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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InformaCast | InformaCast is a proprietary Voice over IP network protocol for live audio paging. The protocol allows endpoints (such as public address speakers) to autonomously announce their presence and capabilities (such as recording or GPIO) and configure themselves to play audio broadcasts. InformaCast was originally developed by Berbee and later spun off into a separate company as Singlewire Software.
The protocol is built largely on standard technologies including SLP for locating a configuration server, TFTP for obtaining configuration data, HTTP and XML for registering devices and transmitting commands, and multicast RTP for audio playback and recording.
Further reading
Public Safety Summer Updates (Daily Gazette, Swarthmore College)
Kenosha Unified deploys $1.5 million security upgrade (Kenosha News)
VoIP companies of the United States
VoIP software |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud%20mining | Cloud mining is the process of cryptocurrency mining utilizing a remote data center with shared processing power.
This type of cloud mining enables users to mine bitcoins or alternative cryptocurrencies without managing the hardware. The mining rigs are housed and maintained in a facility owned by mining company and the customer simply needs to register and purchase mining contracts or shares. Since cloud mining is provided as a service, there is generally some cost and this can result in lower returns for the miner.
Types of hosting
Users of hosted mining equipment can either lease a physical mining server or a virtual private server and install mining software on the machine. Instead of leasing a dedicated server, some services offer hashing power hosted in data centers for sale denominated in Gigahash/seconds (GH/s); users either select a desired amount of hashing power and a period for the contract or in some cases can trade their hashing power.
See also
Mining pool
References
External links
Bitcoin
Cryptocurrencies |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datanglong | Datanglong is an extinct genus of theropod belonging to either Carcharodontosauria or Megaraptora. It existed during the Early Cretaceous (Barremian-Albian) in what is now southeastern China.
Discovery and naming
In 2011, staff of the Geological Survey Research Institute at the village of Nazao, twenty kilometers southwest of the town of Datang, near Nanning in Guangxi, discovered the remains of a large theropod new to science. The dinosaur was named and described in 2014 as Datanglong guangxiensis, by Mo Jinyou, Zhou Fusheng, Li Guangning, Hunag Zhen and Cao Chenyun. The genus name combines a reference to the Datang basin with the Chinese word long, "dragon". The specific name refers to the province of Guangxi.
Datanglong guangxiensis is known from one specimen, holotype GMG 00001, which encompasses vertebrae and hip bones. There is a series of vertebrae that begins with the last dorsal (back) vertebra (according to the descriptors the fourteenth), continues over the five sacral vertebrae, and ends with the second tail vertebra. The sacrum is attached to a left ilium with the upper parts of the left pubic bone and the left ischium, and one piece of the right ilium. The bones were found in a layer of the Xinlong Formation, which was deposited sometime during the Early Cretaceous.
Description
Datanglong is a large predatory theropod with a length of roughly . The specimen has a preserved length of about .
Distinguishing features
The describing authors determined some distinguishing characteristics. The last dorsal vertebra has a pleurocoel, or pneumatic cavity, that is bounded by an enlarged posterior ridge between the diapophysis and the vertebral body, by the posterior ridge between the parapophysis and the vertebral body; and by the vertebral body itself. The rear dorsal vertebra has a well-developed horizontal ridge between the prezygapophysis and the parapophysis. The last dorsal vertebra has a parapophysis that protrudes more laterally than the diapophysis. The groove in the underside of the rear blade of the ilium, serving as an attachment to the musculus caudofemoralis brevis, is shallow and the "brevis shelf", the inner surface of the medial blade wall uncovered by it, is short and shaped like a ridge. The pubic peduncle of the ilium, to which the pubic bone is attached, at the rear side transversely expands to below.
Skeleton
The last dorsal vertebra resembles those of the Ceratosauria in that the parapophysis, the lower rib joint process, extends beyond the diapophysis, the upper rib joint process. The vertebra is also clearly pneumatised but the succeeding sacral vertebrae of the sacrum are not. The first tail vertebra has a depression at the level of the probable ridge between the prezygapophysis and the parapophysis. This vertebra also has a straight chevron. The spinous processes of the tail vertebrae are broken but the remaining pieces are fairly long and expand upwards.
The upper profile of the ilium is unknown, due to da |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Machine%20%28computer%20architecture%29 | The Machine is the name of an experimental computer made by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. It was created as part of a research project to develop a new type of computer architecture for servers. The design focused on a “memory centric computing” architecture, where NVRAM replaced traditional DRAM and disks in the memory hierarchy. The NVRAM was byte addressable and could be accessed from any CPU via a photonic interconnect. The aim of the project was to build and evaluate this new design.
Hardware overview
The Machine was a computer cluster with many individual nodes connected over a memory fabric. The fabric interconnect used VCSEL-based silicon photonics with a custom chip called the X1. Access to memory is non-uniform and may include multiple hops. The Machine was envisioned to be a rack-scale computer initially with 80 processors and 320 TB of fabric attached memory, with potential for scaling to more enclosures up to 32 ZB. The fabric attached memory is not cache coherent and requires software to be aware of this property. Since traditional locks need cache coherency, hardware was added to the bridges to do atomic operations at that level. Each node also has a limited amount of local private cache-coherent memory (256 GB). Storage and compute on each node had completely separate power domains.
The whole fabric attached memory of The Machine is too large to be mapped into a processor's virtual address space (which was 48-bits wide). A way is needed to map windows of the fabric attached memory into processor memory. Therefore, communication between each node SoC and the memory pool goes through an FPGA-based “Z-bridge” component that manages memory mapping of the local SoC to the fabric attached memory. The Z-bridge deals with two different kinds of addresses: 53-bit logical Z addresses and 75-bit Z addresses, which allows addressing 8PB and 32ZB respectively. Each Z-bridge also contained a firewall to enforce access control. The interconnect protocol was developed in-house and known as Next Generation Memory Interconnect (NGMI). This protocol evolved into the open Gen-Z standard. The Z-bridge connects to the SoC using PCIe, avoiding major software changes.
A half rack prototype of the machine was unveiled at HPE Discover in London in 2016. Each node contained ARMv8-A based Broadcom/Cavium ThunderX2 SoCs. In total there were 40 32-core SoCs. Due to unavailability of adequate memristor-based NVRAM or phase-change memory, the prototype used 160 TB of battery-backed DRAM. Despite this setback, software architect Keith Packard said this "can be used to prove the other parts of the design before switching". According to The Register, HPE's partnership with SK Hynix to develop memristor-based NVRAM ran into funding and directional problems and they were working with Sandisk on Resistive RAM (ReRAM) for The Machine. According to The Next Platform, HPE considered switching to Intel Optane DIMMs "when production quantities of are available on the mar |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Gerhards | Rainer Gerhards (born March 11, 1967) is a German software engineer, network engineer, and protocol designer best known for his Computer data logging work including Rsyslog and Reliable Event Logging Protocol. He began developing Rsyslog in 2004, to forward log messages in an Internet Protocol Network from UNIX and Unix-like computer systems. In 1988, Gerhards founded the company RG Informationssysteme, which was later rebranded as Adiscon GmbH in 1997.
Life and career
Gerhards was born in Geilenkirchen, Germany. In 1983 he started professional computing on Univac 1100 mainframes. He was appointed as the head of data center of Dörries GmbH (member of Voith group) where he introduced a company-wide PC network and was among the first in Germany to utilize Windows in larger-scale environments. In 1996, he started work on Computer data logging, and developing network and protocol software based on it.
Protocol Design
Gerhards focused on the IETF syslog standardization and authored four RFCs on syslog. He wrote the base RFC 5424, which describes the syslog protocol architecture and stack. As a board member of Mitre's CEE effort, he worked on standardizing event expression formats and providing interoperability between different logging systems.
He used his software projects as testbeds for IETF standardization including rsyslog for the development of and . He implemented , the syslog over protocol. Later, Gerhards designed the Reliable Event Logging Protocol, and its predecessor Simple Event Transport Protocol (SETP).
Open Source Projects
In 2004, he started working on rsyslog project and later on other open source logging projects, including Project Lumberjack, Adiscon LogAnalyzer, liblogging, and librelp on Linux system logging infrastructure. From 1988, he had started working on the open source projects during his early career.
He wrote a library for portable graphics as well as a portable data exchange tool (cugcpio) and released it as public domain software. This code was distributed on Diskette by the C User's Group.
Closed Source Projects
In 1996, Gerhards wrote the first syslog server for Windows, that was launched by his company, Adiscon. In 1997 he wrote the first ever Windows Event Log to syslog forwarding tool and invented this class of software. The tool EventReporter never made a prominent share in the market, but was a base for Gerhards and other developers to create similar tools. While developing this tool further, Gerhards designed a forwarding tool for Microsoft Internet Information Server log files, based on a paper by him and Dr. Tina Bird.
References
External links
Personal Blog
German computer scientists
1967 births
Living people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cancer%20Genome%20Anatomy%20Project | The Cancer Genome Anatomy Project (CGAP), created by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in 1997 and introduced by Al Gore, is an online database on normal, pre-cancerous and cancerous genomes. It also provides tools for viewing and analysis of the data, allowing for identification of genes involved in various aspects of tumor progression. The goal of CGAP is to characterize cancer at a molecular level by providing a platform with readily accessible updated data and a set of tools such that researchers can easily relate their findings to existing knowledge. There is also a focus on development of software tools that improve the usage of large and complex datasets. The project is directed by Daniela S. Gerhard, and includes sub-projects or initiatives, with notable ones including the Cancer Chromosome Aberration Project (CCAP) and the Genetic Annotation Initiative (GAI). CGAP contributes to many databases and organisations such as the NCBI contribute to CGAP's databases.
The eventual outcomes of CGAP include establishing a correlation between a particular cancer's progression with its therapeutic outcome, improved evaluation of treatment and development of novel techniques for prevention, detection and treatment. This is achieved by characterisation of biological tissue mRNA products.
Research
Background
The fundamental cause of cancer is the inability for a cell to regulate its gene expression. To characterise a specific type of cancer, the proteins that are produced from the altered gene expression or the mRNA precursor to the protein can be examined. CGAP works to associate a particular cell's expression profile, molecular signature or transcriptome, which is essentially the cell's fingerprint, with the cell's phenotype. Therefore, expression profiles exist with consideration to cancer type and stage of progression.
Sequencing
CGAP's initial goal was to establish a Tumor Gene Index (TGI) to store the expression profiles. This would have contributions to both new and existing databases. This contributed to two types of libraries, the and later . This was performed in a series of steps:
Cell contents are washed over plates with poly T sequences. This will bind Poly-A tails that exist only on mRNA molecules, therefore selectively keeping mRNA.
The isolated mRNA is processed into a cDNA transcript through reverse transcription and DNA polymerisation reactions.
The resulting double stranded DNA is then incorporated into E.coli plasmids. Each bacterium now contains one unique cDNA and is replicated to produce clones with the same genetic information. This is termed a cDNA library.
The library can then sequenced by high-throughput sequencing techniques. This can characterise both the different genes expressed by the original cell and the amount of expression of each gene.
The TGI focused on prostate, breast, ovarian, lung and colon cancers at first, and CGAP extended to other cancers in its research.
Practically, issues arose which CGAP acc |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big%20Big%20Channel | Big Big Channel is an online video platform operated by TVB, officially launched in July 2017. It was formerly TVB Network Vision (previously TVB Pay Vision) and was a satellite pay-television platform. The company was renamed Big Big Channel Limited on 23 May 2017, and the satellite pay-TV platform ceased operation on 1 June 2017. When the closure of the satellite pay-TV platform was announced in January 2017, online piracy and internet television were cited as some of the reasons.
The online platform targets younger viewers, and offers fans direct interaction with artists.
History
TVB has noticed that the popularity of the Internet and mobile phones has changed the viewing habits of a new generation of viewers. With the rise of social networking platforms, artists (especially non-first- and second-line artists) need to gain more exposure, so they are keen on social platforms such as Facebook and Instagram and act as Youtubers. By advertising themselves on these platforms, individual artists become more role-oriented and opinion leaders, and even run product endorsements and online shopping to earn extra money. Therefore, TVB deliberately explored this section, allowing its artists to directly contact fans on this platform.
Big Big Channel officially launched its Android and iOS app on June 23, 2017, after a month of testing.
At present, the main layout of Big Big Channel is divided into nine categories: the most HIT, live, artists, talents, cooking shows, foraging, dressing, parenting and post-natal. In addition, the platform also has a "currency" system. Internet users can purchase virtual tokens for the purchase of virtual treasures for artists. However, some artists still do not know whether the proceeds are all owned by themselves or need to be divided into TVB. In addition, TVB will also arrange some series to be exclusively broadcast on this platform.
On May 7, 2018, their official online store, Big Big Shop, was launched.
Controversy
Some people think that it is profitable to see social media on TV, and even the online rate is not missed. Individual TVB artists who promote on social media may need to reduce the exposure of other online platforms and create exclusive content for Big Big Channel.
On June 1, 2018, the Communications Authority announced that TVB indirectly promoted Big Big Channel in five programs to mix programing with advertisements; the Bureau received 37 complaints. The Communications Authority finally decided to impose a fine of HK$300,000 on TVB for the first four of the five complaints, and issued a serious warning to the TV for one of the five programs.
And because the channel Jade broadcast on Broadband TV showed one of the five complaints on the same day, the Communications Authority decided to advise Now Broadband TV.
References
External links
Hong Kong websites
Internet properties established in 2017
Streaming television
Video on demand services |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellenic%20Electricity%20Distribution%20Network%20Operator | The Hellenic Electricity Distribution Network Operator ( was formed by the separation of the Distribution Department of Greece's Public Power Corporation in order to comply with the 2009/72/EC EU Directive relative to the electricity market organization. The mission of this company is to undertake the tasks of the Distribution Network Operator of Greece.
It is a 100% subsidiary of PPC, however, it is independent in operation and management, retaining all the independence requirements that are incorporated within the above mentioned legislative framework.
The electricity distribution network of Greece consists of:
111,130 km of Medium Voltage Network (data of year 2015).
125,160 km of Low Voltage Network (data of year 2015).
See also
Energy in Greece
References
External links
Electric power companies of Greece
Electric power distribution network operators |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonderland%20%28season%202%29 | The second season of the Australian drama television series Wonderland, began airing on 15 October 2014 on Network Ten and will conclude on 19 November 2014. The season airs on Wednesdays at 8:30pm.
Production
On 22 January 2014, it was announced that Network Ten had ordered another 22 episodes of Wonderland to air in 2014 and 2015.
Rick Maier, the head of Drama at Ten stated, "All power to the cast and crew who delivered such a fun show for us last year. We are looking forward to more stories of love, lust and intrigue from the busiest and most romantic block of flats in the country." Filming for the second season began in March 2014.
Of the second season, Jo Porter, the director of Drama at Fremantle Media stated, "We will be building on the strengths of the warmth, romance and humour of our Wonderland residents. In season two viewers will share unexpected twists and turns, fast-paced storylines and dramatic cliff hangers that will test all our characters. We are looking forward to viewers getting to know Australia's favourite flatmates even better as they face love affairs, break-ups and revelations of deep secrets within the Wonderland building. We all can't wait to get started."
Plot
Set in an apartment building on the doorstep of one of Australia's most beautiful beaches, Wonderland is a warm, light-hearted and engaging relationship drama revolving around four very different couples as they navigate the pitfalls of love, meet the challenges life presents head on, and pursue their dreams.
With an idyllic beachside as the backdrop, the residents of Wonderland show that holding down a dream relationship, an attractive career and maintaining solid friendships is sometimes anything other than plain sailing.
Cast
Main cast
Anna Bamford as Miranda Beaumont
Michael Dorman as Tom Wilcox
Emma Lung as Collette Riger
Tracy Mann as Maggie Wilcox
Glenn McMillan as Carlos Dos Santos
Ben Mingay as Rob Duffy
Tim Ross as Steve Beaumont
Brooke Satchwell as Grace Barnes
Jessica Tovey as Dani Varvaris
Recurring cast
Les Hill as Max Saliba (9 episodes)
Ewen Leslie as Nick Deakin (8 episodes)
Martin Sacks as Callan Beaumont (7 episodes)
Simone Kessell as Sasha Clarke (7 episodes)
Michael Booth as Harry Hewitt (6 episodes)
Elise Jansen as Ava McGuire (5 episodes)
Peter Phelps as Warwick Wilcox (4 episodes)
Maggie Dence as Ruth MacPherson (2 episodes)
Roy Billing as Peter Varvaris (2 episodes)
Joy Smithers as Felicity Philips (2 episodes)
Guest cast
Heloisa McMillan as Mama (2 episodes)
Claire Lovering as Rebecca Morris (2 episode)
Sandy Winton as Liam (2 episodes)
Helen Dallimore as Bianca Deakin (1 episode)
Lydia Sarks as Leigh Burrows (1 episode)
Renee Lim as Song Luu (1 episode)
Daniel Krige as Alex (1 episode)
Mirko Grillini as Trent Morris (1 episode)
Christie Whelan Browne as Kristen (1 episode)
Casting
Former Rescue Special Ops actor, Les Hill and former Blue Heelers actor, Martin Sacks both joined the supporting |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICL%20Fellows | The ICL Fellows scheme celebrated the highest levels of pioneering achievement in the field of computing at International Computers Limited, a British IT company.
ICL Fellows were appointed on the basis of their technical excellence and peer recognition in order to develop technical leadership across the company and to represent it externally. ICL Fellows also acted as technical advisers to senior company management.
History of the ICL Fellowship
Robb Wilmot – the then managing director of ICL – appointed Professor Brian Warboys, the chief designer of ICL’s VME mainframe operating system and later Professor of Software Engineering at the University of Manchester as an "ICL Fellow" in 1984. The role was to share good engineering practice across the company.
The ICL Fellows scheme was formally initiated in 1990 by Sir Peter Bonfield who was Chairman and CEO of ICL plc at that time. Five more technical leaders with a range of expertise were appointed. At this point, Professor Brian Warboys became the Senior ICL Fellow. Further appointments were made throughout the 1990s.
In 1993, The ICL Fellows introduced the ICL Distinguished Engineer Scheme in order to build an engineering network across the company that would remain resilient to organisational change. They also introduced an annual engineering conference that ran until 2001.
Following ICL’s acquisition by and rebranding to Fujitsu in the early 2000s, support for the Fellowship scheme became limited. However, in 2013 the scheme was re-launched as the Fujitsu Fellowship, with the same ambition to recognise and celebrate outstanding achievement and technical excellence. Three prior ICL Fellows – Nig Greenaway, Nic Holt and Jeff Parker – were appointed inaugural Fujitsu Fellows. The revived programme also includes recognition & development of Distinguished Engineers, and the return of an annual engineering conference.
Notable ICL Fellows
Notable fellows include Professor Brian Warboys (1984), Michael Kay (1990), Professor Steve Molyneux (1996) who was the first non-employee Fellow, and Ron Brunt (1999) who was the first ICL Fellow appointed in the United States.
References
External links
"Bits & Bytes, ICL Pensioners Newsletter", Spring 1998, p2.
1990 establishments in the United Kingdom
Awards established in 1990
International Computers Limited
British science and technology awards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikki%20Fox | Nikki Fox (born 3 March 1980) is an English broadcaster, presenter and documentary maker. She is a Sony Award-winning journalist who presents for television and network radio. Fox appeared on various TV and Radio shows including Watchdog, The One Show, How to Look Good Naked, and Rip-Off Britain. She is one of the first female disabled TV presenters in the world and has been voted one of the most influential disabled people in the UK.
Fox was born with muscular dystrophy and has used a wheelchair for the majority of her adult life.
Career
Nikki Fox has a B.A. (Hons) in music from Brunel University and has studied theory, piano, opera, composition, analysis and criticism of 20th-century music.
She began working at BBC Radio Cambridgeshire on the Peterborough Breakfast Show, presenting Fox's What's On Guide, as well as competitions and she then won a place on a Channel 4 Disability Researcher Training Scheme and started working at Maverick TV, Channel 4 and ITV. In 2010, Nikki was a researcher and co-presenter on Gok Wan's How to Look Good Naked with a Disability, a Channel 4 show.
She has been nominated for Best On Screen talent at the Cultural Diversity Network Awards in 2010. Fox researched and presented a major documentary for BBC Radio 5 Live, Beyond Disability: The Adventures of a Blue Badger where she set out to discover what it is really like being disabled in the UK in 2012. It won a Sony accolade and the 2012 New York Festivals Radio Programme and Promotion Awards.
In June 2014 she was appointed disability news correspondent for the BBC. Fox said: "I am beyond excited to be joining BBC News and am thrilled to be able to work as part of a specialist team of journalists, dedicated to the reporting of disability issues for a national audience, in a new and fresh way."
In 2015 she won a New York Festival Radio Award for Learning to Walk Again, a radio programme she presented for BBC Radio 5 Live.
In 2016, she was awarded as Journalist of the Year at the 2016 European Diversity Awards. Also that year she joined the BBC Watchdog team as a presenter and appeared on an episode of BBC's Celebrity Mastermind.
References
Living people
English television presenters
English journalists
People with muscular dystrophy
BBC newsreaders and journalists
BBC World News
British journalists
British television journalists
Alumni of Brunel University London
1980 births
People from Blackpool
Television presenters with disabilities
English people with disabilities |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsters%20Among%20Us | "Monsters Among Us" is the premiere episode of the fourth season of the anthology television series American Horror Story, which premiered on October 8, 2014 on the cable network FX. It was co-written by creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk and directed by Murphy.
The episode introduces Elsa Mars who runs one of the last remaining freak shows in the United States in the hamlet of Jupiter, Florida, and her recruitment of conjoined twins Bette and Dot Tattler. It also introduces the rest of her traveling performers, and the murderous clown known as Twisty. This is the first episode of American Horror Story to break the anthology format, which includes the character Pepper (Naomi Grossman), who was previously featured in American Horror Story: Asylum (2012-2013).
"Monsters Among Us" is the second longest episode in the series' history, at just over one hour without commercials. It received critical acclaim and positive reviews from critics who praised the characters, acting, setting, its horror elements, and the story's tone. Critics noted the character buildup, particularly that of the Tattler Twins and Elsa Mars, and Elsa Mars' performance of David Bowie's "Life on Mars?" as the episode's highlights. The episode obtained the highest ratings of any episode in the series, and is currently the most-watched American Horror Story episode.
Jyoti Amge, currently the world's smallest living woman, has her American TV debut in this episode.
Plot
In Jupiter, Florida, in 1952, conjoined twins Bette and Dot Tattler are taken to a hospital after a milkman finds them injured in their home, near their mother, who was brutally murdered. News spread of the twins' existence, leading local carnival freak show owner Elsa Mars attempting to recruit them to join her troupe. Although skeptical, the twins agree. Elsa's troupe of freaks include Jimmy Darling, a boy with syndactyly, and his mother Ethel Darling, a bearded lady.
Twisty, a killer clown, murders a teenage girl's boyfriend and a young boy's parents and imprisons the young boy and teen girl in an old bus. Jimmy kills a detective after he threatens to arrest the twins for their mother's murder. Elsa's group puts on their first show with Bette and Dot as "The Siamese Twins," there are only two attendees, a wealthy but shallow socialite Gloria Mott and her dangerously disturbed son Dandy. Dandy bargains with Elsa to buy Bette and Dot, but the twins refuse. Elsa later tells Ethel that she brought the twins aboard to get more attention for the show and boost her fame. As Elsa prepares for bed, it's revealed that she is an amputee, legless below the knees.
Reception
"Monsters Among Us" was met with critical acclaim, and received praise from numerous television critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes holds an approval rating of 92% based on 12 reviews. The critical consensus reads: "Freak Show sets the template for a compelling character-driven narrative with thoughtful pacing and creepy scares." L |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massacres%20and%20Matinees | "Massacres and Matinees" is the second episode of the fourth season of the anthology television series American Horror Story, which premiered on October 15, 2014 on the cable network FX. In this episode, a curfew is placed on Jupiter, as the police investigate the freak show when they suspect that a police was murdered on the premises. It was written by Tim Minear and directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon.
Plot
The police arrive at the freak show to investigate the detective's disappearance and inform Elsa that a curfew is now in place in Jupiter following the string of murders. Meanwhile, the carnival strong man Dell Toledo, Jimmy's father, and his three-breasted hermaphrodite wife Desiree arrive and ask Elsa for a job. Elsa makes Dell head of security but soon realizes her mistake after Dell schedules a matinee against Elsa's orders, attacks Jimmy, and frames another performer, Meep, for the murder of the detective after Jimmy tried to frame Dell. Meep is arrested by the police and murdered by inmates in jail. His body is returned to the freak show, where the fellow freaks gather around and mourn.
Dandy asks Jimmy if he can join the freak show, as he dreams of being on stage, but after Dandy accidentally insults Jimmy, he is rebuffed and sent away. After falling into a fit of rage, Dandy returns home to find that his mother, Gloria, has hired Twisty the Clown to cheer him up. However, Twisty storms off after Dandy tries to look inside his clown bag. Dandy follows Twisty back to his trailer where the two children Twisty is holding hostage attempt an escape but are recaptured by Twisty and Dandy.
Reception
Reviews
"Massacres and Matinees" has received positive reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the episode has an approval rating of 85% based on 13 reviews. The critical consensus reads: "The dark themes of "Massacres and Matinees" are reminiscent of themes of season two, only more vibrant this time around."
Erik Adams of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B rating, stating: "Following the dull, clean monochrome of Coven, the popping colors and three-ring grime of Freak Show is refreshing." Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a rating of 8.0/10, writing: "The clown is still ghastly, Dandy is still spoiled and sinister, and the introduction of Dell now brings a new carny power struggle to the show. All steps in the right direction." Numerous other critics praised the introduction of Michael Chiklis and Angela Bassett's characters, as well as the Clown's and Dandy's storylines.
Ratings
"Massacres and Matinees" was watched by 4.53 million viewers with a 2.3 18–49 ratings share, down 0.8 from the previous episode. It was the highest rated cable show of the night.
References
2014 American television episodes
American Horror Story: Freak Show episodes
Television episodes written by Tim Minear |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaroslavtsev | Yaroslavtsev is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Grigory Yaroslavtsev (born 1987), Russian computer scientist
Yevgeni Yaroslavtsev (born 1982), Russian footballer
See also
Yaroslavtsev Log
Russian-language surnames |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yonezawa%20%28surname%29 | Yonezawa (written: or ) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Akinori Yonezawa (born 1947), Japanese computer scientist
, Japanese footballer
Honobu Yonezawa (born 1978), Japanese writer
, Japanese voice actress and singer
Takeshi Yonezawa (born 1969), Japanese footballer
, Japanese tennis player
Yoshihiro Yonezawa (1953-2006), Japanese manga author
Japanese-language surnames |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPhone%20OS%201 | iPhone OS 1 (officially iPhone Software) is the first major release of iOS, Apple's mobile operating system. No official name was given on its initial release; Apple marketing literature simply stated that the iPhone runs a version of Apple's desktop operating system, OS X (later known as macOS). On March 6, 2008, with the release of the iPhone software development kit (iPhone SDK), Apple named it iPhone OS. It was succeeded by iPhone OS 2 on July 11, 2008.
History
Development history
Development of iPhone OS 1 and the first generation of iPhone Hardware was a combined effort. Only employees from within Apple were allowed to be a part of the iPhone development team. It was a completely secret project and at the time when the team was selected, even they weren't told what they were going to be working on. There were two teams inside Apple that worked on creating the iPhone: one worked on converting the iPod into a phone and the other worked on compressing the Mac OS X to make it work on smaller devices like phones. A team led by Jon Rubinstein worked on developing a lightweight Linux-based version, commonly referred to as Acorn, while another team led by Scott Forstall worked on developing a more compressed and streamlined version of the Mac OS X, codenamed purple, to run on the ARM chipset. Tony Fadell, who then led the iPhone team said "It was a competing set of ideas, not teams, and we were all working on it" There were 16 to 17 different concepts. Many people on the team were still hung up on the idea that everyone would want to type on a hardware keyboard, not glass. The idea of introducing a complete touch screen was very novel to everyone. Many user interfaces were prototyped, including the multi-touch click-wheel. Although many thought it was a waste of time, Apple CEO Steve Jobs insisted on prototyping all concepts/ideas before the Mac OS-X-based version of the operating system was selected.
Introduction and initial release
iPhone OS 1 was introduced at the Macworld Conference & Expo at the Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco, in a keynote address by Steve Jobs on January 9, 2007, along with the original iPhone. At the time, Jobs only said the iPhone "runs OS X", and according to Chicago Sun-Times columnist Andy Ihnatko, this was confirmed in official briefings and unofficial conversations.
iPhone OS 1.0 was released alongside the iPhone (1st generation), on June 29, 2007.
Apps
iPhone OS 1 did not have the App Store or a Software Development Kit (SDK) for third-party developers to create native applications. Instead, Apple directed developers to create web apps which could be accessed from Safari.
Supported devices
iPhone (1st generation)
iPod Touch (1st generation)
Version history
References
External links
1
2007 software
Products introduced in 2007
Mobile operating systems
Proprietary operating systems |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPhone%20OS%202 | iPhone OS 2 is the second major release of the iOS mobile operating system developed by Apple Inc., being the successor to iPhone OS 1. It was the first version of iOS to support third party applications via the App Store. iPhone OS 2.2.1 was the final version of iPhone OS 2. It was succeeded by iPhone OS 3 on June 17, 2009.
iPhone OS 2 became available on July 11, 2008 with the release of the iPhone 3G. iPhones and iPod Touches running iPhone OS 1 are upgradable to this version. This version of iOS introduces the App Store, making third-party applications available to the iPhone and iPod Touch. Prior to the public release of iPhone OS 2, Apple held a keynote event to announce the iPhone OS Software Development Kit ("SDK") to developers. Originally it was called 1.2.
Default apps
Text
YouTube
Clock
iTunes
Calendar
Stocks
Calculator
App Store
Photos
Maps
Notes
Videos (iPod Touch exclusive)
Camera
Weather
Settings
Dock
Phone
Mail
Safari
iPod
History
iPhone OS 2 was introduced at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference keynote address on June 9, 2008.
iPhone OS 2 was released on July 11, 2008. It was released along with the iPhone 3G, and ran on the first-generation iPhone as well.
Features
App Store
The most notable feature of iPhone OS 2 was the App Store. Before this feature was introduced, the only way to install custom applications on the device was via jailbreaking, which is strongly discouraged and unsupported by Apple. There were 500 applications available for download at the launch of the App Store, though this amount has grown dramatically since then. Now, the App Store has more than 4 million apps and games as of 2021.
Mail
The Mail app had a makeover, having push-emails that provide an always-on capability. It also supports Microsoft Office attachments, as well as iWork attachments. Other new features including support for BCC, multiple email delete, and the ability to select an outgoing email.
Contacts
The Contacts app now has a new home screen icon that is only available on the iPod Touch. Along with the release is the ability to search contacts without being searched one-by-one, as well as SIM contacts import ability.
Maps
New features were added to the Maps app in the iPhone OS 2.2 software update. Among the features added are the inclusion of Google Street View, directions to public transit and while walking, and the ability to display the address of a dropped pin.
Calculator
When the device is in landscape mode, the calculator app displays a scientific calculator. Also, the app icon is updated.
Settings
Settings now has an ability to turn Wi-Fi back on while in Airplane mode, as well as the ability to turn Location Services on or off.
Reception
Rene Ritchie at iMore said, "Overall, iPhone Firmware 2.0 is a stunning achievement that really puts the iPhone on par with the Apple II and Mac as one of the great revolutions in modern technology. It takes it beyond simple Phone + iPod, or |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPhone%20OS%203 | iPhone OS 3 is the third major release of the iOS mobile operating system developed by Apple Inc., succeeding iPhone OS 2. It was announced on March 17, 2009, and was released on June 17, 2009. It was succeeded by iOS 4 on June 21, 2010, dropping the "iPhone OS" naming convention.
iPhone OS 3 added a system-wide "cut, copy, and paste" feature, allowing users to more easily move content. It also introduced Spotlight, a search indexing feature designed to help users locate specific information on their device, such as contacts, email messages or apps. The home screen was expanded to let users add up to 11 pages, showcasing a total of 180 apps. The Messages app received support for MMS, while the Camera app received support for video recording on the iPhone 3GS, and a new "Voice Memos" app let users record their voice. In-app purchase capability was added to third-party applications as well.
iPhone OS 3 is the last version of iOS that supports the first-generation iPhone and first-generation iPod Touch as its successor, iOS 4, drops support for both models.
Default apps
iTunes
App Store
Text
Calendar
Photos
Camera
YouTube
Stocks
Maps
Weather
Clock
Calculator
Notes
Settings
Default dock
Phone
Mail
Safari
iPod/Music
System features
Cut, copy, or paste
iPhone OS 3 introduced a "cut, copy, and paste" bubble dialog when users press and hold text. The "paste" button would incorporate anything stored in the device's clipboard into the marked area.
Spotlight
Spotlight is a system-wide indexing and search feature, aiming to help users search their device for specific contacts, email messages, calendar appointments, multimedia files, apps and more. It is accessed by swiping to the right from the home screen.
Home screen
iPhone OS 3 expanded the maximum number of pages on the home screen to 11, for a total number of 180 apps.
Find My iPhone
Users with subscriptions to MobileMe were able to remotely track, lock, and erase their iPhones if lost.
App features
Messages
The Messages app received native support for the Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS), allowing users to send and receive messages that also contain pictures, contacts, locations, voice recordings, and video messages.
Camera and Photos
The Camera app introduced video recording for the iPhone 3GS.
The Photos app featured a new copy button and the ability to delete multiple photos at once.
Cost
Upgrading to iPhone OS 3 was free for iPhone. Upgrading to iPhone OS 3 originally cost iPod Touch users $9.95; updating to 3.1.x from 2.x cost only $4.95.
iPhone OS 3 was the last major version of iOS for which there was a charge for iPod Touch users to upgrade. Starting with iOS 4, iOS upgrades became free for all users, including users of the iPod Touch, as the Sarbanes–Oxley Act was revised to allow software upgrades for free with hardware that is not subscription-based.
Supported devices
iPhone
iPhone (1st generation)
iPhone 3G
iPhone 3GS
iPod Touch
iPod Touch (1st |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Golden%20Show | The Golden Show is an Australian television series which aired in 1964 on the Australian Television Network, which later became the Seven Network.
Hosted by Billy Raymond, the daytime series featuring interviews, a talent segment, and an audience sing-along. The series was produced in Sydney.
References
External links
The Golden Show on IMDb
1964 Australian television series debuts
1964 Australian television series endings
Black-and-white Australian television shows
English-language television shows
Seven Network original programming |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superpet | Superpet may refer to:
SuperPET, the Commodore PET model number SP9000 personal computer
Legion of Super-Pets, fictional superhero team composed of pets from the DC Comics universe
DC League of Super-Pets, a 2022 film based on the Legion of Super-Pets
pets of Superman-family of comics with superpowers, see List of Superman supporting characters
"Superpets", a 2008 skit from comedy stop-motion TV series Robot Chicken season 3
"Superpets", a 1977 episode of BBC TV magazine That's Life!
See also
Wonder Pets!, cartoon TV series that airs on Nick Jr.! |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World%20Archery%20Philippines | The World Archery Philippines, Inc. is the national governing body for archery in the Philippines. It is used to be known as the Philippines and Philippine Archers' National Network and Alliance (PANNA). It is accredited by the World Archery Federation which is the governing body for the sport of archery in the world.
Its former president was Federico Moreno, the only son of the late German Moreno and the father of 2014 Youth Olympic Games gold-medalist Luis Gabriel Moreno.
References
External links
Philippine Archers' National Network and Alliance profile at the Philippine Olympic Committee website
Philippines
Archery in the Philippines
Archery |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MBNL | MBNL may refer to:
Proteins
MBNL1
MBNL2
MBNL3
Telecommunications
Mobile Broadband Network Limited |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fate%3A%20The%20Cursed%20King | Fate: The Cursed King is an action role-playing computer game that was developed and published by WildTangent and has been available to play online since 2011. In 2014, it became available for purchase on Steam. The game follows the Fate series (originally started in 2005), and is the final in the series.
Plot
Outside the "Grove" featured in other Fate games, is a land called "Ekbatan". While venturing outside the city seeking adventure, the main character comes across a cave and is drawn inside by a glimmer. Inside, they come across an old chest with writing across it that they cannot read. Opening the chest out of curiosity, they release T'kala, an evil necromantic priest who was executed and sealed in the chest for committing treason against the Cursed King. He proceeds to destroy Ekbatan in an attempt to find and kill the king. Hoping to undo the evil they unleashed, the character sets out to free the king's advisers, find the King, stop T'kala and break the curse.
Gameplay and design
The game is played from a isometric perspective. Players use the mouse to control the character's movements and attacks, while the keyboard is used to control spells, potions, and healing items. Players can use different armour, weapons, potions, and pets in tandem
There are two kinds of quests in the game: the main quest, which tells the main story of the game; and side quests provided to the player by non-player characters (NPCs). Some require you to be a specific level before starting them.
Quests include standard activities such as finding an item or killing other NPCs. Rewards for completing quests include gold, experience points, fame points and other various items that help your character.
Weapons, spells, and equipment
There are a variety of items that your character can receive, win, and/or buy in the game. These weapons include axes, swords, spears, bows, knives, clubs, staffs, polearms, and spells. The player is also able to dual-wield these weapons.
Spells fall into three categories: Attack Magic, Defense Magic, and Charm Magic.
Armour includes helmets, boots, shields, and body armour.
These items can also be upgraded and enchanted.
The game has a variety of other wearable equipment that can enhance the character, such as gloves, belts, rings, necklaces, and earrings. Both weapons and equipment can be obtained by a variety of means. Some items are rewards for quests. Weapons can also be found in dungeons. Items can be purchased and worked on by some of the NPCs throughout the game. In some cases, items can only be utilized when the character is at a certain level.
Pets
Pets are able to aid the character in the journey by fighting alongside them and providing help. They will also pick up and carry items found along the playthrough. Although pets cannot die, their life bar can run out causing the pet to enter a "fleeing" state where they will become ineffective, not providing any aid. The pet can be healed by dropping a healing po |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony%20DSC-QX30 | The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-QX30 is an ultrazoom, mobile device-mountable, lens-style compact camera manufactured by Sony. Announced on September 3, 2014, the QX30 is one of Sony's "Smart Lens" cameras, alongside the QX1, QX10 and QX100, that are designed to be specifically used with a smartphone. It has a 1/2.3 inch backside-illuminated Exmor R™ CMOS sensor with 20.4 effective megapixels, sitting behind an ƒ/3.5 (wide) to ƒ/6.3 (telephoto) Sony G Lens. Its highlight feature is its 30x lossless optical zoom.
Like the other Sony Smart Lens cameras, it is Wi-Fi-controlled using an Android or iOS device though the downloadable Sony Imaging Edge (formerly PlayMemories) Mobile application, utilizing the device's screen as its viewfinder and camera controls, while also serving as additional storage medium via its integrated wireless file transfer feature.
Specifications
Technical specifications
See also
Sony QX series
Sony Cyber-shot
Sony DSC-QX10
Sony DSC-QX100
List of superzoom compact cameras
References
Point-and-shoot cameras
Superzoom cameras
Camera lenses introduced in 2014
DSC-QX30
QX30 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jigsaw%20%28Australian%20game%20show%29 | Jigsaw is an Australian television series that aired 1965 on the Australian Television Network, which later became the Seven Network. Hosted by Billy Raymond, it was a daytime game show aired in a 30-minute time-slot. (Running time excluding commercials is not known. Though a prime-time series of the era could run 24–25 minutes, daytime series tended to run shorter). The series was produced in Sydney. It ran for 24 weeks.
References
External links
Seven Network original programming
1965 Australian television series debuts
1965 Australian television series endings
1960s Australian game shows
Black-and-white Australian television shows
English-language television shows |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterative%20impedance | Iterative impedance is the input impedance of an infinite chain of identical networks. It is related to the image impedance used in filter design, but has a simpler, more straightforward definition.
Definition
Iterative impedance is the input impedance of one port of a two-port network when the other port is connected to an infinite chain of identical networks. Equivalently, iterative impedance is that impedance that when connected to port 2 of a two-port network is equal to the impedance measured at port 1. This can be seen to be equivalent by considering the infinite chain of identical networks connected to port 2 in the first definition. If the original network is removed then port 1 of the second network will present the same iterative impedance as before since port 2 of the second network still has an infinite chain of networks connected to it. Thus the whole infinite chain can be replaced with a single lumped impedance equal to the iterative impedance, which is the condition for the second definition.
In general, the iterative impedance of port 1 is not equal to the iterative impedance of port 2. They will be equal if the network is symmetrical, however physically symmetry is not a necessary condition for the impedances to be equal.
Examples
A simple generic L-circuit is shown in the diagram consisting of a series impedance Z and a shunt admittance Y. The iterative impedance of this network, ZIT, in terms of its output load (also ZIT) is given by,
and solving for ZIT,
Another example is an L-circuit with the components reversed, that is, with the shunt admittance coming first. The analysis of this circuit can be found immediately through duality considerations of the previous example. The iterative admittance, YIT, of this circuit is given by,
where,
The square root term in these expressions cause them to have two solutions. However, only solutions with a positive real part are physically meaningful since passive circuits cannot exhibit negative resistance. This will normally be the positive root.
Relationship to image impedance
Iterative impedance is a similar concept to image impedance. Whereas an iterative impedance is formed by connecting port 2 of the first two-port network to port 1 of the next, an image impedance is formed by connecting port 2 of the first network to port 2 of the next. Port 1 of the second network is connected to port 1 of the third and so on, each subsequent network being reversed so that like ports always face each other.
It is thus no surprise that there is a relationship between iterative impedances and image impedances. In the L-circuit example for iterative impedance, the square-rooted term is equal to the image impedance of a half section. That is, an L-circuit where the component values are halved. Designating this half-section image impedance as ZIM we have for the L-circuit,
The diagrams show this result: an infinite chain of L-sections is identical to an infinite chain of alter |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014%E2%80%9315%20United%20States%20network%20television%20schedule%20%28daytime%29 | The 2014–15 daytime network television schedule for four of the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the weekday daytime hours from September 2014 to August 2015. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, and any series canceled after the 2013–14 season.
Affiliates fill time periods not occupied by network programs with local or syndicated programming. PBS – which offers daytime programming through a children's program block, PBS Kids – is not included, as its member television stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary. Also not included are stations affiliated with Fox (as the network does not air a daytime network schedule or network news), MyNetworkTV (as the programming service also does not offer daytime programs of any kind), and Ion Television (as its schedule is composed mainly of syndicated reruns).
Legend
New series are highlighted in bold.
Schedule
All times correspond to U.S. Eastern and Pacific Time scheduling (except for some live sports or events). Except where affiliates slot certain programs outside their network-dictated timeslots, subtract one hour for Central, Mountain, Alaska, and Hawaii-Aleutian times.
Local schedules may differ, as affiliates have the option to pre-empt or delay network programs. Such scheduling may be limited to preemptions caused by local or national breaking news or weather coverage (which may force stations to tape delay certain programs in overnight timeslots or defer them to a co-operated station or digital subchannel in their regular timeslot) and any major sports events scheduled to air in a weekday timeslot (mainly during major holidays). Stations may air shows at other times at their preference.
Monday-Friday
Saturday
Sunday
By network
ABC
Returning series:
ABC World News Tonight
The Chew
General Hospital
Good Morning America
The View
This Week with George Stephanopoluos
Litton's Weekend Adventure
Jack Hanna's Wild Countdown
Ocean Mysteries with Jeff Corwin
Sea Rescue
The Wildlife Docs
Born to Explore with Richard Wiese
New series:
Litton's Weekend Adventure
Outback Adventures with Tim Faulkner
Not returning from 2013-14
Litton's Weekend Adventure
Expedition Wild (Moved to The CW)
CBS
Returning series:
The Bold and the Beautiful
CBS Evening News
CBS News Sunday Morning
CBS This Morning
Face the Nation
Let's Make a Deal
The Price is Right
The Talk
The Young and the Restless
CBS Dream Team
Lucky Dog
Dr. Chris Pet Vet
Recipe Rehab
All In with Laila Ali
Game Changers with Kevin Frazier
New series:
CBS Dream Team
The Henry Ford's Innovation Nation with Mo Rocca
Not returning from 2013-14
CBS Dream Team
Jamie's 15-Minute Meals
FOX
Returning series
Weekend Marketplace
New series:
Xploration Station
Xploration Awesome Planet
Xploration Outer Space
Xploration Earth 2050
Xploration Animal Science
The CW
Returning series:
The Bill Cunningham Sh |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince%20%28software%29 | Prince (formerly Prince XML) is a computer program that converts XML and HTML documents into PDF files by applying Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Prince is a commercial product, which is free to download and use for non-commercial purposes.
Prince supports all common web standards, including HTML, CSS and JavaScript, through its own code. That is, Prince is not based on a browser engine, but implements its own engine.
Prince can generate accessible PDFs conforming to the PDF/UA profile (ISO 14289, the International Standard for accessible PDF technology) that can be used by people with assistive technologies.
Prince supports many languages, including Thai, Indic scripts (Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, etc.) and right-to-left scripts like Arabic and Hebrew.
Prince is developed by YesLogic, a small company based in Melbourne, Australia. Since 2004, Håkon Wium Lie, the co-creator of CSS, has been chairman of the board.
History
In April 2003, Prince 1.0 was released, with basic support for XHTML, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG), and arbitrary XML. This first version was a command-line program that supported Microsoft Windows and Linux; there was no graphical user interface for Windows yet.
In December 2005, Prince 5.1 passed the Acid2 test from the Web Standards Project. It was the third user agent to pass the test, after Safari and Konqueror.
In June 2012, Prince 8.1 added support for HTML5.
In subsequent releases, CSS support has steadily been extended, both to have comparable support with web browsers (such as Opera and Firefox), and to add support for print-specific features, like page breaks and footnotes.
Prince is available for several platforms, including Windows, Linux, macOS, FreeBSD, and Solaris. Wrappers are available for Java SE, .NET Framework, ActiveX, PHP, Ruby on Rails and Node.js to help integrate Prince into websites and apps.
Technical summary
Prince was developed primarily using the Mercury functional logic programming language.
The main driving force behind Prince is the standard CSS3-paged that integrates paged media (including PDF) layout specification with any other W3C technologies: HTML4, HTML5, XHTML, and "free XML", working or not with JavaScript.
More experimental facilities for print needs (for example, footnote policies, specifying the size of the bleed area of the page when crop marks are enabled, creating running page headers and footers and similar) are being standardized in the Generated Content for Paged Media (css-gcpm-3) CSS module.
Prince has good support for CSS, with a print focus: better than web browsers for print-specific CSS modules such as the aforementioned css-page-3 and css-gcpm-3; while support other modules is good relative to other user agents not using a web browser engine but not always as well as web browsers: for example, CSS Flexible Box Model was added in Prince 12 (2018), whereas CSS Grid Layout (css-grid-1) is not yet present in Prince 14.
Prince suppor |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logic%20for%20Programming%2C%20Artificial%20Intelligence%20and%20Reasoning | The International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning (LPAR) is an academic conference aiming at discussing cutting-edge results in the fields of automated reasoning, computational logic, programming languages and their applications.
It grew out of the Russian Conferences on Logic Programming 1990 and 1991; the idea to organize the conference was largely due to Robert Kowalski who proposed to create the Russian Association for Logic Programming. The conference was renamed in 1992 to "Logic Programming and Automated Reasoning" (LPAR) to reflect its extended scope, due to considerable interest in automated reasoning in the Former Soviet Union. After a break from 1995 to 1998, LPAR continued in 1999 under the name "Logic for Programming and Automated Reasoning", to indicate an extension of its logic part beyond logic programming. In 2001, the name changed to "Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning".
The LPAR steering committee consists of Matthias Baaz, Chris Fermüller, Geoff Sutcliffe, and Andrei Voronkov (chair).
Following its slogan "To boldly go where no reasonable conference has gone before", LPAR typically takes place in locations that are unusual or difficult to reach.
Overview of conference events
References
External links
— accounting for 1st to 15th conference (1990–1994, 1999–2008)
17th LPAR's home page (2010)
18th LPAR's home page (2012)
19th LPAR's home page (2013)
LPAR page at DBLP
Theoretical computer science conferences
Logic conferences |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony%20DSC | Sony DSC may refer to:
Sony Cyber-shot, family of fixed-lens digital compact cameras by Sony
Sony SmartShot, family of lens-style digital cameras by Sony
SONY DSC, Exif data of some Sony Cyber-shot digital cameras |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalles%20Fraktaler | Kalles Fraktaler is a free Windows-based fractal zoom computer program used for zooming into fractals such as the Mandelbrot set and the Burning Ship fractal at very high speed, utilizing Perturbation and Series Approximation.
Functionality
Kalles Fraktaler focuses on zooming into fractals. This is possible in the included fractal formulas such like the Mandelbrot set, Burning ship or so called "TheRedshiftRider" fractals. Many tweaks can visualize phenomena better or solve glitches concerning the calculation issues. Other functions are color seeds, slopes for showing iteration depths or entering location parameters in the complex plane. The via zooming reached location can be saved as a KFR file. The rendered image can be saved or be a part of a zoom sequence, which can be later used for a fractal zoom video.
Fork
The program got forked to Kalle's Fraktaler 2+ with additional functions. The newest release is 2.15.1.6 from 2020/12/08 (December 12, 2020). The license is AGPLv3+.
Some additional functions are:
Gaussian jitter
New calculation techniques
New fractal formulas
Hybrid formula creator
References
External links
Kalles Fraktaler homepage
Kalles Fraktaler compiled with GMP by Claude Heiland-Allen
Kalles Fraktaler discussion forum
Kalles Fraktaler 2 + GMP discussion forum
Fractal software
Windows software |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CFR%20Class%2047 | The CFR Class 47 is a class of electric locomotives built for the Romanian Railways for use on the Romanian electrified network. They were originally built by Electroputere from 1965 to 1991 and designated as the CFR class 40 or 41. All Class 47 locomotives were modernized by Softronic from 2007. They are operated both by CFR Marfǎ and CFR Cǎlǎtori.
History
The locomotives are essentially a rebuild/modernisation of the CFR Class EA that were built from the mid 1960s to the early 1990s by the Craiova locomotive works. Starting with the mid 1990s, it was decided to rebuild a number of locomotives, a number of them being modernised between 1998 and 2002 by Siemens-Secheron, resulting in CFR Class 45. The project however was stopped and it wasn't until 2006 when PROMAT and Softronic decided to rebuild a number of locomotives for freight use. Starting in 2007, the passenger locomotive modernisations began as well, but only by Softronic. Modernisation continues, but it is uncertain if it will be stopped or continued as only a small number of locomotives have been modernised in the past years.
Operation
As of 2013, there are over 100 Class 47 locomotives currently in service. They are used by both CFR Marfǎ and CFR Călători. They are the most powerful locomotives built in Romania.
Passenger locomotives
ASEA locomotives
Electroputere locomotives
Co′Co′ locomotives
25 kV AC locomotives
Electric locomotives of Romania
Standard gauge locomotives of Romania
Railway locomotives introduced in 2006
Co′Co′ electric locomotives of Europe |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OktoberTrek | OktoberTrek was an American science-fiction convention held from 1990-1992 by Sandy Zier-Teitler in Hunt Valley, Maryland. The convention was fan-run, not-for-profit, and had programming for various topics such as a competitive masquerade, an Art Show, filking, media, gaming, and celebrity guest appearances. The convention was the successor to ClipperCon(1984-1989) and was succeeded by Farpoint(1993–present).
Locations and Dates
*Attendance numbers do not reflect dealers and guests
History
Defunct science fiction conventions in the United States
Recurring events established in 1990
1990 establishments in Maryland
Conventions in Baltimore |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010%20KBS%20Drama%20Awards | The 2010 KBS Drama Awards () is a ceremony honoring the outstanding achievement in television on the Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) network for the year of 2010. It was held on December 31, 2010, and hosted by Choi Soo-jong, Lee Da-hae and Song Joong-ki.
Nominations and winners
(Winners denoted in bold)
References
External links
http://www.kbs.co.kr/drama/2010award/
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene%20co-expression%20network | A gene co-expression network (GCN) is an undirected graph, where each node corresponds to a gene, and a pair of nodes is connected with an edge if there is a significant co-expression relationship between them. Having gene expression profiles of a number of genes for several samples or experimental conditions, a gene co-expression network can be constructed by looking for pairs of genes which show a similar expression pattern across samples, since the transcript levels of two co-expressed genes rise and fall together across samples. Gene co-expression networks are of biological interest since co-expressed genes are controlled by the same transcriptional regulatory program, functionally related, or members of the same pathway or protein complex.
The direction and type of co-expression relationships are not determined in gene co-expression networks; whereas in a gene regulatory network (GRN) a directed edge connects two genes, representing a biochemical process such as a reaction, transformation, interaction, activation or inhibition. Compared to a GRN, a GCN does not attempt to infer the causality relationships between genes and in a GCN the edges represent only a correlation or dependency relationship among genes. Modules or the highly connected subgraphs in gene co-expression networks correspond to clusters of genes that have a similar function or involve in a common biological process which causes many interactions among themselves.
Gene co-expression networks are usually constructed using datasets generated by high-throughput gene expression profiling technologies such as Microarray or RNA-Seq. Recently, co-expression networks are used to analyze single cell RNA-Seq data, in order to better characterize the gene to gene relations in a cohort of cells from a specific cell type.
History
The concept of gene co-expression networks was first introduced by Butte and Kohane in 1999 as relevance networks. They gathered the measurement data of medical laboratory tests (e.g. hemoglobin level ) for a number of patients and they calculated the Pearson correlation between the results for each pair of tests and the pairs of tests which showed a correlation higher than a certain level were connected in the network (e.g. insulin level with blood sugar). Butte and Kohane used this approach later with mutual information as the co-expression measure and using gene expression data for constructing the first gene co-expression network.
Constructing gene co-expression networks
A good number of methods have been developed for constructing gene co-expression networks. In principle, they all follow a two step approach: calculating co-expression measure, and selecting significance threshold. In the first step, a co-expression measure is selected and a similarity score is calculated for each pair of genes using this measure. Then, a threshold is determined and gene pairs which have a similarity score higher than the selected threshold are considered to have a signi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United%20States%20Army%20Forces%20in%20the%20Philippines%20%E2%80%93%20Northern%20Luzon | The United States Army Forces in the Philippines – Northern Luzon or United States Armed Forces in the Philippines – Northern Luzon (USAFIP-NL) (Tagalog: Sandatahang Lakas ng Estados Unidos sa Pilipinas - Hilagang Luzon (SLEUP-HL)/Hukbong Sandatahan ng Estados Unidos sa Pilipinas - Hilagang Luzon (HSEUP-HL) Ilocano: Fuerza Armada ti Estados Unidos iti Filipinas - Amianan ti Luzon (FAEUF-AL)) was the military and guerrilla organization active in the Philippines after the Japanese occupation. It was made up of United States Army and Philippine Army soldiers, reservists and civilian volunteers.
It was active from January 1, 1942 to June 30, 1946 and commanded by Col. Moses, followed by Russell W. Volckmann.
Following the Japanese occupation of the Philippines through the campaign to liberate the country, the military and guerrilla operations from the units of USAFIP-NL operated in Northern Luzon, including the some provinces in Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, Abra, Mountain Province, Cagayan, Isabela and Nueva Vizcaya.
Formations
Infantry regiments
11th Infantry Regiment – Cagayan Valley
14th Infantry Regiment – Nueva Vizcaya
15th Infantry Regiment – Ilocos Norte
66th Infantry Regiment – Baguio and Southern Mountain Province (now. Benguet)
121st Infantry Regiment – Ilocos Sur and La Union
Military battalions
Field Artillery Battalion
Engineer Combat Battalion
Military Police Battalion
Quartermaster Battalion
Replacement and Casualty Battalion
From November 1943 the forces were organized as districts.
1st District – Major Parker Calvert
2nd, 3rd Districts – Major George Barnett
4th District – Major Ralph Praeger
5th District – Major Romulo Manriquez
6th District – Capt. Robert Lapham (Lapham did not accept Volckmann's authority and operated the Luzon Guerrilla Army Forces [LGAF] independently.)
7th District – Volckmann and Blackburn
Reorganization
Following the Japanese surrender, an in preparation for Philippine independence, the USAFIP, NL, was reorganized as a regular division. It was designated the 2nd Division Philippine Army.
See also
List of American guerrillas in the Philippines
References
External links
Our Igorot Fathers, The Heroes: The Untold Story of the 66th Infantry Regiment, USAFIP-NL (blog entry about video documentary)
Military history of the Philippines during World War II
Guerrilla organizations
World War II resistance movements |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neocalyptis%20rotundata | Neocalyptis rotundata is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found on Sumatra in Indonesia.
References
Moths described in 1941
Neocalyptis |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empirical%20Methods%20in%20Natural%20Language%20Processing | Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP) is a leading conference in the area of natural language processing and artificial intelligence. Along with the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL), it is one of the two primary high impact conferences for natural language processing research. EMNLP is organized by the ACL special interest group on linguistic data (SIGDAT) and was started in 1996, based on an earlier conference series called Workshop on Very Large Corpora (WVLC).
, according to Microsoft Academic, EMNLP is the 14th most cited conference in computer science, with a citation count of 332,738, between ICML (#13) and ICLR (#15).
Locations
EMNLP 2022, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (Hybrid)
EMNLP 2021, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic or online
EMNLP 2020, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic (virtual conference due to COVID-19)
EMNLP 2019, Hong Kong, China
EMNLP 2018, Brussels, Belgium
EMNLP 2017, Copenhagen, Denmark
EMNLP 2016, Austin, Texas, United States
EMNLP 2015, Lisbon, Portugal
EMNLP 2014, Doha, Qatar
EMNLP 2013, Seattle, Washington, United States
EMNLP 2012, Jeju Island, South Korea
EMNLP 2011, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
EMNLP 2010, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
EMNLP 2009, Singapore
EMNLP 2008, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
EMNLP 2007, Prague, Czech Republic
EMNLP 2006, Sydney, Australia
References
Computer science conferences
Natural language processing |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metadata%20Games | MetadataGames is a free and open-source digital gaming platform for gathering data on photo, audio, and moving image artifacts for use by archivists and researchers. Metadata games were developed by Dartmouth College's Tiltfactor Lab with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, American Council of Learned Societies and the Neukom Institute for Computational Science.
Metadata Games uses digital media from: the American Antiquarian Society, the Boston Public Library, the British Library, Dartmouth College’s Rauner Special Collections Library, the Open Parks Network at Clemson University, the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute Library, the University of California-Irvine Library, the University of California-Los Angeles Chicano Studies Research Center, and the Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
Games Currently Included in the Metadata Games Suite
Zen Tag is a single-player browser game. The game presents players with an image and invites them to describe the image with tags, separated by commas. Players are awarded points for the number of tags they submit.
NexTag is a single-player browser game similar to Zen Tag in which players can tag audio and video files, which are presented to players in twenty-second segments.
Stupid Robot is a single-player browser game in which players input words and try to match a words that other players have entered previously.
Guess What is a two-player game in which one player is shown an image and must provide clues to a second player, helping him or her identify the first player’s image from within a series. Points are awarded to both players based on the number of hints required for the guesser to correctly identify the image.
Pyramid Tag is a single-player game for iOS and Android devices in which players have two minutes to try to match popular tags for images with a particular number of letter spaces provided. Points are awarded for matching a higher number of words of distinct length.
OneUp is a two-player game for iOS, Android, and browsers. Players are shown the same image and must submit tags in a series of rounds. Points are awarded for submitting tags, with bonus points for matching words previously submitted and for not submitting tags their opponent has entered.
British Library Collection Games
In May 2014, three new single-player tagging games were added to the Metadata Games suite from the British Library in order to enable public users to explore and tag the British Library’s collection of over one million public domain images, which the Library posted on Flickr Commons in 2013.
Ships Tag is a single-player browser game in which players can tag a large collection of nautically-themed images. Book Tag is a single-player browser game in which players can tag parts of the British Library's large collection of books. Portrait Tag is a single-player browser game that encourages players to "name drop" famous faces from the past.
See also
Human-based computation game
Ref |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy%20White%20%28American%20football%29 | Andrew Benjamin White, Jr. was a manager of advanced computer projects at the Los Alamos National Laboratory where he served as the Deputy Associate Director of the Theory, Simulation and Computing Directorate, and the Roadrunner Project Director from 2006-2012. Before that, he founded and served as Director of the Los Alamos Advanced Computing Laboratory (1989-1998) and Program Manager for the Department of Energy (DOE) High Performance Computing and Communications program. As a college student he had been a quarterback for the University of Texas Longhorns football team. He started one game in 1966 against the Oklahoma Sooners.
Early life
White was the son of a prominent Houston lawyer and an exceptional student and athlete, who served as class president, tied for class valedictorian, and was a highly rated football player. Out of high school he was recruited by almost every team in the Southwest Conference, others in the Southeast and Mideast and by Ivy League schools like Yale, Princeton and Brown, but turned them down to go to Texas, where his father went, as a Plan II student, on an academic scholarship, and play football for Darrell Royal.
Football career
In 1966, Andy White was a backup quarterback to fellow sophomore Bill Bradley. He saw limited action in the first two games of the season, missing on three passes and losing seven yards running. But then he took over when Bradley injured his knee during the 3rd quarter of the Indiana game. With the Longhorns up 14-0, White threw for one touchdown, completed 6 of 8 passes, and led an error-free offense to three touchdowns and a 35-0 win over Indiana. The following week against arch-rival Oklahoma, he got the first and only start of his career. Though White accounted for more than 150 yards of total offense, he also threw 2 interceptions and Oklahoma took an early lead. A late Texas rally capped by his only rushing touchdown narrowed the lead to 15-9, but Oklahoma came back to kick a game-cinching field goal and thus Oklahoma broke its streak of 8 straight losses in the Red River Rivalry. When Bradley came back, White again moved to the sidelines, coming in for a few plays over the next two games. With Bradley settled into the quarterback position, White was moved to wingback, and played in two more games before the end of the season, rushing for 20 yards.
In 1967, he was moved again, this time to tight end. He got into only one game, catching one 18 yard pass against Rice. In March 1968, faced with the prospect of being the #4 wingback, White quit the football team.
The summer before he graduated, Emory Bellard recruited White to help him refine the wishbone formation that would eventually help Texas win the 1969 National Championship.
Science career
White finished his degree at Texas and then earned a PhD in applied mathematics from Caltech. He returned to Texas as a mathematics professor, before moving on to the Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1979 where he served as Program Man |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014%E2%80%9315%20United%20States%20network%20television%20schedule%20%28late%20night%29 | These are the late night schedules for the four United States broadcast networks that offer programming during this time period, from September 2014 to August 2015. All times are Eastern or Pacific. Affiliates will fill non-network schedule with local, syndicated, or paid programming. Affiliates also have the option to preempt or delay network programming at their discretion.
Legend
Schedule
Monday-Friday
Notes
The final episode of The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson aired on December 19, 2014. From January 5, 2015 to March 6, 2015, guest hosts filled the void until The Late Late Show with James Corden premiered on March 23, 2015.
The Summer 2014 weekday schedule continued into the Fall 2014 scheduled unchanged.
On CBS, special late-night editions of The Talk aired January 12–16, 2015 in the timeslot of The Late Late Show.
Following the series finale of Late Show with David Letterman, its timeslot was filled with varying reruns of CBS drama programs under the umbrella title CBS Summer Showcase until the premiere of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert in September 2015. The Mentalist was the first to be aired in this slot.
Saturday
By network
ABC
Returning series
ABC World News Now
Jimmy Kimmel Live!
Nightline
CBS
Returning series
Late Night with David Letterman
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson
Up to the Minute
New series
CBS Summer Showcase
The Late Late Show with James Corden
FOX
Returning series:
Encore Programming
Not returning from 2013-14:
Animation Domination High-Def
NBC
Returning series
Last Call with Carson Daly
Late Night with Seth Meyers
Mad Money
Saturday Night Live
Today With Kathie Lee and Hoda
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon
Not returning from 2013-14:
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
References
United States late night network television schedules
Late
Late |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%20KBS%20Drama%20Awards | The 2009 KBS Drama Awards () is a ceremony honoring the outstanding achievement in television on the Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) network for the year of 2009. It was held on December 31, 2009 and hosted by Tak Jae-hoon, Lee Da-hae and Kim So-yeon.
Nominations and winners
References
External links
http://www.kbs.co.kr/drama/2009award/
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Face%20on%20Moon%20South%20Pole | The Face on Moon South Pole is a region on the Moon (81.9° south latitude and 39.27° east longitude) that was detected automatically in an image from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter by a computer system using face recognition technologies, as a result of a project that was part of the International Space App Challenge 2013 Tokyo. It is composed of craters and shadows on the Moon's surface that, together, form an image resembling a face.
The "Face on Mars" is a better known example of pareidolia.
Face detection and recognition
Human brains have the ability to perceive faces on the Moon due to the brain's structure. On the left hemisphere of the human brain, the fusiform gyrus (an area linked to recognition) detects the accuracy of how "facelike" an object is. The right fusiform gyrus then uses information from the left fusiform gyrus to conclude whether or not the image is a face. The gyrus's inherent ability to detect faces and patterns in organisms and nature has also led to a phenomenon called pareidolia, in which the brain detects and recognizes faces and patterns in collections of objects where there should be none.
Pareidolia partially explains why humans are biased towards perceiving faces on inanimate objects such as the Moon.
Humans identify faces where there are none due to a Gestalt Principle called the Law of Prägnanz. The Law of Prägnanz states that "people will perceive and interpret ambiguous or complex images as the simplest form(s) possible." This means that because the craters and hills of the Moon resemble the shape of eyes and a mouth, the human brain condenses those images into a human face because of familiarity, which is another Gestalt Principle.
Craters on the Moon
The craters of the Moon that make up the "face" on the south pole have been preserved for billions of years. The Moon's exterior is 16% composed of these craters. These craters have been formed by the impacts of meteors; they can be up to 1,600 miles across. Due to the absence of an atmosphere, the Moon is not protected from impacts such as these. Craters are often covered with a mixture of fine dust and rocky debris called regolith. Some research conducted through Clementine suggests that there is also water and ice in some craters throughout the Moon. The craters themselves show a past of being filled with molten lava.
Perception of imagery on the Moon
Within Western culture, people have said to have seen "the man in the Moon". Within East Asian culture, people have seen a rabbit or hands. In addition, various people have seen different imagery such as a tree, a woman, or a toad.
When people describe the images they see on the Moon, such as a face, they are not directly seeing that image displayed upon the Moon. They are rather looking at an irregular section of the Moon's surface. The irregular section consists of deep holes, called craters, and hills.
Other extraterrestrial formations
The face on the Moon is not the sole formation which appe |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handbook%20Emission%20Factors%20for%20Road%20Transport | Handbook Emission Factors for Road Transport (HBEFA) is a Microsoft Access database application providing emission factors, i.e. the specific emissions in g/km, for all current road vehicle categories (passenger cars, light duty vehicles, heavy duty vehicles, buses, and motorcycles). Emission factors are provided for all regulated and the most important non-regulated air pollutants as well as for fuel consumption and . HBEFA is used to estimate road transport emissions on different spatial aggregation levels from national to street level.
HBEFA was originally developed on behalf of the Environmental Protection Agencies of Germany (UBA), Switzerland (FOEN/BAFU), and Austria (Umweltbundesamt). In the meantime, further countries (Sweden, Norway, France) and the JRC (Joint Research Centre of the European Commission) are supporting HBEFA. The handbook is developed and provided by INFRAS, a Swiss research institute and independent consulting group based in Zurich and Bern.
HBEFA (the so-called “public version”) is available for download for everyone (chargeable at a fee of 250 EUR for new users). This public version allows users to view emission factors at different disaggregation levels. For selected experts participating in the development of HBEFA an extended version with additional features (referred to as “expert version”) is available.
Methodology
HBEFA consists of four sub-modules:
The emission factor database (expert version only) containing the base emission factors from various sources (such as vehicle emission measurements, emission factor models, etc.)
The fleet model (expert version only) providing weighting factors for the base emission factors in order to produce fleet compositions for a particular location (e.g. a country or a city) and a particular time period (one or more years).
The emission factor module (public and expert version) allowing access to the emission factor database by calculating weighted emission factors for particular traffic situations for a particular area and time period using the specified fleet compositions provided by the fleet model.
The emission model (expert version only) for the computation of overall emissions either on an aggregated spatial level for a particular area (e.g. a country or a city) or for a specific road network (“linkwise”). Inputs to the emission model are the description of the traffic activity (typically the vehicle kilometres travelled or the vehicle volume per road link) per vehicle category and the emission factors from the emission factor module. By multiplying these inputs the overall emissions are calculated.
The emission factors in HBEFA are based on multi-national measurement campaigns financed by the Environmental Protection Agencies of Germany, Switzerland and Austria, the Swedish Transport Administration, the Norwegian Environment Agency and the French Environment and Energy Management Agency as well as the Joint Research Centre (Research Centre of the European Commi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split%20Personality%20%28game%20show%29 | Split Personality was an Australian television series which aired in 1967. A game show, it was hosted by Terry Dear and aired on the 0-10 Network (now Network Ten). An article in the 21 January 1967 edition of Sydney Morning Herald suggests the format was based on identifying famous people based on their hair, eyes and lips.
The series did not last long. Produced by Reg Grundy Productions, the archival status of the show is not known, and it is possible the series was wiped. It is listed in old TV schedules as airing at 7:00PM on Fridays.
See also
Leave It to the Girls - 1957 TV series with Terry Dear
References
External links
Split Personality on IMDb
1967 Australian television series debuts
1967 Australian television series endings
Black-and-white Australian television shows
Australian game shows
English-language television shows
Network 10 original programming |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bs%20%28programming%20language%29 | bs is a programming language and a compiler/interpreter for modest-sized programs on UNIX systems. The bs command can be invoked either for interactive programming or with a file containing a program, optionally taking arguments, via a Unix shell, e.g., using a Shebang (Unix) #!/usr/bin/bs.
An early man page states, "[bs] is a remote descendant of Basic [sic] and SNOBOL4, with a little C thrown in."
History
The bs command appears in UNIX System III Release 3.0 (1980), first released outside of Bell Labs in 1982. It was written by Dick Haight (Richard C. Haight) circa 1978, who recounts it as follows:
The Release 3.0 manual mentions bs prominently on page 9 (emphasis added):
While not released outside prior to System III, the bs command was present internally in UNIX/TS 1.0 (November 1978), PWB/UNIX 2.0 (June 1979), and CB UNIX editions 2.1 (November 1979) and 2.3 (1981).
The bs command does not appear in some earlier internal releases, e.g., the UNIX Support Group’s March 1977 release, nor the PWB/UNIX manual dated May, 1977, suggesting its creation circa 1978. It does not appear in any version of Research Unix nor the Berkeley Software Distribution.
Subsequently and into the 1990s, bs was included in a variety of System III-derived or System V-derived commercial operating systems including, but not limited to: PC/IX; UNIX System V Releases 2 & 3: SVR2, SVR3, SVR3.2 (1986); HP-UX; AIX; and A/UX.
(The User's Manual for the AT&T UNIX PC (3B1) specifically mentions that the bs command is not available, but that it is available on SVR3.2.)
Occasionally, bs was touted as one of the primary programming languages for development under UNIX. However, bs is not included in the POSIX.1 commands and utilities (the standard List of Unix commands) nor in the Single UNIX Specification and is not provided with most contemporary operating systems. For example in Linux, similar syntax and functionality is provided by bc, Perl, and POSIX shell.
In the 21st century, bs is present in, at least, HP-UX Release 11i (2000), as well as AIX versions 6.1 (2007) and 7.2 (2018), likely due to their UNIX System V heritage.
Design and features
The bs man page, ostensibly the programming language's only specification, characterizes it as follows:
A bs program is compiled and executed differently from programs written in the other principal Unix programming languages of the time: C, FORTRAN, and assembly language, whose respective commands compile program source code to executable assembler output (a.out). Instead, a bs program is, first, converted by the bs command to an internal reverse Polish (RPN) intermediate representation and then executed by the command's internal virtual stack machine. The bs language, thus, is a hybrid interpreter and compiler and a divergence in Unix programming from Ancient Unix.
The bs language shares some features and syntax with BASIC, SNOBOL, and C, the two former presumably inspiring its name. Like BASIC, it can be used interactiv |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACCU%20Uganda | The Anti-Corruption Coalition Uganda, abbreviated as ACCU, is a Ugandan civil society advocacy organization whose primary aim is to fight against corruption in Uganda. It has a network of nine (9) Regional Anti-Corruption Coalitions (RACCs) in the country.
ACCU was founded in 1999 as a brainchild of 10 organisations and individuals who had fruitlessly tried to fight corruption in their individual capacity and so found relevancy in pursuing their common goal as a group. The coalition then existed as a loose arrangement until 2004 when it was formally registered as an independent body.
The anti-graft body's initiatives are primarily aimed at empowering grassroots communities to effectively engage Local Governments to act against corruption and strengthen good governance. In collaboration with national partners and networks, ACCU does advocate against corruption at a national level. ACCU's efforts are implemented in cohorts with different stakeholders like the media, civil society organizations (CSOs), religious leaders and groups, individual activists, academicians and other key institutions involved in the fight against corruption in Uganda. The nonprofit organization survives on donor support and membership subscriptions.
Over the years, ACCU has helped expose corrupt officials and practices in the private and public sectors of Uganda notably through publications like The Black Monday Newsletter, themed anti-corruption events like the Anti-Corruption Caravan and the Anti-Corruption Week (ACW) as well as regular corruption related news on its official website and online resource centre among others.
History
ACCU was formed in August 1999 as a brainchild of 10 organisations and individuals who had tried to fight corruption in their individual capacity but their efforts were inconsequential. These were; Uganda Debt Network, MS Uganda, Oxfam GB, Transparency International–Uganda, FIDA–Uganda, Uganda Women's Network (UWONET), DENIVA, UCAA, FABIO and UNATU.
The coalition then existed as a loose arrangement until 2003 when the Annual General Meeting sitting at Human Rights Network Uganda (HURINET-U) took the decision to have it formally registered as an independent body. In 2004, ACCU was registered with both the NGO Board and the Registrar of Companies for Uganda to become a body corporate with powers to sue and be sued; and with perpetual succession and a common seal.
Since inauguration, ACCU has been surviving on donor support and membership subscriptions. ACCU started with support from MS Uganda as the main donor and as years went by, the anti-graft body started receiving funds from ActionAid Uganda and DANIDA. To date, ACCU has a consortium of donors ranging from The Democratic Governance Facility (DGF), ActionAid Uganda, UNDP, DanChurchAid, Partnership for Transparency Fund, CARE Uganda, Twaweza among others.
ACCU's work
ACCU's Vision is “A transparent and corruption free society”.
Its mission is “To empower citizens to actively and sus |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novabackup | NovaBACKUP, developed by NovaStor is data protection software that enables SMB users to backup and recover data across a hybrid of physical and virtual machines. NovaBACKUP is designed to work on Microsoft Windows operating systems, offering local and online file backups and disaster recovery image backups.
Overview
NovaBACKUP uses a proprietary file format which uses an NBD file extension and is backwards compatible, meaning backups from older versions of NovaBACKUP (after version 8) can be restored with the latest version of the software. For version 7 and 8, the backups can still be restored, but the file extensions need to be updated to .NBD to do so.
Multiple NovaBACKUP editions are available. Versions built for SMB users support backups for PCs, laptops and Servers, including support for Exchange/SQL and virtual machines.
History
Release change log for NovaBACKUP starting at version 13.0. Current NovaBACKUP release log:
References
External links
NovaStor Official Website
Data protection
Data recovery software
Backup software |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple%20S1 | The Apple S1 is the integrated computer in the Apple Watch, and it is described as a "System in Package" (SiP) by Apple Inc.
Samsung is said to be the main supplier of key components, such as the RAM and NAND flash storage, and the assembly itself, but early teardowns reveal RAM and flash memory from Toshiba and Micron Technology.
System-in-Package design
It uses a customized application processor that together with memory, storage and support processors for wireless connectivity, sensors and I/O constitute a complete computer in a single package. This package is filled with resin for durability.
Components
From reverse engineering, the processor handling the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is a Broadcom BCM43342 and the six-axis gyroscope is from STMicroelectronics.
Apple designed 32-bit ARMv7 based application processor APL0778 as the central processing unit (CPU), with an integrated PowerVR SGX543 graphics processing unit (GPU).
512 MB DRAM from Elpida, wire bonded on top of the APL0778 CPU
NFC controller from NXP
NFC booster chip from AMS
8 GB flash from SanDisk and Toshiba
Wireless charging chip from IDT
Touch controller from ADI
Integrated gyro/accelerometer from STMicroelectronics
BCM43342 Wi-Fi/FM/BT combo chip from Broadcom
Power management unit (PMU) from Dialog Semiconductor
S1P
The SiP in Apple Watch Series 1 is called S1P and looks superficially identical to the S1, but in reality is an S2 minus the on-chip GPS functionality. It contains the same dual-core CPU with the same new GPU capabilities as the S2 making it about 50% faster than the S1.
Announcement
The S1 was announced on 9 September 2014 as part of the "Wish we could say more" event.
The S1P was announced on 7 September 2016 as part of the "See you on the 7th" event.
Launch date
The S1 made its first appearance within the Apple Watch, which arrived in April 2015. The S1 was discontinued with the launch of Apple Watch Series 1, containing the S1P.
The S1P was released with the Apple Watch Series 1 on 16 September 2016.
Images
See also
Apple silicon, the range of ARM-based processors designed by Apple.
Apple Watch
Apple S2
References
Apple silicon |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008%20KBS%20Drama%20Awards | The 2008 KBS Drama Awards () is a ceremony honoring the outstanding achievement in television on the Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) network for the year of 2008. It was held on December 31, 2008 and hosted by Choi Soo-jong and Han Ji-min.
Nominations and winners
References
External links
http://www.kbs.co.kr/drama/2008award/
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards
KBS Drama Awards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WatchOS | watchOS is the operating system of the Apple Watch, developed by Apple Inc. It is based on iOS, the operating system used by the iPhone, and has many similar features. It was released on April 24, 2015, along with the Apple Watch, the only device that runs watchOS. watchOS exposes an API called WatchKit for developer use.
The second version, watchOS 2, included support for native third-party apps and other improvements, and was released on September 21, 2015. The third version, watchOS 3, was released on September 13, 2016, to emphasize better performance and include new watch faces and stock apps. The fourth version, watchOS 4, was released on September 19, 2017. The fifth version, watchOS 5, was released on September 17, 2018, to add more third-party support and new workouts, along with the "Walkie-Talkie" feature. The sixth version, watchOS 6, was released on September 19, 2019. The seventh version, watchOS 7, was released on September 16, 2020, to support handwashing and sleep tracking. The eighth version, watchOS 8, was released on September 20, 2021, with updates in health monitoring, visuals, and apps. The ninth version, watchOS 9, was released on September 12, 2022. The tenth version, watchOS 10, was released on September 18, 2023.
Interface overview
The home screen (rendered by and also known as "Carousel") is composed of circular application icons, which can be zoomed in and out with the Digital Crown and dragged and launched by touching the display.
Prior to watchOS 3, Glances provided fast access to a summarized view of the most popular native or third-party applications used on Apple Watch. The Glances view was opened with a swipe-up gesture from the watch face screen. With watchOS 3, Glances were replaced by a redesigned Control Center – much like the one in iOS. The friends menu, invoked with the side button, now acts as a dedicated dock for apps.
Different actions and options appear depending on whether the user taps or deep-presses, which an Apple Watch detects with its pressure-sensitive (Force Touch) Display. Force Touch was completely removed in watchOS 7, and all actions requiring the feature were moved to specific options in the Settings app or to long-press actions.
Supported health metrics
Since its inception, watchOS has supported an increasing number and variety of health metrics for measurement and tracking. These include:
heart rate
maximal aerobic capacity, otherwise known as VO2 max (added in watchOS 4, enhanced in watchOS 7)
electrocardiogram, otherwise known as EKG or ECG (added in watchOS 5.1.2)
blood oxygen saturation, otherwise known as SpO2 (added in watchOS 7)
menstrual cycle status (added in watchOS 6)
sleep duration & respiratory rate tracking (added in watchOS 7)
HealthKit
For several years, Apple has been developing its HealthKit product in an attempt to penetrate the lucrative healthcare and wellness industry, which CB Insights believe holds a huge growth opportunity for Apple. This was co |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beat%20the%20Odds%20%28Australian%20game%20show%29 | Beat the Odds is an Australian television series which aired 1971 to 1972 on the Seven Network. The series aired for a summer season. Hosted by Malcolm Searle, it was a game show based on the visual identification of people, places and objects. It was produced by Reg Grundy Productions.
References
External links
Beat the Odds on IMDb
1971 Australian television series debuts
1972 Australian television series endings
Black-and-white Australian television shows
1970s Australian game shows
English-language television shows
Seven Network original programming |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noel%20and%20Mary | Noel and Mary is an Australian television chat show which aired 1967 on Melbourne station ATV-0 (later ATV-10 and part of Network Ten). This daytime show was hosted by Noel Ferrier and Mary Hardy, and featured interviews.
The series aired in a 25-minute time-slot. It was part of five new programmes which debuted on ATV-0 around the same time. The others were Pied Piper, Gordon and the Girls, Off to the Races and Take a Letter.
References
External links
Noel and Mary
1967 Australian television series debuts
1967 Australian television series endings
Black-and-white Australian television shows
English-language television shows
Network 10 original programming
Australian television talk shows |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Take%20a%20Letter%20%28Australian%20game%20show%29 | Take a Letter is an Australian television game show which aired 1967 on the 0-10 Network (now Network Ten). It aired Mondays to Fridays in a daytime time-slot and was hosted by Jimmy Hannan. A word game based on Scrabble, it was produced in Melbourne.
Reception
Sydney Morning Herald said of the series "it is a fairly harmless and moderately entertaining piece of nonsense.
References
External links
1967 Australian television series debuts
1967 Australian television series endings
Black-and-white Australian television shows
English-language television shows
1960s Australian game shows
Network 10 original programming |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PacBSD | PacBSD (formerly known as Arch BSD) was an operating system based on Arch Linux, but uses the FreeBSD kernel instead of the Linux kernel and the GNU userland.
The PacBSD project began on an Arch Linux forum thread in April 2012. It aims to provide an Arch-like user environment, utilizing the OpenRC init system, the pacman package manager, and rolling-release.
See also
Arch Hurd: A similar project with GNU/Hurd as its base
Arch Linux
FreeBSD
References
Berkeley Software Distribution
Free software operating systems
Unix variants |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsters%20Ate%20My%20Birthday%20Cake | Monsters Ate My Birthday Cake is a game developed by American indie studio SleepNinja Games for the iPad, Android and PC systems and published by Cartoon Network. It was released on 1 July 2014. The art and animation was done by Justin Baldwin, the programming by Yori Kvitchko and Brandon Moreno, the writing by Alex Atkins, sound design by Jordan Fehr. the music by Rich Vreeland, who had previously done the soundtrack of Fez. Development was assisted by a Kickstarter campaign that began in January 2013, and a demo version was displayed at the Portland Retro Gaming Expo in October 2013. Aimed at younger gamers, the game has simple puzzles early on and about ten hours of gameplay.
Gameplay
It is a strategic puzzle game, with a boy protagonist Niko, who is joined by friendly monsters in his quest against the evil boogens. Niko is initially alone, but is soon joined by monsters, each of which has a unique ability such as burrowing in dirt areas, charging down brittle obstacles, freezing water so rivers can be crossed, or shattering crystal with piercing shrieks. Control can be switched between Niko and monsters. Niko can buy different outfits, some of which have special powers. He can also collect coins to buy items or fetch treasure to return to grateful villagers or monsters. There are four regions to explore outside of Niko's village.
Reception
The game was highly rated by ABC's Good Game: Spawn Point hosts Hex and Bajo, who gave it 8.5 and 9 out of 10 rubber chickens respectively. Marcus Estrada praised the monster switching and found the game "fun", rating it 3.5 out of 5. Listed number 1 on a list of 18 "addictive" little games by CoolSmartPhone.
References
2014 video games
Puzzle video games
Kickstarter-funded video games
IOS games
Windows games
Android (operating system) games
Video games about children
Fiction about monsters
Video games about birthdays
Video games scored by Richard Vreeland
Video games developed in the United States
Single-player video games |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiuser%20DOS%20Federation | The Multiuser DOS Federation (MDOS) was an industry alliance to promote the growth and acceptance of multi-user DOS-based solutions on 286, 386 and 486 computers. It was formed in July 1990. Initially among them were Digital Research, Theos Software, SunRiver, DigiBoard, Alloy, Viewport International and others. The idea was to reduce costs by allowing workgroups to run DOS applications from a shared PC while working on terminals or workstations.
On 18 February 1991, several members of the Multiuser DOS Federation issued a press release regarding their intentions to support DPMI (mostly DPMI 1.0) in their products including Alloy Computer Products Inc. (PC-PLUS), Bluebird Systems, Inc. (SuperDOS), Concurrent Controls, Inc. (CCI Concurrent DOS 386, CCI Multiuser DOS), Digital Research, Inc. (DR Multiuser DOS), S&H Computer Systems, Inc. (TSX-32), StarPath Systems, Inc. (Vmos/3), The Software Link (PC-MOS/386), THEOS Software Corporation (THEOS), Intelligent Graphics Corporation (VM/386). Several of them had previously worked on the alternative XVCPI specification.
See also
AT Multiuser System
Virtual DOS machine
References
DOS on IBM PC compatibles |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Arica%20y%20Parinacota%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Arica y Parinacota Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 34 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio UchusumaRío Uchusuma3926636STMI(PE, BL)
Rio ChisllumaRío Chislluma3894959STMI
Rio AzufreRío Azufre3899050STMI
Río CaracaraniRío Caracarani3896809STMI(Quebrada Caracarani, Quebrada Caracharani, Rio Caracarani, Río Caracarani)
Rio CaquenaRío Caquena3896817STM
Rio CondorireRío Condorire3893800STM
Río GuailasRío Guailas3888601STMI(Quebrada Guailas, Rio Guaylas)
Rio CosapillaRío Cosapilla3893395STMI(BL)
Rio AncomaRío Ancoma3899704STM
Rio JuraseRío Jurase3886670STM
Rio BlancoRío Blanco3898219STM
Rio LaucaRío Lauca3883639STM(Rio Lauca, Río Lauca)(BO)
Rio ChusjavidaRío Chusjavida3894666STM
Rio PaquisaRío Paquisa3877232STM
Rio VizcachaniRío Vizcachani3868019STM
Río ChalloaniRío Challoani3895598STM
Rio LlutaRío Lluta3882827STM(Rio Lluta, Río Lluta)
Rio SecoRío Seco3871050STMI
Río Blanco3898239STMI(Arroyo Blanco, Estero Blanco, Rio Blanco, Río Blanco)
Rio San JoseRío San José3872085STMI
Canal Lauca3883641CNLI (from Rio Lauca)
Rio TignamarRío Tignamar3869863STMI(Quebrada de Tianamar, Rio Tignamar, Río Tignamar)
Rio QuiburcancaRío Quiburcanca3874302STMI
Rio GuaiguasiRío Guaiguasi3888605STM
Estero Veco3868554STMI
Rio BlancoRío Blanco3898191STMI
Río JanureRío Janure3886972STMI(Arroyo Janure, Estero Janure, Rio Janure, Río Janure)
Estero Utalacata3868750STMI
Rio SurireRío Surire3870427STM
Rio JarumaRío Jaruma3886934STMI(Rio Jarama, Rio Jaruma, Río Jarama, Río Jaruma)
Rio PailcoailloRío Pailcoaillo3877756STMI
Rio TaruguireRío Taruguire3870100STM
Rio BlancoRío Blanco3898190STMI
Rio ChuquianantaRío Chuquiananta3894690STMI(Arroyo Chuquiananta, Estero Chuquiananta, Rio Chuquiananta, Río Chuquiananta)
Río Camarones3897158STM(Camarones Gully, Quebrada Camarones, Quebrada de Camarones, Rio Camarones, Río Camarones)
Rio AjatamaRío Ajatama3900322STMI
Rio MacusaRío Macusa3881062STM
Rio CaritayaRío Caritaya3896647STMI
Rio BlancoRío Blanco3898218STM
See also
List of lakes in Chile
List of volcanoes in Chile
List of islands of Chile
List of fjords, channels, sounds and straits of Chile
List of lighthouses in Chile
Notes
References
External links
Rivers of Chile
Base de Datos Hidrográfica de Chile
Parinacota |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Tarapac%C3%A1%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Tarapacá Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 44 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio LoaRío Loa3882821STM
Rio Todos SantosRío Todos Santos3869706STM
Arroyo de Veco3868555STMI
Arroyo Sencata3871028STM
Río GuaiguasiRío Guaiguasi3888606STMI(Quebrada Guaiguasi, Rio Guaiguasi, Río Guaiguasi)
Río MulluriRío Mulluri3879192STMI(Arroyo de Mulluri, Estero Mulluri, Quebrada de Mulluri, Rio Mulluri, Río Mulluri)
Río CaicoRío Caico3897428STMI(Arroyo de Caico, Quebrada Caico, Quebrada Cajco, Rio Caico, Río Caico)
Río CubanayaRío Cubanaya3893193STMI(Arroyo de Cubanaya, Arroyo de Cubayana, Quebrada Cuanalla, Quebrada Cubanalla, Quebrada de Cubanaya, Rio Cubanalla, Río Cubanaya)
Arroyo de Cotase3893366STMI
Río Camarones3897158STM(Camarones Gully, Quebrada Camarones, Quebrada de Camarones, Rio Camarones, Río Camarones)
Rio AjatamaRío Ajatama3900322STMI
Rio MacusaRío Macusa3881062STM
Rio CaritayaRío Caritaya3896647STMI
Rio BlancoRío Blanco3898218STM
Río Huinchuta3887503STMI(Arroyo Huinchula, Arroyo Huinchuta, Estero Huinchala, Rio Huenchuta, Río Huinchuta)
Rio ChaguaneRío Chaguane3895675STMI(Manantial de Chaguane, Rio Chaguane, Río Chaguane)
Arroyo Pasijiro3877105STMI
Rio ChaguaRío Chagua3895684STMI
Arroyo Chaguane3895676STMI
Río Llanquipa3882951STMI(Arroyo de Llanguipa, Estero Llanquipa, Quebrada de Llanquipa, Rio Llanquipa, Río Llanquipa)
Quebrada Colca3894316STM(Arroyo de Colca, Quebrada Colca, Rio Colca, Río Colca)
Rio ArabillaRío Arabilla3899476STMI
Rio IslugaRío Isluga3887048STMI
Rio SitaniRío Sitani3870817STMI
Rio CariquimaRío Cariquima3896651STMI
Estero Puchultisa3875083STM
Estero Montecarabe3879464STMI
Rio GrandeRío Grande3888781STM
Río QuenuvutaRío Queñuvuta3874369STMI(Arroyo de Quenuvuta, Arroyo de Queñuvuta, Quebrada Challavilque, Rio Queñuvuta, Río Queñuvuta, Río Chacavilque)
Río TanaRío Tana3870176STMI(Quebrada de Camina, Quebrada de Camiña, Quebrada de Tana, Rio Camiña, Río Camiña, Rio Tana, Río Tana)
Arroyo Toroni3869531STMI
Arroyo Guaitani3888574STMI(Arroyo Guaitani, Arroyo Huaitani, Estero Guaitani, Río Guaitani)(CL)
Arroyo Colchane3894307STMI
Rio CalajuallaRío Calajualla3897348STM
Arroyo Tucuruma3868974STMI
Estero Jornune3886842STM
Estero Charvinto3895360STM
Rio de OcacuchoRío de Ocacucho3878386STMI
Estero Lupe Chico3881157STMI(Arroyo Lupe Chico, Río Lupe Chico, Estero Lupe Chi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Antofagasta%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Antofagasta Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 41 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio LoaRío Loa3882821STM
Río Chela3895293STM(Arroyo de Chela, Estero Chela, Quebrada Chela, Rio Chela, Río Chela)
Rio BlancoRío Blanco3873147STMI(Quebrada Rio Blanco, Quebrada Río Blanco, Rio Blanco, Río Blanco)
Rio San PedroRío San Pedro3871793STM
Río Silala3904306 Rio Siloli(BL)
Rio San SalvadorRío San Salvador3871709STM(Rio San Salvador, Río San Salvador)
Rio SaladoRío Salado3872603STM(Rio Salado, Río Salado)
Rio ToconceRío Toconce3869720STMI
Arroyo Paco-Paco3877807STM(Arroyo Paco-Paco, Estero Pacopaco)
Rio SecoRío Seco3873102STMI
Río ColanaRío Colana3894320STMI(Quebrada de Colana, Rio Colana)(CL)
Rio HojalarRío Hojalar3887987STMI(Rio Hojal, Rio Hojalar, Río Hojal, Río Hojalar)
Rio CaspanaRío Caspana3896272STMI
Arroyo Chilcal3895132STMI(Arroyo Chilcal, Quebrada Chilcal, Quebrada Chileal, Rio Chilcal, Río Chilcal)(CL)
Rio Piedras GrandesRío Piedras Grandes3876062STMI
Arroyo Yusto3867598STMI
Rio CurteRío Curte3892829STMI
Rio TulicuneRío Tulicune3868951STMI
Quebrada Huiculunche3887564STMI(Arroyo Huiculunche, Quebrada Huicouluncha, Quebrada Huiculuncha, Quebrada Huiculunche, Rio Huiculuncha, Río Huiculunche)(CL)
Rio IncaguasiRío Incaguasi3887280STMI(Rio Incaguasi, Rio Incahuasi, Rio Incaquas, Río Incaguasi, Río Incahuasi)
Arroyo Coyo3893317STMI
Arroyo Ojos de Agua de Putana3878123STMI(Arroyo Ojos de Agua de Putana, Arroyo Ojos de Putana)(CL)
Arroyo Aguas Blancas3900439STMI(Arroyo Aguas Blancas, Arroyo Aquas Blancas)
Arroyo de Jauna3886925STMI(Arroyo de Jana, Arroyo de Jauna)
Rio MachucaRío Machuca3881084STMI
Rio PuripicaRío Puripica3874589STMI
Rio SaladoRío Salado3872601STMI
Rio VilamaRío Vilama3868219STMI
Estero de la Cueva Blanca3893113STM
Rio Aguas CalientesRío Aguas Calientes3900420STMI
Quebrada de HonarQuebrada de Hónar3887970STMI(Quebrada de Honar, Quebrada de Hónar, Rio de Honar, Río de Hónar)(CL)
Rio SaladoRío Salado3872600STMI
Rio San PedroRío San Pedro de Atacama3871789STMI(Rio Atacama, Rio San Pedro, Río San Pedro)
Quebrada de Rio GrandeQuebrada de Río Grande3873122STMI(Quebrada de Rio Grande, Quebrada de Río Grande, Rio Grande, Río Grande)
Rio PutanaRío Putana3874563STMI
Quebrada del Rio SecoQuebrada del Río Seco3873099STMI
Rio PiliRío Pili3876002STM
Quebrada Chamaca3895593STMI(Arroyo de C |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Atacama%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Atacama Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 61 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Quebrada Rio SecoQuebrada Río Seco3873100STMI
Rio de la SalRío de la Sal3872619STMI
Rio SaladoRío Salado3872599STMI
Rio SaladoRío Salado3872602STM
Rio de La SalRío de La Sal3884658STM
Rio de la SalRío de la Sal3872620STM
Rio La OlaRío La Ola3885197STMI(Quebrada de La Ola, Quebrada de la Ola, Rio La Ola, Rio Ola, Rio de La Ola, Rio de la Ola, Río La Ola, Río Ola, Río de La Ola, Río de la Ola)
Rio JuncalitoRío Juncalito3886709STMI
Rio SaladoRío Salado3872598STMI
Rio Pastos LargosRío Pastos Largos3877043STMI(Rio Pastos Largas, Rio Pastos Largos, Río Pastos Largas, Río Pastos Largos)(CL)
Río Dulce3892160STMI(Arroyo Dulce, Estero Dulce)
Rio ColoradoRío Colorado3894022STMI
Rio LamasRío Lamas3885376STMI(Rio Lama, Rio Lamas, Río Lama, Río Lamas)
Rio LajitasRío Lajitas3885555STMI
Rio CopiapoRío Copiapó3893651STM(Rio Copiapo, Río Copiapó)
Rio ManflasRío Manflas3880722STM(Rio Manflas, Rio Manflias, Río Manflas)
Rio JorqueraRío Jorquera3886836STM
Rio FigueroaRío Figueroa3889513STM
Rio TurbioRío Turbio (Copiapó)3868888STM
Rio TurbioRío Turbio3868889STM
Río Piuquenes3875720STM(Quebrada Piuquenes, Quebrada Piuquenes, Rio Piuquenes, Río Piuquenes)
Rio de la GallinaRío de la Gallina3889170STM(Rio La Gallina, Rio de la Gallina, Río La Gallina, Río de la Gallina)
Rio NevadoRío Nevado3878711STM
Río CachitosRío Cachitos3897498STM(Rio Cachito, Rio Cachitos, Rio Chacrita, Río Cachito, Rïo Cachitos)
Rio BayoRío Bayo3898550STMI
Rio AstaburuagaRío Astaburuaga3899215STM
Río Paredones3877182STM(Quebrada Paredones, Rio Paredones, Río Paredones)
Río La Laguna3885522STMI(Estero La Laguna, Estero de la Laguna)
Rio Aguas BlancasRío Aguas Blancas3900433STM
Rio PlazaRío Plaza3875636STM
Río Come Caballos3893960STM(Arroyo Come Caballos, Estero Come Caballos)(CL)
Rio PulidoRío Pulido3874887STM
Rio Vizcachas de PulidoRío Vizcachas de Pulido3868003STM
Rio Pircas ColoradasRío Pircas Coloradas3875823STM
Rio MontosaRío Montosa3879406STM Rio Montoso
Rio RamadillasRío Ramadillas3873803STM
Rio RamadasRío Ramadas3873818STM
Rio PotroRío Potro3875254STM
Rio de Las Pircas de MondacaRío de Las Pircas de Mondaca3884005STM
Rio del MedioRío del Medio3880160STM
Quebrada del Medio3880163STM(Quebrada del Medio, Rio del Medio, Río del Medio)
Río Tola |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Coquimbo%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Coquimbo Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 121 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio ElquiRío Elqui3890618STM(Rio Elaui, Rio Elqui, Río Elaui, Río Elqui)
Rio ClaroRío Claro3894574STM(Rio Claro, Rio Derecho, Río Claro, Río Derecho)
Rio CochiguasRío Cochiguas3894494STMCochiguaz
Rio TurbioRío Turbio3868887STM
Rio La LagunaRío La Laguna3885520STM(Rio La Laguna, Rio Laguna, Rio de la Laguna, Río La Laguna, Río Laguna, Río de la Laguna)
Rio ToroRío Toro3869545STM
Rio Vacas HeladasRío Vacas Heladas3868731STM
Rio MaloRío Malo3880822STM(Rio Malo, Rio de los Banos, Río Malo, Río de los Baños)
Quebrada de los Choros3894838STM(Quebrada Los Choros, Quebrada de los Choros, Rio Los Choros, Rio de los Choros, Río Los Choros)
Quebrada Rio LisboaQuebrada Río Lisboa3873121STM
Estero Punilla3874821STM
Estero Negro3878813STM(Estero Negro, Quebrada del Negro)
Estero de Pucalume3875108STM
Estero de Guanta3888415STM(Estero Guanta, Estero Huanta, Estero Malposo de Guanta, Estero de Guanta)
Estero Tilo3869826STM
Rio IngaguasRío Ingaguas3887195STM
Rio SecoRío Seco3871054STM
Estero Lagunilla3885718STM(Estero Lagunilla, Estero Lagunillas, Quebrada Lagunilla, Quebrada Lagunillas)
Rio LagunaRío Laguna3885783STM
Rio La GloriaRío La Gloria3885860STM
Rio ColoradoRío Colorado3894036STM
Estero Tongoy3869637STM
Rio TangueRío Tangue3870163STM(Quebrada Tangue, Rio Tangue, Río Tangue)(CL)
Rio ChacayRío Chacay3895748STM(Quebrada de Chacay, Rio Chacay, Rio de Chacai, Río Chacay, Río de Chacai)
Rio TerneroRío Ternero3869938STM
Estero Aguada3900552STM
Estero Ingenio3887189STM(Estero Ingenio, Quebrada del Ingenio)
Estero Punitaqui3874811STM(Estero Punitaqui, Quebrada Punitaqui, Río Punitaqui, Río Punitaqui)
Rio PonioRío Ponio3875458STM(Rio Campanario, Rio Ponio, Río Campanario, Río Ponio)
Rio TomesRío Tomes3869649STM
Rio LimariRío Limarí3883198STM
Estero Punitaqui3874812STM
Rio GrandeRío Grande3888780STM
Rio GuatulameRío Guatulame3888321STM(Rio Guatalame, Rio Guatulame, Río Guatulame)
Rio PamaRío Pama3877494STM
Rio CogotiRío Cogotí3894438STM
Rio CombarbalaRío Combarbalá3893961STM
Rio RapelRío Rapel3873715STM
Rio Los MollesRío Los Molles3881729STM(Rio Los Molles, Rio de las Molles, Río Los Molles, Río de las Molles)
Rio Hurtado3887425STM(Rio Hurtado)
Rio MostazalRío Mostazal3879250STM(Rio Mostazal, Rio Motazal, Río Mo |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Valpara%C3%ADso%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Valparaíso Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 174 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Estero de Pedernales3876920STM
Canal de Las Vegas3883791DTCH
Estero Yali3867760STM(Estero Yali, Estero de Yali)
Rio MaipoRío Maipo3880983STM (see tributaries in List of rivers of the Santiago Metropolitan Region)
Rio RapelRío Rapel3873714STM
Estero de Los Corralillos3882128STM(Estero Corralillos, Estero Corrolillos, Estero de Los Corralillos)(CL)
Río Tilama3869850STM
Estero RaicesEstero Raíces3873848STM
Cajon InfiernilloCajón Infiernillo3887214STM(Cajon Infiernillo, Cajón Infiernillo, Estero Maquis)
Rio PedernalRío Pedernal3876928STM(Estero de Chaloco, Rio Pedernal, Río Pedernal)
Rio del SobranteRío del Sobrante3870778STM(Rio Sobrante, Rio del Sobrante, Río Sobrante, Río del Sobrante)
Rio SobranteRío Sobrante3870779STM
Estero Los Molles3881731STM(Estero Los Molles, Estero Molles)
Estero de la Ballena3898908STM
Estero Manzano3880614STM
Estero el Ajial3900318STM
Estero Chincolco3895016STM(Estero Chincolco, Quebrada de Chincolco)
Quebrada Los Riocitos3881409STM
Estero Denquer3892648STM
Estero Las Palmas3884085STM
Estero GuaquenEstero Guaquén3888376STM(Estero Guaquen, Estero Guaquén, Estero de Huaquen)
Estero de la Canoa3896900STMI
Río Alicahue3900094STM(Estero Alicahue)
Rio TambillosRío Tambillos3870194STM
Canal Seco3871065DTCH
Rio PetorcaRío Petorca3876414STM(Rio Pelorca, Rio Petorca, Río Petorca)
Rio La LiguaRío La Ligua3885452STM(Rio La Ligua, Rio de la Ligua, Río La Ligua, Río de la Ligua)
Río Los Angeles3882423STM(Estero Cajon de Los Angeles, Estero Cajón de Los Ángeles, Estero Los Angeles, Estero de los Angeles, Estero de los Ángeles)
Río de los AngelesRío de los Ángeles3899640STM(Estero de Los Anjeles, Estero de los Angeles, Estero de los Ángeles)(CL)
Canal de Longotoma3882545DTCH
Estero de Chacai3895790STMI
Canal Valle Hermoso3868638DTCH
Estero El Espinal3891382STM(Estero El Espinal, Estero Espinal)(CL)
Estero El Pangue3890833STM(Estero El Pangue, Estero Pangue)
Estero La Patagua3885085STM(Estero La Patagua, Estero Patagua)
Estero de los Azules3899021STM
Río Portillo Hondo3875374STM
Estero La Patagua3885084STM(Estero La Patagua, Estero de la Patagua)
Río Chalaco3895629STM(Estero Chalaco, Estero del Chaco)
Rio del RocinRío del Rocín3872985STM
Estero del Bolsillo3898110STM
Rio HidalgoRío Hid |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Santiago%20Metropolitan%20Region | This is a list of rivers in the Santiago Metropolitan Region, Chile. Data in this article has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 211 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Estero de Dolores3892323STM
Rio MaipoRío Maipo3880983STM
Río Puangue3875116STM(Estero Puangue, Estero de Pangue, Estero de Pedegua)
Rio MapochoRío Mapocho3880596STM(Rio Mapocho, Río Mapocho)
Río Lampa3885272STM(Estero de Lampa, Rio de Lampa, Río de Lampa)
Rio ColinaRío Colina3894235STM(Estero Colina, Estero de Colina, Rio Colina, Río Colina)
Estero de Polpaico3875489STM
Estero de Chacabuco3895797STM
Estero de El ArrayanEstero de El Arrayán3891939STM(Cajon de Arrayan, Cajón de Arrayan, Estero Los Arrayanes, Estero de El Arrayan, Estero de El Arrayán, Estero del Arrayan, Estero del Arrayán)
Rio San Francisco3872210STM
Rio MolinaRío Molina3879619STM
Estero de la Yerba Loca3867675STM
Río Angostura3899602STM
Rio ColoradoRío Colorado3894031STM
Rio OlivaresRío Olivares3878097STM
Rio YesoRío Yeso3867648STM
Rio VolcanRío Volcán3867968STM(Rio El Volcan, Rio Volcan, Río El Volcán, Río Volcán)
Río Rapel3873717STM (See afluents in List of rivers of the O'Higgins Region)
Estero El ExtravioEstero El Extravío3891362STM(Arroyo El Extravio, Estero El Extravio, Estero El Extravío, Estero del Extravio, Estero del Extravío)
Estero del Rosario3872813STM(Estero El Rosario, Estero del Rosario)
Estero El Chorrillo3891623STM
Río del Plomo3875613STM
Estero de Las Mazas3884191STMI
Estero de Los Valles3881294STMI
Estero de Los Campos3882299STMI(Estero de Los Campos, Estero de los Campos)
Estero Caleu3897285STM
Estero Rungue3872687STM
Estero La Margarita3885386STM(Estero La Margarita, Estero Margarita)(CL)
Estero de La Providencia3884904STM
Quebrada La Leonera3885467STM(Cajon de la Leonera, Estero La Leonera, Estero Leonera, Quebrada La Leonera)
Estero Tiltil3869820STM
Estero de Peldehue3876790STM
3881559STM
Canal Batuco3898594DTCH
Estero Cordillera Ferrosa3893578STM
Estero Esmeralda3889892STM
Estero de Las Pircas3884008STM
Canal de Lo Pinto3882501DTCH
Estero Leonera3883348STMI
Estero de CarenEstero de Carén3896673STM
Estero Los CastanosEstero Los Castaños3882248STM
Estero Paramillos3877207STMI
Estero La Leonera3885469STM(Estero La Leonera, Estero Leonera)
Estero Las Yaretas3883755STM
Río Lomas Coloradas3882600STM
Estero El Carrizo3891686STMI
Río Barros Negros3898647STM
Estero Manzanito3880630STM(Este |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20O%27Higgins%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the O'Higgins Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 156 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio RapelRío Rapel3873714STM
Estero de AlhueEstero de Alhué3900111STM
Estero CarenEstero Carén3896674STM(Estero Caren, Estero Carén)
Rio CachapoalRío Cachapoal3897523STM(Rio Cachapoal, Río Cachapoal)
Estero Zamorano3867577STM(Estero Zamorano)
Rio ClaroRío Claro (de Rengo)3894572STM
Estero de Las Cadenas3884567STM(Esteno de La Cadena, Estero Cadena, Estero Cadenas, Estero de Las Cadenas)
Rio CoyaRío Coya3893334STM(Arroyo Coya, Estero Coya, Rio Coya, Río Coya)
Rio PangalRío Pangal3877389STM
Rio Los CipresesRío Los Cipreses3882194STM(Rio Cipreses, Rio Los Cipreses, Río Cipreses, Río Los Cipreses)
Rio TinguiriricaRío Tinguiririca3869789STM
Estero Chimbarongo3895059STM(Estero Chimbarongo, Rio de Chimbarongo, Río de Chimbarongo)
Rio ClaroRío Claro (Tinguiririca)3894571STM
Estero de Nilahue3878649STM
Estero Las Palmas3884083STM(Estero Las Palmas, Estero de las Palmas)
Estero de La PoblacionEstero de La Población3884956STM
Estero Navidad3878975STMI
Rio San FranciscoRío San Francisco3872209STM
Estero de Matanzas3880350STM(Estero Matanza, Estero de Matanzas)
Estero TroncoEstero Troncó3869049STM
Estero de Codegua3894462STM
Estero PicarquinEstero Picarquín3876332STM(Cajon de Picarquin, Cajón de Picarquín, Estero Picarquin, Estero Picarquín)
Estero de las Viedmas3868265STM
Estero Seco3871060STM
Estero Las Arenas3884628STM
Estero de la Poza Honda3875243STM
Estero del Teniente3869987STM
Estero de Salto del Agua3872498STM
Estero PulinEstero Pulín3874884STM
Estero Manantiales3880757STM
Estero Manquehue3880680STM
Estero Los Lingues3881946STM(Estero Lingues, Estero Los Lingues)
Estero MachaliEstero Machalí3881100STM(Arroyo Machali, Estero Machali, Estero Machalí)
Estero de las Delicias3892673STM
Estero del Valle3868663STMI
Estero Los Quillayes3881457STM
Estero Topocalma3869624STM
Estero del Cuzco3892782STM
Estero San Francisco3872217STM
Estero del Agua Buena3900572STM
Estero El Manzano3891077STM
Quebrada Culenar3893058STM(Estero del Culenar, Quebrada Culenar, Quebrada Culenes)
Agua del Estero3900526STM
Estero de Quilicura3874207STM
Estero Cartagena3896429STM(Estero Carjena, Estero Cartagena, Estero Cartajena)
Estero El CajonEstero El Cajón3891800STM
Estero El CoguilEstero El Cóguil3891580STM
Estero S |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Maule%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Maule Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 256 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio MataquitoRío Mataquito3880346STM(Rio Mataquito, Río Mataquito)
Rio TenoRío Teno3869976STM
Rio ClaroRío Claro (Teno)3894569STM
Rio MaloRío Malo (Teno)3880821STM
Rio NacimientoRío Nacimiento (Teno)3879117STM
Rio LontueRío Lontué3882528STM
Rio ColoradoRío Colorado (Lontué)3894030STM
Rio Palos de San PedroRío Palos de San Pedro3877531STM(Rio Palos de San Pedro, Rio Patos de San Pedro, Río Palos de San Pedro, Río Patos de San Pedro)
Rio HuenchullamiRío Huenchullami3887659STM(Estero Huenchullami, Rio Huenchullami, Río Huenchullami)
Rio BarrosoRío Barroso3898640STM
Estero Cabrera3897569STM
Rio MauleRío Maule3880305STM
Rio ClaroRío Claro (Maule)3894568STM
Rio LircayRío Lircay3883101STM(Rio Lircai, Rio Lircay, Río Lircai, Río Lircay)
Rio LoncomillaRío Loncomilla3882578STM(Rio Loncomilla, Rio Lonconilla, Río Loncomilla, Río Lonconilla)
Rio PutaganRío Putagán3874566STM
Rio AchibuenoRío Achibueno3900690STM(Rio Achibueno, Rio Archibueno, Río Achibueno, Río Archibueno)
Rio AncoaRío Ancoa3899712STM
Rio LongaviRío Longaví3882556STM
Rio PerquilauquenRío Perquilauquén3876475STM
Rio PurapelRío Purapel3874616STM
Rio CauquenesRío Cauquenes3896101STM
Rio TutuvenRío Tutuvén3868854STM
Rio MeladoRío Melado3880124STM
Rio BarrosoRío Barroso3898641STM
Rio NegroRío Negro3878785STM
Estero San Francisco3872216STM
Estero Botacura3898007STM(Arroyo Botacura, Estero Botacura)
Estero Huedque3887727STM
Rio San JuanRío San Juan3872010STM
Estero Vega Honda3868542STM
Rio NiquenRío Ñiquén3878606STM
Estero Pidihuinco3876169STM
Estero del Cardonal3896698STM
Estero VichuquenEstero Vichuquén3868338STM
Estero HuineEstero Huiñe3887500STM
Estero LipimavidaEstero Lipimávida3883115STM
Estero Tilicura3869841STM
Estero PataconEstero Patacón3877038STM
Estero Comalle3893967STM
Estero Boquil3898049STM
Estero Pichibudi3876306STM
Estero Las Cardillas3884518STM(Estero Las Cardillas, Estero Los Cardillos, Estero las Cardillas)
Estero Uraco3868779STM
Estero Quilico3874214STM
Estero de Concaven3893896STM
Estero Duao3892179STM
Rio SecoRío Seco3871053STM
Estero El ParronEstero El Parrón3890810STM(Estero El Parron, Estero El Parrón, Estero Parron, Estero Parrón)
Estero de Los Altos de Caune3882445STM(Estero de Los Altos de Caune, Estero de los Altos d |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20B%C3%ADo%20B%C3%ADo%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Bío-Bío Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 568 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio ItataRío Itata3887026STM
Rio LonquenRío Lonquén3882535STM
Rio NubleRío Ñuble3878470STM
Rio ChangaralRío Changaral3895470STM
Rio ChillanRío Chillán3895084STM*
Rio CatoRío Cato3896150STM
Rio NiblintoRío Niblinto3878693STM
Rio Los SaucesRío Los Sauces3881355STM
Rio LarquiRío Larqui3884692STM
Rio DiguillinRío Diguillín3892432STM
Rio del RenegadoRío del Renegado3873443STM
Estero Bureo3897712STM(Estero Bureo, Estero Bustamante)
Rio AndalienRío Andalién3899674STM(Rio Andalien, Río Andalién)
Estero Coyanco3893324STM
Rio Bío-BíoRío Bío-Bío3898379STM(Rio Biobio, Río Biobío)
Estero Quilacoya3874265STM
Rio LajaRío Laja3885501STM(Rio Laja, Rio de La Laja, Río Laja, Río de La Laja)
Rio ClaroRío Claro3894566STM
Rio RucueRío Rucúe3872723STM
Rio PolcuraRío Polcura3875526STM
Rio ReleRío Rele3873516STM
Rio HuaquiRío Huaqui3887767STM(Rio Guaque, Rio Guaqui, Rio Huaqui, Río Guaque, Río Guaqui, Río Huaqui)
Rio RarincoRío Rarinco3873687STM
Tavolevo River
Rio CulencoRío Culenco3893050STM
Rio NicodahueRío Nicodahue3878688STM (also Araucania)
Rio La EsperanzaRío La Esperanza3885996STM (Araucania)
Estero Maitenrehue3880915STM(Arroyo Maitenrehue, Estero Maitenrehue) (Araucania)
Rio VergaraRío Vergara3868385STM (Araucania)
Rio RenaicoRío Renaico3873457STM
Rio MinincoRío Mininco3879769STM
Rio MallecoRío Malleco3880840STM(Rio Malleco, Río Malleco) (Araucania)
Rio HuequenRío Huequén3887625STM(Rio Hueque, Rio Huequen, Río Hueque, Río Huequén) (Araucania)
Rio RahueRío Rahue3873851STM (Araucania)
Rio PicoiquenRío Picoiquén3876204STM (Araucania)
Rio BureoRío Bureo3897711STM
Rio MulchenRío Mulchén3879199STM
Rio DuquecoRío Duqueco3892136STM
Estero LirquenEstero Lirquén3965538STM
Queuco River
Rio LonquimayRío Lonquimay3882532STM(Rio Lonquimai, Rio Lonquimay, Río Lonquimai, Río Lonquimay) (Araucania)
Riachuelo Colcura
Estero Santa Rosa3871390STM
Rio LaraqueteRío Laraquete3884821STM
Estero El Molino3890979STM
Estero Purgatorio3874603STM
Estero Los Timones3881332STM
Estero Lucanay3881228STM
Estero Las CachanasEstero Las Cachañas3884568STM
Rio CabreraRío Cabrera3897566STM(Estero Cabrera, Rio Cabrera, Rio Cabrere, Río Cabrera, Río Cabrere)
Estero Cabrera3897568STM
Estero Las Chicharras3884480STM
Estero Cifuentes3894645STM
Rio Paji |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20La%20Araucan%C3%ADa%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Araucanía Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 662 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
(Some rivers flow in 2 regions, e.g. Araucania and Bío Bío Regions, like Tirúa, Lleulleu and others. Bío-Bío River, flows in the Bío-Bío Region, but some tributaries flows also in the Araucania Region. For overview we repeat here the complete Bío-Bío Drainage system, and the simple rivers that cross the regions)
Rio TiruaRío Tirúa3869760STM (Araucania)
Rio LleulleuRío Lleulleu3882908STM (Araucania)
Rio BiobioRío Biobío3898379STM(Rio Biobio, Río Biobío)
Estero Quilacoya3874265STM
Rio LajaRío Laja3885501STM(Rio Laja, Rio de La Laja, Río Laja, Río de La Laja)
Rio ClaroRío Claro3894566STM
Rio RucueRío Rucúe3872723STM
Rio PolcuraRío Polcura3875526STM
Rio ReleRío Rele3873516STM
Rio HuaquiRío Huaqui3887767STM(Rio Guaque, Rio Guaqui, Rio Huaqui, Río Guaque, Río Guaqui, Río Huaqui)
Rio RarincoRío Rarinco3873687STM
Tavolevo River
Rio CulencoRío Culenco3893050STM
Rio NicodahueRío Nicodahue3878688STM (Araucania)
Rio La EsperanzaRío La Esperanza3885996STM (Araucania)
Estero Maitenrehue3880915STM(Arroyo Maitenrehue, Estero Maitenrehue) (Araucania)
Rio VergaraRío Vergara3868385STM (Araucania)
Rio RenaicoRío Renaico3873457STM
Rio MinincoRío Mininco3879769STM
Rio MallecoRío Malleco3880840STM(Rio Malleco, Río Malleco) (Araucania)
Rio HuequenRío Huequén3887625STM(Rio Hueque, Rio Huequen, Río Hueque, Río Huequén) (Araucania)
Rio RahueRío Rahue3873851STM (Araucania)
Rio PicoiquenRío Picoiquén3876204STM (Araucania)
Rio BureoRío Bureo3897711STM
Rio MulchenRío Mulchén3879199STM
Rio DuquecoRío Duqueco3892136STM
Estero LirquenEstero Lirquén3965538STM
Queuco River
Rio LonquimayRío Lonquimay3882532STM(Rio Lonquimai, Rio Lonquimay, Río Lonquimai, Río Lonquimay) (Araucania)
—List of rivers--
Estero del Salto3872508STM(Estero El Salto, Estero del Salto)
Estero PuaEstero Púa3875121STM
Estero Rucaco3872747STM
Estero Quilaco3874268STM
Estero RehuecoyanEstero Rehuecoyán3873539STM(Estero Coyan, Estero Coyán, Estero Rehuecoyan, Estero Rehuecoyán)
Rio PerquencoRío Perquenco3876479STM(Estero Perquenco, Rio Perquenco, Río Perquenco)
Estero Ruca Pehuen3872737STM
Estero Guamaqui3888512STM
Arroyo Palo Santo3877534STM(Arroyo Palo Santo, Estero Palo Santo)
Rio CaptrenRío Captrén3896823STM(Estero Catren, Rio Captren, Rio Catren, Río Captrén, Río Catrén)
Rio Re |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20Los%20R%C3%ADos%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Los Ríos Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 165 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio El LingueRío El Lingue3891183STM(Rio El Lingue, Rio Lingua, Rio Lingue, Rio Mehuin, Río El Lingue, Río Lingua, Río Mehuin)
Rio ValdiviaRío Valdivia3868702STM(Rio Valdivia, Río Valdivia)
Rio CallecalleRío Callecalle3897250STM
Rio San PedroRío San Pedro3871791STM
Rio EncoRío Enco3890095STM
Rio LlanquihueRío Llanquihue3882954STM
Neltume River
Liquiñe River
Rio FuyFui River3889220STM
Rio Hua HumRío Hua Hum3888614STM(Rio Guahun, Rio Guahun Norte, Rio Hua Hum, Rio Huaun, Río Guahún, Río Guahún Norte, Río Hua Hum, Río Huaun, Rio Huahum)(AR)
Chapelco River (AR)
Rio LipinzaRío Lipinza3883110STM
Pullinque River
Guanehue River
Estero Llancahue3882992STM
Rio Cau Cau6459019STM
Rio CrucesRío Cruces3893256STM
Rio PichoyRío Pichoy3876217STM
Rio InaqueRío Iñaque3887304STM
Rio MafilRío Máfil3881044STM(Rio Mafil, Rio Mafit, Río Mafit, Río Máfil)
Estero Cutipay3892809STM
Rio Torna GaleonesRío Torna Galeones3869600STM(Tornagaleones)
Rio AngachillaRío Angachilla3899650STM
Rio FutaRío Futa3889227STM(Rio Fula, Rio Futa, Río Fula, Río Futa)
Rio NaguilanRío Naguilán3879102STM
Rio ChaihuinRío Chaihuín3895652STM
Rio PescadoRío Pescado3876447STM(Rio Calbuco, Rio Pescado, Río Calbuco, Río Pescado)
Rio ColunRío Colún3893983STM
Rio BuenoRío Bueno3897808STM (Some tributaries of Bueno River flow also in Los Lagos Region)
Rio LlollelhueRío Llollelhue3897326STM(Rio Calcurrupe, Río Calcurrupe)
Rio CaunahueRío Caunahue3896119STM
Rio CalcurrupeRío Calcurrupe3897326STM(Rio Calcurrupe, Río Calcurrupe)
Rio PillanleufuRío Pillanleufu3875985STM
Rio HueinahueRío Hueinahue3887716STM
Rio NilahueRío Nilahue3878648STM(Rio Milahue, Rio Nilahue, Río Milahue, Río Nilahue)
Rio ContrafuerteRío Contrafuerte3893707STM
Los Venados
Rio RininahueRío Riñinahue3873157STM
Rio PilmaiquenRío Pilmaiquén3875964STM (+Los Lagos R.)
Rio GolgolRío Golgol3888948STM(Gol-gol)(Los Lagos R.)
Rio RahueRío Rahue3873850STM(Los Lagos R.)
Estero Pichi Damas3876275STM(Estero Pichi Damas, Rio Damas, Río Damas)(Los Lagos R.)
Estero QuillenEstero Quillén3874131STM
Estero Huino-HuinoEstero Huiño-Huiño3887491STM
Estero La Poza3884921STM
Estero Lleco3882921STM
Estero Venados3868503STM
Estero PlalafquenEstero Plalafquén3875683STM
Estero EpucoEstero Epucó3890022STM
Est |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20Los%20Lagos%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Los Lagos Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 755 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
(Bueno River flows in the Los Ríos Region, but some tributaries flows also in the Los Lagos Region. For overview we repeat here the complete Bueno Drainage system, and the simple rivers that cross the regions)
Rio BuenoRío Bueno3897808STM (Lagos R.)
Rio CaunahueRío Caunahue3896119STM
Rio CalcurrupeRío Calcurrupe3897326STM(Rio Calcurrupe, Río Calcurrupe)
Rio PillanleufuRío Pillanleufu3875985STM
Rio HueinahueRío Hueinahue3887716STM
Rio NilahueRío Nilahue3878648STM(Rio Milahue, Rio Nilahue, Río Milahue, Río Nilahue)
Rio ContrafuerteRío Contrafuerte3893707STM
Los Venados
Rio RininahueRío Riñinahue3873157STM
Rio PilmaiquenRío Pilmaiquén3875964STM (+Los Lagos R.)
Rio GolgolRío Golgol3888948STM(Gol-gol)(Los Lagos R.)
Rio RahueRío Rahue3873850STM(Los Lagos R.)
Estero Pichi Damas3876275STM(Estero Pichi Damas, Rio Damas, Río Damas)(Los Lagos R.)
(All in Los Lagos Region)
Estero La Poza3884921STM
Rio ChinchinRío Chinchin3895029STM
Estero Puquitrahue3874621STM
Rio MaipueRío Maipué3880976STM
Estero de la Plata3875664STM
Rio ToroRío Toro3869544STM
Estero Pitildeo3875763STM(Estero Pilildeo, Estero Pitildeo)
Estero La Junta3885543STM
Estero Collihuinco3894189STM
Rio MauleRío Maule3880303STM
Rio PuntiagudoRío Puntiagudo3874702STM
Estero Huempelen3887692STM
Rio La PlataRío La Plata3884976STM
Estero Manga de Millar3880720STM(Estero Manga, Estero Manga de Millar)(CL)
Rio PueloRío Puelo3840186STM(Rio Puelo, Río Puelo)(CL)
Rio MansoRío Manso3844969STM(Rio Manso, Río Manso)(CL)
Estero Seco3871057STM
Rio BarceloRío Barceló3898771STM
Rio EnganoRío Engaño3890083STM
Estero Traillen3869362STM
Estero Zallel3867585STM
Estero CorreltueEstero Correltué3893463STM(Estero Coreltue, Estero Correltue, Estero Correltué)
Rio de San JoseRío de San José3872084STM
Estero Nalalguaca3879080STM(Estero Nalalguaca, Estero Nalalguaco)
Estero Minas3879816STM
Rio CalquincoRío Calquinco3897217STM(Estero Calquinco, Rio Calquinco, Río Calquinco)
Rio ReiguaicoRío Reiguaico3873533STM
Estero Niltre3878637STM(Estero Niltre, Estero Nitre)
Rio NanculRío Ñancul3879045STM
Rio ConguilRío Conguil3893778STM
Estero Llamue3883002STM(Estero Llamue, Estero Llamus)
Rio TranguilRío Tranguil3869326STM
Rio LlizanRío Llizán3882866STM(Rio Lizan, Rio Llizan, Río Lizán, Río Llizán)
Ri |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Ays%C3%A9n%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Aysén Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 297 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio Buta PalenaRío Buta Palena3877639STM(Rio Buta Palena, Rio Carrenleufu, Rio Corcobado, Rio Corcovado, Rio Palena, Río Buta Palena, Río Carrenleufú, Río Corcobado, Río Corcovado, Río Palena)
Rio FrioRío Frio3969738STM
Rio OesteRío Oeste3969744STM
Rio RisopatronRio Risopatrón7116152STM
Rio CesarRío Cesar12086909STM
Rio RosselotRío Rosselot3872781STM
Rio FigueroaRío Figueroa3889512STM
Rio PicoRío Pico3841332STM(Rio Pico, Río Pico)(AR, CL)
Rio JeinemeniRío Jeinemeni3853518STM(Rio Jeinemeni, Río Jeinemeni)(CL)
Rio Mosco3843612STM(Rio Mosco, Río Mosco)(AR, CL)
Estero Laura3969747STM
Rio RodriguezRío Rodríguez3872940STM
Estero Pampita3969749STM
Rio AnihueRío Añihué3969665STM
Estero Mirta3969751STM
Arroyo Siberia3870936STM(Arroyo Siberia, Rio Silberia, Río Silberia)
Rio PalenaRío Palena3894564STM
Rio Cuarto7116147STM
Rio Bahia MalaRío Bahía Mala3969631STM
Rio Claro SolarRío Claro Solar3969754STM
Rio CuevasRío Cuevas3969628STM(Rio Cuevas, Rio Water, Río Cuevas, Río Water)
Estero El Negro3969753STM
Rio QuintoRío Quinto3969758STM
Estero Veco3969668STM
Rio Melimoyu7116155STM
Rio Santo DomingoRío Santo Domingo3969629STM
Rio EricRío Eric3969669STM
Rio CorrentosoRío Correntoso3893458STM
Estero Mallines3969846STM
Rio Dinamarca7116150STM
Estero Rosado3872839STM
Rio DientesRío Dientes3892444STM
Rio BordaliRío Bordalí3898043STM
Rio NevadosRío Nevados3878706STM
Arroyo Pan de AzucarArroyo Pan de Azúcar3877437STM
Rio Cacique BlancoRío Cacique Blanco3897466STM
Rio TurbioRío Turbio3868883STM
Rio PascuaRío Pascua3877110STM
Rio VentisqueroRío Ventisquero3868467STM
Arroyo del Poncho3875462STM
Rio JorobadoRío Jorobado3886840STM
Rio PedregosoRío Pedregoso3876899STM
Estero Negro3878809STM
Arroyo Loma Huacha3882622STM
Rio NeptuneRío Neptune3878738STM
Rio PantanosRío Pantanos3877290STM
Estero de las Casas3896368STM
Rio Mallin ChilenoRío Mallín Chileno3880831STM(Rio Mallin, Rio Mallin Chileno, Rio Mallín, Río Mallín Chileno)
Rio MagdalenaRío Magdalena3881025STM
Estero Las Golondrinas3884347STM
Rio Overo NegroRío Overo Negro3877899STM
Rio QueulatRío Queulat3874322STM
Rio de la Loma BajaRío de la Loma Baja3882639STM(Rio La Loma Baja, Rio de la Loma Baja, Río La Loma Baja, Río de la Loma Baja)
Estero La Tu |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20rivers%20of%20the%20Magallanes%20Region | The information regarding List of rivers in the Magallanes Region on this page has been compiled from the data supplied by GeoNames. It includes all features named "Rio", "Canal", "Arroyo", "Estero" and those Feature Code is associated with a stream of water. This list contains 173 water streams.
Content
This list contains:
Name of the stream, in Spanish Language
Coordinates are latitude and longitude of the feature in ± decimal degrees, at the mouth of the stream
Link to a map including the Geonameid (a number which uniquely identifies a Geoname feature)
Feature Code explained in
Other names for the same feature, if any
Basin countries additional to Chile, if any
List
Rio Diablo3859387STM(Rio Diablo, Río Diablo)(AR, CL)
Arroyo Zanja Honda3867568STM(Arroyo Zanja Honda, Rio Zanja Honda, Río Zanja Honda, Zanja Honda)(AR)
Rio VizcachasRío Vizcachas3832476STM(Rio Vizcachas, Rio Vizcanchas, Río Vizcachas, Río Vizcanchas)(CL)
Arroyo Guillermo3892273STM(Arroyo Guillermo, Rio Don Guillermo, Río Don Guillermo)(AR)
Rio ChicoRío Chico3895173STM(Rio Carmen Silva, Rio Carmen Sylva, Rio Chico, Río Carmen Silva, Río Carmen Sylva, Río Chico) (AR)
Rio TrinidadRío Trinidad3869075STM
Rio BarrancoRío Barranco3898710STM(Rio Barranco, Rio Barrancos, Río Barranco, Río Barrancos)
Rio BarrosoRío Barroso3898639STM
Rio BandurriaRío Bandurria3898838STM
Rio de los CaiquenesRío de los Caiquenes3897401STM(Rio de los Caiquenes, Rio los Colquenes, Río de los Caiquenes, Río los Colquenes)
Rio ZamoraRío Zamora3867579STM
Rio BagualesRío Baguales3898995STM
Rio del HieloRío del Hielo3888047STM
Rio de las ChinasRío de las Chinas3895041STM
Rio Tres PasosRío Tres Pasos3869168STM
Arroyo Picana3876339STM
Rio SerranoRío Serrano3870984STM(Rio Serrano, Río Serrano)
Rio PaineRío Paine3877733STM
Asencio River
Dickson River
Rio GeikieRío Geikie3889041STM (Geike)
Rio de GreyRío de Grey3888698STM
Río Pingo7303811STM
Tyndall River
Arroyo Prat3875208STM
Rio SofiaRío Sofía3870746STM
Rio RivasRío Rivas3873055STM
Rio PratRío Prat3875198STM
Rio BoleadoresRío Boleadores3898124STM(Rio Boleadoras, Rio Boleadores, Río Boleadoras, Río Boleadores)
Rio NatalesRío Natales3879001STM
Rio de las Casas ViejasRío de las Casas Viejas3896332STM
Rio TranquiloRío Tranquilo3869305STM
Rio HollenbergRío Hollenberg3887979STM(Rio Hollemberg, Rio Hollenberg, Rio Hollomberg, Río Hollemberg, Río Hollenberg, Río Hollomberg)
Chorrillo de los Alambres3900304STM(Chorrillo de los Alambres, Rio Chorrillo de los Alambres, Rio de los Alambres, Río Chorrillo de los Alambres, Río de los Alambres)
Golondrina RioGolondrina Río3888943STM
Rio Vegas MalasRío Vegas Malas3868530STM
Rio de Los PozuelosRío de Los Pozuelos3881494STM
Rio del MedioRío del Medio3880158STM
Chorrillo Meric3880015STM(Chorrillo Meric, Estero Merjo)
Chorrillo La Leona3885479STM(Chorrillo La Leona, Chorrillo Las Lomas, Rio Las Lomas, Río Las Lomas)
Chorrillo Wagner3867949STM(Chorrillo Wag |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilot%20%28educational%20organization%29 | Pilot is an organization that hosts educational workshops for students (usually focused on the high school demographic) to teach them practical skills in computer science and entrepreneurship. Students break into teams and work to build a prototype, then demonstrate the projects they created (generally apps or websites) to a panel of local entrepreneurs. Awards are given to the teams based on their evaluations. Local engineers and designers serve as mentors for the students during the event.
The goal of the program is to teach students creative thinking, practical skills such as the design and coding of an app, and then the skills of pitching the final product to a prospective customer.
History
Pilot was founded by Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology graduates Mayank Jain, Alex Sands, and Gabe Boning after they recognized the need to bring practical computer science and creativity education to more areas across the US in a way that could bypass the slow moving educational curriculum in schools.
Event Locations
Pilot events were originally only hosted at top educational institutions in the United States, and are slowly being rolled out to additional universities and regions. Early event locations included Stanford, MIT, UPenn, and Occidental College, among others.
Event Model
Pilot events are generally either 12 or 24 hours long. Many of the educational techniques are modeled after practices recommend by the d.school at Stanford. They begin with team formation and a brainstorming/ideation phase. Students then wireframe their products and receive feedback from their mentors, usually engineers and designers from the local area. The majority of the time is then spent building a working model of the app or website that is demoed and pitched to a panel of judges for awards.
References
Educational organizations based in the United States |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ang%20Lihim%20ni%20Annasandra | Annasandra (International title: The Secret of Annasandra) is a Philippine television drama fantasy series broadcast by GMA Network. Directed by Albert Langitan, it stars Andrea Torres in the title role. It premiered on October 6, 2014 on the network's Afternoon Prime line up. The series concluded on February 6, 2015 with a total of 88 episodes. It was replaced by Kailan Ba Tama ang Mali? in its timeslot.
The series is streaming online on YouTube.
Premise
Annasandra is the daughter of Belinda and Carlos. Events will lead to Annasandra to be cursed as an "awok". Her loved ones keep her real identity a secret to protect her from being misjudged, from being hurt and hurting other people.
Cast and characters
Lead cast
Andrea Torres as Annasandra Vergara
Supporting cast
Mikael Daez as William Benitez
Rochelle Pangilinan as Esmeralda Salvador
Pancho Magno as Enrico Sanchez
Glydel Mercado as Belinda Vergara
Emilio Garcia as Carlos Vergara
Maria Isabel Lopez as Rosario Salvador
Joyce Burton as Hazel Benitez
Erika Padilla as Rebecca "Becca" Sanchez
Arthur Solinap as Kenneth Gabriel
Cris Villonco as Lorraine Armada
Guest cast
Mike Lloren as Enrico's father
Barbara Miguel as Annicka "Nikay" Sanchez
Glenda Garcia as Enrico's mother
Chinggoy Alonzo as Don Wilfredo Armada
Juan Rodrigo as Jojo Salvador
AJ Dee as Alex Benitez
Winwyn Marquez as Tiana
Mon Confiado as Dalik
Dianne Hernandez as Stella
Arianne Bautista as reporter
Rocco Nacino as Reneé
Karel Marquez as Cecilia
Gabriel de Leon as Jimmy
Mercedes Cabral as Saling
Joko Diaz as Emong
Mega Unciano as Mikee
Tess Bomb as Myrna
Ratings
According to AGB Nielsen Philippines' Mega Manila household television ratings, the pilot episode of Annasandra earned a 14.3% rating. While the final episode scored a 17.4% rating.
Accolades
References
External links
2014 Philippine television series debuts
2015 Philippine television series endings
Filipino-language television shows
GMA Network drama series
Philippine fantasy television series
Television shows set in Manila |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick%20and%20Morty%20%28season%201%29 | The first season of the American animated television series, Rick and Morty originally aired in the United States on Cartoon Network's late night programming block, Adult Swim. It premiered on December 2, 2013 with "Pilot" and ended on April 14, 2014 with "Ricksy Business", with a total of eleven episodes (including the pilot episode). The first season received critical acclaim.
Cast and characters
The actors and actresses listed below lend their voices to the corresponding animated characters.
Main cast
Justin Roiland as Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith, the two main characters of the show; Rick is an eccentric mad scientist and Morty is his kind but easily distressed grandson.
Chris Parnell as Jerry Smith, Rick's son-in-law and Morty's father; a simple-minded and insecure person, who disapproves of Rick's influence over his family.
Spencer Grammer as Summer Smith, Rick's granddaughter and Morty's sister; a conventional teenager who worries about improving her status among her peers.
Sarah Chalke as Beth Smith, Rick's daughter and Morty's mother; a generally level-headed person, who is dissatisfied with her marriage.
Guest cast
Other cast members
Other cast members of the season, who each have voiced one or more characters, include: Eric Bauza, Dan Harmon, Phil Hendrie, Brandon Johnson, Ryan Ridley, Kari Wahlgren, Melique Berger, Jess Harnell, Smith Harrison, Maurice LaMarche, Rob Paulsen, Jesse Mendel, Dan Benson, Jackie Buscarino, Echo Kellum, Patricia Lentz, Rob Schrab, Gary Anthony Williams, Steve Agee, Tom Kenny, Vatche Panos, Cree Summer, Reagan Gomez, Megan Adams, Will Jennings, Finnegan Perry, Jeff Bergman, Adam Ray, Scott Chernoff, Rich Fulcher, Tress MacNeille, Nolan North, Alejandra Gollas, Lauren Hillman and Chris Romano.
Episodes
Production
Series co-creator Justin Roiland, John Rice, Jeff Myers, Bryan Newton and Stephen Sandoval served as directors, while Roiland, series co-creator Dan Harmon, Tom Kauffman, Ryan Ridley, Wade Randolph and Eric Acosta served as writers; writer's assistant Mike McMahan was also given writing credit. All episodes in the first season originally aired in the United States on Adult Swim, and are rated TV-14. However, the uncensored version of the episodes released on DVD and Blu-ray are rated TV-MA.
All episodes from this season were originally produced and broadcast in 16:9 high-definition on both Adult Swim's SD and HD feeds, resulting in the episodes appearing letterboxed on Adult Swim's standard definition feed. This season began production in January 2013.
Reception
The first season has an approval rating of 96% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 28 reviews, with an average rating of 8.19 out of 10. The site's critics consensus reads, "Rick and Morty zaps onto screens and makes an instant impression with its vivid splashes of color, improvisational voice acting, and densely-plotted science fiction escapades -- bringing a surprising amount of heart to a cosmically heartless premise."
Home media
T |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick%20and%20Morty%20%28season%202%29 | The second season of the animated television series Rick and Morty originally aired on Cartoon Network's late night programming block Adult Swim in the United States on July 26, 2015 with "A Rickle in Time", and concluded on October 4 with "The Wedding Squanchers". This season aired a total of ten episodes.
Cast and characters
The actors and actresses listed below lend their voices to the corresponding animated characters.
Main cast
Justin Roiland as Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith, the two main characters of the show; Rick is an eccentric mad scientist and Morty is his kind but easily distressed grandson.
Chris Parnell as Jerry Smith, Rick's son-in-law and Morty's father; a simple-minded and insecure person, who disapproves of Rick's influence over his family.
Spencer Grammer as Summer Smith, Rick's granddaughter and Morty's sister; a conventional teenager who worries about improving her status among her peers.
Sarah Chalke as Beth Smith, Rick's daughter and Morty's mother; a generally level-headed person, who is dissatisfied with her marriage.
Guest cast
Other cast members
Other cast members of the season, who each have voiced one or more characters, include: Jay Johnson, Tom Kenny, Jill Talley, Paul F. Tompkins, Scott Chernoff, Ryan Elder, Will Jennings, Maurice LaMarche, Tress MacNeille, Ryan Ridley, Kari Wahlgren, John Kassir, Dawnn Lewis, Nolan North, Rob Paulsen, Gary Anthony Williams, Tony Barbieri, Kevin Michael Richardson, Jevin Smith, Tara Strong, Dan Benson, Dan Harmon, Jess Harnell, Phil Hendrie, William Holmes, Cassie Steele, Mike McCaffery, Brandon Johnson, James Atkinson, Rob Schrab and Arin Hanson.
Episodes
Production
In January 2014, the series was renewed for a second season that began on July 26, 2015.
Wes Archer, Dominic Polcino, Bryan Newton and Juan Meza-León served as directors, while series co-creators Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon, Matt Roller, David Phillips, Ryan Ridley, Mike McMahan, Tom Kauffman, Dan Guterman and Alex Rubens served as writers. All episodes in the second season originally aired in the United States on Adult Swim. All episodes are rated TV-14, with the exception of "Interdimensional Cable 2: Tempting Fate", which was rated TV-MA-L.
Reception
The second season has an approval rating of 91% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 13 reviews, with an average rating of 7.81 out of 10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Rick and Morty gains even more slimy layers of complexity throughout its sophomore season, with the dysfunctional duo knocking heads and diametrically opposed philosophies during a string of intricately hilarious misadventures."
Annie Howard of the Chicago Reader wrote: "The show's hyperactive, off-the-cuff energy is a special treat, even in an increasingly crowded animated-comedy field where other great shows like BoJack Horseman and Bob's Burgers compete for eyeballs."
Home media
The second season was released on DVD (Region 1) and Blu-ray on June 7, 2016.
Notes
References
External |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guiffy%20SureMerge | Guiffy SureMerge is a data comparison utility. In addition to comparing files, the program is capable of doing side-by-side comparison of directories and archives. The program is also capable of performing automatic 3-way file merges. It is available for Windows, Mac OS, Linux, and Unix operating systems.
Reception
In December 2002, Guiffy SureMerge was awarded five out of five Cows by Tucows on all 3 platforms (Windows, Mac, and Linux). Scott Swedorski, editor-in-chief and founder of Tucows, said, "To our knowledge, Guiffy is the first multi-platform application to receive 5 Cows for all versions."
In June 2006 Guiffy Suremerge received the Jolt Productivity Award. Rick Wayne, a Jolt Award judge, said, "Guiffy Software's SureMerge uses an advanced set of three-way merge algorithms to detect potentially dangerous conflicts other tools might miss."
In a November 2008 review, Guiffy SureMerge was awarded five out of five stars by CNET. The reviewers found Guiffy SureMerge to be a "tool with serious muscle and a much easier, more intuitive interface than you'll find on any freeware package".
Features
Automatic 3-way file merge
Highlight the differences within the line
Compare views saved as reports (in HTML)
Support for ASCII, MBCS, Unicode character encoding and editing
Syntax highlighting
Ignore of case, white space, comments, regular expressions
Folder compare of file trees with explorer expand/collapse interface
Folder compares of archive files (.zip, .tar, .jar and several variants)
64 bit supports file diff/merge > 2GB
Image diff tool
Binary diff tool
Command line interfaces
Java API
Eclipse and NetBeans plugins
Shell (desktop) integration on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux
SCM integrations including: Perforce, Git, and Subversion
See also
Diff
Comparison of file comparison tools
Merge (revision control)
References
External links
Guiffy Software Inc. website
File comparison tools |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U2opia%20Mobile | U2opia Mobile is a mobile technology company which has its headquarters in Singapore. The company’s product Fonetwish enables customers to receive real time updates from social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Google on any handset without access to the internet. It also develops several social applications.
History
U2opia Mobile was founded by Sumesh Menon and Ankit Nautiyal in 2010. In October 2017, U2opia Mobile launched Reycreo, a platform geared to help game discovery and adoption in frontier markets.
Operations
U2opia Mobile currently has offices in Dubai, Gurgaon, and San Francisco along with their headquarters in Singapore. It has over 150 employees and was backed by the private equity investment firm Matrix Partners in 2011. It has partnered with telecom companies such as Bharti Airtel, Facebook and Twitter.
Products and services
Fonetwish, the company’s main product, is a mobile application platform that works on the USSD protocol. It enables customers to access their Facebook or Twitter accounts from any location without having a 3G, EDGE or any other internet connection. Users can access their accounts by navigating through a textual, session-based interface. The service is popular in several countries in the Asian and African continents. The service is also available in Central and South American countries like Haiti, El Salvador and Bolivia. The versions of Facebook and Twitter are text only and do not have any photos or videos. The company also develops several social applications.
Growth
The company currently has a customer base of 15 million and growing in over 33 countries since its founding in 2010.
References
Mobile technology |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuple-generating%20dependency | In relational database theory, a tuple-generating dependency (TGD) is a certain kind of constraint on a relational database. It is a subclass of the class of embedded dependencies (EDs).
An algorithm known as the chase takes as input an instance that may or may not satisfy a set of TGDs (or more generally EDs) and, if it terminates (which is a priori undecidable), outputs an instance that does satisfy the TGDs.
Definition
A tuple-generating dependency is a sentence in first-order logic of the form:
where is a possibly empty and is a non-empty conjunction of relational atoms. A relational atom has the form , where each of the terms are variables or constants.
Fragments
Several fragments of TGDs have been defined. For instance, full TGDs are TGDs which do not use the existential quantifier. Full TGDs can equivalently be seen as programs in the Datalog query language.
There are also some fragments of TGDs that can be expressed in guarded logic, in particular:
in frontier-guarded TGDs (FGTGD), all the variables shared by the body and the head of a rule (called frontier variables) must occur together in some atom;
guarded TGDs (GTGD) are particular FGTGDs where all variables used in the body of a rule must occur together in some atom;
linear TGDs (LTGD) are particular GTGDs where whose body consists of a single atom;
inclusion dependencies (IND) are particular LTGDs where in both the sides of the rule there is only one relational atom.
In SQL, inclusion dependencies are typically expressed by means of a stronger constraint called foreign key, which forces the frontier variables to be a candidate key in the table corresponding to the relational atom of .
References
Further reading
Alin Deutsch, FOL Modeling of Integrity Constraints, https://web.archive.org/web/20140912044956/http://db.ucsd.edu/pubsFileFolder/305.pdf
Database theory
Logic |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embedded%20dependency | In relational database theory, an embedded dependency (ED) is a certain kind of constraint on a relational database. It is the most general type of constraint used in practice, including both tuple-generating dependencies and equality-generating dependencies. Embedded dependencies can express functional dependencies, join dependencies, multivalued dependencies, inclusion dependencies, foreign key dependencies, and many more besides.
An algorithm known as the chase takes as input an instance that may or may not satisfy a set of EDs, and, if it terminates (which is a priori undecidable), output an instance that does satisfy the EDs.
Definition
An embedded dependency (ED) is a sentence in first-order logic of the form:
where and and are conjunctions of relational and equality atoms. A relational atom has the form and an equality atom has the form , where each of the terms are variables or constants.
Actually, one can remove all equality atoms from the body of the dependency without loss of generality. For instance, if the body consists in the conjunction , then it can be replaced with (analogously replacing possible occurrences of the variables and in the head). Analogously, one can replace existential variables occurring in the head if they appear in some equality atom.
Restrictions
In literature there are many common restrictions on embedded dependencies, among with:
full (or universal) dependencies, which are the ones without existentially-quantified variables ()
tuple-generating dependencies (TGDs)
equality-generating dependencies (EGDs)
single-head (or 1-head) dependencies, which have only one atom in the head
unirelational dependencies, in which only one relation symbol occurs
When all atoms in are equalities, the ED is an EGD and, when all atoms in are relational, the ED is a TGD. Every ED is equivalent to an EGD and a TGD.
Extensions
A common extension of embedded dependencies are disjunctive embedded dependencies (DED), which can be defined as follows:
where and and are conjunctions of relational and equality atoms.
Disjunctive embedded dependencies are more expressive than simple embedded dependencies, because DEDs in general can not be simulated using one or more EDs.
An even more expressive constraint is the disjunctive embedded dependency with inequalities (indicated with DED), in which every may contain also inequality atoms.
All the restriction above can be applied also to disjunctive embedded dependencies. Beside them, DEDs can also be seen as a generalization of disjunctive tuple-generating dependencies and disjunctive equality-generating dependencies.
References
Further reading
Database theory
Logic |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equality-generating%20dependency | In relational database theory, an equality-generating dependency (EGD) is a certain kind of constraint on data. It is a subclass of the class of embedded dependencies (ED).
An algorithm known as the chase takes as input an instance that may or may not satisfy a set of EGDs (or, more generally, a set of EDs), and, if it terminates (which is a priori undecidable), output an instance that does satisfy the EGDs.
An important subclass of equality-generating dependencies are functional dependencies.
Definition
An equality-generating dependency is a sentence in first-order logic of the form:
where , is a conjunction of relational and equality atoms and is a non-empty conjunction of equality atoms. A relational atom has the form and an equality atom has the form , where each of the terms are variables or constants.
Actually, one can remove all equality atoms from the body of the dependency without loss of generality. For instance, if the body consists in the conjunction , then it can be replaced with (analogously replacing possible occurrences of the variables and in the head).
An equivalent definition is the following:
where .
Indeed, generating a conjunction of equalities is equivalent to have multiple dependencies which generate only one equality.
References
Further reading
Alin Deutsch, FOL Modeling of Integrity Constraints, https://web.archive.org/web/20140912044956/http://db.ucsd.edu/pubsFileFolder/305.pdf
Database theory
Logic |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandemis%20rotundata | Pandemis rotundata is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Madagascar.
References
Moths described in 1960
Pandemis |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual%20archaeology | Virtual archaeology is a term introduced in 1990 by archaeologist and computer scientist Paul Reilly to describe the use of computer based simulations of archaeological excavations. Since that time, scientific results related to virtual archaeology were annually discussed, among others, at Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA). The keyword "visualization" defined the aim of the virtual archaeology in the London Charter Initiative:
Since its introduction, the focus of the term has been extended to explore methods that increase the visibility and accessibility of archaeology. Today it serves as an integration paradigm that allows many modern three-dimensional datasets to be analysed together, taking account preliminary reconstructions of archaeological sites and guiding further investigations, for example through archaeological prospection, historical research or excavation. In this iterative and incremental process, the interpretation and virtual representation of results is only one, albeit important, outcome. Consequently, by using 3D printing technologies, results may even be created as physical reality. Such a development was discussed at the first international conference on virtual archaeology, organized by the Department of Eastern Europe and Siberian Archaeology of the State Hermitage Museum, which took place in Saint Petersburg in 2012. A second meeting was held at the State Hermitage Museum in 2015, resulting in a new edited volume, and then in 2018. Next meeting with motto "Revealing the Past, Enriching the Present and Shaping the Future Languages in 2021 was transferred to the Siberian Federal University in Krasnoyarsk.
See also
Computational archaeology
References
Archaeological terminology
Methods in archaeology |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brotli | Brotli is a lossless data compression algorithm developed by Google. It uses a combination of the general-purpose LZ77 lossless compression algorithm, Huffman coding and 2nd-order context modelling.
Brotli is primarily used by web servers and content delivery networks to compress HTTP content, making internet websites load faster. A successor to gzip, it is supported by all major web browsers and has become increasingly popular, as it provides better compression than gzip.
History
Google employees Jyrki Alakuijala and Zoltán Szabadka initially developed Brotli in 2013 to decrease the size of transmissions of WOFF web font. Alakuijala and Szabadka completed the Brotli specification during 20132016. The specification was accompanied with a reference implementation developed by two additional authors, Evgenii Kliuchnikov and Lode Vandevenne, who had previously developed Google's zopfli implementation of deflate and gzip compatible compression in 2013. Unlike zopfli, which was a reimplementation of an existing data format specification, Brotli was a new data format and allowed the authors to improve compression ratios even further.
The Brotli specification was generalized in September 2015 for HTTP stream compression (content-encoding type "br"). This generalized iteration also improved the compression ratio by using a predefined dictionary of frequently used words and phrases. The version of Brotli released in September 2015 by the Google software engineers contained enhancements in generic lossless data compression, with particular emphasis on use for HTTP compression. The encoder was partly rewritten, with the result that the compression ratio improved, both the encoder and the decoder have been sped up, the streaming API was improved, and more compression quality levels have been added. Additionally, the new release shows performance improvements across platforms, with decoding memory reduction.
The Internet Engineering Task Force approved the Brotli compressed data format specification as an informational request for comment () in July 2016. The Brotli data format is an integral part of the 2nd iteration of the Web Open Font Format, which was recognized in a 2021 Technology & Engineering Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for font technology standardization at W3C.
Brotli support has been added over the years to web browsers, with 96% of worldwide users using a browser that supports the format, as of July 2022.
In 2016 Dropbox reimplemented Brotli in Rust to fulfill their requirement to be more secure against a malicious client. In 2018 they implemented the missing feature so one can append to a Brotli compressed file.
Algorithm
Brotli's new file format allows its authors to improve upon Deflate by several algorithmic and format-level improvements: the use of context models for literals and copy distances, describing copy distances through past distances, use of move-to-front queue in entropy code select |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congestion%20management | Congestion management may refer to:
Traffic congestion in transportation networks
Network congestion in computer networks
Transmission congestion in electrical grids |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open%20Data%20Now | Open Data Now is a 2014 book on open data by Joel Gurin.
Reception
A reviewer for the University of California, Berkeley School of Information said the book "is written for the business community, but speaks to the experiences of those in the government, the private sector, or those who make a living advocating for consumers."
A reviewer for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation says, "Gurin’s snapshot of Open Data's innovators also serve as an effective guidebook." That reviewer also notes interest in the book's claim, "If Open Data is free, how can anyone build a business on it? The answer is that Open Data is the starting point, not the end point, in deriving value from information. In general, governments have focused more on making the data itself available than on public-facing applications. The private sector can then add value by taking Open Data and building something great with it."
Andy Oram, a reviewer for O'Reilly Media, described how the book focused on the cost of data.
Summary
The book is divided into two parts, each of which has chapters.
Part 1
An opportunity as big as the web
The author profiles the Open Data Institute, Open Knowledge, and the National Security Agency as organizations working in open data. Definitions are presented for open data and big data. The book is outlined as discussing four business implications for the advent of open data - it will be the product basis for many startup companies and change the nature of investment, marketing, and innovation.
There is a review of the history of open data. United States weather and GPS data are described as free data which have become the basis for new industries generating billions of dollars. Data.gov is presented as a repository of more information which is likely to similarly create new businesses and products.
Hot Startups - Turning Government Data into Dollars
The chapter presents a history of open data in the United States. Google, Foursquare, Uber, Waze, Instagram, and Flickr are profiled as companies who have created products which have a basis in the use of GPS open data which they use in their mapping services.
The author interviews one of the founders of The Climate Corporation. There is a report from a Health Datapalooza.
Consumer Websites - Choice Engines for Smart Disclosure
The author defines a term, "smart disclosure", to mean the combination of government, company, and user information to curate whatever information a consumer would need to make a purchase decision. Another concept, "choice engine", is discussed to mean a filter of all available choices that an individual might make (perhaps in deciding to purchase a product), screened to take into account everything that a shopper might consider when they want and making a final, accurate recommendation which meets the purchaser's need and is less influenced by advertising. The author talks about his work role at the Federal Communications Commission, where he was tasked with promoting con |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surya%20TV | Surya TV is an Indian Malayalam language Indian general entertainment pay television channel owned by Sun TV Network, which is headquartered at Kochi, Kerala. Surya TV HD became the third Malayalam-language high-definition channel.
Current broadcast
Drama series
Spiritual show
Former broadcast
Original series
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Series !! Premiere date !! Last aired !! No. of episodes
|-
|Sita Ramam
|13 March 2023
|25 June 2023
|100
|-
|Swantham Sujatha
|16 November 2020
|12 March 2023
|677
|-
|Manassinakkare
|23 August 2021
|26 November 2022
|411
|-
|Kana Kanmani
|23 August 2021
|23 July 2022
|290
|-
|Ente Maathavu
|27 January 2020
|25 June 2022
|573
|-
|Thinkalkalamaan
|19 October 2020
|23 April 2022
|394
|-
|Indulekha
|5 October 2020
|7 May 2021
|153
|-
|Varnappakittu
|8 March 2021
|21 May 2021
|53
|-
|Namukku Paarkkuvan Munthirithoppukal
|22 June 2020
|2 October 2020
|74
|-
|Bhadra
|16 September 2019
|27 March 2020
|139
|-
|Chocolate
|20 May 2019
|20 March 2020
|215
|-
|Ithikkarapakki
|27 January 2020
|20 March 2020
|40
|-
|Oridathoru Rajakumari
|13 May 2019
|27 March 2020
|227
|-
|Thamara Thumbi
|17 June 2019
|24 January 2020
|157
|-
|Ennu Swantham Jani
|18 July 2016
|13 September 2019
|886
|-
|Thenum Vayambum
|29 October 2018
|10 May 2019
|152
|-
|Gauri
|29 January 2018
|19 January 2019
|293
|-
|Agnisaakshi
|28 May 2018
|7 July 2018
|36
|-
|Avaril Oraal
|18 December 2017
|2 February 2018
|40
|-
|Ayalathe Sundari
|11 September 2017
|26 May 2018
|217
|-
|Kayamkulam Kochunniyude Makan
|12 December 2016
|16 June 2017
|143
|-
|Sagaram Saakshi
|13 June 2016
|17 March 2017
|198
|-
|Moonu Pennungal
|3 October 2016
|17 March 2017
|120
|-
|Sahayathrika
|17 October 2016
|9 December 2016
|40
|-
|Mizhirandilum
|13 June 2016
|12 August 2016
|45
|-
|Punarjani
|22 June 2015
|15 July 2016
|255
|-
|Bhagyalakshmi
|3 February 2014
|14 October 2016
|701
|-
|My Marumakan
|28 September 2015
|17 June 2016
|188
|-
|Chechiyamma
|15 February 2016
|30 September 2016
|162
|-
|Vijayadashami
|5 December 2016
|24 March 2017
|80
|-
|Ishtam
|4 August 2014
|25 September 2015
|296
|-
|Vadhu
|3 March 2014
|3 April 2015
|283
|-
|Sangamam
|22 December 2014
|4 September 2015
|181
|-
|Snehasangamam
|31 August 2015
|16 October 2015
|35
|-
|Mohakadal
|16 July 2012
|20 September 2013
|303
|-
|Makal
|23 September 2013
|28 February 2014
|114
|-
|Akashadoothu
|24 October 2011
|4 October 2013
|501
|-
|Minnukettu
|16 August 2004
|2 January 2009
|1129
|-
|Manaswini
|20 October 2003
|21 May 2004
|154
|-
|Avakashikal
|18 March 2011
|23 March 2012
|262
|-
|Snehajalakam
|17 November 2014
|5 June 2015
|143
|-
|Sarayu
|13 May 2013
|14 November 2014
|391
|-
|Soubhagyavathy
|31 March 2014
|29 August 2014
|114
|-
|Spandanam
|26 January 2015
|19 June 2015
|104
|-
|Mattoruval
|22 March 2010
|19 November 2010
|173
|-
|Mizhiyoram
|6 August 2007
|28 September 2007
|39
|-
|Violin
|28 August 2006
|17 December 2006
|
|-
|Abhayam
|4 November 2002
|7 February 2003
|69
|-
|Valsalyam
|15 July |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secreto%20a%20voces | Secreto a voces (Open Secret) was a Chilean TV talk show focusing on show business and broadcast on the Mega TV network. It was hosted by Mario Velasco and Karla Constant with the assistance of a group of panelists who pose questions to invited celebrity guests and contribute analysis. The 90-minute show was last broadcast weekdays at noon.
History
Around the beginning of 2011, discussion began about a new prime time show to be called Placer culpable (Guilty Pleasure) and which would be hosted by Julio César Rodríguez. As time went on plans crystallized, the show was named Secreto a Voces and Giancarlo Petaccia was named as host along with a four-member panel who would pose questions to invited guests. The first broadcast was on February 3, 2011 with invited guests Raquel Calderón and Eduardo Cruz-Johnson. Petaccia remained as host until the end of 2012 and was replaced by Karla Constant and Mario Velasco.
In 2012 and 2013, the show went through a number of changes in broadcast time and in the makeup of the panel, ending up in the 7:30 prime time slot where it faced tough ratings competition against Alfombra Roja (Red Carpet) on Canal 13 and the blockbuster Somos los Carmona (We Are the Carmonas) on TVN. In September 2013, amidst rumors that the show would be canceled, it was rescheduled to the noon time slot, where it would face off against The Simpsons on Canal 13, as well as the top-rated entertainment talk show SQV on Chilevisión which traditionally had occupied that slot.
A shakeup in July 2014 shifted the program format away from mostly opinion to include more investigation and reporting. As part of that, changes in staff were made including adding Karla Constant as host instead of Pamela Diaz and changing some panel members. In the months following, ratings for 2014 rose half a point, and a full point since 2013.
The last show was broadcast on October 13, 2014.
Cast and crew
Hosts
Current
Mario Velasco (2012- )
Karla Constant (2014- )
Former
Giancarlo Petaccia (2011–12)
Pamela Díaz (2012-2014)
Panel members
Final
Margarita Hantke
Manuel González (2014- )
Patricia Maldonado (2011-2012, 2014-présent)
Pablo Zúñiga (2012- )
Paula Escobar
Former
Pamela Díaz
Javiera Suárez
Andrés Baile
Catalina Palacios
Yamna Lobos
Esteban Morais
Patricia Maldonado
Andrés Mendoza
María Luisa Cordero
Katherine Bodis
Rocío Marengo
Rubén Selman
Vasco Moulian
Vanessa Miller
Eduardo Bonvallet
Alejandra Valle
Journalists and reporters
Final
Yiro Gatica
Carolina Gatica
Valeria Uberuaga
Maria Ignacia Rocha
Daniela Aliste
Gerald Paredes
Former
Karina Pichara
Carolina Rojas
Francisco Kaminski (2012)
Production
Director : Mauro Caro
Executive Producer : Gonzalo Cordero
Producer : Rodolfo Saavedra
News editor : Clara Tapia
See also
Television in Chile
Mega (Chilean television channel)
References
External links
Official site (archived)
2010s Chilean television series
Chilean television talk shows
2011 Chi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al%20Jazeera%20Investigates | Al Jazeera Investigative Unit formerly, Al Jazeera Investigates, the outward facing name for journalists from Al Jazeera Media Network's Investigative Journalism Directorate.
The Investigative Unit
The Investigative Unit has bureaux in Doha, London and Washington DC. It was formed in 2012 when Al Jazeera decided to create a specialized team whose sole mission was to generate breakthrough content. The I-Unit describes itself as producing "original journalism that disrupts the global news agenda. Its mission is to speak truth to power by exposing wrongdoing while acting in the public interest."
Clayton Swisher became the I-Unit's first director following the success of The Palestine Papers and an investigation into the death of Yasser Arafat. In 2018, the former BBC reporter and filmmaker Phil Rees took over the unit. I-Unit investigators generate exclusive content for platforms within Al Jazeera Media Network. This material is presented in multiple languages, visual and audio media, ranging in duration from 30 seconds to two hours. The I-Unit's documentaries have won over forty awards and in December 2019, it began its own podcast, series, Al Jazeera Investigates.
Notable investigations that made global headlines include Pakistan's Bin Laden Dossier, The Spy Cables, Inside Kenya's Death Squads, The Dark Side, The Lobby, Cricket's Match Fixers, How to Sell a Massacre, and Anatomy of a Bribe. The I-Unit operates under the codes and practices of Britain's Office of Communications, Ofcom, the United Kingdom's government approved broadcast and telecommunications regulator.
Awards and nominations
44th Graham Perkin Journalist of the Year Award – Journalist of the Year Award – Nominated
Broadcast Award - Best News and Current Affairs Programme – How to Sell a Massacre – Nominated
WALKLEYS - Investigative Journalism / Scoop of the Year – How to Sell a Massacre – Winner – Investigative Journalism – Nominated / Scoop of the Year
FPA AWARDS - TV Documentary of the Year – How to sell a Massacre – Sports Story of the Year – Cricket's Match Fixers – The Munawar Files – Nominated
LOVIE AWARDS – News and Politics – Karaoke Chemist – Gold Winner
AIB – Association for International Broadcasting - International Documentary – How to Sell a Massacre – Winner
NMRA Kennedy Awards - Scoop of the Year / Journalist of the Year and Outstanding Investigative Journalism – How to Sell a Massacre / Peter Charley – Winner
DIG AWARDS - Long Investigative – Generation Hate EP2 – Nominated
Headliner Awards - Cricket's Match Fixers – The Munawar Files – Third Place Nomination
BAFTA – Current Affairs – Football's Wall of Silence – Nominated
Banff World Media Festival – Rockie Awards – Crime and Investigative – Generation Hate – Nominated
New York Festival TV & Film Awards – The Oligarchs – Current Affairs – Gold – The Oligarchs – Business / Finance – Gold – Football's Wall of Silence – Current Affairs – Gold – Football's Wall of Silence- Sports – Gold – Is |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distrito%20Comedia | Distrito Comedia (Comedy District) is a Mexican cable/satellite television network. The channel broadcast classic comedy shows (from the 1970s to 1990s), contemporary comedy shows (2000's) and original comedy shows (2010's).
Distrito Comedia (launched October 1, 2012) broadcast only Mexican comedy shows and sitcoms from TelevisaUnivision Mexico. Distrito Comedia replaced Clásico TV on (May 7, 2007 – October 1, 2012).
Current programming
Al Derecho y al Derbez (1993 – 1995)
Cero en Conducta (1999 – 2003)
La Hora Pico (2000 – 2007)
Diseñador Ambos Sexos (2001)
Güereja de mi Vida (2001 – 2002)
XHDRBZ (2002 – 2004)
La Familia P.Luche (2002 – 2004 / 2007 / 2012)
La Parodia (2002 – 2007)
Karaoke, Canta y no te Rajes (2013 - 2014)
Puedes con 100 (2013 - 2015)
El Guantazo (2013 - 2014)
Turnocturno (2013 - 2015)
Zona Ruda (2014 - 2015)
Un Tal Show (2014)
Quién se Roba el Show (2014)
Paranoia Total (2015)
La Casa de la Risa (2003 – 2005)
La Escuelita VIP (2004)
El Privilegio de Mandar (2005 – 2006)
Incógnito (2005 – 2008)
Vecinos (2005 – 2008)
¡Qué Madre tan Padre! (2006)
El Chavo Animado (2006-2014)
Amor Mío (2006 – 2008)
Una Familia de Diez (2007)
María de Todos los Ángeles (2009 / 2013)
Estrella2 (2012 – present)
STANDparados (2013 – present)
Nosotros Los Guapos (2016-2017; 2019)
Vas con Todo (2014 / 2020)
Me Caigo de Risa (2014 - 2017, 2018, 2019 y 2020)
Former programming
Festival del Humor (1997 – 2007)
Con Ganas (1998)
Ay María qué puntería (1997 – 1998)
La Güereja y algo Más (1998 – 1999)
Va de Nuez en Cuando (1999 – 2000)
¿Qué nos pasa? (1985 – 1988 / 1998 – 2000)
Parodiando (2012 – 2013)
María de todos los Ángeles (2009 / 2013)
Cachún cachún ra ra! (1981 – 1987)
Diversión Desconocida (1999)
Nosotros los Gómez (1987 – 1989)
Humor es... los Comediantes (1999 – 2001)
Hoy es para Amar (2013 – 2014)
Bajo el mismo Techo (2005)
Hospital el Paisa (2004)
Hogar Dulce Hogar (1974 – 1984)
¡Anabel! (1988 – 1996)
Dr. Cándido Pérez (1987 – 1993)
Derbez en Cuando (1998 – 1999)
El show de Joe y Freddiw (2011 - 2016)
Furcio (2000 – 2002)
Diseñador Ambos Sexos (2001)
Los Polivoces (1971 – 1973)
Chiquilladas (1982 – 1993)
Papá Soltero (1987 – 1994)
Objetos Perdidos (2007)
La Jaula (2003 – 2004)
La Carabina de Ambrosio (1978 – 1987)
Los Perplejos (2005 – 2006)
Par de Ases (2005)
El Chavo del Ocho (1972 – 1980)
El Chapulín Colorado (1973 – 1979)
Chespirito (1971 – 1973 / 1980 – 1995)
References
External links
Official Site
Television channels and stations established in 2012
Television networks in Mexico
Spanish-language television stations
Televisa pay television networks |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changestat | Changestat is a continuous cultivation method that is used for acquiring quantitative data of a microorganism's metabolism at various environmental conditions within a single experiment. Every changestat always starts as a continuous cultivation experiment (chemostat, turbidostat), but after reaching steady state, smooth and slow change of an environmental parameter is applied. Two most common changestat techniques are accelerostat (A-stat) and dilution rate stat (D-stat).
In case of A-stat the changing environmental parameter is dilution rate (D, h−1) that causes the increase of specific growth rate (μ, h−1). When the acceleration of dilution (a) is chosen correctly then D = μ as in chemostat. The problem of choosing the correct acceleration of dilution has been studied with Escherichia coli and Lactococcus lactis resulting recommended range of 0.01-0.005 h−2.
In D-stat dilution rate is always constant as in chemostat, but after reaching steady state environmental parameter other than dilution rate is changed. For instance temperature, pH or acetate concentration has been smoothly changed in bioreactor.
Turbidostat type changestats are called Z-auxoaccelerostats (pH-auxoaccelerostat, CO2-auxoaccelerostat). In similar to D-stat after reaching steady state a selected environmental parameter is changed.
References
Microbiology |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party%20Time%20%28TV%20series%29 | Party Time is an Australian television series which aired 1963 on what would eventually become the Seven Network. A daytime game show aired on Sundays, the first episode aired on 5 May 1963. The show featured two segments, "Letter Box Game" and "Double Your Money" It was hosted by Bill Acfield and featured Myra Roper. It appears to have been a follow-up to Letter Box.
It is not known if any of the episodes still exist, given the wiping of the era.
It should not be confused with Tivoli Party Time, which aired in Melbourne on HSV-7.
References
External links
1963 Australian television series debuts
1963 Australian television series endings
Black-and-white Australian television shows
1960s Australian game shows
English-language television shows
Seven Network original programming |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20House%20of%20Magic | The House of Magic (Thunder and The House of Magic in the United States. French: Le Manoir magique) is a 2013 English-language Belgian-French 3D computer-animated fantasy-comedy film produced by Nadia Khamlichi, Adrian Politowski, Ben Stassen, Caroline Van Iseghem and Gilles Waterkeyn and directed by Stassen and Jeremy Degruson. The film focuses on an abandoned young cat who seeks shelter in the home of an old, retired magician with his robots and gizmos.
A spin-off TV series called Presto! School of Magic (formerly School of Magic) was announced in 2017. The series will be produced by TeamTO and Federation Kids and Family.
Plot
While moving to a new home in Boston, a couple stops the car and the woman opens the door and throws a toy ball on the sidewalk so that their Tabby cat can chase after it. The kittenish cat, later realizes that he has been left behind by his owners when they close the door and drive away without him. Abandoned, he looks for a refuge. A passing tiny Chihuahua attempts to befriend him but is quickly dragged off by his leash. After various obstacles and near accidents, he's chased by a large Doberman until he comes to an old house with fame of being cursed or haunted in the neighborhood. Entering via an open attic window, the cat explores the strange contraptions about and tries to befriend a small mouse named Maggie, who's terrified of him despite the cat trying to convince her that he doesn't even eat mice. Soon, he is threatened by Jack, Maggie's grumpy rabbit friend, and Maggie; ordering him to leave the house before their owner sees him, afraid the cat will monopolize his love and attention since they're aware of his fondness for cats. They throw the cat out but he finds his way back in through a cellar window, attempting to escape a thunderstorm, then explores the mysterious house further. He hides behind an urn and observes the house's owner, Mr. Lawrence, a kindly old magician, have a conversation with the various automatons and gizmos he's created for his magic shows, whilst attempting to fix an electrical bulb-headed one named Edison. Later, the magician's materialist real estate agent nephew, Daniel, drops by for a visit. Afterwards, while Lawrence dozes off, Jack and Maggie locate the cat after he accidentally re-activates Edison and Jack pursues the kitten. Before Jack can throw him out again, Lawrence wakes up and picks up the kitten and decides to adopt him, naming him Thunder (after his fear of lightning).
Thunder learns more about the house, as well as the romantic pigeon pair named Carlo and Carla. Meanwhile, Jack and Maggie try by all ways to exile Thunder from the house, jealous and afraid of being substituted. The next day, refusing to be left behind, Thunder is incorporated into the "rabbit out of a hat" routine in the magic show performed for some children at a hospital, to much fanfare. Whilst riding back home, a disgruntled Jack and Maggie show their disapproval by attempting to get rid of him onc |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bytemark | Bytemark is a UK-based server hosting and datacentre provider, headquartered in York, United Kingdom. It was founded in 2002, and was the first provider of virtual machines and cloud hosting through User-mode Linux in 2003.
In 2012, the company launched BigV, a public cloud platform designed in-house using open source software. In 2013, it moved into a £1.2 million datacentre and headquarters in York. In 2017, their BigV platform was renamed Bytemark Cloud. In September 2018, the company was acquired by iomart Group plc.
On 2 February 2023 Bytemark announced that it would cease to support BigV on 30 April 2023.
Environmental and ethical policies
Bytemark's datacentre uses fresh-air cooling, not common in the UK, and was shortlisted for Innovation in Medium Data Center at the DatacenterDynamics Awards EMEA 2013. Each of its servers is built using efficient power supplies as certified by the 80 Plus scheme, which requires power supplies to be at least 80% efficient at up to 100% rated load. To reduce the bias found in traditional recruitment processes, the company developed their own anonymous recruitment process in 2015.
Awards
In 2014, Bytemark was named one of the Top 50 Fastest Grown Tech Companies in the North at the Northern Tech Awards with revenue growth of 44%. Financially, the company turned over £2.5 million in 2013. In 2014, this grew to £3 million. In 2015, the company was awarded the Fair Tax Mark.
Support of open-source projects
Bytemark has a history of contributing to and supporting free software.
They support LibreOffice through provision of a build server. In 2009, the company became a supporter of XBMC with the same. In 2012, they started supporting Cyanogenmod with build servers.
In 2013, the company contributed hosting services worth £150,000 to the Debian project, having used Debian since the company was founded. The company also supported OpenStreetMap with DNS services and servers to support version control, mailing lists and help pages. The company also support projects for social good, including sponsoring servers for mySociety, who operate FixMyStreet, TheyWorkForYou and WhatDoTheyKnow.
References
External links
Bytemark
Companies based in York
Companies established in 2002
Cloud computing providers
Cloud platforms
Data centers
Web hosting |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacUser%20%28US%20edition%29 | MacUser was a monthly computer magazine published by Ziff Davis in the United States, while the UK edition was published by Dennis Publishing.
History and profile
MacUser started publication in late 1985 as a four-color monthly and contained general interest Mac articles. In 1986 the magazine was acquired by Ziff Davis. It had reviews and regular columns for novice and experienced users with a more humorous view of the Macintosh world than other publications of the time. Games were reviewed and well as business and productivity software. A unique feature, not available in other publications, was the inclusion of about 250 capsule reviews in each edition.
The initial cover price was $3.50 with an annual subscription of $23 per year or $42 for two-years.
In 1997, the publication was absorbed into Macworld as Macworld, incorporating MacUser (a name reflected subtly on the magazine's Table of Contents page) reflecting a consolidation of the Ziff Davis-owned MacUser magazine into the International Data Group-owned Macworld within the new Mac Publishing joint venture between the two publishers.
See also
MacUser
References
Monthly magazines published in the United States
Defunct computer magazines published in the United States
Magazines established in 1985
Magazines disestablished in 1997
Macintosh magazines
1985 establishments in the United States |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action%20model%20learning | Action model learning (sometimes abbreviated action learning) is an area of machine learning concerned with creation and modification of software agent's knowledge about effects and preconditions of the actions that can be executed within its environment. This knowledge is usually represented in logic-based action description language and used as the input for automated planners.
Learning action models is important when goals change. When an agent acted for a while, it can use its accumulated knowledge about actions in the domain to make better decisions. Thus, learning action models differs from reinforcement learning. It enables reasoning about actions instead of expensive trials in the world. Action model learning is a form of inductive reasoning, where new knowledge is generated based on agent's observations. It differs from standard supervised learning in that correct input/output pairs are never presented, nor imprecise action models explicitly corrected.
Usual motivation for action model learning is the fact that manual specification of action models for planners is often a difficult, time consuming, and error-prone task (especially in complex environments).
Action models
Given a training set consisting of examples , where are observations of a world state from two consecutive time steps and is an action instance observed in time step , the goal of action model learning in general is to construct an action model , where is a description of domain dynamics in action description formalism like STRIPS, ADL or PDDL and is a probability function defined over the elements of .
However, many state of the art action learning methods assume determinism and do not induce . In addition to determinism, individual methods differ in how they deal with other attributes of domain (e.g. partial observability or sensoric noise).
Action learning methods
State of the art
Recent action learning methods take various approaches and employ a wide variety of tools from different areas of artificial intelligence and computational logic. As an example of a method based on propositional logic, we can mention SLAF (Simultaneous Learning and Filtering) algorithm, which uses agent's observations to construct a long propositional formula over time and subsequently interprets it using a satisfiability (SAT) solver. Another technique, in which learning is converted into a satisfiability problem (weighted MAX-SAT in this case) and SAT solvers are used, is implemented in ARMS (Action-Relation Modeling System).
Two mutually similar, fully declarative approaches to action learning were based on logic programming paradigm Answer Set Programming (ASP) and its extension, Reactive ASP. In another example, bottom-up inductive logic programming approach was employed. Several different solutions are not directly logic-based. For example, the action model learning using a perceptron algorithm or the multi level greedy search over the space of
possible action models. In |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebraska%20Rural%20Radio%20Association | The Nebraska Rural Radio Association is a radio broadcast network in the U.S. state of Nebraska. It was formed in 1948 with the goal of bringing information to farmers and ranchers in the state, including daily grain and livestock markets, weather and farm reports. Its first station, KRVN (AM), was started in 1951.
Severe blizzards in Nebraska in 1948-49 had resulted in deaths and serious damage to herds and crops across the state. One of the reasons cited for the massive loss of life, crops, and livestock was a lack of timely news and weather sources for farmers. More than 4,000 shares (at $10 each) were sold under the auspices of the Nebraska Cooperative Council, Nebraska Farm Bureau, Nebraska Farmers Union, and the state Grange. The network is still owned and operated by a cooperative of farmers and ranchers. Founder Max Brown ran the network until 1979 and was succeeded by his son Eric Brown, who served until 2012.
In November 2019, the association purchased a group of stations -- six in Scottsbluff and one in Holdrege -- from Legacy Communications. It then resold one of the Scottsbluff stations, KETT, to VSS Catholic Communications. With that purchase, the network now owns 15 stations across the state, as well as four additional affiliates.
Stations
Network owned stations
Cozad, Nebraska
KAMI
Lexington, Nebraska
KRVN
KRVN-FM
Scottsbluff, Nebraska
KNEB and KNEB-FM
KMOR
KOZY
KHYY
KOAQ (AM)
KOLT (AM)
West Point, Nebraska
KTIC
KTIC-FM
York, Nebraska
KAWL
KTMX
Holdrege, Nebraska
KUVR
Affiliates
Chadron, Nebraska - owned by Chadrad Communications
KCSR
KBPY
Nebraska City, Nebraska - owned by Mike Flood through licensee Flood Broadcasting, Inc.
KNCY
KBIE
Beatrice, Nebraska - owned by Mike Flood through licensee Flood Communications of Beatrice, LLC
KWBE
Fairbury, Nebraska - same as Beatrice
KUTT
Sidney, Nebraska - owned by Mike Flood and Andy Ruback through licensee Flood Communications West, LLC
KSID
References
External links
Rural Radio Network
Nebraska Rural Radio Foundation
Ruth E. Brown (2011), "New Holistic Mass Media Business Model", Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 55:4, 490-509, DOI: 10.1080/08838151.2011.62066.
American radio networks
Mass media in Nebraska
Organizations based in Nebraska |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiclet | MultiClet is an ongoing innovation project for a microprocessor that became the first post von Neumann, multicellular microprocessor, breaking the paradigm for computing technology that has been in place for more than 60 years. There have been attempts in the past to shift away from the von Neumann architecture. Under MultiClet a 4-cellular dynamically reconfigurable microprocessor is implemented.
History
In April 2013, the Russian company Sputnix signed an agreement for joint development of the MultiClet microprocessor.
In January 2014, an announcement is made that the FreeRTOS operating system has been ported to the MultiClet microprocessor, this demonstrates that the microprocessor potentially can perform tasks that makes it suitable for real products.
In April 2014, the Kickstarter project Key_P1 MultiClet: Your Powerful Digital Guardian, failed to raise sufficient funding.
Since June 2014, the MultiClet microprocessor is reportedly under test in real space conditions onboard Sputnix’s microsatellite TabletSat-Aurora.
In March 2014, Multiclet present first multicellular dynamically reconfigurable microprocessor in Inatronics 2014.
Financing
Since 2004 more than 300 million roubles has been provided for the project by the Danish venture fund Symbion Capital and the Bortnik Fund. In 2009 there was an unsuccessful request for co-financing by Rusnano. In 2010 it was reported that more than 1 billion roubles would be needed in total before any actual production could take place. In 2011 the MultiClet company, currently responsible for the development of the microprocessor was founded with a capital of 323 million roubles.
In August 2014, a financial request for 80 million US dollars from the Russian-Chinese Investment Fund (RKIF) was made in order to develop a MultiClet based computer.
Technical concept
As opposed to the traditional multi-core processor architecture each individual cell in the microprocessor can communicate with each other, without the need to store intermediate results in memory registers. This removes the concept of assembly language instructions with sequential dependence, in favor of realizing a high level programming language directly on the computer hardware. The smallest indivisible unit is a set of instructions described in the triadic language. Each triad can describe an operation between references to other triads, rather than references to the current contents in memory registers. The result of the sequence of triads is evaluated when selected, e.g. when an operation to write the result to a memory register is issued.
Potential benefits
The multicellular microprocessor architecture makes it easier to perform parallel execution because the need to access intermediate memory for each operation is eliminated, thus each cell can operate independently until the result is needed. The microprocessor can operate with reduced performance if one or more of the microprocessor cells become non-functioning. The dynam |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hromada%20%28secret%20society%29 | A hromada (, "community") was one of a network of secret societies of Ukrainian intelligentsia that appeared soon after the Crimean War. The societies laid a groundwork for appearance of the Ukrainian political elite and national political movement. The Ukrainian national and anti-oppressive movement intensified with the January Uprising and issuing of the Valuev Circular. Many were former members of the disbanded Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius.
In parallel to the development of hromoda networks in the Russian Empire, Prosvita (Enlightenment) societies sprang forth in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Important hromadas existed in Saint Petersburg, Kyiv, Poltava, Chernihiv, Odesa, Ternopil, Lviv, Chernivtsi and Stryi.
The first hromada was established in Saint Petersburg when the first members of the Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius returned from their exile. An important publication of the Petersburg hromada was the magazine Osnova (Basis) that was published for a short time in 1860s.
Due to student unrest and other revolutionary activity the Russian minister of internal affairs Pyotr Valuev had arrested several hromada leaders (Pavlo Chubynsky, Petro Yefymenko and others) and exiled them to Siberia. After the publication of the Pylyp Morachevsky's New Testament in Ukrainian, Valuev banned most of publications and issued his secret Valuev circular as an instruction to the minister of education.
The same year most of the western regions of the Russian Empire rebelled in the January Uprising.
The most important hromada was created in Kyiv and became better known as the Old Hromada. It was created sometimes in 1870s based on a secret club of chlopomans (commoners).
As reaction to the hromada movement, the Russian government issued the well known Ems Ukaz in 1876 prohibiting the use of Ukrainian language.
In 1897 on initiative of Volodymyr Antonovych and Oleksandr Konysky in Kyiv took place a congress of Hromada members where was established the General Ukrainian Non-partisan Democratic Organization. To the new organization entered all members of Hromada that existed in 20 cities of the Russian Ukraine. Hromada however continued to exist until the February Revolution in 1917.
See also
Hromada (disambiguation)
Bratstvo: Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius, political and cultural organizations
Mykhailo Drahomanov
References
External links
Hromadas at the Encyclopedia of Ukraine
Hamm, M.F. Kiev: A Portrait, 1800-1917. Princeton University Press. 1993.
Organizations established in 1858
Ukrainian independence movement
Political organizations based in the Russian Empire
Populism
Secret societies |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titcoin | Titcoin (Ticker Symbol: TIT) is a cryptocurrency launched in 2014. Titcoin's blockchain is derived from the Bitcoin source code, with modifications to improve transaction speed and efficiency. Titcoin is intended for the adult entertainment industry to allow users to pay for adult products and services without the fear of incriminating payment histories appearing on their credit cards.
In 2015, Titcoin received two nominations at the 2015 XBIZ Awards.
History
Titcoin was founded by Edward Mansfield, Richard Allen, and a third anonymous individual. The founders developed Titcoin for the adult entertainment industry as a cash alternative payment system for performing anonymous transactions.
On June 21, 2014, the Titcoin cryptocurrency wallet and source code was released with an initial soft launch for the cryptocurrency community followed by a hard launch for the public.
In September 2014, Patrick McDonnell joined the Titcoin development team as a business development advisor.
On May 29, 2017, Titcoin and its properties were acquired by the adult game development studio Joy-Toilet.
On September 5, 2018, Titcoin and its assets were acquired by the TittieCoin Developers.
References
External links
Official Website
Currencies introduced in 2014
Cryptocurrency projects
Sex industry |
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