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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternaria%20alternata%20f.sp.%20fragariae | Alternaria alternata f.sp. fragariae is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Alternaria
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Forma specialis taxa
Fungi described in 1970 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternaria%20arachidis | Alternaria arachidis is a plant pathogen. Found on the leaves of Arachis hypogaea (the peanut) in India.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Alternaria
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternaria%20cinerariae | Alternaria cinerariae is a fungal plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
cinerariae
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Fungi described in 1931 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternaria%20cucumerina | Alternaria cucumerina is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
cucumerina
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Fungi described in 1895 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternaria%20leucanthemi | Alternaria leucanthemi is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Alternaria
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternaria%20sonchi | Alternaria sonchi is a plant pathogen. It was originally found on the leaves of Sonchus asper (a flowering plant) in Wisconsin, USA.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Alternaria
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Fungi described in 1916 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bipolaris%20incurvata | Bipolaris incurvata is a plant pathogen that causes blight and leaf spots in coconut trees.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Coconut palm diseases
Pleosporaceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochliobolus%20hawaiiensis | Cochliobolus hawaiiensis is a fungal plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Cochliobolus
Fungi described in 1955 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochliobolus%20ravenelii | Cochliobolus ravenelii is a fungal plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Cochliobolus
Fungi described in 1857 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochliobolus%20setariae | Cochliobolus setariae is a fungal plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Cochliobolus
Fungi described in 1919 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochliobolus%20stenospilus | Cochliobolus stenospilus is a fungal plant pathogen that causes the disease "brown stripe" in sugar cane.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Cochliobolus
Fungi described in 1928 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubercularia%20ulmea | Tubercularia ulmea is a fungal plant pathogen infecting elms.
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Nectriaceae
Fungi described in 1947 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvularia%20caricae-papayae | Curvularia caricae-papayae is a plant pathogen.
It was found on the leaves of Carica papaya in Uttar Pradesh, India.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Pleosporaceae
Fungi described in 1963 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curvularia%20penniseti | Curvularia penniseti is a fungal plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Pleosporaceae
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Fungi described in 1921 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrosporium%20cocos | Macrosporium cocos is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Pleosporaceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrenophora%20chaetomioides | Pyrenophora chaetomioides is a plant pathogen that affects oats.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
chaetomioides
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Oats diseases
Fungi described in 1891 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrenophora%20teres%20f.%20teres | Pyrenophora teres f. teres is a plant pathogen causing net form net blotch in barley.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Pyrenophora
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Fungi described in 1923 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holly%20Sutton-Scorpio | Holly Sutton-Scorpio is a fictional character from General Hospital, an American soap opera on the ABC network, portrayed by Emma Samms. She originally appeared from July 1, 1982, to September 5, 1985. With Samms choosing to leave the series amicably to go to ABC's prime time hit Dynasty and its spin-off The Colbys, Holly seemingly perished in a plane crash. "Fan favorite" Samms had been so popular at General Hospital that Holly was brought back from the dead on January 16, 1992, after a seven-year absence. She stayed in the role until July 22, 1993, during this time also playing Holly's lookalike half-sister Paloma, a heroic revolutionary.
After a 13-year absence, Samms made a seven-episode return to General Hospital as Holly on February 20, 2006, in time for the series' 11,000th episode. She reappeared for a three-week run starting May 1 and then again on June 30 the same year. Samms again made a brief return to the series on May 15, 2009. In January 2012, it was announced Samms would once again temporarily step back into the role of Holly. She returned from February 28 to March 8, 2012. Emma Samms again returned for a short stints in August 2013 and June 2015, the latter as part of the story leading to the exit of Anthony Geary's Luke.
On September 18, 2020, Samms briefly reprised the role of Holly. In August 2022, it was announced she would again return to the role in October of that year; she returned from October 20 to November 30. On March 13, 2023, it was announced Samms would again reprise the role; she was set to make her return on April 14 of the same year; however, due to a preemption, her return date was pushed back to April 17.
Storylines
1982–1985
Holly met Luke met at a camping trip, when he saw her skinny dipping. He was smitten, and they ended up having a one-night stand. Holly set up Luke, as she played a principal role in an oil scam designed to bilk the citizens of Port Charles out of millions. Luke refused to believe Holly was a professional grifter. Eventually, Holly was forced to admit the truth. Then, Holly was kidnapped. Luke and Robert Scorpio traveled to Victoria, British Columbia to rescue Holly and recover the money stolen by her ex-cohorts. Still hurt over Holly's deception and unable to fully trust her, Luke and Holly ended up having a terrible argument. Luke packed his things and headed to the mountains. Shortly afterwards, news arrived there had been an avalanche. Luke was presumed dead, but he had broken his back and was recuperating in a remote hospital. Holly discovered she was pregnant with Luke's child and about to be deported. To honor Luke's memory, Robert offered to marry Holly and help raise Luke's child. Soon after the wedding Holly suffered a miscarriage.
Both Robert and Holly were shocked and dismayed when Luke returned alive and well. Luke was deeply hurt to find out his best friend and his ex-lover not only married but had fallen for each other. This ignited one of General Hospital's best l |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stemphylium%20lycopersici | Stemphylium lycopersici is a plant pathogen infecting tomatoes, lettuce, Capsicum and papayas.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Tomato diseases
Vegetable diseases
Papaya tree diseases
Pleosporaceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stemphylium%20sarciniforme | Stemphylium sarciniforme is a plant pathogen infecting lentil, red clover and chickpea.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Pulse crop diseases
Pleosporaceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrophora%20erumpens | Dendrophora erumpens is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Russulales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potentially%20visible%20set | In 3D computer graphics, Potentially Visible Sets are used to accelerate the rendering of 3D environments. They are a form of occlusion culling, whereby a candidate set of potentially visible polygons are pre-computed, then indexed at run-time in order to quickly obtain an estimate of the visible geometry. The term PVS is sometimes used to refer to any occlusion culling algorithm (since in effect, this is what all occlusion algorithms compute), although in almost all the literature, it is used to refer specifically to occlusion culling algorithms that pre-compute visible sets and associate these sets with regions in space. In order to make this association, the camera's view-space (the set of points from which the camera can render an image) is typically subdivided into (usually convex) regions and a PVS is computed for each region.
Benefits vs. Cost
The benefit of offloading visibility as a pre-process are:
The application just has to look up the pre-computed set given its view position. This set may be further reduced via frustum culling. Computationally, this is far cheaper than computing occlusion based visibility every frame.
Within a frame, time is limited. Only 1/60th of a second (assuming a 60 Hz frame-rate) is available for visibility determination, rendering preparation (assuming graphics hardware), AI, physics, or whatever other app specific code is required. In contrast, the offline pre-processing of a potentially visible set can take as long as required in order to compute accurate visibility.
The disadvantages are:
There are additional storage requirements for the PVS data.
Preprocessing times may be long or inconvenient.
Can't be used for completely dynamic scenes.
The visible set for a region can in some cases be much larger than for a point.
Primary Problem
The primary problem in PVS computation then becomes: Compute the set of polygons that can be visible from anywhere inside each region of a set of polyhedral regions.
There are various classifications of PVS algorithms with respect to the type of visibility set they compute.
Conservative algorithms
These overestimate visibility consistently, such that no triangle that is visible may be omitted. The net result is that no image error is possible, however, it is possible to greatly overestimate visibility, leading to inefficient rendering (due to the rendering of invisible geometry). The focus on conservative algorithm research is maximizing occluder fusion in order to reduce this overestimation. The list of publications on this type of algorithm is extensive – good surveys on this topic include Cohen-Or et al. and Durand.
Aggressive algorithms
These underestimate visibility consistently, such that no redundant (invisible) polygons exist in the PVS set, although it may be possible to miss a polygon that is actually visible leading to image errors. The focus on aggressive algorithm research is to reduce the potential error.
Approximate algorithms
These |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voce | Voce (Italian for voice) was a premium Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) using the AT&T GSM network sold by Neiman-Marcus and created by Japanese company Faith Communications. During the month of January 2008, ownership was transferred to SunCal Midwest. The service launched November 2005 and subsequently shut down February 1, 2008 with no official announcement, which caught most customers and some company executives completely by surprise.
The MVNO targeted individuals who desired a mobile phone with unlimited calling, plus an included concierge service. The initiation fee was $500, with a recurring $200 monthly charge (excluding tax). Included was a free customized Voce handset with damage insurance, free trade-in replacements every twelve months, and free accessories, unlimited domestic calling and roaming, unlimited directory assistance, SMS, and WAP, personalized setup and training, and unlimited access to a concierge for travel assistance, technical support, and other services. The original plan was for a $1500 sign up fee and $500 monthly charge, but with new handsets every four months. Handsets available were the Motorola KRZR, Nokia E61i, Nokia N95, LG Prada, Nokia 8600 Luna, Sony Ericsson W880i.
Voce was available in Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada, New Jersey, and New York.
Controversy arose in January 2008, when many Voce clients were double billed on their last statements. Following this, on February 1, 2008, cell phone service was disconnected. Voce has never provided an official statement to its customers regarding the status of its network, but all company phone numbers are disconnected and Voce has now taken down their website. Following the elimination of cell phone service, many Voce customers complained to Neiman Marcus requesting refunds or store credit. Neiman Marcus did not issue any such credits, but referred existing customers to preferred vendors to replace their service. Most customers were referred to AT&T for cell phone service, and to Red Butler for concierge services.
Company executives have reported being fired via text message, or simply having their phones turned off, confirming that the company abruptly went out of business. RCR Wireless News reports that, the former COO, Roy Kosuge, discovered that he'd been fired when his phone line was disconnected, he told the Los Angeles Times.
External links
Official website (content no longer available)
Class Action Against Voce (content no longer available)
Red Butler
References
Mobile virtual network operators
Defunct mobile phone companies of the United States
Companies established in 2005
Companies disestablished in 2008 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceuthospora%20lauri | Ceuthospora lauri is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Helotiales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phacidium%20infestans | Phacidium infestans is a fungal plant pathogen infecting Douglas-firs commonly known as snow/needle blight.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Helotiales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phaeochoropsis%20mucosa | Phaeochoropsis mucosa is a plant pathogen infecting coconuts.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Coconut palm diseases
Phyllachorales
Fungi described in 1999 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-Xylene%20%28data%20page%29 | This page provides supplementary chemical data on m-Xylene.
Material Safety Data Sheet
The handling of this chemical may incur notable safety precautions. It is highly recommend that you seek the Material Safety Datasheet (MSDS) for this chemical from a reliable source such as SIRI, and follow its directions.
Structure and properties
Thermodynamic properties
Vapor pressure of liquid
Table data obtained from CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 44th ed.
Distillation data
See also:
p-xylene (data page)
o-xylene (data page)
Spectral data
References
Xylene
Chemical data pages cleanup |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%3A%20The%20Game%20of%20Intelligent%20Life | Evolution: The Game of Intelligent Life is a life simulation and real-time strategy computer game that allows players to experience, guide, and control evolution from an isometric view on either historical earth or on randomly generated worlds while racing against computer opponents to reach the top of the evolution chain, and gradually evolving the player's animals to reach the "grand goal of intelligent life". It was published by Interplay Entertainment and Discovery Channel Multimedia in 1997.
Gameplay
Players select different ages to play through, including the Labyrinthodontia, or the first amphibians through to the evolution of the Age of Mammals. Each species has points that players can spend on adapting or evolving their creature populations, which are represented by animated icons of that creature. The more points a player spends on a field for a species, the quicker it evolves, becomes better at feeding (and growing in number faster), or better at fighting off predators. When a player evolves a creature, one can pick a population to be upgraded to the evolution one chooses. Each creature has a different set of evolution paths, and some can evolve into six or more different creatures. The world grows as the game advances, with land masses drifting and terrain shifting. As the player evolves the selected creatures, the player slowly advances in the complexity of the animals, eventually reaching intelligent life. Usually, the first player to do this is the victor (standard rules).
The game starts from basal tetrapods, the very first land dwellers: amphibians. At the gain of the game, each player starts with one population of a species of prehistoric amphibian—e.g. Ichthyostega, Tulerpeton, and Acanthostega. Gradually, if the player monitors the species' progress and moves them to more appropriate habitats and climate zones, the selected species will feed, breed, and prosper. From that secure population who can then evolve more advanced and adaptable creatures, along with continental drift and climate change, the other, older, and more primitive species will be rendered obsolete, and their creatures will die out.
As the player advances their creatures, extinctions may wipe out populations of some species, while others may not be affected at all. Each species has a drop-down menu, which displays all the more advanced creatures that this particular species can evolve into. Eventually, when the player reaches intelligent and advanced animals, the menu will display certain creatures that can then evolve into the standard intelligent life of civilization builders. The line of intelligent species doesn't have to be humans (e.g. Australopithecus, Homo habilis, Homo sapiens). The player can also evolve other intelligent species who are fictional or highly speculative. For example, if a player evolves one of the creatures into an elephant, one can access the elephant line, and gradually evolve that elephant into Elephasapiens which is a species |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xobdo.org | Xobdo.org is the first online Assamese dictionary to become available online on 10 March 2006. As of 6 August 2011 the database of this dictionary contains 37013 words of Assamese language. This is a wiki, where anybody can contribute and edit words in the dictionary provided they have a substantial knowledge of the Assamese language. Moreover, the dictionary has the facility to categorize the words as per their origin, nature and locality. It also has the facility of incorporating encyclopedic entries. This website uses UNICODE fonts which ensures global visibility of Assamese fonts when users set their character encoding option to Unicode (UTF-8).
The dictionary is the brainchild of Bikram M Baruah, an Assamese petroleum engineer based in Abu Dhabi. Later many interested people specialized in different areas joined as the working force behind this dictionary.
In 2007 xobdo.org added multiple interfaces to include 17 more languages spoken in the North East India: Khasi, Dimasa, Bodo, Karbi, Nagamese, Garo, Ao, Mizo, Mishing, Tanii (Apatani), Monpa, Meitei-lon, Bishnupriya, Chakma, Kok-Borok, Kuki, and Tanchangya aimed at giving a multilingual edge to the dictionary. Currently XOBDO gives a platform for 27 languages of North-East India, along with English. However, the database for these languages is still substantially small.
Authorship and management
A group of volunteers are responsible for adding words at XOBDO database. As of now the website has two levels of volunteers: "contributors" and "editors". A contributor enters an English and its corresponding Assamese word to the temporary database. Afterwards an editor assigns a unique "idea ID" to the corresponding English and Assamese words and carries on other editing works, if required, to match the standards of XOBDO. After assigning the idea ID the words are added to the main database ready to be retrieved by a user.
Technical details
Initially xobdo.org employed Microsoft server tools and technologies. It ran ASPs on Windows IIS and the primary database on RDBMS based on Microsoft SQL Server. However, in 2007it moved to open source technology and started running PHPs on Apache and an RDBMS on MySQL.
References
External links
XOBDO: An Online Assamese Dictionary
Learn Assamese
Xophur Xobolikoron Achoni
XOBDO.ORG Workshops: A series of workshops on Assamese Typing in Unicode
XOBDO
XOBDO
Assamese language
Internet properties established in 2006 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima%20Central%20Television | , also known as Chūtele (中テレ) or FCT, is a Japanese broadcast network affiliated with the NNN. Their headquarters are located in Fukushima Prefecture.
History
The birth of the second commercial broadcaster in Fukushima Prefecture date back to the dispute between the two major newspapers in the prefecture and the start of Fukushima TV, the first commercial station in the prefecture. At that time there were two local newspapers in the area: Fukushima Minpo (part of Mainichi Shimbun) and Fukushima Minyu (part of Yomiuri Shimbun).When Fukushima Radio started broadcasting in 1953, Fukushima Minpo took the lead, which resulted the rival newspaper to enter the competition.
In the late 1960s, the Ministry of Posts opened up applications for the use of UHF TV frequencies. Kōriyama City, the second largest city, campaigned for the establishment of the second broadcaster in the Prefecture.At that time, there were 11 companies applied for the license. Most of the companies then merged into Fukushima Central Television, and on March 31, 1969, they obtained the broadcast license.The broadcaster is located in Koriyama City, which was the first broadcaster to be headquartered outside the prefecture designated city.
Test broadcasts began on December 23, 1969, which was followed by a pilot broadcast on February 1 of the following year. Fukushima Central TV started broadcasting on April 1, 1970.From its opening, it was affiliated with Fuji TV and TV Asahi.However, more than a year from its first broadcast, Fuji TV and Nippon TV reach an agreement to let FCT air the latter network's programming, which resulted to Fukushima TV airing Fuji TV programs alongside TBS TV programming.
In 1971, FCT aired 100% of its programming in color, becoming the last station in Japan to start airing in color. FCT introduced OB vans that can broadcast in color.In 1976, FCT became number 1 in all-day and primetime TV ratings. In 1976, FCT published the Fukushima Bunko books, with a total of 50 volumes.This was later turned into a drama in 1980 under the title, "Hometown", with a total of 52 episodes.
With the launch of Fukushima Broadcasting on October 1, 1981, FCT dropped its All-Nippon News Network affiliation on that day.Due to the launch of KFB, FCT had a decrease in turnover after competition from other broadcasters intensified.
Stations
Analog
Fukushima 33ch
Aizuwakamatsu 37ch
Iwaki 34ch
Digital(ID:4)
Fukushima 27ch
Aizuwakamatsu 22ch
Programs
Anime
Clione no Akari
References
External links
Fukushima Central TV website
Companies based in Fukushima Prefecture
Television stations in Japan
Nippon News Network
Television channels and stations established in 1970
Mass media in Kōriyama |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backdoor.Win32.IRCBot | Backdoor.Win32.IRCBot (also known as W32/Checkout (McAfee), W32.Mubla (Symantec), W32/IRCBot-WB (Sophos), and Backdoor.Win32.IRCBot.aaq (Bydoon Center)) is a backdoor computer worm that is spread through MSN Messenger and Windows Live Messenger. Once installed on a PC, the worm copies itself into a Windows system folder, creates a new file displayed as "Windows Genuine Advantage Validation Notification" and becomes part of the computer's automatic startup. In addition, it attempts to send itself to all MSN contacts by offering an attachment named 'photos.zip'. Executing this file will install the worm onto the local PC. The Win32.IRCBot worm provides a backdoor server and allows a remote intruder to gain access and control over the computer via an Internet Relay Chat channel. This allows for confidential information to be transmitted to a hacker.
Because of a lack of standard naming conventions and also because of common features, variants of Win32.IRCBot can often be confused with the Agobot and Spybot family of worms. For example, Sophos lists Backdoor.Win32.IRCBot.ul, W32/Poebot-JT worm, and Win32/IRCBot.TS as aliases of the W32/Gaobot.worm.gen.e worm, a member of the Agobot family.
See also
Internet Relay Chat
Comparison of Internet Relay Chat bots
Malware
Botnet
Trojan horse (computing)
References
Computer worms |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrawby%20Junction | Wrawby Junction is a busy railway junction located a short distance west of Barnetby, North Lincolnshire, England and controls the confluence of the Network Rail routes from Lincoln, Retford and Scunthorpe towards Immingham and Cleethorpes. The junction was controlled by a large signal box of part-brick, part-wooden, construction and is now controlled from York Rail Operating Centre (ROC).
History
Although the railway has served the area since 1848, the present construction is of late-Great Central Railway design. Apart from the part-brick construction, Wrawby Junction is of similar design to its companion signal boxes at Barnetby East and Barnetby West. All signal boxes were built about 1916 when the section of route between Wrawby and Brocklesby was quadrupled to cope with the growing amount of freight traffic heading for the docks at Immingham and Grimsby. As well as controlling this busy complex of routes, Wrawby Junction was also responsible for controlling the entrance to the once-busy railway sidings at Barnetby, and the locomotive depot. When built, the lever frame consisted of 132 levers, whilst later, 5 more levers were added at the left hand end (A,to E inclusive). Wrawby Junction was the largest manual signal box in the world to be worked by a lone signaller. Most other large signal boxes require two or more signallers.
Wrawby Junction signal box is a grade II listed building, and closed on Christmas Eve 2015, control of the area being transferred to York Rail Operating Centre.
Accidents
Wrawby Junction has been the site of two fatal accidents :
On 17 October 1898, 8 people were killed when a passenger train collided with a derailed goods train.
On 9 December 1983, one passenger was killed when a goods train collided with a passenger train.
Wrawby Junction today
Modern-day Wrawby Junction is still quite a complex location, although changing traffic patterns have resulted in significant rationalisation of the layout. Once noted for its impressive semaphore signal arrays, the whole area is now controlled by colour-light signals. The locomotive depot no longer exists, although the eagle-eyed observer will still notice the old turntable pit between the Lincoln and Retford routes. The sidings see little use, trains may be either recessed or run-round in the Down Reception lines. Additionally, Colas Rail locomotives can be found stabled in what is left of the goods yard sidings.
Wrawby Junction signal box closed in December 2015 as part of the re-signalling of the line between Scunthorpe and Cleethorpes.
References
External links
Photo collection at Wrawby Junction
Photo collection at Wrawby Junction
Modern photo of the signal box
Rail junctions in England |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physopella%20ampelopsidis | Physopella ampelopsidis is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Teliomycotina
Fungi described in 1958 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physoderma%20leproides | Physoderma leproides is a plant pathogen infecting beets.
See also
List of beet diseases
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Food plant pathogens and diseases
Fungi described in 1950
Blastocladiomycota |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physoderma%20trifolii | Physoderma trifolii is a plant pathogen infecting red clover.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Blastocladiomycota |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pileolaria%20terebinthi | Pileolaria terebinthi is a plant pathogen infecting pistachio.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Fruit tree diseases
Teliomycotina |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puccinia%20carthami | Puccinia carthami is a plant pathogen that causes rust on safflower.
See also
List of Puccinia species
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
carthami
Fungi described in 1840
Taxa named by August Carl Joseph Corda |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio%2010%20%28Suriname%29 | Radio 10 Magic FM is a commercial radio station in Suriname.
Trivia
Radio 10 "MAGIC" FM is the first radio station broadcasting the exact time in Suriname with the aid of a GPS/DCF computer. This computer manages everything in the studio that involves time and date.
History
December 10, 2006 / The new face of Radio 10 Magic FM is an idea of Werner Duttenhofer as a gift in celebration of 10 years 10 and was realized by 3 artist namely. Ray Daal, August Bohé & Sojo Prijatno.
Crew
Werner Jr. Duttenhofer
Jerome Duttenhofer
Elvin Duttenhofer
Jardell Rose
Steven van Frederikslust
Bicham Chandralal
Gerda Duttenhofer
Sidney Grunberg
Raúl Kandhai
Ryan Rozenblad
Jennifer Thompson Suriname
Raynel Dalen
Ruben Tjopawiro
Marynho Tanoeleksono
George Tarsa
Renuka Girjasing
Giwani Zeggen
Maureen Boodie
Rodney Deekman
Sandra Mangalie
Debby Sodikromo
Schedule
Weekdays
News every hour starting at 06:00 till 8:00 10:00 and 18:00
Saturday
News at 06:00, 07:00, 08:00, 12:00 and 18:00u
Sunday
News at 12:00 and 16:00u
Streaming
http://live.radio10.sr/
References
Radio stations in Suriname
1996 establishments in Suriname
Radio stations established in 1996 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puccinia%20verruca | Puccinia verruca is a plant pathogen that causes rust on safflower.
See also
List of Puccinia species
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
verruca
Fungi described in 1879 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uromyces%20apiosporus | Uromyces apiosporus is a fungal species and plant pathogen infecting Primula.
Including Primula minima in New Zealand.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Ornamental plant pathogens and diseases
apiosporus
Fungi described in 1873 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uromyces%20graminis | Uromyces graminis is a plant pathogen infecting carrots.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Carrot diseases
graminis
Fungi described in 1892 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uromyces%20inconspicuus | Uromyces inconspicuus is a plant pathogen infecting hemp.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Hemp diseases
inconspicuus |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uromyces%20lineolatus%20subsp.%20nearcticus | Uromyces lineolatus subsp. nearcticus is a plant pathogen infecting carrots.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Carrot diseases
lineolatus subsp. nearcticus
Fungi described in 1973 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uromyces%20trifolii-repentis%20var.%20fallens | Uromyces trifolii-repentis var. fallens is a plant pathogen infecting red clover. Its first detection in Pakistan was in 1990 in the Kaghan Valley.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phytophthora%20hibernalis | Phytophthora hibernalis is a plant pathogen infecting citruses.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
hibernalis
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Citrus diseases |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20acanthicum | Pythium acanthicum is a plant pathogen infecting strawberries.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould strawberry diseases
acanthicum
Species described in 1930 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20deliense | Pythium deliense is a plant pathogen infecting potato and beet.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Potato diseases
Root vegetable diseases
deliense
Species described in 1934 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20heterothallicum | Pythium heterothallicum is a plant pathogen infecting spinach.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Leaf vegetable diseases
heterothallicum
Spinach |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20hypogynum | Pythium hypogynum is a plant pathogen infecting strawberries.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould strawberry diseases
hypogynum
Species described in 1941 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20middletonii | Pythium middletonii is a plant pathogen infecting strawberry.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould strawberry diseases
Species described in 1960
middletonii |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20paroecandrum | Pythium paroecandrum is a plant pathogen infecting carrots and impatiens.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Carrot diseases
Ornamental plant pathogens and diseases
paroecandrum |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20perniciosum | Pythium perniciosum is a plant pathogen infecting strawberries and poinsettias.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Water mould strawberry diseases
Ornamental plant pathogens and diseases
perniciosum
Species described in 1912 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20tracheiphilum | Pythium tracheiphilum is a plant pathogen infecting lettuce.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Lettuce diseases
tracheiphilum |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium%20ultimum%20var.%20ultimum | Pythium ultimum var. ultimum is a plant pathogen infecting potato.
References
External links
Pythium Genome Database
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Water mould plant pathogens and diseases
Potato diseases
ultimum var. ultimum |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon%20Cormack | Gordon Villy Cormack is a professor in the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo and co-inventor of Dynamic Markov Compression.
Cormack's research with Maura R. Grossman has been cited in cases of first impression in United States, Ireland, and (by reference) United Kingdom approving the use of technology-assisted review in civil litigation.
Since 2001, he has been a program committee member of The Text Retrieval Conference (TREC). He was a coordinator of the TREC Total Recall Track (2015 - 2016), as well as the TREC Legal Track (2010 - 2011), and the TREC Spam Track (2005 - 2007). Cormack is past president of the Conference on Email and Anti-Spam.
From 1997 through 2010, Cormack coached Waterloo's ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest team, qualifying for the World Finals every year, winning the World Championship in 1999, and the North American Championship in 1998 and 2000.
Cormack was a member of the International Olympiad in Informatics Scientific Committee from 2004 - 2011 and was the scientific director of IOI 2010 in Waterloo, Ontario.
Cormack received his B.Sc., M.Sc., and Ph.D. in computer science from University of Manitoba in 1977, 1978, and 1981, and was a faculty member in the McGill University School of Computer Science (1981 - 1983) before joining University of Waterloo in 1983.
See also
List of University of Waterloo people
References
External links
Cormack's homepage
Academic staff of the University of Waterloo
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xeromphalina%20fraxinophila | Xeromphalina fraxinophila is a species of fungus in the family Mycenaceae. It is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Tricholomataceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sclerotium%20cinnamomi | Sclerotium cinnamomi is a plant pathogen infecting peanuts.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Food plant pathogens and diseases
Typhulaceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blennerhassett%20Island%20Bridge | Blennerhassett Island Bridge, with a network arch design, carries U.S. Route 50 (Appalachian Development Highway System's Corridor D) over the Ohio River and the historic Blennerhassett Island between Belpre Township, Ohio and Washington, West Virginia in the United States. Construction of the bridge was overseen by the Walsh Construction Company of Chicago, and it opened to traffic on June 13, 2008. The completion of the span completed Corridor D between Interstate 275 east of Cincinnati to Interstate 79 at Clarksburg, West Virginia.
Photo gallery
References
External links
Blennerhassett Island Bridge at Bridges & Tunnels
Blennerhassett Island Bridge at GoBridges
Construction Photos at Gribblenation
E.L. Robinson Design Team of Blennerhassett Island Bridge
Structural Technical Specs of the Blennerhassett Island Bridge
Road bridges in Ohio
Road bridges in West Virginia
Bridges completed in 2008
Tied arch bridges in the United States
Bridges over the Ohio River
Blennerhassett Island
Transportation in Washington County, Ohio
Transportation in Wood County, West Virginia
Buildings and structures in Washington County, Ohio
Buildings and structures in Wood County, West Virginia
U.S. Route 50
Bridges of the United States Numbered Highway System
2008 establishments in Ohio
2008 establishments in West Virginia
Steel bridges in the United States
Network arch bridges |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporisorium%20cruentum | Sporisorium cruentum is a plant pathogen infecting sorghum.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Sorghum diseases
Ustilaginomycotina |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan%20C.%20Gordon | Ryan C. Gordon (also known as icculus) is a computer programmer and former Loki Software employee responsible for icculus.org, which hosts many Loki Software projects as well as others. Gordon's site hosts projects with the code from such commercial games as Duke Nukem 3D, Shadow Warrior, Quake III Arena and other free and open source projects for multiple platforms.
Gordon created ports of proprietary software products to the Linux and Mac OS X platforms. These include being hired to port most of the Unreal Tournament series, some of the Serious Sam series, the official Postal series, some Tripwire Interactive and Coffee Stain Studios titles, and Prey (2006). He has also been involved in porting several non-gaming products such as Second Life and Google Earth. Some, such as Candy Cruncher and Postal 2, have been published by Linux Game Publishing. He was described alongside Edward Rudd as being "instrumental" in ensuring the multi-platform nature of the Humble Indie Bundle initiatives.
Biography
Personal life
Gordon grew up just outside Philadelphia and attended college in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he resides. On January 3, 2010 he became engaged to Carrie and they were married later that year. On January 31, 2012 his wife gave birth to their first child, Olive Finch Gordon. He is also a founding member of the BareBones Theatre Group in Charlotte.
Loki Software
In 1999 Loki Software ran a contest called "Loki Hack" at the Atlanta Linux Showcase, with the goal of improving the Linux port of Civilization: Call To Power. Gordon decided to give it a try, driving the four-hour trip from his home to Atlanta. Loki was impressed with his work and decided to offer him a job. Gordon quickly rose to prominence at Loki, working as a developer on the game ports of Kohan: Immortal Sovereigns, Quake III Arena, and Eric's Ultimate Solitaire, as well as being the lead developer for Descent 3 and Heavy Metal: F.A.K.K.². In 2000 he also wrote several articles for the online Linux news and information website Linux.com. Around this time he founded icculus.org, made to provide hosting for various free and open source projects, and would later be used to support and continue some of Loki's free software projects and tools. While at Loki Software, Gordon picked his nickname icculus as a reference to the fictional character from Gamehendge in the song "Icculus" by Phish.
Independent contracts
The upcoming closure of Loki forced him to seek outside employment. A friend offered him a job at his cybercafe, and he was forced to move in with his parents. Desperate to escape working a cash register, he found the e-mail address of an artist working for the developer Croteam. They had recently released the first of their highly successful Serious Sam series, and Gordon asked if they would be interested in him building a Linux port. They agreed, and the port's first beta was released on December 5, 2002. From there he gained other contracts such as being hired t |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JUNG | JUNG (the Java Universal Network/Graph Framework) is an open-source graph modeling and visualization framework written in Java, under the BSD license. The framework comes with a number of layout algorithms built in, as well as analysis algorithms such as graph clustering and metrics for node centrality.
JUNG's architecture is designed to support a variety of representations of entities and their relations, such as directed and undirected graphs, , graphs with parallel edges, and hypergraphs. It provides a mechanism for annotating graphs, entities, and relations with metadata. JUNG also facilitates the creation of analytic tools for complex data sets that can examine the relations between entities as well as the metadata attached to each entity and relation. JUNG includes implementations of a number of algorithms from graph theory, data mining, and social network analysis, such as routines for clustering, , , random graph generation, statistical analysis, and calculation of network distances, flows, and importance measures.
JUNG provides a visualization framework that makes it easy to construct tools for the interactive exploration of network data. Users can use one of the layout algorithms provided, or use the framework to create their own custom layouts. In addition, filtering mechanisms are provided which allow users to focus their attention, or their algorithms, on specific portions of the graph.
See also
JGraph
References
External links
Official JUNG Page
Experience Design Agency
Original JUNG Page (Deprecated)
Java (programming language) libraries
Graph drawing software
Free data visualization software
Software using the BSD license |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split%20Suburban%20Railway | The Split Metro () is a suburban railway network in Split, Croatia. The railway was opened on refurbished existing M604 tracks on December 10, 2006. It consists of one line serving seven stations, running from Split centre to Kaštel Stari. The second line between Split centre and Split-Kopilica opened in June 2019, and was discontinued in November 2019. As of 2019, it is planned that new stations will be added along the tracks and the existing stops renovated. The line runs through two tunnels within the city centre of Split; within the longer of the two tunnels a metro-like station (Split-H.B.Z.) will be opened in 2021 to serve the city centre. The line is long while an average train ride lasts for 25 minutes. A link with Split Airport (in 2025) and further extension to Trogir is considered, with possible electrification in the long-term.
History
Most of the railway lines were completed in October 1877, as Split was connected to Siverić via Perković. When Split hosted the 1979 Mediterranean Games, an extensive suburban railway system was planned. The existing tracks from the suburbs to the main terminus train station in the harbor were laid underground. As a double-track electrified railway was planned, an underground station Split-H.B.Z. (with a 1,893 m tunnel) was built. A further section of the railway was covered in 1983. In 1991, Croatian war of independence broke out. The occupied territory severed the railway links between Split (and Dalmatia) and the rest of Croatia. Between February 1993 and October 1994, Croatian Railways, facing many idle trains and railway workers in Dalmatia, organized a short-lived and ill-fated Split suburban railway from Split to Kaštela. Local authorities did not support the project while the long-distance rolling stock proved to be unsuitable for suburban traffic. After the war's end in 1995 this project was abandoned.
In December 2006, Croatian Railways reopened the line for suburban traffic, announcing plans to electrify the line and lay a second set of tracks, which still has not happened. Since 2007, CR has intended to refurbish and re-equip the Split railway tunnel and open the underground station Split-H.B.Z., and a contract was signed between CR and Split authorities, but in late 2015 the City of Split definitely withdrew from the project citing the lack of funds as the main reason. In 2011, Croatian Railways struck off one third - 7 daily departures from its timetable, amidst heavy protests and criticism.
Current state
The major issues plaguing the line include the distance of the railway tracks (built for long-distance traffic towards Knin and Zagreb) from the population centers along Bay of Kaštela. Despite the fact that around 35% of Split, 40% of Solin, and 50% of Kastela population lives along the suburban railway, due to the urban sprawl and the lack of spatial planning the surrounding area mostly consists of single-family detached homes with low urban density and poor access to public trans |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20NPR%20stations | The following is a list of full-power non-commercial educational radio stations in the United States broadcasting programming from National Public Radio (NPR), which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, band, city of license and state. HD Radio subchannels and low-power translators are not included.
External links
Npr |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroma%20caryae | Asteroma caryae is a plant pathogen that causes liver spot disease of pecan.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Diaporthales
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Nut tree diseases |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroma%20inconspicuum | Asteroma inconspicuum is a plant pathogen that causes anthracnose on elm.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Diaporthales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clypeoporthe%20iliau | Clypeoporthe iliau is a plant pathogen.
Hosts
Hosts include sugarcane (Saccharum spp.).
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Gnomoniaceae
Fungi described in 1978 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptosporella%20umbrina | Cryptosporella umbrina is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Gnomoniaceae
Fungi described in 1918 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytospora%20palmarum | Cytospora palmarum is a plant pathogen that causes leaf blight on coconut.
Distribution
Found in Fiji in 2018.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Coconut palm diseases
Diaporthales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytospora%20platani | Cytospora platani is a plant pathogen that causes cankers on Platanus sp. (American sycamores).
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Diaporthales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytospora%20sacchari | Cytospora sacchari is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Diaporthales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytospora%20terebinthi | Cytospora terebinthi is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Diaporthales |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamianiella%20coryli | Mamianiella coryli is a plant pathogen.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Gnomoniaceae
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20arnoldiae | Phomopsis arnoldiae is a fungal plant pathogen infecting walnuts.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Nut tree diseases
arnoldiae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20asparagi | Phomopsis asparagi is a fungal plant pathogen that causes phomopsis blight in asparagus.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Stem vegetable diseases
asparagi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20asparagicola | Phomopsis asparagicola is a plant pathogen that causes Phomopsis blight in asparagus.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Stem vegetable diseases
asparagicola |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20cannabina | Phomopsis cannabina is a plant pathogen infecting hemp.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Hemp diseases
cannabina |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20caricae-papayae | Phomopsis caricae-papayae is a fungal plant pathogen infecting papayas.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Papaya tree diseases
caricae-papayae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20ganjae | Phomopsis ganjae is a fungal plant pathogen infecting hemp.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Hemp diseases
ganjae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20javanica | Phomopsis javanica is a plant pathogen that causes Phomopsis blight in asparagus.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Vegetable diseases
javanica |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20lokoyae | Phomopsis lokoyae is a fungal plant pathogen infecting Douglas-firs.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal conifer pathogens and diseases
lokoyae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20mangiferae | Phomopsis mangiferae is a plant pathogen infecting mangoes.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Mango tree diseases
mangiferae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20perseae | Phomopsis perseae is a fungal plant pathogen affecting avocados.
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Avocado tree diseases
perseae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20sclerotioides | Phomopsis sclerotioides is a fungal plant pathogen infecting cucurbits.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Vegetable diseases
sclerotioides |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis%20theae | Phomopsis theae is a fungal plant pathogen infecting tea.
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Tea diseases
theae
Taxa named by Thomas Petch
Fungi described in 1925 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20von%20Puttkamer | Baron Peter Von Puttkamer (born April 8, 1962) is a Canadian filmmaker known for his unique approach to adventure documentary series for network television, and for his work with Indigenous communities in his country and around the world. He has won major international awards for his work as a writer, director and producer, and was recently nominated for the 2015 Environmental Media Awards for his Nat Geo series, Biggest & Baddest, which he directed and co-produced with his wife and business partner, Sheera Von Puttkamer. For over thirty years, the couple has run Gryphon Productions and has a catalog that includes hundreds of finished films and videos, many that have appeared on television and cable networks globally and continue to be used in classrooms and outreach centers as educational and advocacy videos.
Peter is an occasional media personality who has appeared on many high-profile news programs and talk shows, including popular appearances on Coast To Coast AM with Art Bell and most recently in 2017 with George Noory; and he and his work have been featured in magazines around the world from American Cinematographer, Moviemaker and Discover Magazine.
Early life and education
Peter was born in Bonn, Germany. Von Puttkamer's father created a resort named Paradise Valley. Paradise Valley resort, which once hosted a music festival that included artists like Joni Mitchell, Chicago, Taj Mahal and The Grateful Dead, employed local native people, which gave Peter a chance to get to know their cultures in a unique and personal way and encouraged him to use his talent as a filmmaker to not only document their lives, but also help improve their conditions.
Peter's half-brother, Jesco Von Puttkamer, a consultant to Gene Roddenberry and a technical advisor for Paramount Pictures Star Trek: the Motion Picture, was an employee of NASA and a Russia expert for the International Space Station. Jesco also received NASA's Exceptional Service Medal, the highest civilian order for outstanding services by a U.S. government agency.
Peter attended the University of British Columbia where he studied English Honours and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Film and Television.
Early work
In 1983, Von Puttkamer and his wife formed Gryphon Productions, which has created numerous independent documentaries and programs for television. Their first network documentary was called Spirit of the Mask and it aired in 1992 on Can West Global. The film explored the native mask cultures of the Pacific Northwest and was hosted and narrated by noted anthropologist Wade Davis. Before Spirit was released, Peter produced a series of educational videos, short form documentaries and advocacy films for and about native communities. Projects included “Journey to Strength””In the Heart of the Cedar" 1982; "A Caravan For Youth" 1983; "The Honor of All: The Story of Alkali Lake" 1985.
In 1987- von Puttkamer was Director of Photography and Editor on "Walking with Grandfather" a 6 par |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WCFI%20%28Florida%29 | WCFI was a commercial radio station in Ocala, Florida, broadcasting to the Gainesville-Ocala, Florida area on 1290 AM. WCFI broadcast news and talk programming, along with country music. The station's slogan was "News, Information, and Real Country". WCFI's transmitter tower was severely damaged during the 2004 hurricane season, and the station has been off the air since August 2004. On February 20, 2008, the FCC license for the station was deleted.
External links
History of 1290 AM from Central Florida Radio
FCC Station Search Details: DWCFI (Facility ID: 1217)
FCC History Cards for WCFI (covering 1938-1980 as WTMC)
CFI
Defunct radio stations in the United States
2008 disestablishments in Florida
Radio stations disestablished in 2008
CFI
Radio stations established in 1939
1939 establishments in Florida |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valsa%20kunzei | Valsa kunzei is a plant pathogen infecting Douglas-firs.
See also
List of Douglas-fir diseases
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Diaporthales
Fungi described in 1846
Taxa named by Theodor Rudolph Joseph Nitschke |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valsa%20nivea | Valsa nivea is a plant pathogen infecting elms.
See also
List of elm diseases
References
External links
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Diaporthales
Fungi described in 1787 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical%20reaction%20to%2024 | The Fox Network television series 24 has won numerous Emmy Awards for its technical and artistic merits, and become part of American popular culture. Jack Bauer and David Palmer are seen as iconic television characters. It has also been heavily criticized for justifying the misuse of government authority and the use of torture, and accused of being racially insensitive.
Critical reception
24s real time story-telling method and split-screen technique have also received widespread praise and critical acclaim. This aspect of the show also made it hard to produce from a creative point of view because there was no possibility to do time cuts; as a result, characters needed to be changing locations (e.g., driving or flying) for the same amount of time as it would take for the actual, fictional journey. This aspect of show design and production led to an increasing expectation of suspension of disbelief by the viewer.
Season 1
The first season of 24 received universal critical acclaim, and was featured on the cover of TV Guide as the "best new show of the season". The premiere episode was cited by The New York Times as a "Critic's Pick" by Caryn James, who noted that it was "a drama sleek, suspenseful and absorbing enough to overcome its blatant gimmick". She added that of the 2001 fall season's new government series that "24 is the most daring and promising" and that "Mr. Sutherland is an unexpectedly sympathetic hero". Ain't It Cool News gave the premiere episode five stars, saying it features "Loads of edgy, complex, compelling characters. Intricate, unpredictable plotting. Lightning-like pacing. A stellar cast. A near-constant, electric undercurrent of sex. It keeps asking questions you'll be dying to see answered. And, perhaps best of all, it feels like no TV show you've ever seen."
Time magazine praised the series, saying "Forget sleeping through this one—you won't even want to blink. 24 is the most distinctive, addictive new TV series this season. As an old-fashioned thriller, it's relentless, tense and deliciously paranoiac, with more twists than a Twizzler. But it's also boldly different. Most notably, there's its clever visual signature: picture-in-picture screens that show two, three and even four different scenes simultaneously." Time also noted that "The show takes to the next level the trend of serial story "arcs," which began with '80s dramas like Hill Street Blues and Wiseguy and which continues on The West Wing and The Sopranos." Time also praised the performances of Kiefer Sutherland and Dennis Haysbert, saying that "It helps that there's a strong cast driving the train. Haysbert is commanding, if a tad underutilized in the pilot, as an idealist with a dangerous secret. And Sutherland plays the gravel-voiced Bauer with an assurance that belies his teen-movie-star past; his overstressed agent is stalwart but weary, a haunted spook."
TV Barn called the first episode "not to be missed", adding that "Although there really are only t |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusicladium%20pisicola | Fusicladium pisicola is a species of fungal plant pathogen affecting pea plants.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal plant pathogens and diseases
Vegetable diseases
Venturiaceae |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platychora%20ulmi | Platychora ulmi is a plant pathogen infecting elms.
References
External links
Index Fungorum
USDA ARS Fungal Database
Fungal tree pathogens and diseases
Venturiaceae
Fungi described in 1805 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WTMN | WTMN (1430 AM) is a commercial radio station in Gainesville, Florida. It is owned by MARC Radio Gainesville, LLC, and broadcasts to the Gainesville-Ocala radio market. Programming is simulcast on co-owned AM 720 WRZN in Hernando and on translator station W242CS on 96.3 MHz in Gainesville.
WTMN's format is Christian radio instructional and preaching programs. Some national religious shows heard on WTMN include Dr. Charles Stanley, Dr. James Dobson, Jay Sekulow and Rick Warren. The station calls itself "The Shepherd Radio."
History
WTMN signed on the air in January 1990 as WWLO. It was a daytimer with 2,500 watts power, and required to be off the air at night to avoid interfering with other stations on AM 1430. It was diplexed on the WLUS tower (now WDVH) on SE 27th street in Gainesville. The station initially broadcast an urban contemporary format. That format was moved to sister station 101.3 WTMG in 1993.
After that, several attempts were made to launch a sports radio format. But they were not successful because the dominant Gainesville team, the University of Florida Gators, are heard on AM 850 WRUF, the University's commercial radio station.
The station switched to Gospel radio in 2001, and later switched to a Christian radio format.
In 2003 the station upgraded its daytime power to 10,000 watts and in 2004 the station added 45 watts of night time power.
References
External links
www.sgnthelight.com/
Radio stations established in 1988
1988 establishments in Florida
TMN |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetuan%20%28Barcelona%20Metro%29 | Tetuan is a station on the L2 line of the Barcelona metro network, located below Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes and Plaça de Tetuan in the Eixample district in central Barcelona. It was opened in 1995, along several other stations on the line. The station can be accessed from the entrances located on Carrer de Casp-Passeig de Sant Joan and Carrer de la Diputació-Passeig de Sant Joan.
Services
See also
List of Barcelona Metro stations
External links
Tetuan metro station at Trenscat.com
Railway stations in Spain opened in 1995
Barcelona Metro line 2 stations
Transport in Eixample |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XHTRES-TDT | XHTRES-TDT was a full-power television station in Mexico City, Mexico, broadcasting in digital on UHF channel 27. From 2006 to 2015, it was the flagship station of the now defunct network cadenatres and from 2013 to 2020, it was the flagship station of the Excélsior TV news network. It is licensed to Compañía Internacional de Radio y Televisión, S.A. (CIRT), which is owned by Grupo Empresarial Ángeles (GEA), a company headed by Olegario Vázquez Raña and directed by Olegario Vázquez Aldir, through its Grupo Imagen communications unit.
The current programming of XHTRES, since February 1, 2020, is the Heraldo Televisión news network.
History
An unbuilt station
On November 21, 1964, the office of the Secretary of Communications and Transportation (SCT) granted a 25-year concession to CIRT (unrelated to the Cámara Nacional de la Industria de Radio y Televisión, the Mexican broadcasters' association, which is also abbreviated CIRT) and to its controlling shareholder, Roberto Nájera Martínez, for a television station UHF channel 16, to be designated XHTC-TV. As of July 1989, the station had not been built, mainly due to lack of funds, and Nájera transferred his shares to Raúl Aréchiga Espinoza, with the intent that Aréchiga would “manage the bond and/or funding for the installation and operation of the channel.” Aréchiga, from Baja California Sur, had interests in radio and a concession to operate a cable TV system in Baja California Sur, and was also owner of the airline Aero California; from 1994 to 1996, he would become director of the Cámara Nacional de la Industria de Radio y Televisión (CIRT), Mexico's association of broadcasters. Although the station was still not on air, in 1989, the SCT granted a ten-year renewal at the end of the initial concession period. With this renewal of the concession, the station was moved from channel 16 to 28 due to a reallocation of television spectrum; it also took on the callsign XHRAE-TV, giving it his initials.
XHRAE on the air: the legal battle begins
The concession renewal was scheduled to expire on November 21, 1999, and as the date approached, the station had not yet begun transmitting. Needing to go on the air to avoid having the concession reclaimed, Aréchiga hastily put together a schedule of music videos and put XHRAE on the air in November 1999, sparking a five-year controversy. Roberto Nájera Martínez, who had transferred his shares ten years earlier, claimed that he had merely rented the award of the concession to Aréchiga. Nájera insisted that he was the rightful owner of the station and accused Aréchiga of plundering it. Further adding to the station's troubles, Carlos Ruiz Sacristán, the head of the SCT, claimed that Aréchiga failed to live up to the terms of the original concession, refused to endorse a renewal, and instead, sought to revoke the concession. Aréchiga sued, and in a September 2002, letter to Mexican president Vicente Fox, accused current and former members of the SCT of plunderi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMV%20%28TV%20program%29 | AMV (All Music Video) was a music video show broadcast by the Seven Network between 2000 and 2002. It aired between 7.30am and 9am every weekday, following the 90 minute-long Sunrise news bulletin. It was cancelled in February 2002 when Sunrise expanded into a three-hour-long (later three-and-a-half-hour) format.
AMV was similar to the long-running ABC1 music show rage in that it featured no host, and Network Ten's Video Hits in that it aired a combination of new and popular clips. However, due to the early morning timeslot (which competed against children's programming such as Cheez TV), content was often censored; for example upon broadcasting the controversial video for Robbie Williams' "Rock DJ", the infamous gory ending was not shown.
See also
List of Australian music television shows
2000 Australian television series debuts
2002 Australian television series endings
2000s Australian television series
Australian music chart television shows
Australian music television series
Seven Network original programming |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricola%20macrops | Ricola macrops is the only species of the monotypic genus Ricola, a genus of the family Loricariidae of catfish (order Siluriformes).
Ecological and behavioral data are unavailable for this species. This species is native to Argentina and Uruguay where it occurs in the lower Paraná River basin. R. macrops probably inhabits sandy substrates with flowing waters. R. macrops reaches a length of SL.
It shares features with representatives of different groups within Loricariini. For example, it possesses conspicuous fringed barbels on the lower lip, a feature shared by the representatives of the Pseudohemiodon group. It also bears numerous papillae on the inner surfaces of the lips and numerous straight bicuspid teeth that are characteristic of the Rineloricaria group.
References
Loricariini
Fish described in 1904
Fish of South America
Fish of Argentina
Fish of Uruguay
Taxa named by Charles Tate Regan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontology-based%20data%20integration | Ontology-based data integration involves the use of one or more ontologies to effectively combine data or information from multiple heterogeneous sources. It is one of the multiple data integration approaches and may be classified as Global-As-View (GAV). The effectiveness of ontology‑based data integration is closely tied to the consistency and expressivity of the ontology used in the integration process.
Background
Data from multiple sources are characterized by multiple types of heterogeneity. The following hierarchy is often used:
Syntactic heterogeneity: is a result of differences in representation format of data
Schematic or structural heterogeneity: the native model or structure to store data differ in data sources leading to structural heterogeneity. Schematic heterogeneity that particularly appears in structured databases is also an aspect of structural heterogeneity.
Semantic heterogeneity: differences in interpretation of the 'meaning' of data are source of semantic heterogeneity
System heterogeneity: use of different operating system, hardware platforms lead to system heterogeneity
Ontologies, as formal models of representation with explicitly defined concepts and named relationships linking them, are used to address the issue of semantic heterogeneity in data sources. In domains like bioinformatics and biomedicine, the rapid development, adoption and public availability of ontologies has made it possible for the data integration community to leverage them for semantic integration of data and information.
The role of ontologies
Ontologies enable the unambiguous identification of entities in heterogeneous information systems and assertion of applicable named relationships that connect these entities together. Specifically, ontologies play the following roles:
Content Explication The ontology enables accurate interpretation of data from multiple sources through the explicit definition of terms and relationships in the ontology.
Query Model In some systems like SIMS, the query is formulated using the ontology as a global query schema.
Verification The ontology verifies the mappings used to integrate data from multiple sources. These mappings may either be user specified or generated by a system.
Approaches using ontologies for data integration
There are three main architectures that are implemented in ontology‑based data integration applications, namely,
Single ontology approach A single ontology is used as a global reference model in the system. This is the simplest approach as it can be simulated by other approaches. SIMS a prominent example of this approach. The Structured Knowledge Source Integration component of Research Cyc is another prominent example of this approach. (Title = Harnessing Cyc to Answer Clinical Researchers' Ad Hoc Queries). The Gellish Taxonomic Dictionary-Ontology follows this approach as well.
Multiple ontologies Multiple ontologies, each modeling an individual data source, are used in combinatio |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net%20Literacy | Net Literacy is an Indianapolis based 501(c) non-profit organization that promotes computer and Internet literacy. The program is youth-run, with adult mentoring. All participants receive instruction for free.
Governance
The students have their own operating board of directors to plan strategy, develop operational plans, write grant proposals, and organize their training efforts. The students are assisted by a small volunteer adult member board to sign and authorize contracts.
The honorary co-chairpersons are Senator Evan Bayh and Senator Richard Lugar. Dr. Suellen Reed, Superintendent of the Indiana Department of Education, also serves on the honorary board. Other members of the board include Vice President Mike Pence, Senator Joe Donnelly, Congresswoman Susan Brooks, past Congressman Dan Burton, Congressman Andre Carson, past Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard, Fort Wayne Mayor Tom Henry, past USIIA president Dave McClure, past Fort Wayne Mayor Graham Richard, and past Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett.
Awards and recognition
In 2005, the student-volunteers lobbied members of the Indiana General Assembly, resulting in the passage of House Concurrent Resolution 85, honoring the program. The group was also recognized with presentations from former U.S. President Bill Clinton, former United States Secretary of State Colin Powell, former Senator Robert Dole and President George W. Bush in a White House ceremony. In 2006, Net Literacy received the Mother Teresa Kindness Award from the National Caring Institute and was recognized as the “Citizen of the Year” by Topics and several other Gannett Company newspapers.
The group has been endorsed by or partnered with over 400 organizations, including the Techpoint Foundation, the Indiana Recycling Coalition, the US Internet Industry Association, the AARP, the Urban League, the Indiana Association of Student Councils, Purdue University, the Verizon Foundation, the Lilly Endowment, the United Way of America, Bright House Networks, the Corporation for Education Technology, the Indiana Department of Education, and numerous school districts.
Digital inclusion
Net Literacy’s programs are independently beginning to be developed by students in the U.S. and abroad. The US Internet Industry Association submitted a filing to the U.S. Federal Communications Commission naming Net Literacy’s model as their preferred approach to reducing the digital divide in the United States. Net Literacy was selected by the European Union Study on Digital Inclusion as one of the 91 most promising good practice initiatives based upon an investigation of 32 countries including the EU Member States, the United States, Norway, Iceland, Canada, and India. Microsoft's publication Innovating for inclusion: A Digital Inclusion guide for those leading the way, cites Net Literacy as one of the best of class digital inclusions examples. Other organizations and consortiums, including the US Broadband Coalition with 17 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillar%20Aarelaid | Hillar Aarelaid (born 31 December 1967) is the founder and first CEO for Estonia's Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-EE). He was the Director General of the Estonian Data Protection Inspectorate from 1999 to 2003.
Aarelaid was one of the central officials in charge of responding to the computer attacks on Estonia after the Bronze Soldier of Tallinn controversy. American expert Bill Woodcock and other observers praised Aarelaid's calm professionalism displayed during the attacks.
References
Living people
1967 births
Chief executives of computer security organizations
Recipients of the Order of the White Star, 5th Class
Estonian computer scientists |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fault-tolerant%20messaging | Fault Tolerant Messaging in the context of computer systems and networks, refers to a design approach and set of techniques aimed at ensuring reliable and continuous communication between components or nodes even in the presence of errors or failures. This concept is especially critical in distributed systems, where components may be geographically dispersed and interconnected through networks, making them susceptible to various potential points of failure.
The primary objective of fault-tolerant messaging is to maintain the integrity and availability of information exchange among system components, even when some components or communication channels encounter disruptions or errors. These errors may arise from hardware failures, network outages, software bugs, or other unexpected events.
Key characteristics and mechanisms commonly employed in fault-tolerant messaging include:
Redundancy: One of the fundamental principles of fault tolerance is redundancy, which involves duplicating critical components or data to create backup copies. Redundant systems can seamlessly take over the responsibilities of failed components, ensuring continuous operation and mitigating the impact of failures.
Error Detection and Correction: Fault-tolerant messaging systems often incorporate mechanisms to detect errors, such as checksums or error-detection codes, enabling them to identify corrupted or incomplete data. Moreover, error correction techniques like Forward Error Correction (FEC) may be utilized to reconstruct missing or damaged data.
Message Acknowledgment and Retransmission: To ensure the reliable delivery of messages, fault-tolerant messaging protocols often include acknowledgment mechanisms. When a sender transmits a message, the receiver acknowledges its receipt, and if no acknowledgment is received, the sender may retransmit the message.
Timeouts and Heartbeats: Timeout mechanisms are used to detect unresponsive or stalled communication channels. If a component does not receive a response within a specified time frame, it may trigger appropriate actions, such as retrying the communication or activating failover procedures. Heartbeats, or periodic status messages, are often employed to indicate that a component is still operational.
Error Recovery and Fault Isolation: Fault-tolerant messaging systems implement procedures to recover from errors gracefully. This may involve reconfiguring the system to bypass failed components, isolating faults, or initiating self-repair processes.
Load Balancing: In distributed systems, load balancing techniques distribute the workload across multiple components to avoid overburdening any single node and reduce the risk of individual component failures affecting the entire system.
Consistency and Replication: In replicated environments, maintaining data consistency across multiple copies is essential. Techniques like two-phase commit and quorum-based approaches help ensure consistency in distributed systems.
Sever |
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