Q.
What is The School of Computer Science (SCS) and where it is located ?
Asked by bhoot,
27 Feb '09 07:05 pm
Earn 10 points for answering
Answers (2)
1.
The School of Computer Science (SCS) at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA is a leading private school for computer science.
It has consistently cemented its place among the top computer science programs in the world over the decades, and is currently ranked 4th in the United States. The school became a separate school in 1988; the Department of Computer Science was established in 1965.
Answered by Stone Heart, 27 Feb '09 07:05 pm
It has consistently cemented its place among the top computer science programs in the world over the decades, and is currently ranked 4th in the United States. The school became a separate school in 1988; the Department of Computer Science was established in 1965.
Report abuse
Useful
(1)
Not Useful
(0)
Your vote on this answer has already been received
2.
The School of Computer Science (SCS) at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA is a leading private school for computer science.
It has consistently cemented its place among the top computer science programs in the world over the decades, and is currently ranked 4th in the United States[1]. The school became a separate school in 1988; the Department of Computer Science was established in 1965.
In the past 15 years, SCS researchers have pioneered developments in the fields of algorithms, computer networks, distributed systems, parallel processing, programming languages, robotics, language technologies, human computer interaction and software engineering
Answered by conviction, 27 Feb '09 07:06 pm
It has consistently cemented its place among the top computer science programs in the world over the decades, and is currently ranked 4th in the United States[1]. The school became a separate school in 1988; the Department of Computer Science was established in 1965.
In the past 15 years, SCS researchers have pioneered developments in the fields of algorithms, computer networks, distributed systems, parallel processing, programming languages, robotics, language technologies, human computer interaction and software engineering
Report abuse
Useful
(1)
Not Useful
(0)
Your vote on this answer has already been received