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https://community.alteryx.com/t5/Alteryx-Designer-Desktop-Discussions/Close-Date/m-p/636675
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I'd like to create a column in my data set titled "Close date." I have created a blank column, and I need the field to be populated with the first day of the current month (ex. 09/01/2020 for September). I'd like to populate it on a monthly basis. Is there a way to do this? I am currently dragging/copying the date in excel after my workflow runs. Please let me know if there is a solution.
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https://www.qstack.com/qstack-architecture-explained/
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Qstack architects infrastructure into a self-service single pane of glass platform, that solves the fragmentation of IT management. This document outlines core Qstack concepts and how Qstack provides the ideal platform for any workload.
When configuring Qstack, users will arrange their cloud infrastructure using the following nomenclature: Regions, Zones, Pods, Clusters and Hosts. Once configured, Qstack installation is ready to use and end-users can begin to provision and manage instances.
Infrastructures are arranged in hierarchies with ‘Regions’ at the top of the hierarchical structure. Regions represent geographical locations e.g. separate private data center locations or public cloud regions.
Second in the hierarchy are ‘Zones’ that are used to map a deployment to a physical data center location. When configuring a Zone, the user can also configure networking properties such as VLANs and IP ranges.
A ‘Pod’ is the third level concept in the infrastructure hierarchy. Pods are a virtual grouping that can correspond to physical servers racks within a data center.
Following Pods, ‘Clusters’ are next in line in the infrastructure hierarchy. Clusters are a collection of hosts of the same type. For example, if the Cluster is composed of hypervisor hosts, they must be of the same hypervisor type. Shared storage is used for live workload migration in the cluster when taking down hosts for maintenance.
Last in the infrastructure hierarchy, are ‘Hosts’. Hosts represent physical machines that can, through Qstack, be provisioned by end-users for VM based workloads or as dedicated ‘bare metal’ workload servers.
Qstack supports many hypervisors and each hypervisor has its own unique characteristics. What Qstack calls a ‘Hypervisor’ are:
1) Hosts dedicated to running virtual machines
2) Dedicated servers – otherwise known as bare metal.
This naming convention is for simplicity’s sake because Qstack abstracts the complexities of each hypervisor away from the end user and that includes bare metal instances with no virtualization layer involved.
Qstack supports the industry standard KVM, VMware, and Hyper-V hypervisors and any dedicated server hardware that can provide IPMI or similar management capabilities.
KVM is the default bundled hypervisor in Qstack and requires zero config to set up. Qstack ships with a built-in network boot-services so new physical hosts can be auto-discovered and provisioned as KVM hypervisors simply by adding them to Qstack’s management network. Communications with the hypervisor host is done through an agent which is preinstalled on each auto-configured hypervisor host. Because KVM is the default hypervisor in Qstack, it does not require additional licensing to operate VM workloads.
Qstack deployment with KVM
VMware is the most commonly used virtualization technology used by enterprises today. From an end-user’s perspective, VMware behaves on Qstack much like its KVM counterpart; the differences can be seen on the administrative or infrastructure side of the Qstack. Qstack utilizes VMware’s vCenter to control VMs and discover hypervisor Hosts through the vCenter API. Qstack also integrates with vMotion to allow for better management of resources, general maintenance, etc.
Qstack deployment with VMware
In a recent Qstack release we added support for the increasingly popular Hyper-V. Hyper-V supports Windows Server 2012 R2 and Hyper-V 2012 R2. One of the features that sets Qstack apart from other CMPs using Hyper-V, is that it does not depend on System Center, which is an additional Microsoft component. Instead, Qstack communicates directly with the Hyper-V host API. Additionally, Qstack has built-in functionality that matches the other hypervisors — including live snapshotting and migration.
Qstack deployment with Hyper-V
Qstack workloads on bare metal work like on any other hypervisor from an end-user’s perspective even though bare metal is not technically a hypervisor. Qstack has a built-in PXE boot server, provisioned with preconfigured PXE templates and with images or “clones” of existing servers. Qstack has the ability to work with any modern, industry-standard hardware and has built in templates for the most commonly used operating systems making bare metal support incredibly easy to implement.
Each bare metal zone can be deployed with a flat network topology or with Qstack’s automatic physical switch support which allows for more advanced network topologies and bare metal multi-tenancy.
Also, just like for all supported hypervisors, Qstack supports a virtual serial/TTY browser based console view for bare metal servers. This enables secure multi-tenant management of the console screens of bare metal servers directly from the web user interface with no need to go through rigid and insecure vendor-specific solutions.
Qstack deployment with bare metal Hosts
Qstack with multiple hypervisors in separate Zones
There are two main network models in Qstack, typically defined on a ‘per zone’ basis. The first is a simple case that we call ‘basic’ networking which is essentially a flat network structure. The basic network is similar to the ‘AWS Classic’ networking mode, using security groups or firewalling to implement security.
The second networking model is what we call ‘advanced’ networking, which allows for even greater network security and implementation of dynamic VLANs. The advanced mode has an additional component, a Virtual Router, which operates as a gateway and firewall for the network. There is typically one VLAN per end-user account; however, each account can be defined as a ‘project’ for one user or shared between several users. In addition, there is also a private network that can be configured on a custom network like a 10.0.0.0/24, which can translate traffic in both directions–inbound and outbound from the private network to the outer network. The advanced networking model closely resembles the ‘AWS EC2 VPC’ networking mode.
Advanced networking mode in Qstack
‘Security Groups’ (to use a term borrowed from AWS), also known as firewalls in Qstack, are a way to group ports that can be open or closed and associated with a set of instances. Security Groups in Qstack can be altered at any time through a UI and API which makes it easy change port settings and also to set ingress rules for specified IP address ranges.
There are two types of vendor-agnostic Instance storage in Qstack. We call them Primary and Secondary storage.
Primary storage is used with live virtual machines and the backing technology can differ depending on the hypervisor used e.g. KVM might utilize local storage, NFS, or SAN; VMware might utilize VMFS which can be used with local storage; and Hyper-V can utilize Windows series protocol or SMB/CIFS.
Secondary storage is used for storing base operating system templates and custom templates as well as instance snapshots. Because the type of data on secondary storage is written with much less frequency, it can live on a slower storage option; however, it must be housed in mass storage – either NFS or SMB/CIFS – and can be backed up by object storage (S3 or Swift API).
Qstack’s web based user interface has different views for 3 types of user roles; end-users, admins and infrastructure operators. End-users can run any type of workload using the self service portal and admins can administer and support their departments and users, set permissions and quotas, generate usage reports etc. Infrastructure operators can focus on the infrastructure side of their hybrid cloud and easily setup new Zones and Regions and scale and maintain existing zones as well as create new compute and storage offerings for admins and end-users.
End-user created servers are called Instances in Qstack. This is a common term in cloud computing because the underlying server technology may differ but from an API perspective an instance is some kind of server. An Instance in Qstack can be a virtual machine or a physical machine (bare metal). Qstack automates the lifecycle of the Instance as well as network services, storage provisioning, IP pooling, firewalling and more.
In addition to managed Instances Qstack also manages end-user created Kubernetes clusters just like Google’s GKE but on your private infrastructure. End-users do not need any experience with Kubernetes to launch full blown stateful or stateless applications or microservices because Qstack automates the creation and configuration of Instances to deploy and maintain scalable Kubernetes clusters.
Qstack’s Kubernetes cluster management view
Leveraging Qstack’s core technologies i.e. the multitenant security model, storage abstraction, networking and load-balancer automation and hypervisor agnostic Instances – An end-user can start a new managed private or shared Kubernetes cluster simply by choosing a pre-packaged application from the Qstack UI. The cluster can then be customized using the Qstack UI or the standard kubectl command line tool or Kubernetes API.
Qstack managed Kubernetes brings the power of the excellent container scheduler without the complexities. The UI shows changes in real-time and knows what an Application is and how to install, configure, scale and even upgrade or downgrade an application using rolling updates. Qstack manages the Kubernetes backend and makes it easy to add Nodes (the Kubernetes term for workload Instances) or scale existing Nodes to increase workload capacity.
The role of Qstack’s Application Orchestration support is to accelerating DevOps success in companies not just for developers and operations but for any role so we made Helm, the Kubernetes application packaging format and cli tool, into a multitenant capable API and App store for end-users.
Qstack’s application orchestration creation wizard and app store
To further make Kubernetes clusters as easy to use as possible Qstack installs Cluster Services that help developers and other end-users create and debug their apps. Once a Kubernetes app or service is installed that requires persistent storage, firewall changes or publicly exposed load-balanced services Qstack’s Cluster Services will detect those requirements and automate the creation, formatting and mounting of persistent storage for the application, create the needed security groups and open up the necessary firewall ports as well as provision a software based load-balancer bound to a public IPv4 address. Just like for Instances Qstack also provides a browser based TTY console to any running container and additionally live logging and resource metrics that enable the end-user to easily create auto-scaling rules for their applications.
A multi-tiered application management view
API’s & Command Line Tools
All Qstack functionality is API driven and automatable from the infrastructure side to end-user workloads.
Qstack includes a hybrid native API that makes it possible to consume public cloud services just like Qstack controlled private infrastructure using encrypted and secured end-user api keys. The API is AWS EC2 compatible and by default supports AWS’s public cloud using the EC2 protocol and can also translate commands to the native API of other public clouds. This enables a seamless single pane of glass user interface and a single API for company wide infrastructure whether public or private and on any hypervisor.
Qstack’s hybrid cloud instances view
There are multiple command line tools and configuration management platforms that can control Qstack resources because of Qstack’s EC2 and Kubernetes compatibility including the official AWS and Kubernetes toolset. We have also made sure to make Qstack mashable with any cloud based services by providing a Hashicorp Terraform plugin.
This article hopefully gave you a good high level overview of Qstack’s architecture and its core concepts. For more information go to the official Qstack documentation. Also for a detailed presentation of Qstack’s architecture, tune into this webinar or request a personalized demo!
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https://discuss.getsol.us/
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Something went wrong while trying to load the full version of this site. Try hard-refreshing this page to fix the error.
Fashionable GNOME Forty | The Roundup #19
Call To Action: Translators Needed
GNOME 40 Upgrade Available in Unstable
HTTP Links and Firefox Reporting "Partial Encryption"
Flarum Update Log
Can't transfer files from Solus to Android Phone
Budgie Panel freezing
Keepass issue in user mode
What mouse do you run?
Error while installing haskell package (hlint) using stack
Through the Web, Darkly
avifenc not included in LibAVIF package ?
Microsoft Edge (linux ver)
Firefox starting, but opening in workspace 2?
Black screen with some games (Steam + Nvidia)
Pling Store wont open?
What are your favorite battery saving tweaks on Solus?
If not solus, what distro would you be using
Next Page »
Copyright © 2015-2021 Solus Project. The Solus logo is Copyright © 2016-2021 Solus Project.
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https://docs.topl.co/docs/wallet-cryptography-and-encoding
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We define a way for easily entering and writing down arbitrary binary seeds using
a simple dictionary of known words (available in many different languages).
The motivation here is to have sentence of words easy to read and write for humans,
which map uniquely back and forth to a sized binary data (harder to remember).
The process describing how to encode recovery phrases is described in BIP-0039
section "Generating the mnemonic". Below is a reformulation of this specification.
We call Entropy an arbitrary sequence of bytes that has been generated through high
quality randomness methods. The allowed size of Entropy is 96-256 bits and is
necessarily a multiple of 32 bits (4 bytes).
A checksum is appended to the initial entropy by taking the first
ENT / 32 bits
of the SHA256 hash of it, where
ENT designates the Entropy size in bits.
Then, the concatenated result is split into groups of 11 bits, each encoding a number
from 0 to 2047 serving as an index into a known dictionary (see below).
|Sentence Length||Entropy Size||Checksum Size|
|9 words||96 bits (12 bytes)||3 bits|
|12 words||128 bits (16 bytes)||4 bits|
|15 words||160 bits (20 bytes)||5 bits|
|18 words||192 bits (24 bytes)||6 bits|
|21 words||224 bits (28 bytes)||7 bits|
|24 words||256 bits (32 bytes)||8 bits|
Topl uses the same dictionaries as defined in BIP-0039.
Updated over 1 year ago
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https://dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/ansible/-/merge_requests/38/pipelines
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The current ansible role produces an nginx config incompatible with Funkwhale 1.3.0. This rewrites the role's template based on the current example from the Funkwhale repo.
I think this should be drop-in, provided the version of funkwhale being installed is 1.3.0+ and all clients support TLSv1.3. If backwards compatibility with <1.3.0 or TLSv1.2 is important, I can try to re-add it in conditionals.
I have been running this for a couple days on my personal instance, but I don't have a setup conducive to testing every option handled by the template (TLS termination, certbot, etc).
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https://rntlab.com/question/esp32-mqtt-text-send-and-receive/
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Has anyone experimented with a send and receive message service using MQTT?
What do you mean?
I’m not sure that I understood your question. Can you provide more details?
It would be like a “texting” service via MQTT, whereby you could have a messenger service between two or more ESP32 “text each other”
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https://gretzuni.com/articles/relative-harmony-experience-and-digtal-tools-in-networked-learning
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Relative harmony, experience, and digtal tools in networked learning
Below is the eleven minute audio teaser and supplementary component for a symposium I am participating in at the 13th International Conference on Networked Learning (NLC2022), entitled, Phenomenology and networked learning – a found chord. One of the symposium organizers, Mike Johnson, has introduced the audio segment to the symposium beautifully here. The paper I am presenting is entitled, “Re-presencing the digital trace in networked learning design”.This updated audio file reflects on what “a found chord” means to my presentation. As Christopher Alexander inspired how I set out networked learning design in my paper, I thought it would be fitting in this recording to follow a quotation by him, taken from his first volume in The Nature of Order series. In this quotation, he mentions “relative harmony”:
As architects, builders, and artists, we are called upon constantly—every moment of the working day—to make judgments about relative harmony. We are constantly trying to make decisions about what is better and what is worse…What does “relative harmony” mean with respect to our experience of learning about the ever-more digital world and the spatialization of the connection between us and the digital tools we choose to use? From the audio file introduction:
[As Alexander wrote,] ‘We are constantly trying to make decisions about what is better and what is worse. . . ’ To better understand this recording, try to visualize the network in networked learning as ’focus[ing] on node-link structures, foregrounding connectivity . . . and backgrounding such things as spatial relations’ (Goodyear et al. 2016). In this talk, spatial relations refer to the space between ourselves and other people and things around us and the trajectory we engage in to try to understand these others in our learning experience. The purpose of the recording is to reflect on the question of How we can conscientiously assemble technical things, people, activities, and outcomes in networked learning such that we do not deny the world of feeling and experience – which is expressed in time and space – nor deny the world of objects (cf. Goodyear et al. 2016, Whitehead 1978).
The audio recording is divided into four sections: Where are we?, When is technology?, Vector Feeling, and Where are we going?
Right click the .mp3 file below to download.
The transcript can be downloaded below:
- Alexander, C. (2002). The Nature of Order: The Nature of Life Volume 1. Berkeley: Center for Environmental Structure.
- Atwood, J. (2007). The software imprinting dilemma. Codinghorror.com.
- Beaty, L., Hodgson, V., Mann, S., & McConnell, D. (2002). Towards E-quality in Networked E-learning in Higher Education. 26 March. Networkedlearningconference.org.
- Dass, R. (1971). Be here now. New Mexico: Lama Foundation.
- Doctorow, C. (2021). Right or left, you should be worried about big tech censorship. EFF.org.
- Engelbart, D. (1962). Augmenting human intellect: A conceptual framework. Menlo Park: Stanford Research Institute.
- Fawns, T. (2019). Postdigital education in design and practice. Postdigital Science and Education,1(1),132–145.
- Freire, P. (2005). Pedagogy of the oppressed. New York, London: Continuum.
- Gadamer, H. (2004). Truth and method. London and New York: Continuum.
- Goetz, G. (2021). A song of free software for Stiegler. Educational philosophy and theory: Bernard Stiegler and Education: Experiments in negentropic knowledge, 52(9).
- Goodyear, P., Carvalho, L., Bonderup Dohn, N. (2016). Artefacts and activities in the analysis of learning networks. In Ryberg, T., Sinclair, C., Bayne. S. & de Laat, M. (Eds.) Research, Boundaries, and Policy in Networked Learning. (pp. 93-110). Switzerland: Springer.
- Goodyear, P. & Retalis, S. (2010). Learning, technology and design. In Goodyear, P. & Retalis, S. (Eds.). Technology-Enhanced Learning: Design patterns and pattern languages. (pp. 1–27). Roterdam: Sense Publishers.
- Hodgson, V., & McConnell, D. (2018). The epistemic practice of networked learning. In M. Bajić, N. B. Dohn, M. de Laat, P. Jandrić, & T. Ryberg (Eds.), Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Networked Learning 2018 (pp. 455–464). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42438-018-0029-0.
- Magrini, J. (2002). Phenomenology for Educators: Max van Manen and “Human Science” Research”, Philosophy Scholarship Paper 32. Note: I wrote about this paper in a post on digital work and the ethic of care.
- Markauskaite, L., & Goodyear, P. (2017). Epistemic fluency and professional education: Innovation, knowledgeable action and actionable knowledge. Dordrecht: Springer.
- Ricoeur, P. (1988). Time and narrative, III. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
- Stiegler, B. (2018). The Neganthropocene. Open Humanities Press.
- Schön, D. (1983). The Reflective Practitioner: How professionals think in action. London: Maurice Temple Smith.
- Whitehead, A. ([1929 ] 1978). Process and reality. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co.
- Zuboff, S. (2019). The age of surveillance capitalism: The fight for a human future at the new frontier of power. New York: Public Affairs.
Page generated 02G03. Last edited 02O10.
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https://www.freelancer.com/projects/blog-install/commerce-website-wordpress-30191529/?ngsw-bypass=&w=f
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Job Not Found
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Handling counter for currency exchange. ▪ Checking the correctness of the customers submitted documents ▪ Updating the daily sales transaction in the system. ▪ Handling day to day banking activities.
Am făcut o simulare de atm și am nevoie de interfața grafica in Java, care sa corespundă codului meu
Trung tâm Khách hàng VIP Công ty bảo hiểm Dai-ichi Life cần tuyển vị trí cộng tác viên BÁN thời gian nhằm hỗ trợ phát triển mạng lưới khách hàng cho bộ phận chăm sóc khách hàng VIP. Yêu cầu: - Tuổi trên 21 - Có khả năng khai thác tốt các mối quan hệ xã hội - C&oa...
Autobids / auto-messages will be ignored. Only manual bids according to my job posting will be taken into consideration. We have a job board open in 10+ countries. We are looking for a company to work on the ON page and OFF page SEO. We need someone from Europe so the timetables are the same. Please do not bid if you are not from Europe. We want someone with experience on Google for Jobs as our...
Bonjour j'aimerais améliorer la visibilité de mon site et monter des campagnes de promotions
a project can be done with basic algorithm knowladge in java
Need Logo design for my website
I would like to sort and analyze the attached data which is responses result of a survey.
I want a Wikipedia page created and approved/published about my website. Apart from that, I would need you to create 5 backlinks from high authority domains including one from Wikipedia. Budget is final. Don't submit an entry if you can't do it under budget. Start your bid with keyword "wikip" for me to read your bid.
Hi, I need a node JS developer for creating API's for chatting app. I have a front end developer, front end will be in angular. Please check attached for basic designs, document.
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https://apps.apple.com/cn/app/%E5%85%AC%E4%B8%BB-%E5%AF%BF%E5%8F%B8%E9%A4%90%E5%8E%85-%E7%83%B9%E9%A5%AA%E5%86%92%E9%99%A9%E5%8F%91%E7%83%A7%E5%8F%8B%E7%9A%84%E6%A8%A1%E6%8B%9F%E7%BB%8F%E8%90%A5%E6%B8%B8%E6%88%8F/id1252897314
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code
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This games are designed very addictive swipe elimination in early puzzle.
How to play ; You swipe groups of 3 or more same sushi. Swipe as many groups as possible until one column reaches the top of the screen.
Don't miss it. Don't worry to play, download now for free.
启用“家人共享”后,此 App 最多可供 6 名家庭成员使用。
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https://www.mis.mpg.de/de/publications/preprint-repository/article/2004/issue-77
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We have decided to discontinue the publication of preprints on our preprint server as of 1 March 2024. The publication culture within mathematics has changed so much due to the rise of repositories such as ArXiV (www.arxiv.org) that we are encouraging all institute members to make their preprints available there. An institute's repository in its previous form is, therefore, unnecessary. The preprints published to date will remain available here, but we will not add any new preprints here.
Regularity Theorems and Energy Identities for Dirac-Harmonic Maps
Qun Chen, Jürgen Jost, Jiayu Li and Guofang Wang
We study Dirac-harmonic maps from a Riemann surface to a sphere $\S^n$. We show that a weakly Dirac-harmonic map is in fact smooth, and prove that the energy identity holds during the blow-up process.
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https://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/what-im-teaching-this-fall/
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What I’m Teaching This Fall by Chris Peterson SM '13
spoiler alert: a social history of the internet
Regular readers may recall that I’ve been teaching a bit in Comparative Media Studies/Writing. This fall, I’m teaching again, this time a new special topics course called CMS.S62: The Internet as Social Artifact. It meets from 7-10PM on Wednesday nights. Right now, we have 18 students pre-registered for the course, representing 9 different majors and spread more or less evenly across 2016s, 2017s, and 2018s.
I’m coteaching with Ethan Zuckerman, the Director of the Center for Civic Media, cofounder of Global Voices and MediaCloud, and board member for Ushahidi and Open Society Foundation. You may have seen his TED talk on the importance of diversifying your sources of media:
Ethan and I have been basically thinking about this course as a ‘social history of the Internet,’ one small part of the larger ‘Internet Studies’ curriculum developing at MIT (cf. TL Taylor’s Networked Cultures, or Abelson/Fischer/Weitzner’s Foundations of Internet Policy, both also offered this fall). Here’s our course description:
There is often a tendency to consider technical systems as ‘purely’ technical, designed and built by technical people for technical reasons. But technical systems are always technosocial systems, mixed up with cultural, legal, economic, and political forces that shape the technical, even as the technical shapes them. The internet, in particular, is an artifact shaped not only by technical standards, but by the often utopian aspirations of its architects, and by the local and global communities that have adopted and reshaped it. In CMS.S62, we take the Internet as our object of study, and review some of the techno/social interactions that have historically contributed to its current shapes. In doing so, we will come to understand the Internet as a social artifact, the technical residue of human politics: a built thing that, like all built things, could have had alternative pasts, and still may have alternative futures.
To give you a more concrete sense of the substance of the course, here’s the syllabus entry for the first class:
September 16th: Internet Governance: “Rough Consensus and Running Code”
The Internet runs on code, but it also runs on consensus: the agreements, hashed out in RFCs and controversies, about what bits should route where, when, and why. In this class we’ll discuss aspects of Internet governance and politics, from bodies like the IETF and ICANN to metaphors like the “seven layer burrito” and “end-to-end.”
- McLaughlin & Zuckerman, “Internet Architecture”, Harvard BOLD (2003).
- Zittrain, The Future of the Internet – And How To Stop It, pp. 21-35, 67-71 (2008)
- Gillespie, “Engineering A Principle: ‘End-to-End’ in the Design of the Internet,” Social Studies of Science (2006).
- The IETF Request for Comments document series.
Each week, a few students will research the readings and present their interpretation (and some broader intellectual context) to the rest of the class; students not assigned to research for that week will write a short blog post analyzing, synthesizing, and/or reacting to the various readings. We expect the course to be more of a seminar style than a traditional lecture, with lots of student discussion guided/informed by Ethan and me. The primary deliverable for the class is a term paper on a topic of the student’s choice that dives more deeply into some aspect of the social history of the Internet.
Depending on your own educationl background/interests, you may or may not have thought about the Internet as a thing that has a social history (as opposed to, say, a technical evolution). One thing that I love about CMS/W – and much of SHASS, actually – is the opportunity it provides to study the interaction between science, technology, and society, broadly speaking. I was drawn to CMS/W for my own graduate school experience in part because I wanted to study humanist/social concerns that were shaped / informed / affected / inflected by science/technology, and MIT was one of the best places to do it. I think you can see this theme in many of the other courses offered in CMS/W & SHASS; in fact, probably the most painful part of writing this post was scrolling through all the classes offered this fall…and realizing how much I wanted to take a bunch of them! Instead, I’ll be reading a bunch of applications…which is also fun and educational, albeit in a different way.
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https://engineering.jhu.edu/ece/event/thesis-proposal-vishwanath-sindagi/
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Note: This is a virtual presentation. Here is the link for where the presentation will be taking place.
Title: Single Image-based Crowd Counting Using Deep Learning Techniques
Abstract: With ubiquitous usage of surveillance cameras and advances in computer vision, crowd scene analysis has gained a lot of interest in the recent years. In this work, we focus on the task of estimating crowd count and high-quality density maps which has wide applications in video surveillance, traffic monitoring, public safety, urban planning, scene understanding and flow monitoring. Also, the methods developed for crowd counting can be extended to counting tasks in other fields such as cell microscopy, vehicle counting, environmental survey, etc. The task of crowd counting and density estimation has seen significant progress in the recent years. However, due to the presence of various complexities such as occlusions, high clutter, non-uniform distribution of people, non-uniform illumination, intra-scene and inter-scene variations in appearance, scale and perspective, the resulting accuracies are far from optimal. Furthermore, existing methods tend to perform poorly on datasets that are different from the dataset used for training the models.
In this work, we specifically address two of the major issues plaguing the crowd counting community: (i) scale variations and (ii) poor cross-dataset performance. In order to address the problem of scale variations, we analyze existing scale-aware counting models and identify that their poor performance is due to the lack of contextual information and the poor quality of predicted density maps. We propose to overcome these issues by incorporating multiple context cues into the learning process, and additionally improving the quality of the predicted density maps using adversarial training. Finally, we explore the use of contextual information as weak image-level labels to improve cross-dataset performance.
Rama Chellappa, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Carlos Castillo, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Vishal Patel, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
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https://wiki.opensourceecology.org/wiki/Faux_Fur
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code
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- Standard Textiles, made to simulate the feeling of animal pelts (often without skin too, just a cloth substrate)
- Usually done via having a [[Pile Textile? with occasional "loops", then slicing these loops
- Also probably the same tech for those not felt, but felt like textiles?
- Fleece (similar concept, uses "Textile Napping" instead of shearing it seems?)
- Felt similar use case/concept but made via a different process (also less Tensile Strength ?)
- Flocking (a process that can give similar results, but is typically used for things like Architectural Models for grass, and other greenery )
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https://www.telerik.com/forums/combobox-with-drop-down-tree
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code
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The screenshot here
is from out Windows desktop app. Is it possible to do the same thing in Kendo?
The user needs to be able to type in the value for a comparison. They also need to be able to select from the tree. And the tree needs to populate nodes when they are expanded because the tree can have nodes that are circular (ie Salesperson -> Orders -> Order -> Salesperson).
How can I do this?
thanks - dave
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https://uat.melbournebioinformatics.org.au/training-events/introduction-to-r/
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code
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Introduction to R for Biologists – online
This workshop has been developed collaboratively by training specialists at Peter MacCallum Cancer Center and Melbourne Bioinformatics. It will be presented by Maria Doyle (Application and Training Specialist, Peter Mac) and Jessica Chung (Melbourne Bioinformatics, University of Melbourne).
This introduction to R and RStudio will provide beginners with experience with loading, manipulating and visualising biological data using the tidyverse collection of R packages. The example data used is publicly available RNA-seq data, therefore attendees will gain experience in the structure and appearance of RNA-seq data.
At the end of the course, you will be able to:
• load tabular data into R
• apply tidyverse functions to manipulate data in R
• produce simple plots such boxplots using ggplot
• understand and apply data faceting in ggplot
• modify the aesthetics of a ggplot plot.
The workshop is aimed at bench biologists with no coding/programming skills.
Attendees must use their own computer with RStudio and R installed (installation instructions available at this link). You may need to contact your own IT support for assistance during the installation process and to ensure that you have full permissions to R directories. Therefore, we advise you to begin installation when registering for the workshop, to allow sufficient time to troubleshoot issues with your own IT support such as permissions and sufficient space for installation.
You will need:
- a charged laptop
- Web browser (Firefox or Chrome recommended)
- R (>= version 3.5) and RStudio installed on your laptop
- Zoom (Version 5.1 or higher)
Most workshops are FREE for all researchers and students from the University of Melbourne and its affiliated research institutes.
Earlier in October I attended the Introduction to R for Biologists course. With a bit of delay, I wanted to say how much I liked this course! Thank you so much for delivering this fantastic course, it was really valuable for me.
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https://communities.intel.com/thread/24666
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Have you tried installing the latest graphics driver?
Intel has just released new version
Here is the link for Windows* 7 32 and Windows* 7 64bit drivers
I hope this help.
Hello, thanks for your reply.
Unfortunately I was unable to install the new driver as I have a Vaio, I believe the driver has to be modified and released by Sony, is this right?
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https://lists.zope.org/pipermail/zope/2007-October/172404.html
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[Zope] How can I get graph statistics
chris at simplistix.co.uk
Thu Oct 11 04:08:53 EDT 2007
Jonathan Salazar Santos wrote:
> I am wondering if..., ¿Could some body tell me (help me) how to do graph
> statistics on the fly with DTML or python?
> I need to create reports with statistics on the fly.
Reportlab (http://www.reportlab.org) has some cool charting stuff...
Simplistix - Content Management, Zope & Python Consulting
More information about the Zope
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https://hatoum.com/blog/2010/11/installing-ftp-task-on-ant-18x-on.html
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I recently had to reinstall the OS on the laptop I use primarily for work. I thought I had installed everything I needed, but realized that I couldn't run the FTP task in Ant because of missing libraries. The message I received was:
Problem: failed to create task or type ftp
Cause: the class org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.optional.net.FTP was not found.
This looks like one of Ant's optional components.
Action: Check that the appropriate optional JAR exists in
-a directory added on the command line with the -lib argument
Do not panic, this is a common problem.
The commonest cause is a missing JAR.
This is not a bug; it is a configuration problem
My searches on the subject lead to multiple solutions, but they were aimed at earlier versions of Ant (1.7.X and below), somewhat complicated and turned out not to be what I needed for my version of Ant (1.8.1 on MacOSX 10.6.5). You'll see lots of instructions for setting your ANT_HOME environment variable, along with other settings, but that's not necessary with newer versions of Ant on MacOSX.
Most information I found on the web correctly pointed out that according to the Apache Ant install instructions for optional tasks, such as FTP, you need to have the Jakarta Oro 2.0.8 (text manipulation) and Commons-Net 2.0 (networking protocol support) jar libraries installed.
What wasn't clear is that you also need to have ant-commons-net.jar installed. However, by default, the version of Ant that is installed via the MacOSX Developer Tools does not provide that library. So, even if you install Jakarta-Oro and Commons-Net, you'll still get the missing libraries error above. If you look in the ant/lib directory, all you'll see if ant-commons-net.pom, which is a Maven support file, but not the necessary jar file.
A handy command to show you what's installed or not in your version of ant is:
> ant -diagnostics
That generates a long list of features, installed jars, version numbers, etc. When I ran it, I confirmed that the FTP task was not available:
ftp : Not Available (the implementation class is not present)
This was after I had installed Oro and Commons-Net. The phrase 'implementation class is not present' stuck out at me and I realized that ant-commons-net.jar contained the ftp implementation class, which in turn uses Oro and Commons-Net to support ftp'ing.
Here's how to install everything:
- Find your ant/lib directory. Any jars placed in here are available to Ant at launch. The command 'whereis' or 'which' tells you where the executable of a command is located:
> whereis ant
If you then do 'ls -la /usr/bin/ant' you'll see that on MacOSX that path is usually a symbolic link to /usr/share/ant.
> ls -la /usr/bin/ant
> lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 22 Nov 13 17:54 /usr/bin/ant -> /usr/share/ant/bin/ant
Ant the lib directory, which is where you will place your jar files, is located at /usr/share/ant/lib.
- Download the Jakarta-Oro 2.0.8 and Commons-Net 2.0 jars and copy them to your ant/lib directory: /usr/share/ant/lib. (It's easiest to download the zip version of binaries, btw) Ex:
> sudo cp /path/to/jakarta-oro-2.0.8.jar /usr/share/ant/lib
> sudo cp /another/path/commons-net-2.0.jar /usr/share/ant/lib
You need to use 'sudo' since you need root permissions to copy files into the ant/lib directory.
- Confirm your version of ant:
> ant -version
> Apache Ant version 1.8.1 compiled on September 21 2010
> ant -diagnostics
> ------- Ant diagnostics report -------
Apache Ant version 1.8.1 compiled on September 21 2010
- Download a full/complete copy of the version of Ant you have installed. I downloaded a copy from the Apache Software Foundation mirror download site. I downloaded [MIRROR_SITE]/ant/binaries/apache-ant-1.8.1-bin.zip.
- Unzip full Ant installation, then copy ant-commons-net.jar to your ant/lib directory. Ex:
> sudo cp ~/Downloads/apache-ant-1.8.1/lib/ant-commons-net.jar /usr/share/ant/lib
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CC-MAIN-2019-39
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https://notlaura.com/category/now/
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code
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It’s only going to be 95F today.
Cauliflower, category theory, FizzBuzz in CSS, and more!
Fraction iterations in CSS, FizzBuzz monsters, books, more math, gardening, and knee problems again.
Thoughts about math and me, systems and software, Twitter and thought leadership.
So much going on! Learning graph theory, reading new books, slow work on my own book, Pittsburgh Racial Justice Summit, and much more.
Writing, deciding what to read, runner’s knee, learning cool things, did a fun hardware project.
Back from travel and resetting.
Cross country road trip coming up, and updating the AMP plugin.
Preparing for a bike trip, planning Gutenberg project, contributing to WordPress Core CSS chat.
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https://help.univention.com/t/not-getting-email-with-license-file/20687
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code
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I want install Owncloud appliance at home. I have downloaded and started the VirtualBox image and I have entered my email and requested a key. I don’t get any key, have tried several email addresses from different providers, nothing in the innboxes or in the spam folders.
How do I get a license file in return? I’m out of ideas.
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| 333
| 2
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https://www.subaruoutback.org/threads/best-place-to-sell-my-95-outback-legacy.494155/
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code
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I was being polite considering it would be a rust free desert car. (as per the IP)I wouldn't buy something with 280k, deployed airbags, new tires, and more unknowns on it for anything more than 100$
Even fixed up it's worth less than 1000$ You're looking at 500$ for tires and and a similar cost for airbags.
I would call up a local scrap hound. Or donate it as a tax write off.
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| 378
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https://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/48047/pi-zero-raspistill-error-camera-is-not-enabled-in-this-build
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code
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I have a Pi camera V2.1 and a Pi Zero V1.3 with an adapter cable for the camera. I made sure to connect it correctly on both sides, metallic connections towards the green PCB. I have done a
sudo apt-get update and a
sudo apt-get upgrade and I have enabled the camera via
sudo raspi-config and rebooted. When I run the command
raspistill -o image.jpg I get the following error:
mmal: mmal_vc_component_create: failed to create component 'vc.ril.camera' (1:ENOMEM)
mmal: mmal_component_create_core: could not create component 'vc.ril.camera' (1)
mmal: Failed to create camera component
mmal: main: Failed to create camera component
mmal: Camera is not enabled in this build. Try running "sudo raspi-config" and ensure that "camera" has been enabled
Telling me that the camera is not enabled.
I have seen that this error also occurs when no camera is connected. So, I connected the camera to my Pi 3 to see if it was broken, but it worked fine on there.
Is there any reason I am seeing this error? What do I need to do to fix it?
I very monotonously checked every connection on the camera's cable with a multimeter and they all were fine.
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https://new.rosettacommons.org/documentation-and-support/forums/reply/5882/
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code
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Another developer, Matt, has spent a lot of time fiddling with hydrogen bonds (sensitive to hydrogen placements). He says:
“My impression is that if the hydrogens are there, it keeps them, if they aren’t, they are placed and then optimized their position if the the -no_OptH flag is false.
To test this, they can remove the hydrogens (delete the HATOM rows in the pdb) and see that they are placed differently (e.g. by measuring their geometry in pymol).”
I would add a further note: Do you see lines of output mentioning that the PDB reader is rejecting atoms from residues? Hydrogen nomenclature is not very standard, so Rosetta often jettisons NMR hydrogens because they aren’t named to the PDB standard that Rosetta uses. I forget the exact statement but it’s something like “rejecting N atoms from residue 123: best match: ARG”. You’d see a whole lot of them in a row.
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https://devpost.com/software/traffix-1wldb2
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code
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Urban areas are notorious for high traffic congestion, which can cause numerous problems, such as increased travel times, reduced urban attractiveness and economic activity, and most importantly, more accidents. By adjusting and changing roads, such as by adding or removing stop signs, traffic lights, and even lanes, these problems can be reduced.
However, city planners currently have no way to gauge how potential changes will improve traffic flow, meaning they are disincentivized from making adjustments at all, which halts innovation. Thus, we took a unique approach from the common hackathon project. Instead of creating an application meant for general use, we developed an application for government officials. We plan to implement our software as part of a nationwide government plan to promote smarter urban infrastructure and more efficient planning. Since governments often utilize outside developers to build applications, we believe our website fills a normally unoccupied niche.
Thus, we developed Traffix, an application that uses AI to allow cities to experiment with road infrastructure efficiently in order to optimize travel times and decrease the prevalence of accidents.
What it does
Traffix is a progressive web application that lets city governments and communities collaborate in order to improve road infrastructure efficiency in urban streets.
First, on the government page, city planners upload their traffic and road data that many cities already have stored. Once this data is provided, it is sent to Google Cloud, where a model and Graphical User Interface (GUI) are created for that specific city.
Once a model and GUI are created for a city, government planners, private contractors, or even residents can add, remove, or edit with different types of infrastructure changes to improve traffic flow. We provide a legend of functions and instructions for users. Specifically, we allow users to input addresses and coordinates to experiment with five different road features: Stop Signs, Yield Signs, Speed Limits, Traffic Lights, and Lanes. Existing signage can be updated to new signage, such as changing a traffic light to a stop sign, or entirely new signage can be added to new places, such as adding a stop sign to an intersection. Once signage is added or edited, users can view the impact of each individual change, represented in 5 traffic metrics: rate of flow, average speed, vehicle density, intersection wait times, and average time of travel. After finding an optimal combination of infrastructure, we display the overall improvements in traffic flow as well as an estimated cost for the project. This allows city planners to outline an entire infrastructure project with confidence. Once complete, users can save and download the map, and submit it to city planners.
The GUI is built with Google Cloud and the Maps and Places APIs, and we use Radar.io to geocode locations and perform distance/metric calculations. Our algorithm is trained on a dataset from Atlanta that contains roads and their attributes (the 5 listed above). The dataset has wait times at each intersection, so when we train our model, the model learns how each specific road feature individually affects traffic flow. Therefore, when given a prediction scenario with specific road features, the model can predict the new traffic metrics, which are all derived from wait times. When a user makes a change on the GUI, these features are fed back to the trained model with the minor change, and the model re-predicts the metrics for the slightly adjusted scenario. These results are compared to the original metrics and the change is calculated and presented. Our model is an XG Boost (gradient boosting) model, which we found performed best when compared to a neural network (models are well documented in notebooks). We trained our model for 4 cities and connected it to the GUI for Atlanta.
Often, local governments hire private contractors for infrastructure endeavors. Using our Google Cloud backend, we allow private contractors to create changes to existing city plans and then submit their proposals to the city government. This allows contractors to directly communicate and propose changes on public forums.
Finally, drivers and community members can participate in the infrastructure design process. Drivers can learn about upcoming, approved construction projects in need of funding and can choose to financially contribute to them. They can also use our visualization tool to transform their own ideas into legitimate proposals and suggestions for the governments. This allows infrastructure projects to be funded through crowdsourcing, overall making city improvements a community effort.
How we built it
After numerous hours of wireframing, conceptualizing key features, and outlining tasks, we divided the challenge amongst ourselves by assigning Ishaan to developing the UI/UX, Adithya to connecting the Google Cloud backend and testing our traffic prediction models, Ayaan to developing our traffic prediction models, and Viraaj to developing and perfecting the GUI.
Challenges we ran into
The primary challenge that we ran into was developing our geographic models. Since the data was very complex and required cleaning, we weren’t sure how to start. Luckily, we were able to do enough EDA to understand how to develop the models and utilize the data. Training these models was also a huge challenge because of the sheer size of the data. While we were not able to deploy our models, as they are too large to deploy on free and available servers, as long as governments give us data, we can produce models and GUIs for them.
Accomplishments we are proud of
We are incredibly proud of how our team found a distinctive yet viable solution to assisting governments in optimizing road design. We are proud that we were able to develop some of our most advanced models so far. We are extremely proud of developing a solution that has never been previously considered or implemented in this setting.
What we learned
Our team found it incredibly fulfilling to use our AI knowledge in a way that could effectively assist governments. We are glad that we were able to develop models to help a vast range of people. Seeing how we could use our software engineering skills to impact people’s daily lives was the highlight of our weekend.
From a software perspective, developing a large scale model and a GUI were our focus this weekend. We learned how to use great frameworks for such as Radar.io and Google Cloud. We grew our web development skills and polished our database skills.
What is next for Traffix
We believe that our application would be best implemented on a local and state government level. City planners and government officials currently do not have a way to effectively optimize road construction, but with AI tools and solutions, we believe roads can be made safer and faster.
In terms of our application, we would love to deploy our models on the web and streamline the process of collecting and preparing data, training a model, and creating a GUI all in one step. Given that our current situation prevents us from buying a web server capable of running all those processes at once, we look forward to acquiring a web server that can process high-level computation. Lastly, we would like to refine our algorithms to incorporate more important traffic parameters and road features.
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https://ceres.larc.nasa.gov/people/dr-norman-loeb/
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code
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Kato, Seiji; Loeb, Norman G.; Rutan, David A.; Rose, Fred G.Kato, S., N. G. Loeb, D. A. Rutan, F. G. Rose, 2020: Effects of electromagnetic wave interference on observations of the Earth radiation budget. Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, 253, 107157. doi: 10.1016/j.jqsrt.2020.107157. This paper investigates conditions necessary to match the irradiance derived by integrating radiances measured by a narrow field of view scanning radiometer with the irradiance measured by a hemispherical radiometer, both placed at a satellite altitude for Earth radiation budget estimates. When all sources are similar and they are spatially distributed randomly, then integrating radiance for the irradiance does not introduce a bias. Although the exact magnitude of the bias in other conditions is unknown, a finite area of the aperture that is much larger than the coherence area of radiation contributing to the Earth radiation budget, and a finite time to take a single measurement that is longer than the coherence time are likely to make the difference of the irradiance integrated from radiances and the irradiance measured by a hemispherical instrument insignificant. This conclusion does not contradict the existence of spatial coherence of light from incoherent sources. Therefore, electromagnetic energy absorbed by Earth is derivable from radiances measured by a scanning radiometer integrated over the Earth-viewing hemisphere and then averaging across all locations on the satellite orbital sphere when combined with solar irradiance measurements. Comparisons made in earlier studies show that the difference is less than 1%. In addition, when surface irradiances computed by a radiative transfer model constrained by top-of-atmosphere irradiances derived from radiance measurements are compared with downward shortwave irradiances taken by combinations of a pyreheliometer and a shaded pyranometer, or pyranometers, and with longwave irradiances taken by pyrgeometers, the biases in monthly mean irradiances are less than the uncertainties in the surface observations.
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https://devsday.ru/event/details/13820
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code
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On June 9, GDG Minsk community will host the GDG Web Meetup.
FORMAT - online.
➡️ Registration - https://bit.ly/3gaReLR
⚡️New age navigation. Diving into portals - Nikita Poltoratsky, Akveo, GDE
We’re building web applications mainly using two approaches — Single Page Application (SPA) and Multi-Page Application (MPA). They solve issues in different ways. However, there is one issue that is not solved in both approaches well enough. I’m talking about navigation.
SPAs offer nice user experience and beautiful transitions however they are too complex.
MPAs are much easier to implement but users will end up with blank screens between pages.
A new web platform API proposal called Portals aims to solve that issue offering the best of both worlds. During the session, we’ll learn what are portals and how you can use them for building the best navigation experience possible.
⚡️Simplifying Dependency Injection in Angular - Dhananjay Kumar, Founder geek97, creator ng-India, 1MVP, GDE
Dependency Injection is one of the most famous architecture patterns to create a scalable application that has loosely coupled entities such as classes. Application made using the DI pattern is highly loosely coupled, and any part such as the business logic layer of application can be replaced at the run time without affecting the presentation layer. By design Angular framework supports dependency injection. It enables you to inject dependencies such as services without writing your own DI container or refereeing to any third-party libraries.
🕖 The start - at 19.00. Join us!
Организатор: GDG Minsk
Google Developer Group (GDG) Minsk is a non-profit developers group that was created for people who'd like to know more about Google technologies and want to share their experience with others. Our technical directions: Android, Web, Cloud, IoT.
Our events are open to all developers, QAs, designers and managers who are interested in Google technologies and APIs or already use them as a part of their projects.
Disclaimer: GDG Minsk is an independent group; our activities and the opinions expressed here should in no way be linked to Google, the corporation. To learn more about GDG program, visit https://developers.google.com/groups/
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https://www.coastercms.org/docs/user/sorting-menus
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code
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Sorting menus can be done by dragging and dropping pages from within the Menus tab of the Coaster CMS admin dashboard. Please note that the order of pages within the pages tab will not reflect that of the pages on the front-end. The menu order is automatically saved after each page element is dragged and dropped.
New menu items can be added by clicking on the "Add Menu Item" button, which will bring up the dialog for adding a new menu element. You can also choose whether you want menu elements to have any number of sub-levels. The number of sub-levels a menu item can have is determined by the code itself. In the case of sub-levels, the pages within a sub-level are inherited from that of child pages in the pages tab.
Based on Laravel 5
Additional features always being planned/researched
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https://lists.ag-projects.com/pipermail/blink/2015-June/003333.html
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[Blink] Which SIP service providers support SMS that can be used by Blink?
fallenpegasus at gmail.com
Sat Jun 13 00:22:36 CEST 2015
I asked back in Sept 2012:
> Blink can do SMS via the SIP MESSAGE
> But, which SIP service providers can do it?
The answer at the time was "none of them".
Is that still the case?
VoIP.ms, for example, will send and receive SMSs, but it does it thru a web
portal at https://sms.voip.ms/sms.html, and also has interfaces to forward
received SMSs to email and also via a web url callback. But still
aparently not via SIP MESSAGE or via XMPP.
Are there any SIP providers that do SMS via Blink friend SMS MESSAGE?
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https://chooseyourstory.com/forums/feature-wishing-well/message/8819
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--split this from the other thread--
Building off that ratings idea, I think it'd be cool to see statistics about you rate storygames, similar to this (where if you click on the rating, it would show you a list of all storygames that you've given that rating to). Maybe have additional statistics too, like "average rating: 5.2" and so on.
If that sounds like too much work, you could always add a filter to the search function in the new version of the Storygames tab that allows you to filter in/out storygames based on what you've rated them as well as whether you've rated them or not. For instance, say I want to see all the storygames I've given an 8 - I could accomplish this with the new filter.
Obviously this would not be a high priority feature to work on compared to creating the new-look CYS or combining the classic/advanced editor etc. but I'm just putting it out there. Thoughts?
Definitely would like this.
Yes, I would like to see something like this. Or even a more basic listing of how many games you've given each rating to as a way of charting how critical you are. :)
YES. I say we go for it :D
I really agree with Octobers second idea. Especially with the new rating system that will hopefully be implemented, I may need to go through the games I've played and change their ratings. As such, being able to see the games I rated would be incredibley helpful
I think that a user's average rating should be publicly viewable or at least viewable to mods+admins because it would elucidate which users are trolling :)
I'd say mods/admins only. Sometimes there are legit reasons to give a game a low rating, after all.
I think a user's personal ratings should be available to themselves as well.
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http://yooperdevil.blogspot.com/2012/04/v-is-for-victory.html
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So we're approaching the end of the month, and for me, it's the end of the semester. Finals start tomorrow with Calculus II leading the pack. I'm crossing my fingers and hoping for the best, but I'll admit that I'm not the most confident about it. I finished up my astrobiology group project paper at about 2 this afternoon, so all that's left in that class is the final on Monday. Theory of Urban Design has a final on Tuesday and so does Earth and Space Science. I shouldn't do too badly on those. There's no final for Marine Ecology and Conservation (thank god), and I'm done with the lab for Earth and Space Science.
I sort of enjoyed doing this challenge. I thought that it would be more difficult, though now we're hitting the harder letters of the alphabet. It'll be interesting to do X on Friday.
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https://medium.com/best-buy-developers/were-going-all-ssl-aa98fef684ef
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code
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Best Buy’s APIs have accepted both plain-text (HTTP) and SSL (HTTPS) API requests for a long time. This year, in the interest of improving everyone’s security & privacy, we’re dropping plain-text support. Here’s the gist of what we’re doing:
- api.remix.bestbuy.com and api.bbyremix.bestbuy.com are going away in favor of api.bestbuy.com
- Starting April 3rd, all HTTP requests will redirect to https://api.bestbuy.com using an HTTP 301 status code redirect. If your current HTTP client doesn’t properly handle 301 redirects, there is a chance this change will break your implementation.
- Starting July 10th, all HTTP requests will receive a status code of 426 (which basically means “you have to switch to HTTPS”). If your API integration is using anything other than https://api.bestbuy.com, your implementation will break at this time.
Although we’ll be sending this message again in April, June and July, we encourage everyone to immediately update their API integrations to use https://api.bestbuy.com/. We’ll be dropping previously used hostnames (such as api.remix.bestbuy.com) as well as plain-text HTTP support to simplify, streamline and secure our integrations with your systems.
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https://shopgbd.com/product/brand-style-guide-canva-template
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code
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**HOW IT WORKS**
After making your purchase you will receive an email with a PDF to download.
This PDF will contain access to our video tutorial library showing you how to save the template to your Canva account and how to edit the template.
It also contains the link to access the master copy of this template. **You must go through the Getting Started video steps before editing your copy**
* LET’S CONNECT ON SOCIAL *
Please feel free to reach out with any questions!
THANK SO MUCH!
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| 487
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https://docs.servicenow.com/bundle/helsinki-servicenow-platform/page/build/service-portal/concept/c_ConfigureWidgetInstances.html
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code
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Configure widget instances Each instance of the widget you configure remains unique, so you can have several instances of the same widgets on a page. For example, each instance of the cool clock widget on a page shows a different time zone. Configure a widget on a page by adjusting the instance options. Each time you add a widget to a page it creates a record on the sp_instance table with the following information: Reference to the column where the widget is located Reference to a widget Configuration for a widget in the form of pre-defined form fields and an Additional Options field in JSON format On a page in the Service Portal Designer, point to the Edit icon () in a widget to open the widget instance options. You can also access widget instance options using the control + right-click menu. Figure 1. Configure Cool Clock widget From the Instance Options window, make the selections you want to configure your widget. Instance options vary depending on which widget you select. Advanced users can configure the available options for a widget. For more information, see Widget instance options.
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| 1,107
| 1
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http://www.emtcity.com/topic/23969-ceus-tracking/
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code
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Does anyone of a database to track the progress of EMT,s continuing education, certifications ect I do not want a online database that requires a yearly fee.
Posted 04 February 2013 - 01:47 AM
excel? Are you looking to just track yours or multiple peoples? I've always just made my own database with excel.
Posted 04 February 2013 - 02:39 AM
It's a newer site that has something like this in the works, it's supposed to be a free service that includes reminders of upcoming expiry. Send them an e-mail and ask when it'll be up and running if it isn't yet.
Edited by Arctickat, 04 February 2013 - 02:40 AM.
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users
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http://perimeterinstitute.ca/people/Huangjun-Zhu
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code
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I am interested in better understanding the distinctive features of quantum information processing as compared to its classical analog and to harnessing the power offered by quantum mechanics. I am also interested in connections between quantum information processing and fundamental laws of quantum mechanics, as well as their geometrical manifestation.
My current research work focuses on the following topics:
Quantum state estimation.
Foundation of quantum physics.
Geometry of quantum states, with focus on symmetric informationally complete positive-operator-valued measures (SIC~POVMs) and mutually unbiased bases (MUBs).
Multipartite entanglement and its applications in quantum state estimation,
quantum computation, and condensed matter physics.
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| 755
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http://www.jpsoft.co.kr/company/
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code
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Our Full-Stack Web Developers have the programming expertise and industry-specific experience to build, integrate, and customize your website or application to align perfectly with your vision.
Since not all off-the-shelf applications have all the bells and whistles that you need to optimize your workflow, JPSOFT can customize and integrate your existing applications to get the job done. We can customize your existing applications for Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), E-Commerce, Interactive Gaming, Online Training & Courses, Customer Relationship Management (CRM), and so much more.
Custom Software Services
Startup & MVP Services
We combine PHP server-side scripting with tighty-written HTML5 to create powerful web applications, content management systems, portable APIs and dynamic websites with expansive database functions.
Strong HTML5 programming forms the basis of all of our web application programming and website building performance.
We design database architectures, improve automated reporting software, and optimize querying and data retrieval functions using open-source platforms like Microsoft SQL Server, MySQL, and Oracle.
We use AJAX and XML to develop interoperable applications, schema constraints, data mapping tools, automation programs, and more.
Java helps us program dynamic Android applications, like mobile games, e-commerce apps and location-based services. We also use Java to build content-rich, enterprise-grade websites and web services during IT augmentations.
Whether you require a Web Development Solution developed from scratch, or a third-party integration to add to your existing app, Chetu can get the job done quickly, effectively, and affordably.
Our developers create a database architecture to effectively collect, store, retrieve, sort, and graph all of your data in your new integrated Custom Website or Application.
We carefully detail out every functional and technical specification to ensure optimized usability, navigation, and functionality within your custom website or application.
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https://developer.jboss.org/thread/69078
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code
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lets discuss MVC first.
There are several Implementation for MVC frame work such as famous Struts and Barcuda. You can also define your own implementation for MVC pattern.
Now to answer your question, let me tell you one thing, Enterprise JavaBeans are serverside components. Especially Session beans are mainly used to PROCESS BUSINESS LOGIC. Using Session Bean a controller will be not that much productive or usefull, because its better to use them as model where business logic are performed, instead of asking to perform as controller or diverting the request from client to model and back from model to client.
Servlets are ideally suited to act as a controller. All the big implementation like struts uses servlets as controller - because they can handle multiple client same time and yes you have more facility like using session, listeners etc to do a proper controlling work.
Thanks for the information; it was very helpful.
I've decided to use a java web start application as the view, and session beans as the model, but the best solution for the controller remains unclear.
With multiple simultanious client connections who's view must be updated anytime one of them performs an action, plain rmi for communication between the view and the controller seems to be the best choice.
Does JBoss support rmi?
If not, can one support the above controller-view requirement with servlets?
Well u can write your own controller. Create ur own controller class that can understand what to do. Define a specific protocol between Server Controller object and client listener object.
Or use the servlet as a controller but in this case u need to pass the information back and forth using http response and request objects.
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| 1,721
| 11
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http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2866708/firefox-jquery-drag-and-drop-file-upload-together-with-php
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code
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Hoping to get some assistance but I am after a jQuery/PHP means of allowing a user to drag and drop files and then via PHP, upload one or more files to a specific directory on a Linux box.
I only have Firefox 3.6 as my base browser but can also move to FFox if need be.
Cann use any HTML5 features as long as I'm using Firefox 3.6
Can someone possibly point me to any examples/sites where this process is demonstrated?
I have had a look at http://www.plupload.com/index.php but this does not work in IE6.
As mentioned, would like it to work in FFox only.
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CC-MAIN-2015-18
| 554
| 6
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https://www.freelancer.ie/projects/website-design/need-web-developer-build-web/
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code
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Job Not Found
Sorry we couldn't find the job you were looking for.
Find the most recent jobs here:
I need some graphic design. I need a design for Facebook page for a medical laboratory
i will give you the url on chat, please bid if you can fix now, new frelancers welcome
About to switch from full time employee into freelancing market & need a UK based accountant to guide me through - I already have first engagement lined up.
android app: sock checker - detect 4 dominant colors in sock in realtime camera image - measure the surface in cm2 of sock in image (the sock will always be on orange background) - creat sock id in database - save the 4 dominant colors for sock on the create sockid - save the surface in cm2 for sock on the create sockid - check if 4 dominant colors and surface measurement meet earlier scanned sock...
It is a tutoring agency, I have bought a domain and I need to create a database and allow people to sign up both clients and tutors and be able to search in the area.
Company name is Trident Valve, we need a Logo for our with a solid, simple design. Our colours are Dark Blue, Bright Green and Grey, see attached Also attached is a concept that we like and a guide however it would need to include the word Valve in the logo. Thanks
Its a small project where i am looking for 3 views with realistic 3D max render, i develop the AutoCad plans, elevations and section along with a mood board showing all material.
I would like to add some feature on my video subscription sites. We need to adding the following features to my site. 1) Adding member referral features , member sponsor to whom. 2) Adding Vimeo upload API to our backend , our admin can upload Vimeo directly on our backend isn't pasted the Vimeo link on backend. 3) Adding local payment gateway to our backend
we are hiring SQL expert with experience of other dbs as well
We are a Marketing Agency from Germany. Currently we look for a creative and reliable graphic designer to extend our team and to outsource our projects. You can get orders from us on a regular basis. You need a professional experience with "Photoshop" and "InDesign". Please note that our orders aren't suitable for beginners. In the present order we ask you to complete th...
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| 2,245
| 13
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https://support.risepeople.com/portal/kb/articles/lieu
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code
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Learn how to create a "Days in Lieu" policy and how to make requests using this policy type.
This applies to;
√ Admins √ Managers √ Employees
How to create a "Days in Lieu" policy
Click on the"Policies"button on the left navigation bar.
Either edit an existingpolicy,or create a new policy.
Enter all the basic details (Name, etc) for this policy, and near the bottom, select "Yes" for the question "Are Employees Able To Add Time Worked And Increase Their Accrual?". If you want further details about what this does, please click the "?" icon for a full description.
How to make a request with a "Days in Lieu" policy
Making requests with this policy type follows the same basic structure as a traditional request (information about that here).
The only difference is during the initial selection of time. A pop-up will appear asking if the request is for time worked, or time off.
By default, the system will only count impact for "Working" requests that are made on weekends or holidays. The user canover-ridethe impact if need be.
By default, the system will only count impact for "Time Off" requests that are made on regular working days. The user canover-ridethe impact if need be.
After selecting the request type, and the days, the user can click add to receive the request summary as with all other requests.
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CC-MAIN-2019-26
| 1,323
| 13
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https://superuser.com/questions/720206/ubuntu-13-10-authorization-problems/720225
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code
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I tried to upgrade from 13.04 to Ubuntu 13.10 but while I was upgrading the internet connection cut-off and I wasn't able to resume it.
A couple of days later I was trying to install another package on Ubuntu 13.10 and it took about 1 hour, after I finished installing it The computer restarted and I found it has Upgraded to Ubuntu 13.10.
Here My problem starts. First, The menu bar disappeared, then I whenever I open the dash it keeps on loading without viewing any icons. I'm not able to change sound, Networking, and brightness settings.
I'm not able to to install or remove any package, I'm not even authorized to view my packages. Also I'm not authorized to complete Ubuntu 13.10 installation, and when I tried to re-install Ubuntu 13.04 Which I have stored on a USB I found that I can't access usb or Dvd on the computer.
I'm not authorized to do anything, Please Help!
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CC-MAIN-2019-04
| 877
| 5
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https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19351-01/821-1924/z400000a2304.html
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code
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The Oracle Secure Global Desktop 4.6 Gateway Administration Guide provides instructions for installing, configuring, and operating the Oracle Secure Global Desktop Gateway (SGD Gateway). The document is written for system administrators.
Chapter 1, Installing the SGD Gateway describes how to install the SGD Gateway.
Chapter 2, Configuring the SGD Gateway describes how to configure the SGD Gateway for your network.
Appendix A, SGD Gateway Architecture Overview describes the architecture of the SGD Gateway.
Appendix B, Command-Line Reference describes how to configure and control the SGD Gateway from the command line.
Appendix C, Advanced Configuration covers advanced configuration of the SGD Gateway, including how to configure and use the reflection service of the SGD Gateway.
Appendix D, Troubleshooting the SGD Gateway includes troubleshooting information, to help you to diagnose and fix problems with the SGD Gateway.
This document might not contain information on basic UNIX commands and procedures such as shutting down the system, booting the system, and configuring devices. Refer to the following for this information:
Software documentation that you received with your system
Solaris Operating System documentation, which is at
This document does, however, contain information about specific SGD commands.
Note - Characters display differently depending on browser settings. If characters do not display correctly, change the character encoding in your browser to Unicode UTF-8.
The following table lists the documentation for this product. The online documentation is available at:
Submit comments about this document by clicking the Feedback[+] link at http://docs.sun.com. Include the title and part number of your document with your feedback:
Oracle Secure Global Desktop 4.6 Gateway Administration Guide, part number 821-1924.
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| 1,851
| 15
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https://gripped.com/news/ines-papert-climbs-likhu-chuli/
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code
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Ines Papert Climbs Likhu Chuli I
Ines Papert stood alone on top of Likhu Chuli I, Nepal, 6,719-metres, on November 13th, for its first ascent. Her partner, famed photographer Thomas Senf, had to stay at high-camp due to frost bite.
More on Ines Papert here
More on Likhu Chuli at Planet Mountain
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CC-MAIN-2023-23
| 295
| 4
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https://boards.straightdope.com/t/ok-this-is-downright-geeky-mildly-disconcerting/364423
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Like the rest of you (I presume), I usually come here utilizing a web browser. You know, a piece of software more or less dedicated in purpose to fetching and rendering pages via the hypertext transport protocol (http). Even if it does a couple other things as a sideline (like old Netscape which incorporated an email client).
I’m in here courtesy of a database. eFileMaker Pro 8.5. Yeah, OK, so they tossed in a web rendering engine, so you can display web content in your database screens (and calculate the URLs in part from field contents, you can see how that could be kind of cool). But to tell you the truth I figured it would not “cookie” properly. Would not let me log in. To my surprise, I see Welcome, AHunter3 greeting me when I drag a webportal onto the screen and set it to http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb. (It must be sharing cookie-territory with Shiira somehow…otherwise, how would it know?)
And the links work, and Control-i turns italics on and off and the smilie icons work…
(I just tried right-clicking a link and danged if it didn’t give me the option of opening in a new window. How can it do THAT? Oh, it launches my regular web brower to handle that one. OK, unless you wanted to forego that feature, you couldn’t ditch your regular web browser and just browse from FileMaker.)
I forgot to check to see if it shows previews when I hover over thread titles.
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| 1,400
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https://iacr.org/news/item/19114
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code
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IACR News item: 15 September 2022
Azam SoleimanianePrint Report
Random Allocation -the random assignment of the data to the parties- is a well-studied topic in the analysis of medical or judicial data, and the context of resource distribution. Random allocation reduces the chance of bias or corruption in the relevant applications, which makes the results more reliable. This is done by preventing a special or pre-planned assignment of the data to accommodate the assessment toward the desired results. This paper provides the first formal syntax and security notion of a random allocation scheme. Based on our new security notions of anonymity, confidentiality, and data-integrity, random allocation can cover more applications such as the distributed audit system where the confidentiality of data and the anonymity of auditors are of paramount importance. Our protocol allows the parties to stay anonymous during the concurrent executions of the protocol even if they have revealed themselves at a certain execution. The revelation property gives the possibility to the parties to claim certain advantages/faults at the end of a protocol-execution (without breaking the data-privacy or anonymity in other protocol-executions). We instantiate our syntax and prove the security based on simple cryptographic components and assumptions such as the Diffie-Hellman assumption, in the random oracle model.
Additional news items may be found on the IACR news page.
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CC-MAIN-2023-14
| 1,462
| 4
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https://smithprocess.com/process-studies/headlands-2-axis-drawing-robot
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code
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Process Study: Superstructure
Livia Foldes and Jared Smith
Video, paper, drawing robot: Headlands Center for the Arts is a physical space enveloped in an invisible superstructure of relationships and connections. This project is an attempt to make pieces of that structure tangible. We started with a data set: all of the artists who have participated in Headlands’ programs over the last twenty five years. We found connections between the artists—by year, location, and discipline—and used network mapping software to manipulate the data.The images you see were generated by algorithms. The images are not ornamental: they are the artifact of a process intended to arrange data into legible images and patterns. But neither are they strictly informational. We worked together with the algorithms to make these images, massaging data and selecting outputs to generate a distinct vocabulary of shape and movement.The resulting forms, governed by a sometimes inscrutable internal logic, give shape and weight to the complex web of connections generated in this physical space.
After completing the Headlands Center for the Arts symposium website I was approached by long-time design collaborator Livia Foldes with an opportunity to continue the collaboration by building a physical representation of the dataset visualizations that were core to the website.
Together with Foldes, I came up with the idea of creating a long-running cnc drawing robot to live-draw the data visualizations throughout the day at the Headlands Center during the symposium.
Similar to an etch-a-sketch in theory and operation, except for the addition of a small solenoid to drive the pen off the paper, a crude binary z-index if you will. We ended up loving the artifacts lefts behind by always having the pen in contact with the paper, so we coded the z-index moves to a minimum.
A dream project to play a part in: physical supporting digital, all scratch-built here in house, and all to support an institution that has done so much over the years to support artists.
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| 2,050
| 7
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https://philliphamlyn.wordpress.com/2013/03/10/the-humble-for/
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code
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In most C# is normal to use the fantastically easy foreach() construct to iterate a set. This comes with a hidden cost;
- An incrementor object is created for the duration of the loop and then destroyed, which is fine if you dont suffer from heap fragmentation, or are not aware that different C# .net frameworks have different GC implementations (XBox for instance).
- the incrementor cannot easily be used in an anonymous code block within the loop, as, by the time the code is executed, the incrementor may yield a different value to the one it had when the code block was constructed.
Reconsider our old friend for() which is faster to execute, doesn’t lead to heap allocations and doesn’t suffer from the anonymous code block problem.
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http://bbs.magnum.uk.net/?page=001-forum.ssjs&sub=usenet_sciastrw&thread=196
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"live post" from the Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics
From Phillip Helbig (undress to reply)@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 16 21:47:31 2019
A few weeks ago, fellow moderator Jonathan suggested that I "live-post"
from a conference, so I'll do so this week. He was actually thinking
about another conference next year (not sure if I shall go), but I might
as well do so from this year's Texas Symposium on Relativistic
Astrophysics in Portsmouth, England. It won't actually be live.
Rather, each evening, if I have time, I can mention some things which I
found interesting. The internet connection is slow, so I'll keep things simple, though there should be enough to go on if someone wants to
In his opening welcome, LOC president David Wands mentioned the late,
great Wolfgang Rindler. Born in 1924, he died earlier this year.
Fleeing from Nazi Austria as a child, he went to university in England
and taught there for a bit before moving to Cornell University in the
USA in the mid-1950s, then in 1963 to what would later become the
University of Texas at Dallas, where he stayed the rest of his life. He
was known for many things: the definitive paper on cosmological horizons (coining the term "event horizon"), a famous textbook on relativity,
Rindler coordinates (not many people have their own coordinates). He
was at the first Texas Symposium in 1963, and helped organize the 50th-anniversary one in 2013. Although I had seen him at conferences
before and we had exchanged a few emails, I was happy to finally meet
him in 2013, where he proved to be a really nice guy as well.
Chris Reynolds, the current Plumian Professor of Astronomy in Cambridge, mentiond that axions, or axion-like particles, small-mass particles
often touted as dark-matter candidates, could, due to their small mass
and hence macroscopic de Broglie wavelength, form gravitational
analogs of atoms, with black holes as nuclei. This can lead to energy transmission from the black hole, and the fact that spinning black holes
are observed puts constraints on the number and properties of such
Enrique Gaztanaga gave an interesting talk based on the idea that
causality can determine the value of the cosmological constant, though
based on the assumption that Lambda alone is unphysical. The details
are a bit complicated, but for an infinite universe he expects a Lambda
of zero and for a finite one a value similar to that which is observed,
which might also explain some of the "anomalies" in the CMB. See arXiv:1911.13199.
Going with the times, the conference has its own app. As at all Texas Symposia, there are plenary sessions in the mornings and about 10
parallel sessions in the afternoons. A particularly useful feature
allows one to come up with a custom schedule by choosing talks one wants
to hear from various sessions. The participant list includes pictures
if the participants chose to upload them, one can send messages to other participants, request meetings, and so on (useful where there are
several hundred participants and talks in several different buildings).
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https://zh.coursera.org/learn/build-a-computer/reviews?authMode=signup&page=5
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Feb 18, 2017
An excellent course provided by phenomenal professors! Everything is broken down into simple, easily understandable portions, and leaves you with a clear idea how to proceed to solve a given problem.
Feb 15, 2017
One of the best courses I have taken on Coursera. I feel much more knowledgable about the lower-level workings of computers now. I hope at some point Coursera offers the second part of the course.
创建者 Marcel S•
Nov 29, 2017
Truly a great course if you want to learn about how computers work. If you don't have a CS degree and feel that there are some gaps in your knowledge to fill this course will definitely help you. But the most important thing: This course is great fun.
创建者 Ben K•
Dec 28, 2017
This course provides a knowledge foundation and extensible vision to see how computing systems work. I have been following this course to develop a curriculum based on the vision of this course. Excellent contribution to the bring computational literacy to the masses.
创建者 Danny D•
Sep 14, 2017
This class was fantastic! It was illuminating, well planned and extremely gratifying. I am a much more knowledgeable computer scientist as a result of taking this course. I highly recommend this to anyone who wants to truly understand how low-level computing operates.
创建者 Markus F P•
Jun 29, 2018
A very great course, had lots of fun with the first 5 projects, but sadly wasnt able to write a program for project 6, therefore did it by hand which wasnt that interesting. However, I learned a lot about the functioning of the CPU and the Memory, which is great.
创建者 Sapozhnikov K•
Feb 21, 2018
Awesome course, it give me understanding how everything works under the hood. I am grateful to the creators for their work, perfect explanations, interesting and exciting projects, awesome supported materials and software. It was an amazing adventure. Thank you.
创建者 Daniel S•
Dec 08, 2019
This class was truly exceptional. I felt like it did an excellent job on conveying abstract concepts and I came away with a working knowledge of very basic computer architecture. I recommend this class to anyone curious about the inner workings of a computer.
创建者 Ajinkya M•
Sep 29, 2019
Really I want to thank Coursera for providing such wonderful knowledge and high-quality course available. The course should be made mandatory to kids, students & engineers. The understanding of the computers is greatly enhanced after completing this course
创建者 Thomas N•
Dec 06, 2016
The most amazing online course. I love how it is project based. Everything you learn is straight away applied to building the project and it it made me look at so many things in life differently due to the way it breaks down the concept of abstraction.
创建者 Ion P•
Dec 24, 2018
It was a really nice course with very good practical projects. What I really liked was the fact that in the end you will understand how all the electronic circuits inside the CPU will be translated into the lowest level of software inside a computer.
创建者 Alexander N•
Dec 31, 2017
I took this course out of curiosity and probably some nostalgic feelings. I really like the idea of making CS 101 course that builds your knowledge from ground up. And what can be more exciting than building a computer and writing your own game :)
创建者 Vytenis N•
Dec 21, 2019
This course provides a great and sight-opening introduction to the very basics of computing science. Going from basic parts and seeing the system build up step-by-step gives a sense of accomplishment and understanding that is hard to be matched.
创建者 Eric B•
Nov 19, 2019
Excellent course. Instructors provide enough guidance for you to do most of the discovery and design on your own. The topics are covered in a logical order. It's a lot of work, but you'll learn a tremendous amount and feel quite accomplished.
创建者 Aniruddha D•
Sep 22, 2018
Awesome Course!! This instructors teach all the concepts on building a computer from ground zero and at a very decent pace. This course has greatly improved my understanding of how the different layers interact and work to build a computer.
Sep 27, 2019
I was a computer science student, still I was not able to make much sense out the theory classes I attended. But this course gives extremely different experience and make it a piece of cake. Now I can correlate many things I have learned.
创建者 Michalis P•
Nov 14, 2019
One of the best courses I have taken. I am so excited about this course and the instructors are amazing.
The journey in this first part of the course gave me a lot of intuition about how a computer works under the hood.
创建者 Ned P•
May 27, 2017
I didn't know what to expect coming into this course but I was really blown away with the quality of the written content as well as the lectures. It really is the perfect course for any engineer wanting to know what goes into their baby
创建者 Cheng W•
Jun 01, 2019
Great design of course content and projects. Personally the class is a fulfilling journey in my exploration of career change. Highly recommend it to STEM background engineers and physicists interested in understanding modern computers.
创建者 Alen V•
Mar 27, 2016
The projects/assignments are awesome. Lots of fun. Very clear lectures.
One thing is reading how the Computer works from books/articles. The other is to actually build a working CPU/Computer from nothing but Nand gates. Can't beat that.
Mar 16, 2020
This is far the best course I've ever taken part in!
A lot of things that I've been thinking about computers are now clear, theoretical part are supported by practical part what is great.
If I could I would rate this course on 10 stars!
创建者 Vivek N•
Apr 08, 2017
Fast paced but very interesting course. The teachers are brilliant and teach very clearly. I knew some digital electronics and programming, but this course helped me fill the gaps in my knowledge very well.
Already enrolled in Part 2!
创建者 Alex C•
Jun 08, 2019
Absolutely wonderful. I'm a boot camp grad who's been working as a software engineer for about a year now and want to start learning fundamental computer science and this course has been a great help. Thanks for a great course!
创建者 Kresimir D•
Jan 12, 2018
I am a mechanical engineer with zero experience in computer architecture. This course was far beyond my expectations. Strongly suggest to everyone who want to get into programming further than just knowing "Hello world" syntax.
创建者 Nicholas F•
Aug 08, 2016
This class teaches some very important subject regarding computer hardware design and low level languages. I found it very challenging but not too challenging, except the 4th and 5th week which were very difficult to complete.
创建者 Aidan R•
Jun 11, 2019
A great starting point for anyone with an interest in computer programming its easy to follow and well planned although the partner website could be a little cleaner but i found everything i needed fairly quickly. Thanks Guys
创建者 Balasubramanyam E•
Jun 30, 2017
Nand2tetris is the course I was searching for, beautifully constructed and explained. The course gives an in depth knowledge of how hardware works and different layers present in it. Looking forward to the second part !!
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http://www.coconut.com/blog/archives/2006_10.html
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October 28, 2006
Coconut VideosWhat does YouTube have to say about coconuts?
Da Coconut Nut by Ryan Cayabyab:
Here's a commercial. Only one problem. They're not coconut palm trees. Oh well:
More people trying to open coconuts, the wrong way:
Finally, someone who opens it successfully, sort of. She's scary with that knife, though!
Harry Nillson sings his song "Coconut":
Ketamine Disguised as Coconut CharcoalWhat will they think of next...
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http://identi.ca/waltergd
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For now I will just say: Hello identi.ca!!!
I love practice sports (Tennis, Surf, Biking), design some web, 3D and programing in Python. I use GNU-Linux Ubuntu and Android phone.
Identi.ca is a microblogging service brought to you by E14N. It runs the StatusNet microblogging software, version 1.1.0-release, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.
All Identi.ca content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.
Switch to mobile site layout.
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http://www.kcl.ac.uk/prospectus/graduate/furtherinfo/name/psychiatric-research/alpha/N/header_search/
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It was one of the most rewarding experiences of my life as I had the chance to learn from global leaders in mental health. They were inspirational for me in many ways in developing my career as a researcher and an academic. I am currently conducting research among internally displaced people in Sri Lanka as part of my Wellcome Trust fellowship. The knowledge and skills I learnt from the MSc in Psychiatric Research are helping me immensely to conduct sound research. I had the honour of being selected as the first ever recipient of Professor Robin Murray Award for the best MSc dissertation in Psychiatric Research course, which was very rewarding and gratifying for me.
I strongly consider that graduating from this course was a life changing experience both academically and personally.
I am currently writing papers on cause and cause-specific mortality. This MSc programme has enabled me to function as an independent researcher in India and I can now confidently design research projects, perform statistical analysis, and write research papers for scientific journals.
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https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1980049-outlook-cursor-jumps-to-top-when-saving
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There's an article above that claims the steps solves the problem of the cursor jumping to the top of an Outlook message when saving. The issues is [NOT SOLVED]. None of the proposed solutions in the article solved the problem on three of my workstations running Outlook 2013 and 2016 and Windows 7,8, and 10.
Any new ideas that actually work?
Yes, I tried Safe Mode. The cursor jumping to the top of the email occurs when saving progress after typing. Turning off the Autosave is not a solution since I manually save my progress on long emails, though autosaving or manually save both produce the bug.
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https://aviewfrommyseat.com/member/Rlampkin/
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Rlampkin has shared 6 photos from 2 venues.
Rlampkin has received 3 high fives.
5 photos or videos
Guaranteed Rate Field
1 photo from Guaranteed Rate Field
Your first photo or video!
White Sox Game
3 photos with the Chicago White at home
1 photo from Wrigley Field
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http://hazmi.id/how-to-get-unlimited-free-email-for-your-domain/
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How to get unlimited FREE email for your domain
Want to have your own email with your own domain but can't afford to pay google apps? Try Yandex, you can have as many emails as you want.
What is Yandex?
If you don't know Yandex, Yandex is kinda like Google from Russia. It has search engine, maps, browsers and lots other products. Its not quite popular here in Indonesia, but it seems its very popular there. It's ranked #4 most popular search engine in the worlds below Google, Baido and Yahoo, and surprisingly ahead of Microsoft.
Ok, enough for the brief introduction, theres plenty articles about Yandex if you interested to find out more. Heres what you need todo to get the emails.
1. Create FREE email in Yandex Mail
Go to Yandex Mail and create a free account there. You will also need to verify your phone number too.
2. Connect your domain and verify your domain ownership
There's 3 methods for domain ownership verification, using upload file, CNAME or update your registrar email address. I prefer using CNAME option, mine is looking like this:
yamail-bc1ff5cfc027.hazmi.id. CNAME mail.yandex.net.
3. Setup your MX records
We need to tell the world that from now on, Yandex is the one who handle your email. Mine is looking like this:
hazmi.id. MX 10 mx.yandex.net.
4. Setup SPF and DKIM (Optional)
Although is optional, you might also want to add SPF and DKIM record in your DNS settings. This is to decrease the possibilty of being marked as spam by other mail servers. Mine, is like this:
hazmi.id. TXT "v=spf1 redirect=_spf.yandex.net"
mail._domainkey.hazmi.id. TXT "v=DKIM1; k=rsa; t=s; p=MIGfMA0...AQAB"
Thats it, you can add your email now!
You might need to wait for couple hours for your dns to properly propagate, then you're ready. You can start to manage your email with your own domain!
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http://sundog-soft.com/sds/blog/
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Today I launched my third, most ambitious course on Udemy: Data Science and Machine Learning with Python – Hands On! If you’d like to learn to apply your programming or scripting skills to the very lucrative data science field, you can enroll for $15 using coupon code DATA15.
This course draws on my nine years of experience at Amazon.com and IMDb.com, and covers all of the main topics in data mining and machine learning over 68 lectures, 9 hours of video, and lots of hands-on Python notebooks you can take with you for future reference and experimentation. There’s also a whole section on using Apache Spark’s MLLib library to scale up machine learning to a Hadoop cluster! The course includes lots of fun examples, like building a search engine for Wikipedia, developing your own movie recommendation engine, building a spam filter for email, and building an intelligent Pac-Man agent.
While Sundog’s SilverLining and Triton SDK’s continue to be our primary focus, we’ve found our foray into Udemy courses to be really rewarding as well. We’ve taught over 20,000 students in over 150 countries highly valuable, sought-after skills in just a few months already, and that’s pretty exciting stuff!
A little-known feature of the Triton Ocean SDK is its ability to simulate tidal streams, also known as eddies. These are like stationary wakes on fixed objects like bouys, that result from water flowing around them.
Triton offers the TidalStreamWake class, which makes it easy to simulate eddies around stationary objects in the water. All you need to do is contruct a TidalStreamWake of a given size for each buoy or other object in your scene, and then update it each frame with the object’s position and the velocity of the water moving past it.
The effect includes both a 3D wake wave surrounding your object, and an animated volumetric decal effect that simulates foam moving around on the crests of these waves. There is also some pseduo-random motion of the direction and amplitude of the waves, to make it look more natural.
In addition to buoys, this is also a useful effect for bridge supports, ships at anchor, rocks, or any fixed object within flowing water. The effect is also very fast, so there’s not much cost to using it. Take advantage of our TidalStreamWake class to add eddies and extra realism to objects in your simulated water!
I just closed the books on 2015, and it was another record year for Sundog Software: net income (profit, after taxes) was up over 20% compared to 2014, making 2015 our best year ever on both the top and bottom line. Thanks to our loyal customers for fueling that growth!
Let’s look back at what Sundog did in 2015:
- We delivered 45 updates to the SilverLining Sky, 3D Cloud, and Weather SDK and 42 updates to the Triton Ocean SDK to our customers, making them more stable, realistic, and beautiful than ever.
- We released SilverLining 4, featuring an all-new simulation of stratiform clouds never before seen commercially.
- We got directly involved in training citizen astronauts to conduct meteorological research from space.
- I wrote a book sharing the techniques I used to turn Sundog Software into my full-time job.
- Sundog was once again named a top simulation and training company and our work was all over I/ITSEC.
- We launched support for Visual Studio 2015 and DirectX 11.1.
- I launched a whole new business for Sundog, training people online for careers in data science. Courses on MapReduce and Spark are already out, and are expected to drive a lot of revenue growth in 2016.
- SkyMaxx Pro 3 for X-Plane was launched, and became the fastest-selling add-on for X-Plane ever.
- We pulled our Unity products from the market, as they were costing more to maintain than the revenue they created from the outset. This should also set the stage for an even better 2016.
2015 also sticks out to me for a few more reasons. By and large, we stopped doing contract work in 2015, and are now focusing exclusively on making our products better and creating new products. The fact that our revenue grew even while giving up contract work is pretty exciting. That revenue comes from diverse streams all around the world: SDK’s, flight simulator add-ons, and online courses.
We’ve landed some big new customers I can’t tell you about just yet, and we’ve seen strong repeat business from our existing customers. Our strongest growth in 2015 has been in China, despite the language barrier and our lack of a local presence there.
All in all, 2015 was awesome – and the outlook for 2016’s great as well. Happy new year!
Sometimes, users want things like airplane landing lights to illuminate SilverLining’s clouds as you fly through them at night. A few customers have done this on their own by using SilverLining’s extensible shader framework. Recently, we had to do this ourselves as well – so I’ll share the code we used. Note, this article is specific to the OPENGL renderer in SilverLining.
In case you missed it- we’ve previously published the best things you can do to maximize SilverLining‘s performance. Those tips can make a big difference! As we continue to work with customers obsessed with their frame-rates, we’ve uncovered a couple of new tips as well:
Update to the latest SilverLining. SilverLining 4.035 changed the way cumulus cloud layers are initialized. It used to be that new clouds would get “compiled” only when they entered the scene for the first time. In SilverLining 4.035, all of a cloud layer’s clouds get compiled when the layer is seeded instead. This reduces pauses as new clouds yaw into view for their initial appearance. You can grab the latest evaluation version of SilverLining here, or if you have an up-to-date support & maintenance plan with us, the source code SDK is available through here.
Some customers, however, value fast cloud layer seeding times over runtime performance. If you want to put things back to the way they were, the new setting
pre-init-clouds in the Resources/SilverLining.config file may be used for this.
Optimize how cumulus clouds are fogged. It turns out a lot of CPU time was spent computing the proper fog color for each individual cumulus cloud, such that it matches the color of the sky behind it. If you can live without this precision, try changing the
disable-per-cloud-fog setting in Resources/SilverLining.config to “yes” – it can make a big difference – up to 20% in our tests! If you do need perfect cloud fog colors (for example, edge-blended displays may legitimately need this,) SilverLining 4.035 allows you to spread these calculations out over time. The new
cumulus-fog-refresh-frequency settings may be used to enable spreading out the fog calculations, and how many frames the calculations are spread over. Be warned, however, that this can result in noticeable discontinuous cloud color changes with fast-moving viewpoints. Be sure to watch for that while testing.
Many of our customers struggle with depth buffer resolution issues, due to the massive scenes they must represent in training and simulation systems. 2015 seems to have been the year of the logarithmic depth buffer, but going into 2016 we’re seeing more customers also experimenting with reverse depth buffers (AKA inverse depth buffers).
Reverse depth buffers operate on the observation that floating-point depth buffer formats tend to concentrate resolution near the depth value of 0. This is especially weird in OpenGL, which maps its depth range from -1 to 1, putting that area of concentrated resolution in the middle of the scene where it doesn’t do much good. Detailed write-ups are available from Outerra and NVidia that explain how this trick works. But the bottom line is, OpenGL users can sometimes just call glDepthRangedNV(-1,1) and be done with it. (Yes, that works on AMD/ATI cards too.)
If your application is using a reverse depth buffer, you can tell Triton about it by modifying these settings in the Resources/Triton.config file:
# Adjusts our assumptions about the range of projected Z values in your application's
# projection matrix. If you are using an unusual projection matrix, such as for a
# reverse floating point depth buffer in OpenGL, you can adjust the near and far
# z values here.
opengl-near-clip = -1.0
opengl-far-clip = 1.0
directx-near-clip = 0.0
directx-far-clip = 1.0
Be sure you’re using Triton version 3.48 or newer for this to work properly.
In SilverLining, use the Atmosphere::SetDepthRange() method:
/** Call this at the beginning of each rendering loop, prior to calling DrawSky(), indicating
the range of depth buffer values in use. Calling this is optional, but may result in
avoiding a stall each frame. Normally, the near depth value is 0.0 and the far depth
value is 1.0, unless you're doing something like implementing reversed floating point
\param nearDepth The z value that is mapped to the near clipping plane. (Usually 0)
\param farDepth The z value that is mapped to the far clipping plane. (Usually 1)
void SILVERLINING_API SetDepthRange(float nearDepth, float farDepth);
Between this and our extensible shader framework, you’ve got all the tools you need to integrate SilverLining and Triton into pretty much any exotic depth buffer scheme you can dream up. Go get rid of your z-fighting!
*Image credit: Outerra
I/ITSEC 2015 is over, and the show was almost surreal for Sundog. Every year we see our SilverLining and Triton technology showcased at the booths of many of our customers, but this year we were just everywhere. And the visual systems our customers are putting forward all look fantastic. This image is from AECOM’s X-IG demo, which was shown in a few places throughout the show and features SilverLining’s 3D clouds and skies.
Buzz has also apparently spread about our products – people I’ve never met were stopping me in the halls to compliment our work, and were calling to set up meetings. I’m very excited about some potential partnerships in 2016 for Sundog – some customers I’ve been dreaming of for years approached me during the show, and I think we’ll build some very cool things together. Of the exhibitors involved with visual simulation, almost everyone is using Sundog’s technology for something now.
Although the simulation and training industry has seen some challenging years recently, Sundog has continued to grow year after year with a simple strategy of providing great technology and great service at low cost. 2016 is poised to keep us well-positioned to keep delivering innovation and excellent service to our customers, and we’re looking forward to it!
Our Russian friends at Source Side LLC have released the Sevo Engine for iOS! It’s an Objective-C interface to the Ogre3D engine, offering advanced graphics, physics, and sound capabilities for iPhone, iPad, and iPod.
What excites us is that it has built-in support for SilverLining for iOS – so if you need physically realistic, simulation-quality skies, you can download an evaluation of our SilverLining for iOS package and try it out for free with the Sevo Engine.
We wish Source Side LLC success with this new product! I think it fills a need for a fast-performing game or simulation engine for mobile devices, without introducing all of the extraneous features and complexity of higher-level engines. And, it’s currently offered for free – so the price is right! Please check it out.
I’m at the I/ITSEC conference in Orlando this week, which is the premier training and simulation technology conference in the US. And, I’m seeing lots of our customers displaying visual systems that feature SilverLining and Triton!
If you’re at the show, see if you can spot our clouds and water. Some of the displays I noticed are:
AECOM (booth 1070) – Their X-IG product features SilverLining’s skies and clouds, and it looks fantastic.
VT MAK (booth 372) – The VR-Vantage line features a great integration of both SilverLining’s skies and Triton’s water effects.
Alpha Pixel (booth 21) – They’re offering software engineering services work and are displaying Sundog’s visuals as an example of their integration expertise. Check them out!
JRM Technologies (booth 185) – I spotted our clouds in what looked like an IR demo there. Hope to talk to them more about it this week.
Kongsberg Globalsim (booth 192) – They have a couple of different water technologies, but it looked like Triton was in use on their display on the side.
Adacel (booth 5) – Their ATC training system features SilverLining’s skies and clouds integrated into a DirectX environment.
CM Labs – They’re showing some demos of their Vortex product used for Port training, and one of the most physically intense integrations of Triton we’ve seen.
3D Perception, Canon, and Digital Projection – All three of these vendors are showing huge multi-channel displays featuring AECOM’s X-IG demo, which prominently features SilverLining.
US Navy – I’m told they’re showing CSC’s Virtual Ship in the Navy booth, which is built with our Triton Ocean SDK.
We have many, many more customers at the show as well – I thought I spotted our stuff in a few more places too. So if you’re looking for a good conversation starter – Sundog is something most of you at I/ITSEC have in common!
Here are a couple of photos I took (with permission) from Alpha Pixel and AECOM:
As 2015 draws to a close, now may be a good time to check with your manager about any extra budget money for technology purchases. Large companies often set aside a fixed amount of money for software purchases, and often it’s a “use it or lose it” sort of deal.
So, if you’ve been considering using Triton or SilverLining on a new project – the time might be right to start the acquisition process. Even if you’re an existing customer, remember our SDK’s are licensed on a per-application basis – so if you have new projects expected to launch next year, it may make sense to purchase the licenses you need now. If your support and maintenance plan is due to expire soon, you might also consider purchasing a renewal early so you’ll continue to have access to software updates throughout 2016.
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When hearing of folks running statistical analysis with Excel , statisticians often have panicky images of ‘Home Haircutting , with Electric Shears, in the Wet’!
Mind you, Excel really is great for processing data, but analysing it in a more formal or even exploratory sense, can be a trifle tricky.
On the upside, many work computers have Excel installed, it’s readily available for quite a low price even if one is not a student or an academic, and for the most part is well designed and simple to use. It’s very easy to develop a spreadsheet that shows each individual calculation needed for a particular formula such as the standard deviation, for instance. Such flexibility is wonderful for learning and teaching stats, because everyone can see the steps involved in actually getting an answer, more so than the usual press-button, window click, typing ‘esoteric’ commands.
On the downside, pre-2010 versions of Excel had both practical accuracy issues (with functions & the add-in statistics toolpak) and validity issues (employed non-usual methods for things like handling ties in ranked data). There’s still no nonparametric tests (e.g. Wilcoxon), and Excel is still a bit light on for confidence intervals, regression diagnostics, and for performing production, shop-floor type statistical analyses. More of an adjustable wrench than a set of spanners?
In sum, if used wisely, Excel is a useful adjunct to third party statistical add-ins or statistical packages, but please avoid pie charts, especially 3D ones, and watch out for those banana skins….
**Excel 2010 (& Gnumeric & OpenOffice) Accuracy / Validity**
**Some Excel Statistics Books**
Conrad Carlberg http://www.quepublishing.com/store/statistical-analysis-microsoft-excel-2013-9780789753113
Mark Gardener http://www.pelagicpublishing.com/statistics-for-ecologists-using-r-and-excel-data-collection-exploration-analysis-and-presentation.html
Neil Salkind http://www.sagepub.com/books/Book236672?siteId=sage-us&prodTypes=any&q=salkind&fs=1
**Some Statistical Add-Ins for Excel**
Analyse-It http://analyse-it.com DataDesk /XL http://www.datadesk.com
RExcel (interfaces Excel to open source R) http://rcom.univie.ac.at/
**Some Open Source Spreadsheets**
Gnumeric https://projects.gnome.org/gnumeric/ OpenOffice http://www.openoffice.org.au/
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https://www.endpoint.com/team/darius_clynes
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Darius is at his best working on real-time applications, particularly scientific, medical, trading, and entertainment.
In working with VR & AR for serious games as well as musical applications, voice recognition and voice synthesis (TTS, text to speech) he has integrated his favorite areas of expertise with an incessant curiosity.
Designed and implemented real-time software for multimedia performances and avant-garde installations.
Software projects include music software, real-time eye tracking, 3D virtual applications for market research, and database work on trading systems.
As a senior software consultant in R&D he has designed, implemented, and coordinated small teams of dedicated programmers to create prototypes for a variety of exciting projects.
Darius enjoys composing & playing music, hiking, and endlessly discussing philosophy.
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CC-MAIN-2021-21
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https://github.com/tobias/boot-jruby
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boot.boot-jruby - eval JRuby code from
boot-jruby is published to Clojars. To use from boot:
Note: boot 2.0.0-rc1 or newer is required.
boot jruby -h for details, and see the
Immutant is licensed under the Apache License, v2. See LICENSE for details.
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s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-30/segments/1531676592150.47/warc/CC-MAIN-20180721012433-20180721032433-00475.warc.gz
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CC-MAIN-2018-30
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https://netbeans.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=125750
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Just started NetBeans with two projects open, right-clicked one of them in the Projects view and invoked close.
Created attachment 55365 [details]
Not sure if the merged code is the culprit here. The webservices in projectClosed() (thus under opneproject list lock)
call stuff that offloads work to other threads and waits for them.
fixed in OpenProjectList by moving the notifyClosed() callbacks out of the synchronized block. notifyOpen() is not
synchronized either for a long time.
Checking in OpenProjectList.java;
/cvs/projects/projectui/src/org/netbeans/modules/project/ui/OpenProjectList.java,v <-- OpenProjectList.java
new revision: 1.80; previous revision: 1.79
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https://developer.jboss.org/thread/106052
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I'm using OracleDialect with EJB RC1
I'm not sure if there is a proper way to do this, but I have a query like this:
SELECT x FROM Resource x WHERE :visibleOnly = false OR x.visible = true
Resource has a boolean property called "visible".
I get an Oracle error saying "Invalid column name". I checked the debug logs and noticed that hibernate was not changing the boolean values to sql 1s and 0s in the (impressive) sql that it generates. So now I've changed the query to
SELECT x FROM Resource x WHERE :visibleOnly = 0 OR x.visible = 1
and set the "visibleOnly" parameter to 1 or 0, and now it works...
Is this my mistake? Can I leave my query like it is now? Is it wrong to use booleans as parameters?
use a parameter or a query substitution (see the hibernate ref doc)
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s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-39/segments/1537267165261.94/warc/CC-MAIN-20180926140948-20180926161348-00517.warc.gz
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CC-MAIN-2018-39
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http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/printthread.php?t=21745
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code
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whole screen turns black
I just downloaded the RedHat 8.0, but during installation the whole screen turns blank, then I tried the text mode to install the linux, and I finally found out the where the problem lies... it's because it doesn't support my monitor, I search all over the monitor list, but none match my one --> LG Studioworks 700S. It can recognize my video adapter, so there's nothing wrong with the video adapter. Does anyone know what else I can do????? I really want to install linux but I don't want to buy a new monitor....:confused: :(
Perform text mode installation. When you will reach X configuration stage, simply select the unknown monitor (or "generic" - I don't remember exactly) type in horizontal sync and vertical refresh frequencies manually (see your monitor user manual for frequency values). If your graphics card had been recognized by anaconda (Red Hat installer), than all you need to get working configuration of X is to tell it you monitor frequency ranges. Good Luck! (Igor)
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https://forums.aat.org.uk/Forum/discussion/436491/paragraphs-or-lack-of
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Paragraphs (or lack of)
Any ideas as to why I can't use paragraphs in my posts on the new site? (New paragraph?) No matter how neatly I format my posts, when posted, they are just one big block of text. (New paragraph?) I've given up answering queries with calculations in, as a big block of numbers would be just too confusing for the reader. I'm using an ipad by the way. I suppose I should check what my posts look like when I use the computer but I rarely use it.
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CC-MAIN-2021-49
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https://www.opencart.com/index.php?route=marketplace/extension/info&extension_id=3907&filter_license=0&sort=e.date_modified&order=DESC
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This mod will give you images in the Refine Search box on the category page (sub category images).
Included is a vQmod, instructions on how to manually alter the files and replacement default files if you want to use them.
You'll need to apply your own css styling although I have added centering to the template/instructions.
Either upload the vQmod OR do the manual edits, DO NOT, I repeat, DO NOT do both.
UPDATED: The 1.5.3 version now responds to the product count option.
ALL:To change image size, search for
$image = $this->model_tool_image->resize($result['image'], 60, 60;
60,60 is the size of the images, change as required
To remove the product count (NOT 1.5.3), search for
'name' => $result['name'] . ' (' . $product_total . ')',
and replace with
'name' => $result['name'],
IF THIS MOD DOES NOT WORK FOR YOU:
The error is because:
1. installed more than one method (ie. vqmod AND manual edits);
2. there is another mod altering the file near the same place;
3. your ../controller/category.php is not standard or previously edited;
4. you already have sub-cat images with your theme.
I NO LONGER RECEIVE COMMENT NOTIFICATIONS - IF YOU NEED ASK SOMETHING THEN PLEASE USE THIS LINK FOR PRE-SALES ENQUIRIES OR SUPPORT: EMAIL SUPPORT (Note: as this is a free extension you may or may not get a reply).
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CC-MAIN-2022-49
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https://quri.substack.com/p/interim-update-on-our-work-on-ea
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Interim Update on our Work on EA Cause Area Candidates
The story so far:
I constructed the original Big List of Cause Candidates in December 2020.
I spent some time thinking about the pipeline for new cause area ideas, not all of which is posted.
I tried to use a bounty system to update the list for next year but didn't succeed.
I found a researcher, Leo, to update the list in March 2022.
In addition to the EA forum post, there is also an Airtable sheet, with filters for promisingness and other characteristics. This hasn't been updated since the original iteration in 2020. Initially, it was an experiment that could have been built upon, but it ended up being messier and thus abandoned.
As of now:
I think the list is a fine resource as it is, and I intend to make sure that it continues to be updated.
It is now more apparent to me that integrating this list into structures that could use it is probably as important as producing and updating the list in the first place.
Some stakeholders known to me are:
Charity Entrepreneurship. Finding out whether they are in fact using it in their deliberations for deciding where to, and if it can be modified in order to be more useful to them, is probably a valuable step.
Various "longtermist incubators". These have generally completely failed to get off the ground, with the notable exception of Nonlinear, which e.g., has this well populated page with bounties.
The Center for Effective Altruism uses the original post as part of its Effective Altruism Handbook. As the list becomes longer, it’s possible that a lighter version might be more suitable as introductory material.
Possibly Open Philanthropy, though I doubt it.
The Quantified Uncertainty Research Institute might not be an ideal institution for this, because the connection to forecasting and epistemics is a bit tenuous. But I think it will suffice for now.
There is also a Cause Prioritization Wiki, with partially overlapping content and aims. It might be a good move to either:
Move the Big List of Cause Candidates to that Wiki
Combine contents of both sources into a different system, e.g., an Airtable
The first step to decide this would be to create a list of options, with pros and cons for each one.
Super linear is a new bounty portal that could be used to update this list and do related work in the upcoming year.
This concludes my thoughts for now.
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http://zebrapeople.com/digital-jobs/job/technical-lead-government-body
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Technical Lead for Government body
Technical Lead for Government Body in London – £500 per day
A Technical Lead is needed for a 6 months rolling contract for a data migration project.
You will be joining a greenfield team within a scrum environment focusing on delivering a product against a vital timeline.
- A passion for Agile methodologies and concepts such Lean, Scrum, and Kanban including pair programming,
- Proven delivery experience of high volume, high availability, large-scale backend systems in one of Scala, Java 7, Java 8
- Testing tools (e.g. Junit, Cucumber) & mock frameworks (e.g. mockito)
- Familiarity with microservices architecture, cloud environments
- Experienced in Continuous Integration and/or Delivery practices
- Experience with writing SQL queries on complex legacy databases
- Experience with MongoDB or other No SQL databases
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CC-MAIN-2018-13
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http://comfortforums.com/forum20/3368-2.html
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juwi_uk wrote: OK so here are the steps to easily recreate.
1) Open Comfigurator 3.6.8 and sign in
2) I immediately see Keypads for Kitchen (KP06), Landing (KP04, now shown in red) and a new "Keypad02". So I delete my "Landing" one and exit comfigurator.
3) Open Comfigurator again and sign in; look I'm now joined by "Keypad020" (in red). Close.
4) Open Comfigurator again and sign in; look I'm now joined by "Keypad021" (in red). Close.
5-infinity) I could go on all day like this... :0)
Julian can you clarify yiour steps
"Open comfigurator and sign in, and see new keypad in Red"
Do you mean just start comfigurattor without any file? or do you open the lastfile
What do you mean "sign in' do you mean press the login button?
Just Log in will not make any changes to the modules.
Do you mean do a scan for keypads?
Do you save the file with the invallid keypads and open the file again?
This topic has been moved to Comfigurataor as it seems to be a comfiguraor handling issue and not related to firmware
I have Comfigurator set to load the last opened cclx file.
By sign in I mean I usually select System Info menu action and it pops up a signon dialog box, I enter my code and once the info dialog is returned I close it and then go to the modules tab and I see a duplicate.
what you describe is the result of a Scan for modules and not log in. Transfer System information also does a scan for modules
This is why we were unable to duplicate your problem. We just logged in and did not see the problem with the extra module
It's not Keypad firmware related. I simulated this using my Simulator (firmwares 0000, 1.010 and even fictituous 7.001) and it seems that it's something in Comfigurator itself. Strangely, in my case, it's always a KP04 that is the phantom keypad.
If an old KP04 before 1.010 that does not report its firmware version during the scan is in the system (ie it reports version Unknown like in Julian's screenshot) , when you save the file and open it again, a new scan will result in another KP04 with status "not found"
This wil be fixed in the next comfgurator but as workaround, please delete any unknown KP04s before saving the file. Right click on the keypad on the left pane and select Delete
If a phantom keypad firmware < 1.010 appears after a scan and is shown in RED and with Status NOT Found, writing to Comfort will NOT add this keypad to the Number of Keypads and so will not cause a Communications Failure Trouble alarm.
Modules which are NOT found will not be added to Number of modules
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http://crypto.stackexchange.com/users/9007/joshua
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Apparently, this user prefers to keep an air of mystery about them.
2 Why is DSA falling out of favor? May 1
0 How secure is using a pad (using xor) on a encrypted data, for the purpose of obfuscating/hiding the underlying encryption? Jul 18 '14
0 Perfectly secret cipher can leak about the key? Nov 13 '14
0 Viability of an “Unconventional” Hashing Scheme? Dec 22 '14
0 Is RC4 +XOR secure for small data? Jan 21 '15
0 Why not just encrypt the message and the hash of the message to achieve cryptographic integrity? Feb 11 '15
0 AES key from encrypted text and VI Mar 4 '15
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s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-26/segments/1466783403826.29/warc/CC-MAIN-20160624155003-00045-ip-10-164-35-72.ec2.internal.warc.gz
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http://loupgaroublond.blogspot.com/2008/02/credit-card-madness.html
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Doing this two days before leaving the continent, very bad.
I now have two choices. I can fly with a fair amount of currency in pocket, and exchange it there at a notoriously exorbitant place at the airport, or find an equally questionable place run by money launderers in town. Risks are high.
The other option is to play the whole switcheroo. I can pull money from a credit card, and then make sure to pay it just before I make the withdrawal. The really tricky part, though, is figuring out how interest is calculated. Let's say the regular charge rate on the card is 15% and a cash advance is 20%. I withdraw 200 dollars, and make a payment right away of an equal value. I also have another hypothetical 500 dollar balance at the rate of 15%. How is that payment applied to the balance? Is it distributed equally in 5 parts to 2, giving me some odd number of a interest rate? Or is the bank smart enough to realize they already stripped me bare?
Which leads to my next question. Did the ancient greeks, when they came up with their rational point of view on the world envision such a system where such ambiguous questions could evolve? Or are we just merely becoming the fabled 'post-human' playing at building incomprehensible worlds like the one we're evolving in?
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s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-35/segments/1566027313996.39/warc/CC-MAIN-20190818185421-20190818211421-00405.warc.gz
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CC-MAIN-2019-35
| 1,270
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https://rllinsure.com/privacypolicy/
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What information does Company collect?
Information You Voluntarily Disclose
Certain features of Service and the App are designed to publicly display or publish Information that you choose to provide to other users of the Service or App or to other third parties. These features include a Company blog. Please keep in mind that whenever you voluntarily disclose Information through the Service or the App, that Information can be collected and used by others. Additionally, you may receive unsolicited messages from other parties or make others aware of your location. You submit this Information at your own risk. We are not responsible for the security or privacy of any Information you choose to submit in connection with these public features.
How does Company use this Information?
We may use your Information, including your Personal Information, as follows:
We may also use your Information for any other purpose with your consent.
Data and Blind Data
You own all right, title, and interest in and to any data (excluding Technical Information) that we collect from you via your use of and interaction with the Service (“Data”). You also grant to us a non-exclusive, transferable, sublicensable, royalty free license to use any data we collect based on your use of the App or the Service in order to provide, monitor and improve the Service and to compile, synthesize and analyze this Data (“Blind Data”), such as to generate anonymous usage statistics. If we collect or generate Blind Data, it will be owned by us and we may use it for any lawful business purpose without any payment to you. Any Blind Data will not personally identify you or the source of the Data.
Information We Share
Company or its agents, vendors or contractors may disclose Information, including your Personal Information, to third parties in the following circumstances:
Security of Your Information
We maintain physical, electronic, and procedural safeguards designed to protect the Information. These safeguards include storing your Information on our secure servers behind firewalls and using encryption technology. Despite the actions and precautions we take, no data transmissions over the Internet can be guaranteed to be 100% secure. Consequently, we cannot ensure or warrant the security of the Information and you acknowledge and agree that you transmit it to us at your own risk.
Third-Party Websites, Services and Technologiesn
The Website, the App and the Service are not intended for children under the age of 13. We do not knowingly collect Information from children under 13. If you believe that we may have collected Information from a child under the age of 13, please contact us at firstname.lastname@example.org.
Information Choices and Changes
We may need to communicate with you about the Service and the App, and we would like to make certain commercial offers available to you from time to time. As such, you consent to receive commercial messages (whether by phone, email, text or push notifications) from us or our third party partners, and acknowledge and agree that your primary phone numbers and email addresses and other information may be used for the purpose of initiating commercial messages. We will allow you to opt-out of receiving commercial messages, but in order to stop receiving any messages from us whatsoever (including administrative messages regarding the Service or messages that are primarily about transactions enabled via the Service), you will need to terminate your account.
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CC-MAIN-2022-40
| 3,513
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https://sites.google.com/site/ev3basic/ev3-basic-programming/using-sensors
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EV3 Basic is compatible with all the standard EV3 and NXT sensors with the probable exception of the NXT sound sensor. It is helpful (but not obligatory) to attach sensors to sensor ports on the EV3 according to the following convention:
port 1 = touch, port 2 = gyro, port 3 = color, port 4 = infrared or ultrasonic.
As in the standard Lego EV3 software, many sensors can be used in different modes. Some information on the different modes can be found below, and more can be found in the sensor appendix. To set the desired mode for the sensor you are using, use Sensor.Setmode(port number, mode). For example, to set a color sensor on port 3 to mode 1 (ambient light intensity) use Sensor.SetMode(3, 1). It is important to always set the mode of the sensor before it is used.
You can obtain further guidance on the EV3 Basic sensor functions from the EV3 Basic Manual.
The touch sensor is a simple switch and Sensor.ReadPercent(port number) returns a value of zero when the switch is not being pressed and 100 when it is being pressed.
In EV3 Basic, the color sensor can be used to read:
In mode 0, the value returned by Sensor.ReadPercent(port number) is the percentage of the emitted light that is reflected back to the sensor. The maximum value that I can achieve for this sensor (by holding white paper a centimeter in front of the sensor) is about 86%.
Mode 1, ambient light mode, returns zero when there is no ambient light and a maximum of 100 in bright light. Here is an example of code that will continuously display the ambient light level:
In mode 2 the color sensor will return a code number corresponding to which standard Lego color has been detected (0=unknown, 1=black, 2=blue, 3=green, 4=yellow, 5=red, 6=white, 7=brown). Since the sensor is returning a single value that is not a percentage you should use Sensor.ReadRawValue(port number, 0). Here is an example of code that will continuously display the standard color detected:
It's much neater to use an array of color names rather than the If.. ElseIf.. EndIf structure:
Note that in mode 2 the color sensor is quite fussy about the colors. Genuine 'Lego colors' work best e.g. colored Lego pieces. The colors of other objects may not be recognised correctly even though they may seem obvious to you.
In the above program it is tempting to neatly create the array like this:
This method is fine for programs that will only ever run in 'PC mode' (directly within Small Basic) but it is not compatible with the EV3 Explorer compiler that tries to convert the Small Basic programs into the RBF format that the brick understands, should you wish to run the program in brick mode (from the brick's menu system). It's probably best to write programs that are compatible with both Small Basic and the EV3 Explorer compiler. See this page for more tips on this.
In mode 4 (not 3) the colour sensor will return RGB colour values for reflected light. This means you can measure any color, from a palette of millions, and are not limited to recognising one of 7 standard colours like you are in mode 2. This is a relatively advanced topic so it has been placed on a separate page.
Note that the ultrasonic sensor is not included in the home version of the EV3 robotics kit, though it is available for purchase as optional extra and the corresponding programming block can be downloaded free and incorporated into the home version of the Lego software. Since the ultrasonic sensor and the infra-red sensor both measure distance, the infra-red sensor can be substituted for the ultrasonic sensor in the lessons that follow (changes must also be made to the code - see the next section).
To obtain the distance reading from the ultrasound sensor, use Sensor.ReadRawValue(port number, 0). If the sensor is in mode 0 then the distance will be measured in mm (not cm). If the sensor is in mode 1 then the distance will be measured in tenths of an inch.
Here is a program that will continuously display the distance reading from the EV3 ultrasonic sensor in cm (or inches if you set the sensor to mode 1, i.e. change the highlighted number from 0 to 1).
Note that the infrared sensor and beacon are not included in the education version of the EV3 robotics kit, but are available for purchase as optional extras. In EV3 Basic, the infra-red sensor can be used to measure:
After switching to mode 1 with the command Sensor.SetMode(4,1) (for an IR sensor on port 4) the sensor will detect and return the direction and distance of an IR beacon. Since it is returning two values simultaneously you must use Sensor.ReadRaw(port number, 2). This will return an array of two elements in which element 0 is the direction and element 1 is the distance in cm. More help with this later...
After switching to mode 2, IR-REMOTE, with the command Sensor.SetMode(4,2) (for an IR sensor on port 4) the sensor will detect which buttons are being pressed on one or several IR beacons (remote controls) that are sending signals to the brick.
The gyro sensor is included in the education version of the EV3 but not in the home version, though it's always possible to buy it separately.
It's very important to keep the gyro sensor and EV3 very still when connecting the cable and during start-up of the EV3, otherwise the gyro reading will continually wander away from the correct value. If you are not sure that this condition was met then simply unplug the sensor from its port and then reconnect it before running the program, while ensuring that the EV3 and the gyro sensor are perfectly still. You can use port view on the third tab of the brick menus to check whether the angle value is wandering even when the robot is still, but don't forget to exit port view before you try to run any EV3 Basic program.
Even if you are careful to ensure that the gyro sensor is still when it is started up, and even if you have verified in port view that the angle value is not wandering, you cannot expect perfect accuracy from the gyro sensor. How accurate is it? Visit this page to see the results of my testing. In a nutshell, my carefully-initialized gyro sensor usually measures counter-clockwise rotation fairly accurately, but usually underestimates clockwise rotations by about 2.5%. This may not sound like much, but these errors will accumulate, so for example if my sensor is twisted back and forth through 360° ten times then the error will be about 2.5% x 10 = 25% or 45°, which is really significant. I also noticed that errors were large for slow or jerky rotations, and smaller for faster, smoother rotations ('faster' meaning a full rotation in about 5 seconds). It's possible that my observations apply only to my gyro sensor, but it's also possible that they apply to all EV3 gyro sensors - if you need high accuracy from your sensor then you should do your own tests...
Mode 0 measures angles in degrees (relative to the gyro position when the program was started). The gyro sensor can be used to measure angles in either a horizontal or a vertical plane, according to how it is attached to the robot. The gyro sensor should be read with Sensor.ReadRawValue(port number, 0). In mode 0 the sensor supplies an array which contains a single element (element) - see how that element is read in the code below.
Here is a simple program that continuously displays the angle in degrees through which the sensor has been rotated since the program was started (attach the gyro sensor to port 2):
Mode 1 measures rate of change of angle in deg/s. This is a more advanced concept than angles themselves. If you set the mode to 1 instead of 0 in the above program (by changing the highlighted digit from 0 to 1) then the program will display rate of change of angle in deg/s. Don't forget to also change the units displayed on the LCD.
Just as in the official Lego EV3 software, the motors can also be used as angle sensors, detecting the angle to which they have moved by their own force or some eternal force. The command Motor.GetCount (port letter) will accurately measure (in degrees) all movements of a motor, even if the motor is driven by some external force while not actively running.
Here's what the developer has to say: "Some other third party sensors may work as well, but again I can't test this myself. I think that if the manufacturer has successfully tested them with the Lego software, EV3 Basic should also be able to speak with them somehow (either using 'ReadRaw' or in the worst case with some custom made I2C communication programming), but this would probably be far beyond beginner level."
To get a better feel for percent and raw values, connect any standard NXT or EV3 sensor (except the NXT sound sensor?) to port 1 and run the SensorReading.sb file that was included in the Examples folder that was part of the installation of the EV3 extension. To make sense of that program, refer to the Sensor Appendix.
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https://www.mcallen.net/departments/engineering/construction-projects/bond-projects-intersection-improvements
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Bond Projects: Intersection Improvements
23rd & Jackson, Ebony, Hackberry, and Kendlewood and 10th & Bus.
Design status: ROW acquisition is complete. Design is being finalized to get utility relocation underway. Utility relocation phase must be complete before this project may be bid out. TxDOT is participating with 99% of the construction cost, the State process is required to be followed.
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https://askubuntu.com/questions/760408/can-i-install-ubuntu-16-04-lts-with-less-than-25gb-hard-disk-space
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I have a limited amount of free disk space left on my machine, (around 9 - 10 GB), and I would like to try out the latest Ubuntu 16.04 LTS on my computer, so my question is that, Is it possible to install Ubuntu 16.04 LTS with less than 25 GB of disk space (which is stated on the official documentation, as the recommended disk space for installation)?
25GB is the recommended available space, however the minimums are stated in section 3.4 of the installation guides. Visit https://help.ubuntu.com/16.04/installation-guide/ and select your machine architecture first. AMD64 with the desktop has a min of 10GB HDD.
A minimal server installation of xenial requires 400MB of disk space. The standard Ubuntu desktop installation requires 2GB.
So, technically, you should be able to install it on a far smaller drive (unless the installer refuses to do so, I didn’t try it), but of course you may easily run into out of disk space problems which easily play havoc on linuxes. So keep an eye on that!
You state in your question that you have about 9-10GB of disk space.
If you plan on running the Ubuntu Desktop, you must have at least 10GB of disk space. 25GB is recommended, but 10GB is the minimum.
Unless you can meet that 10GB minimum (and no, 9GB is not 10GB), you should not be using Ubuntu on that small a space, and should probably be cleaning off other stuff from your computer to make more space for your system. (Very few systems can operate with just 9GB or 10GB free, if the disk is large - the rule of thumb is once the drive dips under 10% of available free space, it's going to slow down considerably).
Source: https://help.ubuntu.com/16.04/installation-guide/, and knowledge gathered through trainings and experience
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https://www.bram.us/tag/css/page/45/
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A nice overview summing it all up.
Some of the experimental features Tab Atkins — a guy who’s on the Chrome team and part of the CSSWG — is working on (aka how we will most likely write CSS in the near future)
“I can’t stand how the close button for tabs is on the right. On the Mac, close goes on the left.”— John Gruber (#) Last night I whipped up a tad of CSS to position the tab close buttons in Firefox 4 (currently in Beta) on the left hand side of the tab. The CSS […]
Rounded corners are hot. They have been for a long time and still are. Recently things got a whole lot easier due to the fact that lots of browsers started supporting (their vendor specific prefixed version of) border-radius. One of the problems with it is that border-radius cannot be used on images. Tim Van Damme […]
Working with nested lists is not an uncommon practice, yet I’ve noticed that some (and I before) had troubles when working with nested lists of different types (viz. an ol inside an ul or vice versa). However, it shouldn’t be a burden at all, here’s a hat tip, saving you some headaches.
Huzzah! bramus_cssextras 0.5.0 has been released! No new features have been added, yet this version differs a lot from the previously released versions of bramus_cssextras: Under the hood bramus_cssextras has been totally rewritten to make it TinyMCE 3.0 compatible.
Nice summarizing article for those still in the dark on the subject. The article basically is a rewrite of Andy Clarke’s Specificity Wars (the first article ever on the subject, not?) but then with some little extras.
In FireFox (or any other Mozilla/Gecko based browser), the caret in input fields and textareas sometimes just disappears (viz. it’s not there). To be more precise it has something to do with input fields and textareas inside fixed-positioned elements. Found a CSS fix a few months ago, but forgot about it, so sticking a post-it […]
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https://clairesamuel.com/2018/04/22/book-review-altruism-by-matthieu-ricard-reading/
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The book Altruism by Matthieu Ricard is perfect for the 21st century. I love the idea of associating kindness and compassion to strength. Very well documented, Altruism proves that it is the way of the future on the planet.
Collaboration being the trend of the new era also reminds me of Blue ocean strategy, as opposed to the red blood ocean of competition.
Matthieu Ricard also wrote Happiness:
And Why meditate?:
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https://communities.vmware.com/t5/vCenter-Server-Discussions/Unable-to-login-to-vCenter-6-7-appliance-as-SSO-user-or-local/m-p/2283218
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Our vCenter 6.7 appliance has been running fine for a few months. Since today though, SSO users can't login.
(SSO identity source is LDAP, which seems to be running OK)
When I try to investigate.
- I can login to the server on port 5480 as email@example.com OK, and the dashboard for SSO, only says 'vsphere.local' and Status 'Running', and no options to edit.
- But when I try to login to the vSphere UI as firstname.lastname@example.org to check if I have lost my SSO settings, I get this error.
A server error occurred.
An error occurred while processing the authentication response from the vCenter Single Sign-On server. Details: Status: urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:status:Responder, sub status: urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:status:RequestDenied.
Check the vSphere Web Client server logs for details.
Shouldn't I be able to login as the local administrator ? even without a SSO service - what am I doing wrong ?
I can login to the appliance as root via ssh, but not sure which are the relevant logs
can you try to ssh of the vcenter and see what log entries we have in below log files.
Re produce the issue and note the time stamp to find relevant log entries.
In these files we can find some details.
Thanks for the responses. The problem has resolved itself after the following, although I'm not sure any addressed the root cause
I'll investigate further, and if the problem re-occurs, I'll start looking with these suggested log files
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https://www.alibabacloud.com/help/doc-detail/73658.htm
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A virtual private cloud (VPC) is an isolated network environment that you can configure to meet your business requirements in different scenarios.
Applications that are hosted in a VPC can provide external services. To control access to the applications over the Internet, you can create security group rules and whitelists. You can also isolate application servers from databases to implement access control. For example, you can deploy web servers in a subnet that allows access to the Internet, and deploy the databases in another subnet that denies access to the Internet.
Host applications that require access to the Internet
You can host applications that require access to the Internet in a subnet of a VPC and use a NAT gateway to route network traffic. You can configure SNAT rules to allow instances in the subnet to access the Internet without the need to expose the private IP addresses. In addition, you can change the public IP address that is used to access the Internet at any time to prevent attacks from the Internet.
Implement cross-zone disaster recovery
You can create vSwitchs to divide a VPC into one or more subnets. vSwitches within the same VPC can communicate with each other. To implement cross-zone disaster recovery, you can deploy resources across vSwitches in different zones.
Isolate business systems
VPCs are logically isolated from each other. You can use multiple VPCs to isolate business systems in different environments such as production and test environments. To allow business systems deployed in two VPCs to communicate with each other, you can create a peering connection between the VPCs. For more information, see What is a peering connection?.
Build a hybrid cloud
To expand your on-premises network, you can create a dedicated connection between a VPC and your data center. This allows you to seamlessly migrate the application systems in your data center to the cloud. You do not need to change the access method for the applications.
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https://forums.flightsimulator.com/t/correct-working-pulse-lights/320847
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I’ve noticed in the sim that the “pulse” setting for the landing lights just causes the lights to turn on and off in unison. On most aircraft I’ve seen use this system in real life, the landing lights pulse in an alternating left and right pattern. Its my understanding that this system is used to exaggerate movement to scare birds and make the aircraft more visible to others. Can we get this system working correctly in the sim?
What aircraft is this on? I’d like to tag those aircraft in your post so that people can find this topic more easily.
Hello. I believe the “pulse” light switch is in the TBM, both Citation Jets and Cirrus. I know those aircraft should have the alternating (wig wag) pulse lights when the “pulse” switch is activated. Currently they just flash on and off.
Thanks! I added those tags to your post.
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https://torque-it.com/product/huawei-implementing-enterprise-routing-network/
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Huawei Certified ICT Professional-Implementing Enterprise Routing Network
Available on request.
For more information click on button below
The HCNP-R&S-IERN course provides intense knowledge about the implementation and configuration of OSPF and BGP. The training modules focus on describing multicast protocols and using various filtering tools such as route policy, ACLAS-Path Route filtering and IP-prefix for route filtering. The course provides knowledge about OSPF, and BGP routing protocols, IPv4 address planning, multicast routing protocols, routing and routing control, and Huawei routers networking application. The HCNP-R&S
curriculum includes, but is not limited to the following: Network fundamentals; Principles of switches and routers; TCP/IP protocol.
- Network Administrators & Engineers.
- Anyone who is involved in network operations.
The knowledge and skills that a learner must have before attending this course is as follows:
- HCNA certification or similar knowledge.
Huawei is a leading global information and communications technology (ICT) solutions provider. Driven by responsible operations,
ongoing innovation, and open collaboration, they have established a competitive ICT portfolio of end-to-end solutions in telecom &
enterprise networks, devices, and cloud computing.
Huawei’s ICT solutions, products, and services are used in more than 170 countries and regions, serving over one-third of the world’s population. With more than 170,000 employees, Huawei is committed to enabling the future information society, and building a Better Connected World.
Torque IT have officially been named a Huawei Authorised Learning Partner (HALP), and is authorised by Huawei to implement their training programs under Huawei’s guidance. Torque IT together with Huawei are dedicated to the professional training of ICT intellects. Torque IT launches Huawei Training & Certification Solutions, based on years of experience in developing ICT talents and deep insight into industry developments.
The technical certification program, that includes several levels, is created to match the career development life cycle of the ICT industry. The solution leverages Huawei’s Cloud-Pipe-Device convergence technology and covers IP, IT, CT, as well as ICT convergence technology. It covers all the technical areas of ICT, which makes it the only one of its kind in the industry.
Relying on its strong technical and professional training and certification system and in accordance with customers of different ICT technology levels, Huawei certification is committed to providing customers with authentic, professional certification, and addresses the need for the development of quality engineers that are capable of supporting enterprise networks in the face of an ever changing ICT industry.
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http://ridleypearson.blogspot.com/2007_10_01_archive.html
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Dave (Barry) and I kicked off our Peter and the Secret of Rundoon tour with an amazing party at Books and Books in Coral Gables, Florida. We had a terrific turnout (thank you!) but also the book store went "all out" with pirate costumes, flags, decorations, events for the kids, Radio Disney, and ...
an 11', 95 lb, python that we had to hold while read from the book. Not only was it absurdly heavy, and constantly moving, and slimy, but after this shot, it curled around me and laid its head on my shoulder and steadily hissed into my ear, to where I was convinced I was going to be its dinner, while 300 people looked on.
(notice the Mickey Mouse ears I get from the eyes of the pirate flag—this confirms it was a Disney event!)
Anyway it was a wild start to what I'm sure will be an equally wild book tour. We look forward to meeting many of you on the road—just one thing: don't bring any snakes.
10/28 – on way to NY to begin the 2 week tour
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https://github.com/Perl/perl5/commit/09bfa780161d8611fea2ac7867903995c4f09003
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Please sign in to comment.
locale.c: Remove branch to label
The code at this label was branched to because it contained common cleanup code. But now that code is in a function, so the cleanup call is trivial, so just skip this intermediate label.
- Loading branch information...
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https://support.fundly.com/hc/en-us/articles/360004647332-Basic-Reporting-Part-V-FAQ-How-Do-I-Display-the-Filter-Values-on-the-Report
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NOTE: Due to a recent update to the reporting module, you may notice some differences between your system and the screenshots in this tutorial. We are working to update the screenshots, but in the meantime, the steps in the tutorial below are accurate/have not changed
Basic Reporting Part V FAQ: How Do I Display the Filter Values on the Report?
- Sometimes, you may with to display on the report output the values that you selected for the report filters. That is, you might want to show on the report the date range that you selected in the filters.
- To do this, you simply click into the cell where you want the filter value to display and add the following formula (be sure to add the equal sign; it tells the report that what follows is a function/formula and not text):
- =Filter Value(x)
- "X" in the formula is the number of the filter. Filters are numbered/counted from top to bottom. For example, in the screen shot below, Fund is the third filter from the top, so we would put a "3" in place of the "x" in the formula to show on the report what we had chosen for Fund in the filters like this: =Filter Value (3).
- The "Filter Value" function is only going to display the value of the filter; it will not display the name of the filter. If we want to add some text to show the name of the filter, we can do that by adding whatever text we want, enclosed in single quotations, before the Filter Value function. We must also add an ampersand (&) to indicate to the report that we wish to combine the text with the Filter Function (this is called "concatenate" when we tell the report to combine two functions).
- The syntax for the Filter Value plus description text would look like this:
- ='your text here' & Filter Value(x)
- For instance if we were displaying the donation date filter on this report, we might add the following to the report: ='Gift Date Between' & Filter Value(1)
- If we wanted to display the value of the Donation Amount filter (#7 from the top of the list) then we would add ='Donation Amount Greater Than' & Filter Value(7) to the report.
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https://www.rubin.com.np/windows-8-application-development-under-starters-orders-1144.html
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Microsoft says product development and testing are complete and the company has officially started handing off the final code to OEM partners. But what does this mean for software application developers getting ready to start programming for Microsoft’s “Metro” user interface?
After an initial period of “invitation only” for developers targeting the Windows Store (with free apps for users during the preview phase), programmers will be able to start charging and the app market will open up in general.
At RTM (release to manufacturing), Microsoft is also expanding the Windows Store to new markets and adding additional language support for developers. According to Microsoft, “Since the Windows 8 Release Preview, we’ve released the Windows Store in 54 new markets, bringing the total number of app catalogs to 80. We’ve also added 24 new app certification languages (bringing the total to 38 app submission languages) and have localized the developer dashboard into an additional 11 languages.”
When Windows 8 is generally available, customers in more than 200 countries and regions around the world will be able to shop for apps in more than 100 languages.
Developers who have an MSDN or TechNet subscription will be able to download the Windows 8 RTM code on August 15, the same day they can visit the Windows Dev Center to get access to all the tools and resources they need to design, build, and sell apps in the Windows Store, including the RTM release of Visual Studio 2012.
“Some of the most exciting innovations with Windows 8 are yet to come — the innovations from developers building apps on the new WinRT platform,” blogged Microsoft Windows’s chief Steven Sinofsky. “While we have reached our RTM milestone, no software project is ever really ‘done.’ We will continue to monitor and act on your real world experiences with Windows 8 — we’ve used the preview process to test out our servicing and we have every intent of doing a great job on this next important phase of the product.”
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https://www.inapps.net/top-12-python-libraries-for-2022/
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When talking about the data science world, Python is increasingly becoming a go-to language and is one of the key aspects hiring managers are searching for in the skill set of a data scientist. It has been repeatedly ranking at the topmost position at the global data science surveys and its universal success just keeps growing!
Python offers us easy-to-code, object-oriented, high-level language means. And then we have numerous libraries to do jobs like mathematics, data mining, data exploration, and visualisation.
In this blog, we will be discussing these Python Libraries that are doing wonders in 2021:
NumPy is among the most powerful scientific computation Python libraries and is used extensively for Machine Learning and Deep Learning apps. NumPy is short for NUMerical PYthon. Complex computational machine learning algorithms need multidimensional array operations. NumPy shows solutions for large objects with multidimensional arrays and different tools to function with them.
Features of NumPy
- It is an open-source Python library.
- It has matrix data structures and a multi-dimensional array.
- It can be used to conduct a range of mathematical functions on arrays.
- It is an extension of Numeric and numarray.
- It also has random number generators.
Dear PyGui uses what is really considered the immediate mode paradigm, made popular in video games. This effectively implies that the dynamic GUI is separately created frame by frame, without the existence of any data. This allows this tool to be radically different from other GUI frameworks for Python. It is highly efficient and uses the GPU of your computer to promote the building of highly complex interfaces, as many have needed in applications for engineering, simulations, games, or data science.
Features of Dear PyGui
- Dear PyGui has a drawing API to build custom drawings, plot, and even 2D games.
- Offers easy built-in Asynchronous function support.
- DearPyGui utilizes the immediate mode paradigm enabling the extremely dynamic interfaces.
- Allows developers to build create fast and strong GUIs for scripts.
This is a Python library that is linked to NumPy and SciPy. Scikit-learn is known to be among the best libraries for dealing with complex data. In this library, there are a lot of modifications being made. The cross-validation function is one modification, offering the choice to use more than one metric. Few small changes have been made to many training approaches, such as logistics regression and nearest neighbors.
Features of Scikit-learn
- It is an easy and effective tool for predictive data analysis.
- Anyone can access it and reuse it in different contexts.
- It is built on NumPy, SciPy, and matplotlib
- It is open-source, commercially usable – BSD license
Keras is known as being one of Python’s finest machine learning libraries. It offers a simplified method for expressing neural networks. Keras also offers impressive utilities for compiling models, data-set analysis, graph visualization, and so much more.
Keras utilizes either Theano or TensorFlow internally within the backend. It is also possible to use some of the many common neural networks, including CNTK. When we contrast it with other machine learning libraries, Keras is relatively sluggish. Since, by using back-end infrastructure, it generates a computational graph and then uses it to perform tasks.
Features of Keras
- Keras offers a lot of prelabeled datasets that can be imported and loaded directly.
- Keras has many implemented layers and parameters, such as loss functions, optimizers, metric evaluations.
- It runs on both the CPU and the GPU smoothly.
- Keras is a platform that is fully Python-based, making it simple to debug and explore.
- The modular design of Keras is extremely expressive, versatile, and ideal for creative research.
When it comes to scientific computing, SciPy (Scientific Python) is the go-to library that is used extensively in the realms of math, science, and engineering. It is similar to using a paid instrument called Matlab. As the manual states, SciPy offers many user-friendly and effective numerical routines such as numerical integration and optimization routines. It is built on the NumPy library.
Features of SciPy
- SciPy implementation can be found in every complicated numerical computation.
- It is an open-source Python library used to solve scientific and math problems.
- It is built on NumPy extension and enables the user to manipulate & visualize data.
- It offers more utility features for optimization, stats and signal processing.
PyTorch is a massive library for machine learning that enables programmers to conduct GPU acceleration tensor computations, produce interactive computational graphs, and automatically calculate gradients. Other than that, PyTorch provides rich APIs to solve neural network-related application problems.
The basis of this machine learning library is Torch, which is an open-source machine library built-in C with a wrapper in Lua. This machine library was released in Python in 2017, and the library has been getting popular and drawing a growing number of programmers of machine learning ever since its creation.
Features of PyTorch
- PyTorch enables fast, flexible experimentation and efficient production.
- It is concise and easy to use and provides you the ability to deploy computational graphs.
- It makes use of python integrations combined with a data science stack.
- It provides an easy interface with APIs.
Matplotlib is by far the most common library in the Python community for exploration and data visualization. This library is the foundation of every other library. It provides countless charts and customization, from histograms to scatter plots, to customize and configure your plots, matplotlib sets down a variety of colors, themes, palettes, and other possibilities. If you are doing data analysis for a machine learning project or producing a report for stakeholders, matplotlib is certainly the most functional library.
Features of Matplotlib
- It offers an object-oriented API for integrating plots into applications using general-purpose GUI toolkits like Tkinter, wxPython, Qt, or GTK+.
- It has quite an active development community.
- It is open-source and free.
Plotly is a visualization library that is free and open-source. Developers love this library because of its top quality, publication-ready and immersive charts. A few instances of the charts that are available are Boxplot, heatmaps, bubble charts. Built on top of the D3.js, HTML, and CSS visualization library, it is one of the greatest data visualization tools accessible. It is developed using the Django framework and Python.
Features of Plotly
- It helps in the creation of interactive graphs.
- It is involved in the development of data analytics and visualization tools such as Dash and Chart Studio.
- You can easily import data to chart.
- It helps you make beautiful slide decks and dashboards.
PyCaret is an open-source machine learning library that assists you in functions like data preparation and deployment of models. By being a low-code library, it allows you to save loads of time. It is a machine learning library that is simple to understand and use that will assist you to conduct end-to-end machine learning tests, whether it is inferring missing values, interpreting categorical data, engineering features, tuning hyper parameters, or creating ensemble models.
Features of PyCaret
- PyCaret is a low-code library that helps you become more efficient.
- It is a simple and easy-to-use ML library.
- It enables you to prototype quickly and efficiently from your choice of notebook environment.
- It provides a business-ready solution.
Gradient Boosting is among the oldest and most effective libraries for machine learning, which allows programmers to use redefined elementary models and decision trees to create new algorithms. There are also unique libraries that are available to apply this approach easily and efficiently. LightGBM, XGBoost, and CatBoost are such libraries. All these libraries are competitions to each other that attempt to overcome a similar problem and can be used in virtually the same way.
Features of LightGBM
- It offers optimal speed and memory usage.
- It gives better accuracy.
- It is capable of handling large-scale data.
- It is highly efficient and supports GPU learning.
In terms of machine learning and deep learning, TensorFlow, created by the Google Brain team, has picked up steam and became the most happening library. Back in 2015, TensorFlow had its very first public disclosure. At the moment, Caffe and Theano were consuming the emerging deep learning environment for programmers & researchers. TensorFlow drew considerable attention as the deep learning library in a short period of time.
TensorFlow is an end-to-end machine learning library that provides research group tools, databases, and resources to drive the state of the art in deep learning and business developers to create ML & DL driven applications.
Features of Tensor Flow
- It is an open-source framework developed by Google.
- It supports deep learning networks and ML principles.
- It is easy to run and allows faster debugging.
- It offers a prediction of stocks, products, and more.
Scalene is a Python script CPU and memory profiler equipped to handle multi-threaded code correctly and distinguishing between the time spent running Python versus native code. There’s no requirement to change your code as you can straight away execute your script from the scalene command line, and it will produce a text or HTML document for you, displaying CPU and memory use for each line of your code.
Features of Scalene
- Scalene is fast and precise.
- Scalene supports memory usage.
- It produces per-line memory profiles, making it easier to track down leaks.
- Scalene separates out time spent running in Python
Python is among the most common languages used for Data science activities by both data scientists and programmers. It could be used to predict results, automate operations, streamline procedures, and provide insights into business intelligence.
Working with data in Vanilla Python is feasible, however, there are also a few open-source libraries that render Python data activities quite simpler. This list is by no means exhaustive! Several other tools that can be useful for data science work are offered by the Python community. Several of these tools would be used by data scientists and programmers involved in data science projects using Python, as they are important for building high-performance ML models in Python.
python has been in-demand for quite some time and developers have been loving working around the language. Hiring an expert Python Developer will make things easier for you and upgrade your project quality.
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Let’s create the next big thing together!
Coming together is a beginning. Keeping together is progress. Working together is success.
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https://forums.fast.ai/t/make-a-dataset-of-audio-to-slice-and-laveling/108583
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I have created several model projects with fastai to implement topics 2 and 3 of the course. The image datasets were obtained with the ddg_search_images function of Fastai. They were small projects but they were useful to learn. Now I want to do something more ambitious. I would like to create an application that is able to recognize from an audio the type of scale it uses, instrumentation, most used melodic patterns and tonality among other things… For this I proposed to create a well labeled dataset to be able to train the model with guarantees. The plan is the following for this:
Creating a dataset to train a model to identify the musical scale of a piece of music is an interesting project. Here are some general steps to create such a dataset:
Finding pieces of music in various scales and genres. Using existing music files or creating my own recordings.
Making sure the pieces of music are correctly labeled with the musical scale they are in.
Splitting audio tracks:
Dividing each piece of music into fragments of several seconds. be able to use audio editing software to do this. Make sure to label each fragment with the corresponding scale.
Conversion to digital format:
Convert the audio fragments to digital format, such as WAV or MP3, so that they can be processed by machine learning algorithms.
I initially searched for the files in a Youtube playlist. With a very simple and easy to use python script I downloaded 37 pieces of good quality Mozart music.
So far so good. Then with Audacity I opened the first file of the 37, divided it into 6 labeled pieces that once labeled and cut I exported them in MP3 format to a folder on a hard disk. My question is if there is a more automatic and fluid way to tag and cut than going piece by piece and file by file doing this procedure. Because with the little time I have to cut, tag and prepare all the audios it will take me more than a month.
I would very much welcome any suggestions or advice from any of you.
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https://ayende.com/blog/154785/ravenhq-goes-beta-ravendb-reaches-the-cloud
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One of the things that we have been doing lately was providing solutions for cloud hosted RavenDB. I am very proud to announce the public beta phase of RavenHQ, a cloud based, fully managed RavenDB service.
Currently it is available on AppHarbor only, and I must emphasis that this is still a beta, so you might run into some road bumps, but we have a really good team working on this.
Actually, here is an important detail, about this offering.
Hibernating Rhinos (the company who is actually doing the development of RavenDB) is at heart a development / consulting company. We didn’t want to try to break apart something good, so we setup a new company dedicated for running RavenDB on the cloud, RavenHQ.
Why do you care about this? Because it means that while the RavenDB development team is available for any problem that you might run into, RavenHQ is actually stuffed by people whose job is merely to make sure that all your databases are humming along nicely, and not a developer who is 15% of watching what is going on in that server somewhere on the cloud.
I collaborated in RavenHQ with Jonathan Matheus (NSeviceBus Committer and an all around cool guy) to create something that I feel will be really awesome.
As I said before, we are currently offering RavenHQ on App Harbor only, but we will soon open it for general registration. In the meantime, this is called beta for a reason.
It is hard to test cloud based stuff in a lab, so after we have made sure that everything works, the next step is to see if you can break it. I am assuming the worse at that you will manage to break it in all sorts of creative ways. Please give us a short amount of grace period to make sure that we can match our internal workings to how people are actually using us.
Have an awesome weekend!
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s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2024-10/segments/1707947474526.76/warc/CC-MAIN-20240224080616-20240224110616-00756.warc.gz
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CC-MAIN-2024-10
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http://developer.nokia.com/community/discussion/showthread.php/224788-Deploy-by-short-URL-always-gives-the-same-URL
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I am deploying my application to an X3-02 device successfuly through bluetooth launcher, but when I want to test it in a C3, I get the error note "Ovi Browser by Nokia was not found on your device...", I select that I want to download it and it gives me an invalid URL.
So, I read here http://wiki.forum.nokia.com/index.ph...-_known_issues that when you get that error on the device you should deploy bu url. I can do this successfuly but the generated goo.gl url is always the same and opening in the ovi browser sends me to a blank page, in both devices.
What do you suggest? Is the Nokiawebtools supposed to generate always the same url?
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https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2011/08/msg00264.html
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Re: thread issue
Thanks for correct some concepts here.
On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 10:47 PM, Stan Hoeppner <email@example.com> wrote:
> On 8/4/2011 8:12 AM, lina wrote:
>> I noticed when make -j 8, the 8 cores can be fully occupied.
>> can I use some way to enable 8 cores at the same time when I run
>> something, such as a bash script?
> This will fully answer your question, and then some:
> Multiprocessing has been around for many decades as well as the methods
> to program for it. Most regular users simply never heard of it because
> only "business" machines had more than one processor. A dual, quad, 6,
> 8, or 12 core CPU is simply a multiprocessor computer where all the
> processing units fit on a single chip, instead of many chips as in
> decades past. From a programming standpoint, there is little difference
> from a 1980s multiprocessor UNIX machine and today's 8 core desktop.
> The term "processor" is used by systems programmers, not "core". "Core"
> is a marketing term of CPU companies. A "core" is a "processor". A
> chip is NOT a processor unless it only has one core. Get used to this
> terminology when discussing programming. The term "core" does not exist
> in programming. It is a hardware description, not a software
> description. To the kernel, a "core" is a processor.
> The short short answer: The Linux process scheduler will efficiently
> place processes and threads on hundreds of CPU cores for execution. It
> is up to the programmer, sometimes the sysadmin or user, to generate the
> processes and threads, i.e. "the workload", necessary to occupy all
> processors in a machine. If there is insufficient work to occupy all
> the processors, they will simply sit idle.
> 1. Write an application or script that forks or spawns a number of
> processes equal to or greater than the number of processors (CPU cores)
> in the system. This is what 'make -j[x]' gives you when x is equal to
> or greater than the number of CPU cores. Postfix spawns multiple smtpd
> and smtp processes for inbound/outbound mail delivery, allowing
> scalability across dozens of cores (although mail is rarely CPU bound).
> The Apache web server forks dozens or hundreds of children allowing
> multiprocessor scalability. These are but two examples of applications
> that can take advantage of a multiprocessor system. Yes, a single CPU
> with many cores is a "multiprocessor".
> 2. Write an application that uses POSIX or Linux threads, creating one
> thread per CPU core in the machine.
> To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-REQUEST@lists.debian.org
> with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact firstname.lastname@example.org
> Archive: [🔎] 4E3AB117.email@example.com">http://lists.debian.org/[🔎] 4E3AB117.firstname.lastname@example.org
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https://sharepoint.stackexchange.com/questions/185316/sharepoint-2013-rest-api-expand-issues
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I'm new to using the SP API's and I am having an issue getting the required result using $expand on list lookup columns.
I have 3 lists named ProjectList, SiteList, RegionList with relating lookup's as below.
- ProjectList with 'Site' lookup
- SiteList with 'Region' lookup
Project > Site > Region
For example I want to a result which includes RegionTitle, SiteTitle and projectTitle. I'm trying this..
but an getting an error
"The query to field 'Site/Region' is not valid."
However if I try..
this works fine?
Can anyone shed some light on this? can SP only expand to a single lookup level?
Thanks in advance
See this also, a question asking the same thing but was unanswered..
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https://www.cloudtarek.com/make-way-for-chatgbton-chatbot-conversation/
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You’ve definitely heard about ChatGPT, the general-purpose chatbot prototype that the internet is now infatuated with. It’s quickly become the leading illustration of the future impact of AI-generated content, demonstrating exactly how powerful these technologies may be.
It was created by OpenAI, which is well-known for developing the text-to-image generator DALL-E, and it is now free to use. Here’s what ChatGPT is, how to use it, and how it might impact the internet’s future.
Understanding the basics of chatbot conversation
Before delving into the finer points of chatbot conversation, it is important to understand the basics. they are computer programs that engage in conversations with people in natural language. This bot is able to recognize user input and respond with an appropriate response. It is important to note that this conversation is not necessarily a one-to-one conversation between two people, but rather a conversation between a user and a machine.
To create a successful conversation, it is important to understand the concepts of natural language processing, sentiment analysis, dialogue design, and user experience. With these concepts in mind, it can be programmed to respond to user input and generate meaningful conversations.
Introducing Chatgpt and its features
To enable users to make the most of their conversations with Chatgpt, it comes with numerous features. An AI-powered natural language processing engine helps it to understand and respond to questions in a more conversational way, so users don’t have to repeat their queries. Moreover, it can easily recognize and address multiple users at once. This allows for collaboration and allows users to get the most out of their conversations.
Additionally, this Artificial intelligence is equipped with an array of customization options, which allows users to tailor their conversations to their needs. With these powerful features, users can have more meaningful conversations with Chat|gbt and make the most of their conversations.
Exploring the types of chatbot conversations
A chatbot can have three distinct types of conversations with its user. The first type is an automated conversation, which is conducted entirely through a predetermined script. In this type of conversation, it responds with predetermined messages, and the user can only reply with predetermined options. The second type is the semi-automated conversation, which relies on natural language processing (NLP) algorithms and artificial intelligence (AI) to interpret the user’s intent.
This type of conversation is more interactive and can respond to user input more fluently. The third type of conversation is a manual conversation, which is delivered through a human operator. In this type of conversation, it can still provide automated responses to certain questions, while a human operator is available to provide more detailed or personalized assistance.
Identifying implications of chatbot conversations
Identifying the implications of these bot conversations requires a thorough understanding of the conversation context and the chatbot’s role within the conversation. it must be able to recognize and respond to subtle changes in the conversation, as well as recognize potential implications of the conversation. For example, if the conversation is about a particular product, it should be able to identify potential sales opportunities and adjust the conversation accordingly.
Additionally, this bot should be able to monitor the conversation for signs of customer dissatisfaction, so that it can be addressed quickly and efficiently. Finally, the bot should be able to recognize the end of the conversation and provide helpful information, such as follow-up actions or additional resources.
Implementing Chatgpt’s natural language processing (NLP) capabilities
When it comes to making conversations with customers more natural and fluid, Chatgpt’s natural language processing (NLP) capabilities are at the forefront. NLP enables this bot to understand and respond to user queries in natural language, allowing it to engage in more meaningful conversations. Chatgpt’s NLP capabilities are powered by a deep learning model which was trained on a large corpus of conversation data. This model enables this bot to interpret user input and generate relevant and context-aware responses accurately. Additionally, the NLP model allows for dynamic entity extraction, which allows it to recognize and capture user-defined entities to create more personalized conversations.
Leveraging Chatgpt’s intent recognition capabilities
Leveraging Chatgpt’s intent recognition capabilities: its ability to recognize user intent is one of its most powerful features. By analyzing the user’s input and incorporating natural language processing, it can quickly determine the user’s goal and respond accordingly. This is incredibly useful in creating personalized, dynamic conversations and providing helpful answers to user questions faster than ever before. With this Artificial intelligence, developers can make sure their chatbot is having meaningful conversations with users whatever their intent may be.
Assessing the scalability of Chatgpt
One of the most important considerations when developing a chatbot is assessing its scalability. The scalability of a chatbot is determined by its ability to handle a large volume of incoming requests, as well as its ability to effectively manage the ever-growing complexity of conversations. this AI provides an easy-to-use, yet powerful architecture that supports optimal scalability and performance. In particular, it allows for the creation of complex conversations with multiple nodes and branches, which can be managed in an organized manner.
Additionally, features such as natural language processing and machine learning help this bot be more responsive to user requests and deliver a more relevant experience. This scalability makes it an ideal platform for businesses looking to leverage the power of bots.
Outline the best practices of using Chatgpt
Chatgpt is an advanced chatbot conversation platform designed to facilitate natural, personalized conversations between businesses and their customers. By leveraging natural language processing, Chatgpt can instantly understand a user’s intent and responds accordingly. To get the most out of Chatgpt, it’s important to consider the following best practices for crafting effective conversations and optimizing user engagement.
1. Start conversations with a greeting and a prompt.
2. Use short, simple language.
3. Utilize feedback loops to promote customer engagement.
4. Keep conversations on-topic and relevant.
5. Monitor and update conversations regularly.
6. Utilize rich media such as images, videos, and audio.
7. Leverage personalization techniques to tailor conversations.
8. Implement analytics to track customer engagement and user satisfaction.
By following these best practices, businesses can ensure their chatbot conversations are engaging and effective.
Chatbot conversation has revolutionized how people interact with technology by providing an easy and efficient way to generate meaningful conversations. this bot can automate mundane tasks and provide valuable insights, enabling companies to provide improved customer service and increase customer engagement. The possibilities for the bot conversation are endless, and it is up to developers to explore and use its capabilities to the fullest in order to create innovative and effective solutions.
- chatGPT solutions (internal server errors
- cyber security Entry-level opportunities
- greatest 16 answers of( chatGPT)
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http://kytermpapercmiv.allstarorchestra.info/gimp-resynthesis-plugin.html
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Gimp resynthesis plugin
Resynthesizer download and installation i want to use resynthesizer with gimp 2 what you want to do is remove the current resynthesizer plugin you. Resynthesizer tutorial if you can not compile the plugin a new version of gimp appeared that you use apparently and which made the plugin. Gimp resynthesizer is a plugin you cannot live a day without it helps you to remove any unwanted thing or object from your image without a trace. Repository of optional extensions for gimp resynthesizer (20): gimp plugin for texture synthesis this gimp plugin takes samples of textures.
Getting around in gimp - heal selection (resynthesizer) to yield the code that gave gimp users the resynthesizer plugin nature of gimp plugins and. Resynthesizer tutorial (heal selection): ein gimp-plugin das zaubern kann. Gimp: how to install scripts & plug-ins to so be prepared to turn down the volume (note: plugins - go to the plug-in browser under help on your gimp menu bar.
Gimp plugins are available on the internet in abundance a gimp free download turns out most effective when is coupled with a collection of the best gimp plugins. Http://tutorialgeekblogspotcom/2010/12/how-to-remove-elements-from-your-photoshtml this is one of my favorite plugins to use with gimp. This is just a quick little video tutorial to test out my screen recording setup and to show off how to use gimp's resynthesise plugin one thing to note that. If you'd like to upload plug-ins, please create an account below you do not need one for download enjoy :-. (formerly) gimp for windows and mac with a huge amount of open source or otherwise free or public domain plugins windows version has installer mac.
Gimp extensions is a collection of extensions for gimp that provides the ability to choose which plug-ins, scripts, brushes, etc, that you want to install. An introduction to the gimp resynthesizer plugin - an alternative to photoshop cs5's content aware fill. Gimp 28 - in this video i show you how to download and install the resynthesizer plugin for gimp. Resynthesizer - suite of gimp plugins for texture synthesis.
¿qué ventaja tiene el plugin pues que lo que antes era un buen rato de trabajo (tanto con gimp como con photoshop) ahora lo hace cualquiera en un instante. This is the official website of the gnu image manipulation program productivity with gimp thanks to many customization options and 3rd party plugins. Installer gimp-resynthesizer (qui enlève gimp-plugin-registry), sauvegarder le programme resynth, réinstaller gimp-plugin-registry. How to install gimp plugin resynthesizer and heal selection.
Resynthesizer is a gimp plugin for texture synthesis you can use it to seamlessly remove objects from images, create more of a texture, and create themed images. Let's make gimp look and work like photoshop know is that this feature originated as a gimp plugin called resynthesizer want to support pcsteps. Bootchk has taken over maintenance of resynthesizer the latest version is available from the gimp registry: gimp registry page resynthesizer is a gimp plug-in for.
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https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/982635-outlook-2013-multiple-emails-open
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One of the directors likes to keep many emails open. I am talking between 30 and 75 emails at a time. Does Outlook 2013 have a limitation on how many emails can remain open at any one time?
Sometimes they disappear off the Task Bar and can be located through the Task Manager window.
Other times, Outlook closes completely and then he has to try and remember what emails he had open.
He is getting quite frustrated with this and in turn I am getting the constant complaining. He is the only user to have so many emails open. Is there anything I can do to allow these emails to remain open? I have 16GB of memory in the computer, it is running Windows 7 with Office 2013.
Any help on this would be great.
Create an "IMPORTANT" subfolder to move the messages there when he wants to keep them open or track them.
He can also use the color tags whenever he wants to keep track of them. The email messages can be sorted by the tag colors.
Sounds like someone that isn't willing to learn anything and expects everything to work the way they want it to because he is the boss.
There could be many reasons as to why it may be crashing, for example if you use an add-on and have lots of emails open and it crashes or stops working it could be possible that Outlook will crash instead of the add-on stopping and disabling itself.
I mean I've never heard of users keeping open over 75 emails at a time, doesn't really make sense to use Outlook in this way but then again I said sense and user in the same sentence.
I'd have to say normally it's an add-on thing as Outlook is a pretty solid application but maybe someone else can shed some light.
I have to agree with GORT, he needs to learn to keep better track of his inbox, or create subfolders for things he wants to see frequently.
As it stands at the moment, it sounds to me like he's opening emails and keeping them open like it is his inbox - which to any normal person makes absolutely 0% sense.
I'm not surprised that Outlook is crashing if you have the main application plus 70 emails open. 9teen90nine's suggestion about add-ons could be an issue, but I think he's just overloading the capacity Outlook has to open emails. Imagine he had 70 tabs open in an internet browser, or rather, tried to. I bet it would crash or run extremely slow, the fact that he's been able to do it thus far shows that Outlook is indeed a solid application.
Clean up the computer using a utility such as CCLEANER (that's GORT's favorite freebie cleaner).
The boss probably has way too many "temp" files and the system will become overwhelmed keeping track.
Using CCleaner (32-bit or 64-bit), also clean the registry (use the "backup registry" option within ccleaner).
Run the registry cleaner twice (at least). Generally, the first pass will uncover other registry issues, so run the registry cleaner within ccleaner twice.
This will likely allow up to 200 emails open! OK, maybe not...
I imagine this doesn't really help you much since he's the boss, but keeping that many emails open is just effing stoopid. He needs to learn to flag, move, print or maybe even better still, do what the email requires him to do and move on.
Perhaps you can diplomatically suggest better ways of managing his work. No, that's gonna sound presumptuous of you. Instead, point out "these really nifty features I just found out about in Outlook that can help manage all this work you have to do...."
I hate to say it Bahnjee but both of those sound presumptuous haha
I think the best approach sometimes is just straight up saying (in this case) that you cannot have that many emails open or else you will lose work/Outlook will crash and if he has a problem with that and he continues to use Outlook in that way then next time he complains you can just reiterate that Outlook won't work that way.. he'll learn eventually.
Just because they're the boss doesn't make them a god. Reminds me of a story..
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http://www.usmilitariaforum.com/forums/index.php?/topic/6311-unknown-korean-war-ribbon/
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Unknown Korean War(?) Ribbon
Posted 14 June 2007 - 05:59 PM
Thanks in advance,
Posted 15 June 2007 - 06:41 AM
Posted 15 June 2007 - 06:49 AM
I would bet that this Marine was in the Civil Air Patrol at one time or another and somehow the ribbon set was put on this uniform by mistake.
Posted 15 June 2007 - 11:32 PM
Thanks for the ID. This officer was a Warrant Officer so the CAP connection does have possiblities.
Posted 05 September 2009 - 10:05 AM
You are in the MEDALS & DECORATIONS "Reference Section". This area is where posts from the general Medals & Decorations "discussion section" (http://www.usmilitar.....?showforum=83) are moved for permanent retention and education about the history of the various U.S. medals and military decorations.
As time moves forward, some of these posts may have additional information added to them by the moderators of this section. We ask for your input as well, especially in the correction of any erroneous information that may have inadvertently be posted..
We encourage further comments about this post and its content. In order to do so, you will need to start a new post in the general Medals & Decorations "discussion section" (here: http://www.usmilitar.....?showforum=83). And, as needed, we will be pleased to move any new and / or valued information that is derived from your post (and subsequent comments) into this reference area as its own standing post.
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https://reviews.freebsd.org/p/avg/
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- User Since
- Jun 4 2014, 6:42 AM (312 w, 6 d)
Mon, Jun 1
I have a vague memory, maybe wrong, that commonly used fixed RSS keys were selected because they had some property (-ies).
So, maybe just being random is not good enough?
I think that hypothetical rss_isbadkey was mentioned for a reason?
Fri, May 29
Thu, May 28
John, I know that you would prefer something grander.
Do you at least not object to this change ?
Wed, May 27
Just in case:
(kgdb) tid 101533 (kgdb) bt #0 sched_switch (td=0xfffffe00b4f85500, flags=<optimized out>) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/sched_ule.c:2147 #1 0xffffffff807e4de2 in mi_switch (flags=260) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_synch.c:542 #2 0xffffffff80831916 in sleepq_switch (wchan=0xfffff80085627bd8, pri=<optimized out>) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/subr_sleepqueue.c:625 #3 0xffffffff807acb61 in sleeplk (lk=0xfffff80085627bd8, flags=532480, ilk=<optimized out>, wmesg=<optimized out>, pri=<optimized out>, timo=51, queue=0) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_lock.c:295 #4 0xffffffff807ab19f in lockmgr_xlock_hard (lk=0xfffff80085627bd8, flags=<unavailable>, ilk=0x0, file=0xffffffff80c40f02 "/usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c", line=1438, lwa=0xfffff80085627bd8) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_lock.c:841 #5 0xffffffff808c3c64 in VOP_LOCK1 (vp=0xfffff80085627b70, flags=532480, file=0xffffffff80c40f02 "/usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c", line=1438) at ./vnode_if.h:879 #6 _vn_lock (vp=0xfffff80085627b70, flags=532480, file=0xffffffff80c40f02 "/usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c", line=1438) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/vfs_vnops.c:1613 #7 0xffffffff8045ef27 in zfs_lookup_lock (dvp=0xfffff8000bc1c5b8, vp=0xfffff80085627b70, name=0xfffffe00b07cb3b0 "kcminit.1001.00.core", lkflags=532480) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c:1438 #8 zfs_lookup (dvp=<optimized out>, nm=0xfffffe00b07cb3b0 "kcminit.1001.00.core", vpp=<optimized out>, cnp=0xfffffe00b07cb8a0, nameiop=1, cr=<optimized out>, td=<optimized out>, flags=0, cached=1) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c:1612 #9 0xffffffff8045f60d in zfs_freebsd_lookup (ap=0xfffffe00b07cb4e0, cached=<error reading variable: Cannot access memory at address 0x1>) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c:4922 #10 zfs_freebsd_cachedlookup (ap=0xfffffe00b07cb4e0) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vnops.c:4930 #11 0xffffffff80898248 in VOP_CACHEDLOOKUP (dvp=0xfffff8000bc1c5b8, vpp=0xfffffe00b07cb870, cnp=0xfffffe00b07cb8a0) at ./vnode_if.h:80 #12 vfs_cache_lookup (ap=<optimized out>) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/vfs_cache.c:2149 #13 0xffffffff808a22c1 in VOP_LOOKUP (dvp=0xfffff8000bc1c5b8, vpp=0xfffffe00b07cb870, cnp=0xfffffe00b07cb8a0) at ./vnode_if.h:54 #14 lookup (ndp=0xfffffe00b07cb810) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/vfs_lookup.c:951 #15 0xffffffff808a17f3 in namei (ndp=0xfffffe00b07cb810) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/vfs_lookup.c:512 #16 0xffffffff808c314b in vn_open_cred (ndp=0xfffffe00b07cb810, flagp=0xfffffe00b07cba4c, cmode=384, vn_open_flags=5, cred=0xfffff801edb7a000, fp=0x0) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/vfs_vnops.c:226 #17 0xffffffff807dcec4 in corefile_open_last (td=<optimized out>, name=<optimized out>, indexpos=<optimized out>, indexlen=<optimized out>, ncores=<optimized out>, vpp=<optimized out>) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_sig.c:3434 #18 corefile_open (comm=0xfffff80013c098f0 "kcminit", uid=<optimized out>, pid=<optimized out>, td=0xfffffe00b4f85500, compress=0, signum=5, vpp=<optimized out>, namep=<optimized out>) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_sig.c:3585 #19 coredump (td=0xfffffe00b4f85500) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_sig.c:3669 #20 sigexit (td=0xfffffe00b4f85500, sig=6) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_sig.c:3211 #21 0xffffffff807ddc3c in postsig (sig=6) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/kern_sig.c:3109 #22 0xffffffff8083969b in ast (framep=0xfffffe00b07cbc00) at /usr/devel/git/motil/sys/kern/subr_trap.c:336
Tue, May 26
fix a typo
Some of the new description can use additional explanation, but I am not sufficiently fluent with WiFi concepts to do that.
Sun, May 24
Fri, May 22
Thu, May 21
address markj's feedback
Thank you for the feedback.
Working on it.
catch up with the fact that zfs.c is a "normal" file now
@adrian, is this closer to what you have in mind?
do not call rt_ifmsg directly, wrap it under ieee80211_notify_ifnet_change
Wed, May 20
Mark, thank you very much for this!
I think that this change is good.
I still wonder if we can do some trick to avoid busying valid pages.
Maybe there is some way to be more sloppy when checking the validity.
E.g., we could possibly rely on a fact that with ZFS the range lock makes sure the validity cannot change because both page-in and page-out would need to lock the range.
Tue, May 19
Wed, May 13
Tue, May 12
No feedback in long time.
Thu, May 7
update the module makefile
Wed, May 6
Tue, May 5
Mon, May 4
rebase on the latest tree
Yeah, I think that it is better to use _BQC whenever it is actually provided because there can be multiple ways to control the brightness.
The more I look into this the more quirks I discover.
Some systems handle brightness keys completely in firmware, some post ACPI events, some post custom events via WMI.
On some systems _BCM actually changes the brightness (it's handled by the firmware); on some systems _BCM is just another level of indirection -- it just posts more events to be handled elsewhere (e.g., via ATIF with AMD's video).
I think that Linux drifts towards converting brightness events to evdev brightness key events and then letting the userland handle those keys. The actual brightness controls are exposed as sysfs backlight nodes and they cab be hooked to ACPI video (_BCM) or directly to graphics drivers or something vendor specific, etc.
May 1 2020
Apr 30 2020
Apr 24 2020
Apr 18 2020
Mar 6 2020
Looks good as far as my knowledge of the recent VM changes goes.
Thank you very much!
Mar 3 2020
I assume that a change to vmxnet3 that takes advantage of this improvement is coming.
We came to the same conclusion at Panzura and used a similar fix.
Feb 28 2020
I like Ken's suggestion on PIM_NO_INIT_ID.
Feb 27 2020
@mav , I do not know much about this but I would expect that if an initiator can also be a target then its target ID -- which, if I understand correctly, you suggest to be treated as an initiator ID -- would be from a different namespace than IDs of its targets. That is, I think that for a SAS initiator it is impossible to see itself as a target (where a target ID is typically also some made up number derived from the actual SAS topology).
Move creation of a "minor" from dsl_dataset_snapshot_sync_impl() to
dsl_dataset_snapshot_sync(). The former is also used by
dsl_dataset_snapshot_tmp_sync() and we do not need to create minors for
temporary snapshots. They are used only by zfs diff against a filesystem (via
rebase to r358382
Feb 3 2020
Add Actifio copyright to files where I made verbatim copies of the
corresponding code from ZoL.
Abandoned in favor of D23478.
Looks like the proposed change does not improve anything, so time to abandon.
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https://www.destructoid.com/blogs/broonor/my-ps3-has-returned--83864.phtml
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Great news: I got my PS3 back just now; it's currently system updating itself to the newest firmware.
Better news: it wasn't formatted or replaced, it's my good ol' system (minus the good part for failing on me)
Bad news: I have to go to work in an hour :(
Time to queue up the DLC downloads while I work I guess.
See you all in PS3 Gameland tomorrow!
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https://www.enworld.org/threads/what-does-a-paladin-do-or-should-be-doing.324690/page-3
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And a cleric can do that in 3.x and 4e too. And considering the Next Moradin cleric can keep up with the Fighter very nicely, I'm still thoroughly unconvinced.
Again, you can't decide for yourself what is and isn't a cleric and then say "See, that's different from a paladin!", especially when a cleric can, in fact, do what you say it can't.
This goes double for saying what is and isn't the focus of the fighter especially when said focus ("chivalric") has absolutely no game mechanics whatsoever and is completely a backstory-based on. Want a chivalric fighter? I'll use the knight background and play him up as Sir Gawin with a strict moral code. Want divine? Put in a theme similar to the Magic User theme to give low-level access to divine spells.
I've yet to see a single convincing argument for why the Moradin cleric is not a paladin. Only thing I can find is the lack of the "magic horsie" and frankly, that's the power of paladins I almost always ignored because it doesn't work in a dungeon-based game and the mounted combat rules are almost always a cast iron pain in the ass.
Erm, I was responding to your point about early editions of the game; yes, the cleric can do those things in later editions of the game, but then the paladin has other different abilities. I think you moved the goalposts on me a little.
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https://csi.nii.ac.jp/en/faculty/digital_content/ikehata_satoshi/
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Aiming to implement high-precision 3D reconstruction techniques
Reconstructing 2D information in 3D
We humans perceive the objects that we see as three-dimensional (3D) objects by combining information about them, such as depth, in a complex way. I am researching 3D computer vision, which examines how to reproduce this function of the human eye using computers, in other words, how to take two-dimensional (2D) image information, such as a photograph, and reconstruct the 3D information.
Up until now, my research has centered on the photometric stereo method, which uses one camera to photograph an object under light coming from different angles and then performs 3D reconstruction based on multiple shading patterns for a single object. This method is capable of elaborately reconstructing fine surface details such as the brush strokes of oil paintings, as well as delicate shapes of small objects such as tumor in endoscopic images.
Application in the real estate industry
However, there are still very few examples of application of 3D computer vision. In my previous position at Washington University in St. Louis, I conducted 3D modeling of real estate property information through joint research with a real estate company, with the goal of applying the research results. In the United States, the decision to purchase or rent real estate is often made on the basis of Internet information only, and the creation of detailed 3D information on properties was required.
There were examples of 3D reconstruction of indoor spaces before then, but they were only ever floor plans converted into 3D and could not provide meaningful information required for living in a place, such as room divisions and connections, or which rooms are bedrooms, for example. Using proprietary 3D reconstruction methods based on panoramic depth images taken in multiple places in the rooms, we succeeded in creating user-friendly property information that can be linked to CAD and provides meaningful information to 3D models.
Aiming towards integration with deep learning
Currently, I am researching combining 3D reconstruction with deep learning to improve reconstruction accuracy by loading large amounts of data, such as shading patterns, and having the system learn from it. However, outputting 3D information from inputted 2D information is difficult using current deep learning technology especially when the number of input is large (e.g., one thousand). There have not yet been any examples of research anywhere in the world that has successfully reconstructed accurate 3D information, and I am attempting to solve a difficult problem that could have a global impact.
Another problem with existing deep learning technology is that once the object category has been determined, the algorithm can only be applied to that object category. In other words, a 3D reconstruction algorithm with a certain purpose cannot be used for other objects. I am therefore also working on removing such constraints and developing techniques that improve versatility. Additionally, in the same way as human sight reconstructs objects in 3D using multiple clues such as parallax due to binocular vision, shading, and texture, I would like to make it possible for computers to combine multiple clues to perform 3D reconstruction.
In the future, I aim to share these research results for the benefit of society by developing applications based on these 3D reconstruction techniques.
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https://www.genuitec.com/javaone-2017-highlights/
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Director of Customer Engagement - Loves technology and almost everything related to computing. Wants to help you write better software. Follow at @brianfernandes.
Posted on Oct 9th 2017
In his keynote at the JavaOne Conference, James Governor said, “Things have changed in the Java ecosystem, probably more in the past three weeks, than they have in the previous thirteen years.” Now JavaOne has only just ended, and we’re still trying to sift through the vast volumes of information pouring out from this conference, but with the recent releases of Java 9 and Java EE 8, new Java projects announced at JavaOne, and the general move of most things Java to open source, we tend to agree.
Exciting New Projects Announced
A few new projects were announced at this conference, but the big ones were clearly the Wercker and Fn projects. Wercker is centered around microservices development for Java developers on top of Kubernetes, and Fn is a container native serverless platform that you can run anywhere. Fn packages your functions as containers and runs on any platform supporting Docker. It was interesting to watch the Fn project being open sourced as part of the keynote, live!
Major releases of Java are now planned every six months, and the next version of Java will not be 10, but 18, to be released in March 2018. Of course, there’s a lot of ‘awesome’ in Java 9 already, as thoroughly covered in a plethora of sessions. An interesting way to learn about some new APIs in Java 9, is to explore them with JShell, and here’s a session on the now default G1 GC in JDK 9. Learn about JUnit 5, the first JUnit release in a decade, and finally – here are sessions on “Hidden Gems” in JDK 9, as well as the some module fundamentals.
Check out the JavaOne Keynote and the JavaOne Intel Keynote for an overall perspective on where Java is heading. James’ post JavaOne article on the Java Ecosystem, makes for an interesting concluding read, and can be found here.
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https://community.atlassian.com/t5/Bitbucket-questions/Amended-commits-trashes-pull-request-s-comments/qaq-p/436423
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You're on your way to the next level! Join the Kudos program to earn points and save your progress.
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Did you just alter the commit message or the actual contents?
Updates to a file in a pull request can cause comments to disappear. We attempt to put the comments back on the correct line however this is not always possible for example when the line is removed from the file.
It is not possible for me to comment on whether this particular comment should have been drifted or not as I don't know the particulars.
The bitbucket team wrote a detailed description (see the "High Plains Drifter" section) of how they implemented comment drift which may help you understand how this issue is approached.
Lastly I am not clear is this a bitbucket pull request or a Stash pull request?
This is still a problem. As a general rule comments should not disappear in any case. If a line number is no longer relevant, then the comments must be attached to the file, without line context.
PR comments are live discussions until declared closed by user.
The current behavior is very annoying. Please fix this.
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https://rotynski.dev/tag/unit-testing/
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Real Estate Dividend Paying Smart-Contract. Check out the solidity smart contract development process. Unit testing according to TDD (test driven development).
Individual analysis of each requirement
Learn how to test all those cases where situation are not standard i.e. someone is trying to call a function without sufficient privillages or transfer funds he/she does not have
The following text will discuss different approaches to testing the angular components that use ngrx/store. Using Jasmine’s withArgs() method is available for jasmine version 3.0 users.
description: Different approaches to testing the angular components that use ngrx/store with Jasmine
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