Campus Connect College 

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Dear Professor,

Greetings from Infosys Campus Connect Team!!!

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Free Courses
1.       Business English
2.       Business Communication
3.       Programming Fundamentals using Python
4.       OOP using Python
5.       Data Structures & Algorithms using Python
6.       Learning DBMS and SQL
7.       Big Data
8.       NoSQL Databases
9.       Artificial Intelligence
10.   Cloud Computing
11.   Cyber Security


Please find below links for the information related to latest technology and trends. This could help your faculty members and/or your college students.

Tech News for the Day
As in previous years, input validation vulnerabilities accounted for a substantial proportion of total, Risk Based Security report shows.
New York Times: Facebook is building a new cryptocurrency for WhatsApp payments.
Researchers have developed an algorithm that safeguards hardware from attacks to steal data.

Programmer News for the Day
Downstream version of OpenJDK supports Windows, Linux, MacOS, and Docker
In this article, I'll walk you through some of the new features introduced in the 8th version of C# and show some use cases.
Learn how to developer and push an Angular and ASP.NET Core-based application to Azure in a CI/CD release cycle.

Word for the Day
marsupial adjective
mar·​su·​pi·​al | \ mär-ˈsü-pē-əl  \
: one of a family of mammals that nurse their offspring in a pouch
Zoologist study the features of the marsupial creatures

Puzzle for the Day
Anagram for the Day

Legs Puzzle

At the local BrainBashers Sunday School meeting, the teacher brought in some puppies.

There were 20 more children than puppies.

In the corner of the room, within the ant's nest, the number of ants was 10 times the number of children.

In total, including the teacher, the children, the puppies and the ants, there were 1440 legs in the room.

How many children attended?

Solution (Previous Puzzle):

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe.

The piece of text is from the original book and should read:
I was born in the year 1632, in the city of York, of a good family, though not of that country, my father being a foreigner of Bremen, who settled first at Hull. He got a good estate by merchandise, and leaving off his trade, lived afterwards at York, from whence he had married my mother, whose relations were named Robinson, a very good family in that country, and from whom I was called Robinson Kreutznaer; but, by the usual corruption of words in England, we are now called - nay we call ourselves and write our name - Crusoe; and so my companions always called me.

a has been represented by q.
b has been represented by r.
c has been represented by x.
d has been represented by y.
e has been represented by s.
f has been represented by u.
g has been represented by n.
h has been represented by z.
i has been represented by f.
j has been represented by a.
k has been represented by k.
l has been represented by p.
m has been represented by m.
n has been represented by w.
o has been represented by e.
p has been represented by h.
q has been represented by g.
r has been represented by l.
s has been represented by d.
t has been represented by c.
u has been represented by b.
v has been represented by o.
w has been represented by t.
x has been represented by i.
y has been represented by j.
z has been represented by v.

An anagram is a word made by using letters of another word in a different order.
Example: shot à host

Find the anagram for the following:

Lapse
Layer
Leeks

Solution (Previous):
ITEMS : TIMES
KILLS : SKILL
LAMBS : BALMS

Innovation of the Day
In 1830, limelight as a form of lighting was presented before scientists at the Tower of London, in a trial with two other lamp designs. Invented by Thomas Drummond in 1816, limelight used jets of oxygen to assist heating lime to incandescence.
In 1868, a stapler was patented in Birmingham, England by C.H. Gould (No. 765; provisional protection only).
In 1872, George Westinghouse Jr., received a U.S. patent for his “Improvement in Steam-Air Brakes” (No.124,405) for use on railroads.

Video for the Day
Podcast for the Day
The elephant is a creature of epic proportions — and yet, it owes its enormity to more than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells. And on the epically small end of things, there are likely millions of unicellular species, yet there are very few we can see with the naked eye. Why is that? Why don’t we get unicellular elephants? Or blue whales? Or brown bears? Murry Gans explains.
Research shows that it actually influences us more than we realise - whether we're at the movies, the supermarket, or down the pub.

Tune in to Rob and Neil to hear about earworms, wine tasting, and horror films as well as some musical vocabulary.

Idiom for the Day
alive and kicking
continue to live or exist and be full of energy
He had been down with an illness for sometime, but now he has recovered and is alive and kicking.

Quote for the Day

“Never give up if you want to be something, be conceited about it. Never say that you are not good for that will never get you anywhere. Set high goals. That is what life is all about.”

Mike McLaren

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