your purpose for being here. Read what you need or want; you can always come back.

Statement

  • HIP focuses on bringing hardware and software together
  • Green Science is merged with HIP and so our projects frequently includes the use, representation, and creation of energy
  • generally you can pick the projects you work on

Workspaces

  • Dennis roof
  • Noyes basement
  • Green Zone

Keys

  • get a key request form from Bobbi.
  • fill it out and include applicable locations
    • Dennis front entrance, ???
    • Dennis back entrance, CAX
    • Dennis roof, CAB 6
    • 2nd floor lab, ???
    • Noyse basement, CAB 13
  • get a signature from Charlie
  • take form to security

Projects

Check HIP for up-to-date project listings.

This is a list of present/past projects that we've worked on. It's intended to give you a taste of what we do.

  • solar array
  • wind generator
  • energy monitoring of buildings
    • normalization of resulting data
  • kiosks that display energy information
  • earthquake sensors
  • time server
  • construction cam

Communication

Group

  • we use a listserv, email hip@cs.earlham.edu to email everyone
  • generally it's good to notify the group about significant progress via email or in meetings
  • phone numbers / emails are useful to have
  • google services such as docs, spreadsheets, etc can be used for development
    • you need gmail accounts to utilize these services

Meetings

  • Friday in the Green Zone for lunch (12-1pm)
    • general discussion about current and future projects
    • bring-your-own-lunch style
  • Sunday on the roof (1-3pm)
    • working together in the same space

Documentation

Documentation is an important part of HIP because different people from different times will need to know about the work you did. It's more efficient to point them here than to explain something multiple times.

  • document projects
    • inline code documentation helps readability
    • document while working on a project
    • after completion, document changes to keep information relatively accurate
  • document your work, process, or experience
    • your experience is invaluable to someone who is going through a similar experience

Wiki Basics

  • how to use
    • you need an account to be created by an admin; ask Charlie
    • if a page doesn't exist, search for it and the wiki will let you create that page
    • make sure to click "Save Page" after you're finished editing
  • how to learn
  • how to style
    • group things sensibly because having too many headers can be overkill
    • lists are the simplest way to organize content