Talk:Integration

Disambiguating page needed
We need a disambiguating page. Integration is also the opposite of racial segregation and was often seen as a goal of the civil rights movement of the late 1950s and early 1960s in the US. Ed Poor —Preceding undated comment added 12:24, 5 April 2002

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&q=integration

I have to agree. --Larry Sanger —Preceding undated comment added 19:50, 13 October 2002


 * Integration was also the name of a boxed set by The Cure (the band). (Presumably it was a takeoff on the name of their album Distintegration.)  --Daniel C. Boyer —Preceding undated comment added 15:55, 29 April 2003

I am surprised at how badly written this article is, because most of the math articles are very well done. (If there were more hours in a day I'd do something about it; I've already cleaned up a very bad mathematical mess on Wikipedia today.)  -- Mike Hardy — Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.183.81.100 (talk • contribs) 21:54, 16 November 2002


 * I agree, we have a mess here. There's integral, integration, Riemann integral and Lebesgue integral. Something has to be done to clean this up; at the very least integral and integration should be merged. AxelBoldt 00:40 Nov 17, 2002 (UTC)

racial integration, desegregation
"...racial integration, also called desegregation." I beg to differ. They are two different (although related) things. See, for example the very good discussion of this at http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/integration/IAF-FM.htm.

Unless someone can give me strong reasons to the contrary, I intend a short article on racial integration rather than just a redirect, mainly discussing this difference and linking to desegregation for the main substantive article embracing both.

I'll link to this comment on the other two related talk pages. -- Jmabel 07:10, Sep 1, 2004 (UTC)

"Lifestye"
What the heck does "In Digital Lifestye" mean? I'd guess that "Lifestye" was a typo for "Lifestyle", but the phrase still would make no sense in its context. -- Jmabel | Talk 16:26, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

"Integration, in mathematics, a concept of calculus, is the art of finding integrals"
Though I am only a calc novice, I doubt that finding an integral is much of an art form. "Act of finding integrals" seems more appropriate to me. Xanatos290 (talk) 14:43, 5 March 2010 (UTC)

Integrated in engineering and contracting
Integration in general is the bringing together or successful interfacing between parts ...

In engineering the Enterprise architecture framework (category), such as DODAF each have a group of desing documents and want the elements to be consistent, complete, and correct among all the documents. So the list of inputs on one item are the exact same labels as defined elsewhere, uses the complete list of such, and each uses the same meaning.

In Schedule (project management), the list of tasks is resource-loaded, linked to the enterprise resources to identify who and what is assigned to each task, and linked by dependencies to other tasks and/or workflow approval steps.

In contracting, the Work breakdown structure labels and definitions should match exactly to sections in the Statement of work that tells how each will be done, and also have billed by the same WBS element designations.

In software, a common data format and open interface standards allow applications the method to exchange data, to connect and interoperate.

Integration
What is integration Sameer chauhan babu (talk) 16:19, 1 September 2016 (UTC)