text
stringlengths 173
4.38k
| subset
stringclasses 13
values |
|---|---|
I love fall when the leaves turn their bright colors, the air is crisp and the farmers market is alive with the abundance of the harvest. I always feel a pull to turn inward, make soup and laze around more, though the outer world doesn’t always support that. There is a great paradox being reflected in nature this time of year. As the trees turn their brilliant colors, they remind us of our hearts’ inner brilliance and as the leaves fall, we know on some level we are being asked to let go. In this way, nature gives us permission to let old patterns fall apart and go back to the void so we can clear the way for something new to emerge.
One of my favorite Hindu goddesses is Kali who is also known as the Goddess of Destruction. When you first see an image of her, she looks scary but she is actually quite beautiful in her rawness. Kali shows up commonly in yogic art. She is the one with the wild hair, the bare breasts and the severed heads around her neck. She usually carries a sword and one of the ways you know it’s her is that she is sticking out her tongue.
Kali represents the energy of death, darkness and uncertainty in each of us. She cuts through the illusions of the ego. She is also the void. Most of us are terrified of this energy within us, so we turn our back on it and it goes into the shadow—coming out as resentment, repressed anger and a disconnection with the mother archetype. This dark and scary place is often where we carry our most tender wounds. When we have the courage to go into the darkness and meet our deepest fears and wounds, we’re able to feel more and allow our raw emotions to move and express themselves. When integrated into the heart, these wounds become our true beauty. In her many teachings, Kali gives us the opportunity to pause, to stop the busyness and ask ourselves, “What do I really value?” This mother goddess tells us that death is not a problem but an opportunity to turn toward life.
I’ve been admiring all the different leaves as they fall from the trees, each one carrying their own unique hue of reds, yellows, bright oranges and browns. Some small, some large with various shapes and textures, all beautiful in their own way as they dance in the autumn winds, falling and composting back to the same place our bodies will go someday—return
|
pile-cc
|
Is 37 a factor of -1*(-222)/(-4)*8/(-12)?
True
Let u(x) = -10*x - 14. Is 17 a factor of u(-6)?
False
Let u(b) = -2*b - 5. Let w be u(-5). Let f(y) = -y**3 + 11*y**2 - 2*y - 5 - 5*y**2 + 0*y + 0*y. Is 5 a factor of f(w)?
True
Let q(u) = u**3 - u + 44. Is q(0) a multiple of 5?
False
Suppose -5*h + 0*h = -295. Does 2 divide h?
False
Suppose -4 - 16 = -4*h. Suppose -s = 2*s - h*i + 8, -3*s - 5*i = -32. Suppose -3 = z + 2*v, z - s*v - 30 + 9 = 0. Does 2 divide z?
False
Suppose 31 = -0*y + y + b, 0 = 2*y - 2*b - 54. Does 29 divide y?
True
Let u(d) = d**2 + 8*d - 9. Let c be u(-9). Suppose -a + c*a + 66 = 0. Is 22 a factor of a?
True
Let r be (-2)/4 + (-255)/(-6). Let i = r - 4. Is 12 a factor of i?
False
Let n(s) = s + 8. Let g(k) = k + 7. Let c(i) = 3*g(i) - 2*n(i). Let r be -2 - (-1 - 0) - -1. Is c(r) even?
False
Let b(m) = -m**2 - 4*m + 2. Let n be b(-3). Suppose 3*g - 569 = n*o, 3*g - 4*g + 227 = -2*o. Does 6 divide 5/15 + o/(-6)?
False
Suppose -2*a - 2*a + 12 = 0. Suppose -2*x - 210 = a*x. Let z = 72 + x. Is 15 a factor of z?
True
Suppose 3*u - 3
|
dm_mathematics
|
-----Original Message-----
From: Ring, Richard
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2001 2:09 PM
To: Mainzer, Elliot
Subject: Renewable Energy Product Description
Elliott,
Based on your request I have taken the opportunity to modify your Renewable Product Description, see attached. I hope that your are not offended by the quantity of modifications. Actually, the PJM region is located within the "MA
|
enron_emails
|
2006 WL 1518938, at *1 (D.D.C. May 26, 2006) (“Where, as here,
the failure to state a claim is patent, ‘it is practical and
fully consistent with plaintiffs’ rights and the efficient use of
judicial resources’ for the Court to dismiss the action sua
sponte.”) (quoting Baker, 916 F.2d at 726). Although the
complaint and attached exhibits are incoherent in substantial
part, the complaint arguably could be read to assert that Exelrod
breached an agreement with Jennings to pay Jennings for Exelrod’s
3
The civil cover sheet that Jennings completed when he
filed his complaint reflects that Jennings brings his case under
42 U.S.C. § 1983, the federal statute permitting suits to redress
violations of constitutional rights committed by individuals
acting under color of state law. The complaint does not recite
any grounds showing that Jennings is entitled to relief from
Exelrod under § 1983.
-4-
“us[ing] [Jennings’] bill” (Compl., Ex. B). The complaint,
however, fails to allege facts that would “allow[] the court to
draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable,”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009), for a breach of
contract. Jennings does not plead any factual content describing
the existence of a valid contract between the parties, an
obligation or duty arising out of the contract, a breach of that
duty, and damages caused by breach. See Tsintolas Realty Co. v.
Mendez, 984 A.2d 181, 187 (D.C. 2009) (setting forth elements of
breach of contract claim). In particular, to the extent that
Jennings asserts, without supporting factual allegations, the
existence of a contract for use of his bill entitling him to
“100.5 million 500,000 for a house like it state[s] in [the]
agreement” (Compl. at 2), the complaint is not plausible on its
face and could not survive a motion to dismiss. Iqbal, 556 U.S.
at 678
|
freelaw
|
This is primarily about supporting the back button, and I don't think users
expect the latest data when going back through their browser history -
generally pages aren't refreshed, and that's not an unusual or unexpected
behavior. So you could cache each page state, without worrying about
displaying newer tweets, though the caching mechanism itself incurs some
nontrivial cost.
------
rhizome
The thing I noticed in the slow new Twitter is that typing a new status seems
to involve continuous autofill-like behavior for each character typed, which
seemed to introduce round-trip lag (or javascript-parsing, or...) and causes
characters to appear at a rate of ~1/second. Unusable.
And this is one way that dominant sites fall: business considerations are
given priority over the user experience. Maybe they just have Flickr-itis and
just can't adapt to leaving well enough alone, but for the time being I'm on
old-Twitter and not contributing much to the Twitterverse until this is sorted
out. If it never winds up being fixed, I've got a head start in living without
them.
There is also a possible Second System Effect amongst Twitter's UX gods. It's
interesting that after having switched to the new Twitter a couplefew weeks
ago, last week I started seeing a "Wanna switch back to the old Twitter?"
header. Of course I did, but to me this possibly points to a level of
complaints that I did not realize.
~~~
j_baker
Or it could also point to a "Hey, this is different. I don't like change!"
reaction that you always get when you change something's UI.
~~~
rhizome
I don't think so. I'm not a huge tweeter and so anything that gets in the way
of the rare things really jumps out at me, of which the slow status box is no
small issue. Other than that the redesign is just that, an expanded sidebar
with some fleshed out boxes. No big deal. That it's causing different problems
for different people tells me that maybe something else is going on behind the
hood. Heck, maybe they just want to be the network and aren't interested in
providing a groovy webapp interface anymore, who knows.
------
epi0Bauqu
I've been keeping twitter open
|
hackernews
|
DESCRIPTION (applicant's abstract): Neurosecretory neurons have a large capacity for morphological and physiological plasticity as a function of endocrine state during adulthood. Of principal interest in this project is the formation of new synapses in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system during lactation, when the demand for oxytocin (OT) release is high. This morphological plasticity is accompanied by significant increases in the activity of glutamate-releasing synapses which are
|
nih_exporter
|
Goblet cell carcinoid of the appendix: laparoscopic appendectomy or right hemicolectomy?
Goblet cell carcinoids are uncommon tumours with histological features of both adenocarcinoma and carcinoid tumour. They occur predominantly in the appendix and although the malignant potential remains unclear, adenocarcinoids appear to be more aggressive than conventional carcinoids. In this case report, we present a goblet cell carcinoid with laparoscopic operative treatment in two stages. A 43-year-old female patient with constant
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
: phorbol-12-myristate 13-acetate induced protein 1
MMP1
: matrix metalloproteinase-1
SPRY2
: sprout homolog 2
DUSP5
: dual specificity phosphatase 5
HSPA5
: heat-shock protein 5
HSPA6
: heat-shock protein 6
STC1
: stanniocalcin 1
*α*-SMA
: alpha-smooth muscle actin
FAP
: fibroblast activation protein
GAPDH
: glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase.
[Supplementary Information](#sup1){ref-type="supplementary-material"} accompanies this paper on Cell Death and Disease website (http://www.nature.com/cddis)
Edited by M Agostini
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Supplementary Material {#sup1}
======================
######
Click here for additional data file.
######
Click here for additional data file.
######
Click here for additional data file.
######
Click here for additional data file.
######
Click here for additional data file.
######
Click here for additional data file.
######
Click here for additional data file.
{#fig1}
![*MiR-9* affects cell motility in NFs and CAFs. (**a**) Migration assays, by transwell (upper panel) and wound healing (lower panel), of NFs after transient transfection with control or *miR-9*. (**b**) Invasion assay of NFs transiently transfected with control or *miR-9*. (**c**) CAF migration (left panel) and invasion (right panel) after transient transfection with control or LNA-9. The migrated or invaded cells are shown by histograms. Data are presented as the mean±S.D. of three views (\**P*\<0.05; \*\*\**P*\<0.0005).
|
pubmed_central
|
How to add random number id inside div class
bellow is my html code. this content-box will depend on content. i could be 5, 10, 20 what ever. because it will be dynamic content. now i want to add one more class each div randomly and class name will be color-1, color-2, color-3, color-4, color-5,.............. color-10. so number range will be 1-10. so how could i add those class in content-box random numberly. any idea please.
HTML:
<div class="content-box">
<img src="images/love-01.jpg" />
</div>
<div class="content-box">
<img src="images/love-05.jpg" />
</div>
<div class="content-box">
<img src="images/love-02.jpg" />
</div>
<div class="content-box">
<img src="images/love-03.jpg" />
</div>
<div class="content-box">
<img src="images/love-04.jpg" />
</div>
http://jsfiddle.net/dKgaz/
A:
$('div.content-box').addClass(function(){
var color = Math.floor(Math.random() * 10) + 1;
return 'color-' + (color < 10 ? '0' + color : color)
});
JS Fiddle demo.
Updated the demo, to be a little more obvious: demo.
A:
I've updated your JSFiddle. Basically you want the following javascript:
$('.content-box').each(function() {
var number = 1 + Math.floor(Math.random() * 10);
$(this).addClass("color-" + number.toString());
});
Your JSFiddle demo updated
The $('.content-box').each bit selects each element with the content-box class and then loops through the collection applying whatever is in the brackets. In this case Math.random() gives you a number between 0 and 1, which we multiply by 10 and add 1 to get a random number between 1 and 10. The Math.floor bit ensures that there are no decimal places.
Finally we take that number
|
stackexchange
|
It will be appreciated that the above-described wafer testing scheme has several inherent disadvantages. The greatest cost is incurred in packaging integrated circuits at the third stage. As a consequence, packaged integrated circuits rejected at the final stage represent a significant expense. The overall time period for the illustrated testing scheme may run up to twelve weeks. If final stage performance testing reveals that the integrated circuits are being fabricated in a defective manner, feedback to modify the wafer fabrication process at the first stage will be untimely, resulting in the fabrication of semiconductor wafers which must be discarded.
One prior art method employs a plurality of probe needles having tips which physically engage the terminal contact pads of the IC chips to be tested. Representative examples of such prior art are disclosed and illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,382,228, 4,518,914, 4,523,144, 4,567,433 and 4,593,243. While needle probe systems are generally an effective means of determining the parameters of low density IC chips, there are several drawbacks which decrease their utility for testing high density IC chips.
First, to ensure that the plurality of needle tips lie in approximately the same plane, the probe needles may require mechanical finishing by sanding or filing to bring the needle tips within the required tolerance range, i.e., degree of planarization. As well as being a time consuming and expensive process, needle tip finishing may also result in damage to the probe assembly itself.
Needle-type probes physically engage contact pads of the IC chips and thus present a likelihood that damage may be sustained by the pads such as by gouging during initial engagement. Further, unevenly applied pressures exerted against the engaged needles and pads may result in contact pressures being transmitted through the pads to the underlying wafer structure, resulting in damage thereto.
Another problem with needle-type probe assemblies is the degree of care, both in terms of time and skill, which must be exercised to ensure that the needles are properly connected to the probe assembly. Additionally, lower limits as to the degree of miniaturization possible in probe needle systems limit the utility of needle-type probes for testing high density IC chips. Further, at high frequencies (1 MHz or greater) it is difficult to control the characteristic impedance between the needles and the line conductors connecting the needles to external test equipment.
Another method for compensating for nonplanarization between devices to be electrically interconnected is to form metallic conducting buttons on one of two arrays of registered contact pads, as disclosed in U.S
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
2023 Asaph, provisional designation , is a dark asteroid from the outer regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 21 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 16 September 1952, by astronomers of the Indiana Asteroid Program at Goethe Link Observatory in Indiana, United States.
Orbit and classification
Asaph orbits the Sun in the outer main-belt at a distance of 2.1–3.7 AU once every 4 years and 11 months (1,781 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.28 and an inclination of 22° with respect to the ecliptic. The asteroid's observation arc begins with its official discovery observation Goethe Link.
Physical characterization
In November 2001, a rotational lightcurve of Asaph was obtained from photometric observations by American astronomer Brian Warner. Lightcurve analysis gave a rotation period of 4.74 hours with a low brightness variation of 0.06 magnitude (). Upon re-examination of the revised data set, Warner constructed a new, ambiguous lightcurve with two possible period solutions of and hours (). These observations supersede a period of 9.19 hours derived from two fragmentary lightcurves obtained in 2001 and 2006, respectively ().
Diameter and albedo
According to the surveys carried out by the Japanese Akari satellite and the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, Asaph measures between 19.678 and 21.29 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an albedo between 0.09 and 0.1045.
The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes a standard albedo for carbonaceous asteroids of 0.057 and consequently calculates a larger diameter of 25.44 kilometers based on an absolute magnitude of 11.7.
Naming
This minor planet was named in memory of American astronomer Asaph Hall (1829–1907), who discovered the Martian satellites, Phobos and Deimos. The official was published by the Minor Planet Center on 15 October 1977 ().
Notes
References
External links
Asteroid Lightcurve Database (LCDB), query form (info)
Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, Google books
Asteroids and comets rotation curves, CdR – Observatoire de Genève, Raoul Behrend
Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets (1)-(5000) – Minor Planet Center
002023
002023
Category
|
wikipedia_en
|
PRECISION MEASUREMENTS AND EFFECTIVE LAGRANGIANS
================================================
In the examples given so far we assumed specific models and examined how well precisions measurements could either detect them or discriminate them from other models. A more general approach is to use the language of effective Lagrangians [@Krstonosic:2005qp; @Kilian:2005bz; @Osland:2005ee]. Generically ${\cal L}_{eff}$ can be written: $${\cal L}_{eff}={\cal L}_{SM}+\sum_i {{c_i}\over{\Lambda^p} }
{\cal O}^{(4+p)}$$ where $\Lambda$ reflects the scale of new physics and the details of the new physics (couplings, chiral structure etc.) are parametrized in the coefficients $c_i$. For example, new interactions such as $s$-channel $Z'$’ or $t$-channel leptoquark exchange can be parametrized as 4-fermion interactions if $\sqrt{s}<< \Lambda$.
In the gauge sector the trilinear gauge boson vertex $\gamma WW$ can be sensitive to new physics via new particles included in the vertex loop corrections [@Monig:2005ge]. It has become the practice to parametrize the trilinear gauge boson vertices in terms of $k_\gamma$ and $\lambda_\gamma$. Mönig and Sekaric presented results of a detailed simulation including polarization and backgrounds of $\gamma\gamma\to W^+W^-\to q\bar{q}q\bar{q}$ at $\sqrt{s}_{ee}=500$ GeV [@Monig:2005ge]. Their results on $k_\gamma$ and $\lambda_\gamma$ sensitivities comparing $e^+e^-$, $e\gamma$ and $\gamma\gamma$ modes for $\sqrt{s}_{ee}=500$ GeV and ${\cal L}_{int}=1000$ fb$^{-1}$ are shown in Table \[monig\].
-------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ ------------- --------------- -------------
LEFT [$\gamma e$]{} $e^{+}e^{-}$
Mode Real/Parasitic $|J_{Z}|=3/2$ $|J_{Z}|=2$ $J_{Z}=0$ $|J_{Z}|=1$
$\int{\cal L}\Delta t$ 160 fb$^{-1}$/230 fb$^{-1}$ 500 fb$^{-
|
arxiv
|
/*
* Copyright (c) 1995, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
*
* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
* by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
* Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
* or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
* questions.
*/
package java.awt;
import javax.accessibility.*;
/**
* {@code Panel} is the simplest container class. A panel
* provides space in which an application can attach any other
* component, including other panels.
* <p>
* The default layout manager for a panel is the
* {@code FlowLayout} layout manager.
*
* @author Sami Shaio
* @see java.awt.FlowLayout
* @since 1.0
*/
public class Panel extends Container implements Accessible {
private static final String base = "panel";
private static int nameCounter = 0;
/*
* JDK 1.1 serialVersionUID
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = -2728009084054400034L;
/**
* Creates a new panel using the default layout manager.
* The default layout manager for all panels is the
* {@code FlowLayout} class.
*/
public Panel()
|
github
|
“These findings are concerning,” says principal investigator Edward Mills, professor in the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences at the University of Ottawa and Canada Research Chair in Global Health. “Wealthy countries are trying to strengthen the health systems of Africa and are providing essential medicines, but they are benefitting from Africa’s financial loss in training health workers that emigrate to the wealthier settings.”
The authors are now calling for destination countries to invest in training and health systems in the source countries.
“No one is saying that people should not be permitted to make decisions about where they live or want to succeed in their careers,” says Dr. Nathan Ford, a study author from the University of Cape Town, South Africa. “But how can we make progress in building health systems when local university budgets and school places are depleted by physicians who then go and work in a wealthy nation?”
The migration of health workers from poor countries contributes to weak health systems in low-income countries and is considered a primary threat to achieving the health-related Millennium Development Goals, says the study.
“While wealthy countries are benefitting from the doctors who choose to move, there is a responsibility to ensure we are not damaging local health systems in Africa,” adds study author Ivy Bourgeault, professor in the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences at the University of Ottawa and CIHR Health Canada Research Chair in Human Resources for Health Policy. “Some countries, such as the USA, have recognized this and pledged to train 130,000 new health staff in Africa; other countries, such as Canada, are providing much less.”
There is a critical shortage of doctors in sub-Saharan Africa, which has a high prevalence of diseases like HIV/AIDS. Mills and colleagues estimated the monetary cost of educating a doctor through primary, secondary and medical school in nine sub-Saharan countries with significant HIV-prevalence. The research team added the figures together to estimate how much the origin countries paid to train doctors and how much the destination countries saved in employing them.
The results show that governments spend between $21,000 (Uganda) to $59,000 (South Africa) to train doctors. The countries included in the study paid around $2 billion US dollars (USD) to train their doctors only to see them migrate to richer countries, say the authors. They add that the benefit to the UK was around $2.7 billion USD and about $846 million USD for the United States.
Paramedical
|
pile-cc
|
What is prob of picking 1 b, 1 g, and 1 m when three letters picked without replacement from {p: 2, m: 1, x: 3, a: 1, b: 3, g: 1}?
1/55
Calculate prob of picking 1 q and 1 g when two letters picked without replacement from gggbbqqqvvbqbgq.
4/21
Calculate prob of picking 2 a, 1 b, and 1 d when four letters picked without replacement from gbkgaaddpkkg.
2/495
Two letters picked without replacement from qqqqqqq. What is prob of picking 2 q?
1
Three letters picked without replacement from mbimiibbbmbbimi. Give prob of picking 1 b and 2 m.
36/455
What is prob of picking 1 z, 1 l, and 1 t when three letters picked without replacement from lzmtzllklmlflmtlll?
3/68
What is prob of picking 2 x when two letters picked without replacement from {q: 3, x: 5, g: 4, n: 3, p: 4}?
10/171
Four letters picked without replacement from {o: 1, u: 1, y: 3, b: 1, t: 1}. Give prob of picking 1 y, 1 b, 1 t, and 1 o.
3/35
Two letters picked without replacement from tftftffcttfffttvff. What is prob of picking 1 f and 1 t?
7/17
What is prob of picking 2 j when two letters picked without replacement from juullljlljuluj?
6/91
Calculate prob of picking 1 a, 1 z, and 1 y when three letters picked without replacement from {y: 2, h: 2, w: 1, a: 1, z: 1}.
2/35
Three letters picked without replacement from {p: 1, q: 1, k: 5, t: 2}. Give prob of picking 1 t, 1 q, and 1 k.
5/42
Three letters picked without replacement from {e: 3, o: 1}. Give prob of picking 3 e.
1/4
What is prob of picking 1 l and 1 r when two letters picked without replacement from {r: 2, f: 1, l: 1, w: 1, c: 2, x: 1}?
|
dm_mathematics
|
without risking bankruptcy right away.
Moreover,the $ 90,000 may be paid in 3 fractions
and your risk would be quite minimal
3.Regarding the escrow,we have been using so
far a small law firm with 5 partners(none of my
family) in Amherst:Hart,Reed,Brown,Golowich
and Kaplan.But we are not closed to anther
solution you would strongly prefer.
Best regards
Helyette
|
enron_emails
|
2
Alatorre’s transfer to the Public Works Office (PWO) in February 2012 does
not qualify as a tangible employment action because she did not show that
Bergamini was involved in the decision to transfer her, and Alatorre’s affidavit
portrays a positive experience at the PWO. Her transfer back to the Facilities and
Maintenance Division (FMD) in May 2012 does not qualify because her stint at the
PWO was always intended to be temporary. Moreover, Bergamini and Grant were
placed on administrative leave for three weeks immediately after Alatorre filed her
informal EEO complaint. Thus, her return to the FMD lasted, at most, slightly
more than a fortnight. As for her assignment to online training courses, Alatorre
did not meet her burden to show a causal nexus between this assignment and
Bergamini’s alleged sexual harassment.
Since no tangible employment action occurred, the Navy was entitled to
raise its affirmative defense, and it did so successfully. In response to Alatorre’s
first complaint about Bergamini, the Navy temporarily transferred her to the PWO.
The FMD held a meeting emphasizing the Navy’s zero-tolerance policy after
Alatorre returned. When Alatorre filed an informal EEO complaint, the Navy
placed Bergamini (and Grant) on administrative leave, transferred Alatorre to the
PWO for the second time, and later hired a former EEOC Administrative Law
Judge to conduct an investigation of her complaints. The Navy “exercised
3
reasonable care to prevent and correct promptly any sexually harassing behavior,”
and by delaying, Alatorre “unreasonably failed” to avail herself of the available
corrective mechanisms. See Hardage, 427 F.3d at 1183–84.
3. Alatorre did not establish a prima facie case of co-worker harassment. To
make out such a claim, she was required to show that she “was subjected to verbal
or physical conduct of a sexual nature, . . . that was unwelcome; and . . . that was
sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of [her] employment and
create an abusive working environment.” E.E.O.C.
|
freelaw
|
Two Cameras in every NYC Citi Bike - scranglis
http://johnjpowers.blogspot.com/2013/07/citi-bike-latest-nyc-surveillance.html
======
conroy
No need to get the pitchforks out, this post is satire. The two quotes in the
article aren't sourced. A quick Google search shows the last quote only
appears in this blog [1].
[1]:
[https://www.google.com/search?q=The+vigilance+of+New+York+Ci...](https://www.google.com/search?q=The+vigilance+of+New+York+City+is+unmatched+and+the+technology+that+it+takes+to+bring+criminals+to+justice+has+just+caught+up&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-
US:unofficial&client=firefox-aurora&channel=fflb#client=firefox-
aurora&hs=sMY&rls=org.mozilla:en-US%3Aunofficial&channel=fflb&sclient=psy-
ab&q=%22The+vigilance+of+New+York+City+is+unmatched+and+the+technology+that+it+takes+to+bring+criminals+to+justice+has+just+caught+up%22&oq=%22The+vigilance+of+New+York+City+is+unmatched+and+the+technology+that+it+takes+to+bring+criminals+to+justice+has+just+caught+up%22&gs_l=serp.3...6131.7573.0.7835.4.4.0.0.0.0.0.0..0.0....4...1c.1.23.psy-
ab..4.0.0.6FrmYRC-
nzc&pbx=1&bav=on.2,or.r_cp.r_qf.&bvm=bv.49967636,d.cGE
|
hackernews
|
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH's) are widespread pollutants. Many are metabolized to highly carcinogenic derivatives. The principal enzyme activity involved is cytochrome P1-450 dependent aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH). PAH's, in addition to being substrates, also induce P1-450. Induction is mediated by the Ah receptor. This receptor also mediates pathogenesis (including carcinogenesis) of many environmentally important polychlorinated hydrocarbons, but by an unknown mechanism. P1-450 is highly
|
nih_exporter
|
Only one case of carcinosarcoma in the pouch of douglas has been reported in the English literature. The author herein reports a case of carcinosarcoma of the pouch of douglas. A rapidly growing tumor (10 cm in diameter) was found in the pelvic cavity of a 51-year-old woman, and an operation was performed for the clinical diagnosis of left ovarian malignancy. However, it was found that the tumor was located in the pouch of douglas, free of ovarian involvement.
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
5. The disorder is not only observed during episodes of anorexia nervosa.
6. Episodes of binge eating and compensatory behaviors are observed at least once a week over a period of 3 months \[[@cit0016]\].
Etiology of bulimia nervosa {#sec3}
===========================
The etiology of bulimia nervosa is complex and not completely clear. A combination of factors has to be present for this disease to develop. The reasons include the following: biological (genetic predisposition, impaired mechanism of satiety control, neurochemical disorders including serotonin deficiency), behavioral (abnormal eating habits and irregular eating, using nutritional restrictions), psychological (depression, impaired emotion regulation, low self-esteem with high expectations of oneself), systemic/family (impaired relations and communication between family members) and sociocultural (the cult of the body and aspiration to have a perfect body) conditions \[[@cit0019]--[@cit0021]\].
Clinical picture of bulimia nervosa {#sec4}
===================================
A consistent clinical picture of bulimia nervosa is observed only in a small group of patients. The phenomenon of diagnostic migration, occurring in the majority of patients, means the movement between diagnoses associated with eating disorders. Migration reflects a pattern in which eating disorders start with dietetic limitations, followed by failure of the self-control mechanism and leading to binge eating \[[@cit0022]\]. An episode of binge eating may be a single 2-hour episode that ends with compensatory behaviors, but it may also include a series of episodes interrupted with instances of behaviors aimed at eliminating food from the body that are typical of a given subject. Episodes of overeating and engaging in compensatory mechanisms constitute a method to indicate an approach to oneself and others, and a strategy of coping with affect, both positive and negative \[[@cit0023]\]. In subjects with an impaired process of emotion regulation, eating disorders may be pathologic and associated with an inappropriate amount, quality and frequency of food consumption \[[@cit0024]\].
Psychopathology of bulimia nervosa {#sec5}
==================================
Eating disorders have a common, specific psychopathological background that is cognitive and involves paying too much attention to body weight and possibilities of its control \[[@cit0022]\]. Patients suffering from bulimia nervosa base their self-esteem on their external appearance and not on their achievements and activities in various spheres of life. Additionally, they are characterized by dysfunctions in emotion interpretation and regulation (the lack of ability
|
pubmed_central
|
Note that commit b9436bdf, the tip of origin/1.5.4.1-final, does not have commit 81ec3665 as an ancestor. Tag 1.5.4.1-master_20161201 points to object 4e415462 which is an annotated tag object that in turn points to commit 81ec3665:
$ git rev-parse 1.5.4.1-master_20161201
4e415462bc7dbc2dc0595a8c55d469740d5149d6
$ git cat-file -p 1.5.4.1-master_20161201
object 81ec3665cb5fe68eb8596612485cc206b65659c9
...
The tag you were hoping to find, 1.5.4.1-master_20161201, is not eligible to describe commit b9436bdf. There are no commits in this particular graph that are descendants of commit 81ec3665.
Using git log --all --decorate --oneline --graph, I find that there are some such commits in the full graph, e.g., b96e3147:
* | | e7f06395 Update to current version of SPIFFS (#1949)
| | * c8ac5cfb (tag: 2.1.0-master_20170521) Merge pull request #1980 from node mcu/dev
| | |\
| |_|/
|/| |
* | | 787379f0 Merge branch 'master' into dev
|\ \ \
| | |/
| |/|
| * | 22e1adc4 Small fix in docs (#1897)
| * | b96e3147 (tag: 2.0.0-master_20170202) Merge pull request #1774 from node mcu/dev
| |\ \
| * \ \ 81ec3665 (tag: 1.5.4.1-master_20161201) Merge pull request #1653 from nodemcu/dev-for-drop
| |\ \ \
| * | | | ecf9c644 Revert "Next 1.5.4.1 master drop (#1627)"
but b
|
stackexchange
|
FIGS. 2A-2F are graphical illustrations of the likelihood function {L(.theta.)} of a typical source having a signal to noise ratio (SNR) of -4 dB moving from 85.degree. (FIG. 2A) through 90.degree. (FIG. 2B), 95.degree. (FIG. 2C), 100.degree. (FIG. 2D), 105.degree. (FIG. 2E) and 110.degree. (FIG. 2F) along the azimuth axis (.theta.). The source is received by a three-element linear array with inter-element ratio of 3:4 and aperture of 3.lambda.. Each graph illustrates the directions-of arrival (DOA) likelihood function {L(.theta.)} for a plurality of samples (approximately 100) below the ambiguity threshold.
The peaks of L(.theta.) represent the most likely directions-of-arrival for the given batch. Generally, above the ambiguity threshold, the peak corresponding to the correct DOA is the highest. However, below the ambiguity threshold, the height of the ambiguous peaks rise and may exceed the peak corresponding to the correct DOA.
As shown in FIG. 2A, there are two peaks, referenced 302, having a DOA of approximately 85.degree., and 304 (having a DOA of approximately 125.degree.). Peak 302 is lower than peak 304, having a likelihood value of just below 50. (The highest peak 304 occurs for a DOA of 125.degree. instead of the correct one of 85.degree..
FIG. 2B for an angle of 90.degree., has three peaks, 306, 308 and 310 indicating DOAs of approximately 50.degree., 90.degree. and 130.degree., respectively, having likelihood values of approximately 60, 65 and 60, respectively. FIG. 2C for an angle of 95.degree., has three peaks, 312, 314 and 316 indicating DOAs of approximately 55.degree., 95.degree. and 135.degree., respectively, having likelihood values of approximately 55, 55 and 50, respectively.
FIG. 2D for an angle of 100.degree., has three peaks, referenced 318, 320 and 322 having a likelihood value above 50, indicating DOAs of approximately 55.degree., 100.degree. and 120.degree., respectively. In addition, there are three other peaks, referenced 324, 325 and 326, having likelihood values slightly above and slightly below 50 and 60, respectively. In this
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
Track listing
"Knuckle Down" - 3:07
"Piranhas Club" - 3:52
"Steak Knives" - 3:26
"Dark Arts" - 3:49
"Haute Tropique" - 3:51
"Shameless" - 6:45
"Spooky Jookie" - 4:20
"Eel Bros" - 0:50
"Bangkok Necktie" - 2:51
"Life Fantastic" - 4:43
"Oh, La Brea" - 4:48
Deluxe Edition Bonus Tracks (iTunes Exclusive):
"Mayan Nights" - 2:41
"Trunk Eyes" - 2:57
"Hourglass" - 2:01
Personnel
Man Man
Honus - forethroat lead vocals, primitive piano tickling, synthesizer slantings, magic lil guitar dusting
Chang - synthesizer abuse, mallets of heaven, truly dreamy horns, assorted saxophones, bookworm bass clarinet, melancholy melodica shadow, percussive bangs, stabthroat backing vocals
Pow - drumming magic, percussiveness, lowthroat backing vocals
Critter - guitar shredding, mallet twinkling, trumpeter swan, glowworm backing vocals
T. Moth - bass line jopping, synthesizer linking, additional piano clangs, crazerthroat backing vocals
Additional Musicians
Nate Walcott - string arrangements
Frank Seligman, Tracy Dunn, Paul Ledwon, Amy Peterson - strings
Matt Maginn, Steve Bartalomei, Ben Brodin - handclaps
Neely Jenkins - backing vocals on tracks 1, 2, 4, 6 & 10
Susan Sanchez - backing vocals on tracks 2, 4, 6 & 11
Laura Burhenn - backing vocals on tracks 2, 4, 6 & 11
Stella Mogis - backing vocals on tracks 4, 5 & 10
Tim Kasher - backing vocals on tracks 4 & 9
Ted Stevens - backing vocals on track 4
Denny Mogis - backing vocals on track 4
References
External links
https://web.archive.org/web/20110518202646/http://www.philebrity.com/2011/05/10/man-mans
|
wikipedia_en
|
Jung [*et al.*]{} have used our Eq. (14) to calculate the dynamical resistance of two infinite jellium electrodes separated by a vacuum gap [@JBG]. By using the local-density dependent formula for the viscosity coefficient as reported in Ref. [@CV] they conclude that the dynamical resistance is negligibly small in the specific cases they consider. Here we argue that their calculations do not preclude the possibility that the viscosity contribution to the conductance be large in realistic nanoscale structures, the systems of interest in Ref. [@SZVD]. Two main points support this statement.
1\) Our Eq. (14) is an approximate formula, derived under certain physical assumptions (see below) in order to provide a qualitative understanding of the viscous effects in nanostructures. As noted in Ref. [@SZVD], Eq. (14) was derived assuming homogeneous density in the transverse direction [*and*]{} homogeneous current density in both transverse and longitudinal directions. The only contribution to the correction we included in Eq. (14) comes from density variations along the longitudinal direction. It is on the ground of these assumptions that we adopted the viscosity of the bulk electrodes in the model calculations. We did not claim any quantitative accuracy of our estimates in Ref. [@SZVD].
In realistic nanoscale structures, the current density may vary rapidly in the transverse direction due to a decrease of velocity from the center of the channel to the sides of the conductors. The transverse density and current density gradients can thus contribute significantly to the dissipation effects. The contribution can be further enhanced in the presence of turbulent eddies near the contacts [@SBHD; @DD]. To capture these gradient contributions, one needs to evaluate the dissipation power $dE/dt = - \int e
\vec{j}\cdot\vec{E}_{xc}d\vec r$ directly (and the associated resistance as $R^{dyn}=(dE/dt)/I^2$, with $I$ the total current), because the nonconservative nature of the dynamical xc field makes it, in general, ambiguous to evaluate a line integral as in Ref. [@SZVD]. If, once again, the current density and viscosity are assumed constant, the correction to the resistance evaluated from the power dissipated is given by $R^{dyn} =
\frac{\eta}{e^2A^2}\int \left[\frac{4}{3}(\partial_z n^{-1})^2 +
(\partial_\perp
|
arxiv
|
class Api{
// 小册
static const String XIAOCE = 'https://xiaoce-timeline-api-ms.juejin.im/v1/getListByLastTime';//?uid=&client_id=&token=&src=web&pageNum=1
static const String BANNER_STORAGE = 'https://banner-storage-ms.juejin.im/v1/web/page/aanner?position=hero&platform=web&page=0&pageSize=20&src=web';
// 首页list
static const String RANK_LIST = 'https://timeline-merger-ms.juejin.im/v1/get_entry_by_rank';
// 沸点
static const String PINS_LIST = 'https://short-msg-ms.juejin.im/v1/pinList/recommend';
// 小册导航
static const String BOOK_NAV = 'https://xiaoce-timeline-api-ms.juejin.im/v1/getNavList';
static const String BOOK_LIST = 'https://xiaoce-timeline-api-ms.juejin.im/v1/getListByLastTime';
// 开源库
static const String REPOS_LIST = 'https://repo-ms.juejin.im/v1/getCustomRepos';
// 活动
static const String ACTIVITY_CITY = 'https://event-storage-api-ms.juejin.im/v1/getCityList';
static const String ACTIVITY_LIST = 'https://event-storage-api-ms.juejin.im/v2/getEventList';
//登陆
static const String LOGIN = 'https://juejin.im/auth/type/phoneNumber';
static const PinsListSubscribed = 'https://short-msg-ms.juejin.im/v1/pinList/dynamic?uid=59be059c5188256c6d77cf2e&device_id=1541234434
|
github
|
Then there were the dreams, the best and the worst part of it all. We were together, healthy, laughing, talking, hugging -- I swear I could even smell her comforting scent. As soon as I felt whole again, happy again… I’d wake up only to realize that she was gone. It was tough, but I embraced those dreams for the moments they gave me with her, for their ability to let me feel her once again. And then there were the nightmares, the ones that made me so upset that I would literally jump out of bed. She was in pain, dying and non-verbal. In those nightmares I relived the last few weeks of her life on repeat. I would bawl and bawl and scream out for her.
Today, I am better. I’m not sure if there was a turning point or if I just made a decision to be happier. Maybe my tear ducts dried out and I couldn't cry anymore. Maybe she kicked my butt back to life so I wouldn’t waste it away. Whatever the reason, I can now honestly say that my pain, no matter the intensity, didn’t last. Of course, her absence pierces my soul and I miss her - no, crave her - presence every day. Mother’s Day will forever suck. It sucked that she wasn’t there on my wedding day. It sucks that she can’t be here to watch my adorable niece and nephew grow up—she would have loved it and been a fabulous grandmother. It really sucks that I can’t ask her about her youth, call her up to gossip or to learn her delicious recipes, or the countless other things that people get to do. I miss her cooking - man, do I miss her cooking! And without a doubt, I would do anything if I could bring her back. But I can’t. So instead I chose to hold on and to cope.
Coping does not mean "moving on" from her passing. It means carrying her forward with me as I move through my life, always with her ever-present guidance and love. It means being comforted in the knowledge and hope that one day we will be reunited. Because with the people you love the most, there is no goodbye. There is only see you later.
Meet the author! (Furreal. She's fantastic!)
Name: MihoAge: 29 Day Job: Pediatric medical social worker
|
pile-cc
|
What is the value of (93/5704*23)/((-14)/(-16))?
3/7
Calculate (-8)/6*(80/940)/(16/6).
-2/47
Calculate (-3975)/(-159)*(-1)/(-5).
5
Calculate ((-1)/39)/(6/72*-2).
2/13
((-15)/12)/(122/(-2440))
25
Evaluate (6/20)/((-5)/(-10)*(-5)/5).
-3/5
10/2*20/(9600/16)*-6
-1
Evaluate (572/(-34320))/(1/4).
-1/15
Evaluate (-13)/(-46)*1128/3666.
2/23
What is 3/2*(-30)/(-2025)*-10*3?
-2/3
Calculate (-9)/(-3)*(-70)/(-140).
3/2
Evaluate (-4)/((-52)/(((-7)/7)/((-6)/36))).
6/13
What is 8/(-25)*430/(-516)*(-4)/(-4)?
4/15
What is (-7*2/(-2))/(((-2520)/(-21))/(-24))?
-7/5
What is the value of (-360)/(-810)*(-1863)/(-36)?
23
What is (-256)/24*(-2)/(4/(-3))?
-16
What is (4*50/125)/((-4)/6)?
-12/5
Evaluate (8/1088*-4*-6)/(-3).
-1/17
(((-8)/(-10))/(-2))/(((-5909)/1140)/(-311))
-24
36/18*1/6*6/37
2/37
What is the value of 4/(-1)*2075/6640?
-5/4
What is ((-96)/42)/(-8)*(-2)/2?
-2/7
Evaluate (-13)/(-4)*15/(-260)*-8*-2.
-3
What is (-110)/44*(-48)/(-4)*12/30?
-12
Calculate (-6*10/(-16))/(-3).
-5/4
Evaluate ((-105)/(-50))/(63/45).
3/2
Calculate (118/(-1770))/((-14)/(-1400)).
-20/3
What is -3*2*(-16)/32?
3
What is (25/(-70))/((-
|
dm_mathematics
|
Looks fine to me. SS
Dale Rasmussen
06/01/99 02:45 PM
To: Christopher Smith/HOU/ECT@ECT
cc: Sandra McDonald/HOU/ECT@ECT, Sara Shackleton/HOU/ECT@ECT
Subject: Re: Chase Confimation
Thanks, Christopher. The change is reflected in the attached. Now, if we
can get the remaining data for the table, the letter
|
enron_emails
|
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Norfolk.
John A. MacKenzie, Senior District Judge.
(CR-94-9)
Submitted: March 21, 1996
Decided: April 3, 1996
Before NIEMEYER and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and
BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge.
_________________________________________________________________
Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
_________________________________________________________________
COUNSEL
James Edward McGill, Appellant Pro Se. James Ashford Metcalfe,
Assistant United States Attorney, Norfolk, Virginia, for Appellee.
_________________________________________________________________
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
Local Rule 36(c).
_________________________________________________________________
OPINION
PER CURIAM:
James E. McGill appeals from the district court's order denying his
motion for the return of property. Because the district court did not
abuse its discretion in denying the motion, we affirm. See Ramsden
v. United States, 2 F.3d 322, 324 (9th Cir. 1993), cert. denied, ___
U.S. ___, 62 U.S.L.W. 3705 (U.S. Apr. 25, 1994) (No. 93-8393).
On appeal, McGill seeks to remove the restraining order placed on
his savings bonds subsequent to his indictment. Although the savings
bonds are not tainted proceeds from his conviction, they are properly
subject to forfeiture as substitute assets pursuant to 18 U.S.C.A.
§ 982(b)(1)(A) (West Supp. 1995). In his plea agreement, McGill
expressly agreed that forfeiture could be obtained against any of his
untainted assets in the event directly forfeitable assets were unavail-
able. He further agreed that he would not contest efforts to forfeit
such substitute assets. Furthermore, he agreed at the time of his guilty
plea to the continuing restraint of substitute assets "until the conclu-
sion of all matters, including appeals and forfeiture proceedings, relat-
ing to this case."
Although the restraining order was placed on McGill's savings
bonds before his conviction, this court has upheld pre-trial restraints
on substitute assets. See In re Billman, 915 F.2d 9
|
freelaw
|
Ask HN: Should I quit now or wait for an hypothetical acquisition? - throwaway_gp
American company, New York. The company is sinking. Founders want to sell.
The company has mainly been funded by "SAFE" investments, with no ensuing VC round (series or seed). I think they raised around $2-3M total like that. The founders insist the value of the company is between $5 and $8M ; but after 2 - 3 months since they started the process they have had only one offer at a much lower price (i don't know which price).<p>They want me to stay to be able to sell the company, for which I won't want to work for anyway. I have a really nice opportunity elsewhere to which I already answered yes, verbally.<p>They offer me 2.5% common stock (options) and a raise to stay.<p>Are the 2.5% they are offering me really potentially worth $100k as they say ? I've seen a lot of stories where stocks don't pay out for many different reasons in the end. Won't the investors get their money first, which means it's very likely employees won't get anything (To me, the probability they manage to sell at the desired value is very low) ? Should I give them 6 months ?
======
gus_massa
For simplicity, let's assume the 2.5% of common stock is worth nothing (this
may be a good approximation).
Are they paying you now in hard green real cash now? (Not a promise of cash,
not IOU, ...)
~~~
throwaway_gp
Yes (for now), but not more than my other offer!
------
chrisbennet
I would not gamble on any "magic beans" (future earning from stock). If they
have the cash, let them _double_ your salary to stay. If they don't have the
cash (and they probably don't), take the other position.
You were going to get screwed in the end even with a "successful" startup.
While the founders will share the profits you realize that you weren't going
to? Like you alluded to, the VC's an maybe founders will have preferences that
mean you get
|
hackernews
|
Work from several laboratories over the past 10-15 years has established that the monomeric end-products of lysosomal digestion, e.g. amino acids, monosaccharides, nucleosides and (probably) lipid components traverse the lysosomal membrane to the cytoplasm through the agency of specific carriers rather than by simple diffusion. The importance of these carriers to animal metabolism is indicated by the existence of two human disorders, viz., cystinosis and sialic acid storage disease, which owe their origin to
|
nih_exporter
|
The purpose of this study is to examine the expression of Yes-associated protein (YAP) in metaplastic carcinoma and compare to those of triple-negative breast carcinoma (TNBC) for investigation of its implication. Tissue microarrays containing 34 cases of metaplastic carcinoma and 175 cases of TNBC were constructed and immunohistochemical staining was used to evaluate expression of the following proteins: YAP and phosphorylated YAP (pYAP). According to immunohistochemical staining results of cytokeratin 5/6, EGFR,
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
On physical examination, the patient was determined to be morbidly obese with a body mass index (BMI) of 51.8 kg/m^2^. Her blood pressure was 160/90 mmHg. There were no carotid bruits or jugular venous distension. Cardiac auscultation showed distant heart sounds with no audible murmurs or gallops. Lower extremity examination showed +1 edema with weak pedal pulses.
Her current medications included nisoldipine 20 mg daily, losartan/hydrochlorothiazide 100/25 mg per day, atenolol 25 mg per day, and lansoprazole 30 mg per day.
The patient's ECG showed non-specific ST segment and T-wave changes. Initial echocardiogram demonstrated left ventricular hypertrophy, left atrial enlargement, and diastolic dysfunction grade I with preserved ejection fraction. An adenosine nuclear study showed an area of reversible ischemia of the inferior wall. Subsequently, she underwent right and left cardiac catheterization.
Selective left coronary angiography demonstrated short left main coronary artery (LCA) that originated appropriately from the left sinus of Valsalva. From the LCA, left anterior descending (LAD) and left circumflex (LCX) coronary arteries arose in a typical course ([Figures 1A](#f1-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}, [2A](#f2-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}). Both LAD and LCX were dilated and tortuous without significant stenosis. The right coronary artery (RCA) was visualized in a retrograde fashion almost instantaneously via collaterals originating from the left coronary system ([Figure 1B](#f1-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}, [Video 1](#f4-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}**)**. The RCA was markedly tortuous and dilated with no significant stenosis. It drained into the main pulmonary artery ([Figure 2B](#f2-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}, [Video 2](#f5-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}). On aortic root angiography, the origin of the RCA could not be determined ([Figure 3](#f3-amjcaserep-19-992){ref-type="fig"}, [Video 3](#f6-amjcaserep-19-992){ref
|
pubmed_central
|
Q:
Invoke particular writer based on operation type?
I am working one batch which reads each row and insert into db as well as write in file. I want to write this below data in database as well as in file. So needs to call particular writer using ClassifierCompositeItemWriter. I have file which has following rows:
DATA,I,1,John,Shiazo,Sushi
DATA,U,8,Pablo,Carmen
DATA,D,9,Diego,Sergio
DATA,I,10,rucha,rekha
Here, I stands for insert, U stands for update and D stands for delete. How should I call one particular writer for insert, other is for update and one more is for delete. This three writer will work differently based on operations(Insert, Update and Delete) and there is one more writer which will always for work for writing data in file.
Below is my sample code:
@Classifier
public List<String> classify(Object object) {
String type = "Success";
List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
if(person.getOperationType().contentEquals("I")){
String insert = "I";
list.add(type);
list.add(insert);
}else if(person.getOperationType().contentEquals("U")){
String update = "U";
list.add(type);
list.add(insert);
}else{
delete = "D";
list.add(type);
list.add(delete);
}
}
Sample xml writer code:
<bean id="classifierFileItemWriter" class="org.springframework.batch.item.support.ClassifierCompositeItemWriter" scope="step"> <property name="classifier"> <bean class="org.springframework.classify.BackToBackPatternClassifier"> <property name="routerDelegate">
<bean class="com.iz.batchprocessing.writer.SuccessFailClassifier" scope="step"/>
</property>
<property name="matcherMap">
<map>
<entry key="I" value-ref="jdbcInsertItemWriter" /> //insert writer, here I want access ArrayList
<entry key="U" value-
|
stackexchange
|
1. Field of the Invention
The subject invention relates to crop oil concentrates. More particularly, the subject invention relates to improved crop oil concentrates which enhance the efficacy of herbicides, over and above standard crop oil concentrates which are commercially available.
2. Description of the Related Art
It is well established that a variety of adjuvants play important roles in the application of herbicides. These adjuvants are a diverse group of components with equally diverse functions which may often be determined from their generic names, i.e. "spreaders," "stickers," "solubilizers," "emulsifiers," "flow control agents," "drift control agents," and so on. Among the many useful herbicide adjuvants are the so-called "crop oil concentrates."
Crop oil concentrates are often recommended by herbicide manufacturers and formulators for inclusion in tank mixes to increase the efficacy of postemergent herbicide formulations. Crop oil concentrates are available from a variety of sources, and generally consist of from 75-95 percent by weight of a hydrocarbon oil or solvent with the balance being a surfactant. The hydrocarbons which form the bulk of the crop oil concentrate may be derived from mineral (petroleum) or vegetable sources.
Although the use of selected crop oil concentrates may enhance herbicidal efficacy, it is well known that many of the proprietary concentrates available are not as effective as others. Some may even impact negatively upon herbicidal efficacy. Additionally, there is a great deal of inconsistency with regard to the make up of available crop oil concentrates. Finally, to further complicate the situation, manufacturers frequently change the formulations without notifying the consumer, resulting in a great deal of uncertainty with regard to their performance.
In recent years, the situation with respect to crop oil concentrates has achieved such a level of notoriety that some agriculturists refer to them as "snake oils." Thus there is a need in the agricultural sector, for a crop oil concentrate with a well defined make-up which is capable of enhancing the efficacy of a broad spectrum of herbicides, and which gives reproducible results.
In copending application Ser. No. 104,658 are disclosed crop oil concentrates containing a specific class of anionic polyoxyalkylene surfactants, a long chain fatty acid component, a lower alkanol ester of a fatty acid, and optionally, a hydrocarbon component. These crop oil concentrates were effective adjuvant systems and moreover, decreased the apparent antagonism
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
The Children’s Advertising Review Unit (CARU) is a U.S. self-regulatory organization that was established in 1974 and is administered by BBB National Programs. It is an independent self-regulatory agency for the promotion of responsible advertising to children under the age of 12 in all media. CARU reviews and evaluates advertising for truth, accuracy, appropriateness and sensitivity to children’s still developing cognitive abilities in accordance with its Self-Regulatory Program for Children's Advertising (the Guidelines) and relevant laws.
CARU monitors advertisements found in broadcast and cable TV, radio, children’s magazines, comic books, the Internet and mobile services for compliance with its Guidelines. When ads are found to be misleading, inaccurate or inconsistent with its Guidelines, CARU seeks changes through voluntary cooperation. The results of CARU inquiries are publicly recorded in the NAD/CARU Case Reports. CARU also handles advertiser challenges and consumer complaints.
In 1996, CARU added a section to its Guidelines that highlight issues that are unique to the Internet including Websites directed at children under age 13 for online privacy. These Guidelines served as the basis of the federal Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA).
In January 2001, CARU's self-regulatory program became the first Federal Trade Commission-approved Safe Harbor under COPPA. Participants who adhere to CARU's Guidelines are deemed in compliance with COPPA and essentially insulated from FTC enforcement action as long as they comply with program requirements.
CARU, operating under the principle that self-regulation is best supported by education, provides a general advisory service for advertisers and agencies and has created publications to help parents help their kids understand advertising.
CARU has an Advisory Board, composed of leading experts in education, communications, child development and nutrition, as well as industry leaders. The Board advises on general issues concerning children’s advertising and assists in the continuous development of the Guidelines.
CARU’S Guidelines
CARU's Self-Regulatory Guidelines are deliberately subjective, going beyond the issues of truthfulness and accuracy to take into account the uniquely impressionable and vulnerable child audience.
The Guidelines are based upon the following core principles:
Advertisers have special responsibilities when advertising to children or collecting data from children online. They should take into account the limited knowledge, experience, sophistication and maturity of the audience to which the message is directed. They should recognize that
|
wikipedia_en
|
We have studied both types of surface termination for all three materials (PbTiO$_3$, BaTiO$_3$, and SrTiO$_3$) using a repeated slab geometry. The slabs are symmetrically terminated and typically contain seven layers (17 or 18 atoms), as illustrated in Fig. \[fig:slab\]. The vacuum region was chosen to be two lattice constants thick. The calculations were done using a (4,4,2) Monkhorst-Pack mesh,[@mesh] corresponding to three or four k-points in the irreducible Brillouin zone for cubic and tetragonal surfaces respectively. The convergence of the calculations has been very carefully checked for PbTiO$_3$ by repeating some of the calculations with asymmetrically terminated eight-layer slabs and symmetrically terminated nine-layer slabs. Additionally, we have enlarged the vacuum region to a thickness of three lattice constants, and we have checked the convergence of the Brillouin zone integration by going to a (6,6,2) k-point mesh. In all cases, the results for the structural properties of the surfaces given in the Tables \[tab:relaxI\] to \[tab:fedist\] change by less than 0.2%.
For all three materials, we first computed the relaxations for the “cubic” surface, i.e., for the case where there is no symmetry lowering relative to a slab of ideal cubic material. In this case we preserved $M_x$, $M_y$, and $M_z$ mirror symmetries relative to the center of the slab, and set the lattice constants in the $\widehat{x}$ and $\widehat{y}$ directions equal to those computed theoretically for the corresponding bulk material (3.89 Å, 3.95 Å, and 3.86 Å for PbTiO$_3$, BaTiO$_3$, and SrTiO$_3$, respectively). The symmetry-allowed displacements of the atoms in the $z$ (surface-normal) direction were then fully relaxed.
Each of the three materials studied displays a different sequence of structural phase transitions from the cubic paraelectric phase as the temperature is lowered.[@lines] PbTiO$_3$ undergoes a single transition into a tetragonal ferroelectric (FE) phase at 763K and then remains in this structure down to zero temperature. BaTiO$_3$ displays a series of three transitions to tetragonal, orthorhombic,
|
arxiv
|
// Copyright 2018 The Draco Authors.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
//
#include "draco/io/file_utils.h"
#include "draco/io/file_reader_factory.h"
#include "draco/io/file_reader_interface.h"
#include "draco/io/file_writer_factory.h"
#include "draco/io/file_writer_interface.h"
#include "draco/io/parser_utils.h"
namespace draco {
bool SplitPath(const std::string &full_path, std::string *out_folder_path,
std::string *out_file_name) {
const auto pos = full_path.find_last_of("/\\");
if (pos != std::string::npos) {
if (out_folder_path) {
*out_folder_path = full_path.substr(0, pos);
}
if (out_file_name) {
*out_file_name = full_path.substr(pos + 1, full_path.length());
}
} else {
if (out_folder_path) {
*out_folder_path = ".";
}
if (out_file_name) {
*out_file_name = full_path;
}
}
return true;
}
std::string ReplaceFileExtension(const std::string &in_file_name,
const std::string &new_extension) {
const auto pos = in_file_name.find_last_of(".");
if (pos
|
github
|
Dear Sir/Madam,
We have Completed 750+ LEGAL projects on Freelancer related to CONTRACTS, PATENTS, TERMS OF WEBSITE, LEGAL RESEARCH and IT LAW.
We also have access to LEXIS NEXIS and TOTAL PATENT.
Relevant Skills and Plus
I’d like to be considered for your writing position.I can provide you best work with desired formatting, table of content, and in any reference style APA, MLA, Harvard.
Relevant Skills and Experience
For more than 7 yPlus
I have read the guidelines of your work, i believe i can provide you with the best quality of work you are anticipating from this platform.
Relevant Skills and Experience
Kindly give me a chance to show you the best iPlus
Hello sir/ma, I am interested in taking up your project. I am highly inspired to give you the best of my experience in conducting an excellent and quality research for you.
Relevant Skills and Experience
I am an ardenPlus
Greetings,
I have gone through the details as you are looking for Legal Research writing Services, You are at the right place. When it comes to Legal Research writing, I’m ‘The Best’ here.
Feel free to hire me Plus
Dear client? I have read and understood what the project needs. I have a lot of legal research writing experience and i will do it perfectly. My charges are always reasonable.
Relevant Skills and Experience
Legal resePlus
Legal Writing
Relevant Skills and Experience
I am a British writer and also a paralegal based in the UK. I can assist you with writing a legal paper.
Proposed Milestones
$30 USD - 1
Please contact me to discuss thisPlus
Hello I am a professional full time research writer and having a good experience in different writing styles. I will offer you very best quality and distinctive Articles with none errors.
Relevant Skills and ExperienPlus
I am an experienced Research + Academic writer.
I am LLM in criminal Law and Masters in English Literature.
I have experience of more than 5 years of writing on all topics.
Relevant Skills and Experience
Please give Plus
Hi,
I'm interested in working on this project. Please, consider sending a message so that we can discuss the project details exclusively. Thank you.
Relevant Skills and Experience
|
pile-cc
|
False
Is 148059607 composite?
True
Is 3269693939 prime?
True
Is 4468156079 a prime number?
False
Is 442053149 a composite number?
True
Is 2230320511 a composite number?
True
Is 11544695203 a composite number?
True
Is 25394222081 composite?
False
Is 1580887391 a composite number?
False
Is 733411859 a prime number?
False
Is 3678438199 prime?
True
Is 2229223079 composite?
True
Is 2578566479 composite?
True
Is 461449439 a prime number?
False
Is 3195508865 a composite number?
True
Is 434387147 a prime number?
True
Is 30431891927 a prime number?
False
Is 3921097133 a composite number?
False
Is 15071418139 prime?
True
Is 8843461882 a composite number?
True
Is 1696712509 a composite number?
False
Is 184861885867 a prime number?
True
Is 678610337 prime?
True
Is 93282811007 a composite number?
False
Is 21699448311 composite?
True
Is 1118043877 composite?
False
Is 170881425851 prime?
True
Is 104015302613 a prime number?
True
Is 20780321767 a prime number?
False
Is 8204968969 a composite number?
True
Is 169619707813 a composite number?
True
Is 5093983579 a prime number?
False
Is 13701040339 composite?
True
Is 1298302039 composite?
False
Is 71481497411 a composite number?
False
Is 37237665841 a prime number?
True
Is 1618225391 prime?
False
Is 125804680091 a prime number?
False
Is 663969521 a prime number?
True
Is 309600505051 prime?
True
Is 7871137679 a prime number?
True
Is 20480981669 composite?
False
Is 2320467781 prime?
False
Is 750680741 composite?
False
Is 1088085329 composite?
False
|
dm_mathematics
|
We have a final draft of Drunken Beta.? I have received?corrections and
additions and have made the necessary changes.? In recognition of this
momentous Homecoming 2000 and Beta Reunion event, I have published a
collectors version for y'all to treasure for many years then pass along to
your wee ones. Please open the attachment.
?
-kai-
BEEK
- DBetadoc.doc
|
enron_emails
|
56
As was stated in Hargadon v. Louisville & Nashville R.sR., supra, 375 S.W.2d at 838:
57
'In fact, the ultimate answer to the 'extra-hazardous' argument in this case is that the principle simply does not apply when the inquiry is confined exclusively to whether the highway traveler was contributorily negligent, because the hazards of the crossing, whatever they are and whatever their degree, are necessarily embraced in that inquiry anyway.'
58
The highest court in Kentucky has well stated the obligation of a motorist in approaching a railroad track.
59
'The obligation imposed upon every person to exercise ordinary care for his own safety requires that, in approaching a railroad track, he must use his senses in the way that an ordinarily prudent person would under similar circumstances, in order to determine whether it is safe to cross the track at that time. Where the facts make it certain that a traveler could have seen or heard an approaching train in time to avert a collision, had he looked and listened properly, he will not be heard to say that he looked for the train but did not see it, or that he listened for it and did not hear it.' Lousiville & Nashville R.R. v. Hines, supra, 302 S.W.2d at 557.
60
Accord, Hunt's Adm'r v. Chesapeake & Ohio R.R., 254 S.W.2d 705, 709 (Ky.1952); Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Stagner, 305 Ky. 717, 719-720, 205 S.W.2d 493 (1947).
61
In Meadows v. Chesapeake & Ohio R.R., 412 S.W.2d 233 (Ky.1967), the Court was faced with a situation similar in some respects to the one before us. The motorist approached a railroad crossing on a clear night. The crossing, with which the motorist was familiar, was described as extrahazardous because it carried heavy train traffic and the view was substantially obstructed until the motorist was within ten or fifteen feet of the tracks. The motorist stopped within fifteen feet of the track and then proceeded slowly across the tracks and was struck by a train. The Court observed:
62
'We are unable to comprehend how
|
freelaw
|
#1. This relationship only holds at focal points
#2. Nothing to do with Fast Fourier Transform
#3. No mention of complex part of FT
#4. No derivation of why this is the case
~~~
gsteinb88
Also, ignores that Fourier optics only holds for the paraxial approximation
(i.e. the small angle approximation). I'd put the rule of thumb somewhere
around a numerical aperture of 0.3 [0] -- beyond that, polarization effects
start to come into play, and beyond 0.5-0.6, it becomes an issue in, for
example, microscopy.
[0]
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_aperture](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_aperture)
\-- Similar to f-number from photography, and describes how big the aperture
of the lens is in relation to its focal length. Specifically, it's the sine of
the angle from the optical axis to the ray extending from the focal point to
the edge of the lens, for a single lens system.
~~~
frozenport
>>around a numerical aperture of 0.3
From experience you are being overly conservative. Foremost polarization
effects depend on the rigidity of your surface and the bandwidth of your light
source. The correction is minimal. Most importantly oil immersion 1.4 NA is
common and nobody complains.
>>Also, ignores that Fourier optics
Although there is another good point. After making the born approximation you
get this kind of dish shape in the Fourier transform, but on the other hand
the dish is compensated on both sides of the lense
~~~
gsteinb88
Ah yeah, to be fair it's not a _huge_ correction, but in what I do (single-
mode confocal microscopy) it definitely becomes an issue around NA=0.3 when
trying to characterize spot sizes and collection efficiency functions. Namely,
the overlap integrals can change significantly if your source is also
polarized. Also, I'm probably more sensitive to these things than most since
I'm at the single-photon level usually.
------
tanvach
Wow this brings back some memories! I spent a long time doing research in this
area. You can do very cool stuff by realizing that spatial light pattern
propagates as Fourier transform with a
|
hackernews
|
Abstract: Our archival data indicates that 27% of older adults hospitalized with major depression and suicidality continue to report suicidal ideation (SI) three months after discharge. Having persistent post- discharge SI places individuals at very high risk for suicidal behaviors and death. Cognitive and affective mechanisms likely determine the course of post-discharge SI, but interrupting these processes remains challenging. This is, in part, because the upstream modifiable risk factors that exacerbate problems with cognition, affect, and
|
nih_exporter
|
The incidence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) shows large regional differences. This variability cannot be completely explained by differences in classical risk factors. 28-day case fatality of AMI remains unacceptably high with 50% on the average, although therapeutic possibilities have improved considerably. Time trends in mortality from ischaemic heart disease (IHD) show a decrease in most Western European countries and an increase in Eastern Europe. On a population level, the impact of medical care on the short-term
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
Histomorphometry and Immunofluorescence {#Sec8}
---------------------------------------
Undecalcified samples were prepared for subsequent histomorphometry studies. Samples were cleaned of soft tissue, dehydrated in graded alcohols and embedded in methyl methacrylate. Then, sections of 200 μm in thickness were cut longitudinally, ground to 20 μm and stained with Van Gieson (VG) and Hematoxylin-Eosin (H&E) for microscopic examination. Images were observed and captured with a light microscope (DMI6000, Leica Inc., Germany).
For sclerostin immunofluorescence, sections were washed in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and blocked in goat serum for 10 min at room temperature. Endogenous peroxidases were quenched with 3% H~2~O~2~, and sections were incubated in rabbit sclerostin polyclonal antibody (Bioss Inc., China) for 24 h at 4 °C. After washing in PBS, sections were incubated with secondary antibody labeled with FITC. Images were captured with a confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM) (Fluo View FV-1000, Olympus Inc., Japan). Fluorescence intensity was measured in five areas of each section using the CLSM software, and the average was calculated for statistical analyses.
RNA Extraction and RT-qPCR {#Sec9}
--------------------------
Bone tissue at the base of the implant was snap frozen and crushed in liquid N~2~. According to the manufacturer's instructions, total RNA was extracted using Trizol reagent and was dissolved in DEPC H~2~O. cDNA was synthesized using a 10 μl reverse transcription reaction mixture composed of 0.5 μg total RNA, 2 μl 5× PrimeScriptTM Buffer, 0.5 μl PrimeScriptTM RT Enzyme Mix I and 0.5 μl random primer. Partial sequences of SOST, β-catenin, RANKL and β-actin in the reverse transcribed cDNA were amplified using a fluorescence RT-qPCR instrument (RG-3000, Gene Inc., Australia). The forward and reverse primer sequences used for amplification are listed in Supplementary Table [S2](#MOESM1){ref-type="media"}. Relative mRNA expression levels were standardized to β-actin expression for quantified analyses using the ∆Ct method.
Ethics {#Sec10}
------
This study was carried out in strict accordance with the recommendations in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals of the Animal Center of the Fourth Military
|
pubmed_central
|
Q:
Output multi-dimensional array with brackets
So I have this and I need to be able to output all of the arrays including brackets within the array. The following example works by calling the index explicitly, but I can't seem to pass a function or a for loop where it is expecting an expression. Also, a string will not do.
for (var a in obj) {
var dateArray = [];
var date = new Date(obj[a]);
// var date = new Date('March 29, 2016 14:00:00');
var hours = date.getHours();
var minutes = date.getMinutes();
console.log(date.toString());
console.log(hours);
console.log(minutes);
dateArray[0] = hours;
dateArray[1] = minutes;
disabled_time_list.push(dateArray);
}
for (var i = 0; i < disabled_time_list.length; i++) {
console.log(disabled_time_list[i]);
}
pickertime.set('disable', [
disabled_time_list[0]
// [14,0],
]);
A:
In case anyone ever needs it, this is how I solved the problem:
$('.datepicker').change(function() {
var datepicker = $('.datepicker').pickadate();
var pickerdate = datepicker.pickadate('picker');
var dateInput = pickerdate.get('value');
var request = $.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: 'http://apptsch.dev/index.php/appointment/get_post_date',
data: { date: dateInput }
}).done(function(){
disabled_time_list = [];
var timepicker = $('.timepicker').pickatime();
var pickertime = timepicker.pickatime('picker');
var times_disabled = pickertime.get('disable');
console.log(times_disabled);
$.each(times_disabled,function( index, value) {
pickertime.set('enable', [
times_disabled[index]
])
}); // end
|
stackexchange
|
The p101 regulatory subunit for PI3 Kgamma was originally cloned in swine, and the human ortholog identified subsequently (Krugmann et al., J. Biol. Chem., 274:17152-8 (1999)). Interaction between the N-terminal region of p101 with the N-terminal region of p110γ appears to be critical for the PI3Kγ activation through Gβγ mentioned above.
A constitutively active PI3K polypeptide is described in International Publication No. WO 96/25488. This publication discloses preparation of a chimeric fusion protein in which a 102-residue fragment of p85 known as the inter-SH2 (iSH2) region is fused through a linker region to the N-terminus of murine p110. The p85 iSH2 domain apparently is able to activate PI3K activity in a manner comparable to intact p85 (Klippel et al., Mol. Cell. Biol., 14:2675-85 (1994)).
Thus, PI 3-kinases can be defined by their amino acid identity or by their activity. Additional members of this growing gene family include more distantly related lipid and protein kinases including Vps34 TOR1, TOR2 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (and their mammalian homologs such as FRAP and mTOR), the ataxia telangiectasia gene product (ATR), and the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK). See generally, Hunter, Cell, 83:1-4 (1995).
PI 3-kinase also appears to be involved in a number of aspects of leukocyte activation. A p85-associated PI 3-kinase activity has been shown to physically associate with the cytoplasmic domain of CD28, which is an important costimulatory molecule for the activation of T-cells in response to antigen (Pages et al., Nature, 369:327-29 (1994); Rudd, Immunity, 4:527-34 (1996)). Activation of T cells through CD28 lowers the threshold for activation by antigen and increases the magnitude and duration of the proliferative response. These effects are linked to increases in the transcription of a number of genes including interleukin-2 (IL2), an important T cell growth factor (Fraser et al., Science, 251:313-16 (1991)). Mutation of CD28 such that it can no longer interact with PI 3-kinase leads to a failure to initiate IL2 production, suggesting a critical role for PI 3-kinase in T cell activation
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
7 Come 11
Many of the songs that appeared on Flyin' Shoes were originally recorded in 1973 for an album with the working title 7 Come 11. The album was not released, however, due to a dispute between producer Jack Clement and Poppy Records founder Kevin Eggers. As Van Zandt's former manager John Lomax III explains in the 2004 biopic Be Here To Love Me, "That was the sort of missing link in his career. If that had come out right on top of the Late Great, it would've really been a whole other thing but I think Kevin lost the deal so Jack Clement just held on to the tapes."
In the same documentary, Steve Earle confirms that the tapes "got put back into the tape pool because Kevin Eggers didn't pay for them." According to John Kruth's 2007 biography To Live's To Fly: The Ballad of the Late, Great Townes Van Zandt, the bad feelings had been festering ever since Clement had requested that Van Zandt alter a potentially offensive line in the song "Tecumseh Valley" for the singer's debut album For the Sake of the Song back in 1968, and that by 1974 Clement and Eggers "had come to a final parting of the ways. Between Kevin's unpaid bills and some of the Cowboy's more questionable production decisions...there was some bad blood behind them. And Van Zandt's dual Jekyll and Hyde personality could turn a shaky situation volatile in a heartbeat."
By all accounts, Van Zandt was extremely frustrated that 7 Come 11 had been held up, with guitarist Mickey White telling director Margaret Brown in 2004 that any hopes they had that the album would come out "were just about gone. Every time we'd try to call Kevin to find out what was going on with it, or try to communicate with him, it was just clear." A short time after the split with Clement, Poppy Records went under, further isolating Van Zandt from the music business.
By 1978, Van Zandt had released no new original material in five years and was living with his second wife Cindy in a cabin in Franklin, Tennessee where, as Earle recalls in Be Here To Love Me, the troubadour spent most of his time listening to Paul Harvey every morning and watching Happy Days. However, the stagnation worsened Van Zandt's drug and alcohol problems, with the singer's son J.
|
wikipedia_en
|
At least three filaments are highlighted in both the [*Herschel*]{} maps (see vertical lines in Figures \[fig2\]a and \[fig2\]b). Among these filaments, an elongated filamentary feature (length $\sim$8.3 pc) is identified using a column density contour with a level of 3.94 $\times$ 10$^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$, which is marked in Figures \[fig2\]a and \[fig2\]b. The total mass of the filamentary feature is estimated to be $\sim$1170 M$_{\odot}$, and is computed using the equation, $M_{area} = \mu_{H_2} m_H Area_{pix} \Sigma N(H_2)$, where $\mu_{H_2}$ is the mean molecular weight per hydrogen molecule (i.e., 2.8), $Area_{pix}$ is the area subtended by one pixel (i.e., 6$''$/pixel), and $\Sigma N(\mathrm H_2)$ is the total column density [see also @dewangan17]. The other two filaments show a temperature range of about 13–13.5 K, and seem to be directed toward the central part of the filamentary feature. The locations of the infrared shell and the IRDCs are located within the central part of the filamentary feature, which is indicated in the [*Herschel*]{} maps. One can note that a column density deficient region is found in the direction of the infrared shell (see Figure \[fig2\]b and also Figure \[fig2a\]a). The central part of the filamentary feature is traced using a column density contour with the level of $\sim$9–11 $\times$ 10$^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$, where the maximum value of the column density is estimated to be $\sim$3.7 $\times$ 10$^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$. Earlier, @krumholz08 reported a threshold value of 1 gm cm$^{-2}$ (or corresponding column density $\sim$3 $\times$ 10$^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$) for formation of massive stars. Hence, it is likely that massive stars can be formed within the central part of the filamentary feature. Interestingly, @lee11 suggested the presence of massive protostar candidates toward the dense cores. The [*Herschel*]{} temperature map shows an extended temperature structure toward the central part of the filamentary feature. The infrared shell is spatially located
|
arxiv
|
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.util.List;
import javax.persistence.Cache;
import javax.persistence.EntityManagerFactory;
import javax.sql.DataSource;
import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;
import org.springbyexample.mvc.test.AbstractProfileTest;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext;
import org.springframework.core.io.Resource;
import org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.init.ResourceDatabasePopulator;
import org.springframework.test.context.ContextConfiguration;
/**
* Base class for REST controller tests.
*
* @author David Winterfeldt
*/
@ContextConfiguration({ "classpath:/org/springbyexample/web/mvc/rest-controller-test-context.xml" })
public abstract class AbstractRestControllerTest extends AbstractProfileTest {
final Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(AbstractRestControllerTest.class);
@Autowired
private EmbeddedJetty embeddedJetty;
/**
* Reset the DB before each test.
*/
@Override
protected void doInit() {
reset();
}
/**
* Reset the database and entity manager cache.
*/
protected void reset() {
resetSchema();
resetCache();
logger.info("DB schema and entity manager cache reset.");
}
/**
* Resets DB schema.
*/
private void resetSchema() {
ApplicationContext ctx = embeddedJetty.getApplicationContext();
DataSource dataSource = ctx.getBean(DataSource.class);
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
List<Resource> databaseScripts = (List<Resource>) ctx.getBean("databaseScriptsList");
Connection con = null;
ResourceDatabasePopulator resourceDatabasePopulator = new ResourceDatabasePopulator();
try {
con = dataSource.getConnection();
resourceDatabasePopulator.setScripts(databaseScripts.toArray(new Resource[0]));
resourceDatabase
|
github
|
Fact of the day indeed. I had a look at the survey (PDF), which isn't hard to do by the way. The article on the Daily Caller had a link to follow so anyone with a sense of curiosity or an interest in the source could find out for themselves.
The survey was conducted from Apr 18-May 22 of this year. Here's the question being made into a fact of the day.
So what's wrong with this question? What "current changes" in the medical system does it refer to? Nobody knows so it's left up to the survey responder to determine that. Someone decided that "Obamacare" was the current change and it magically caused 83% of doctors to consider quitting.
This question is just as bad as it is clever, if it was intended to be. It appears that requiring people to purchase insurance is bad. But what they're asking is if it will improve access to actual medical care. I have insurance but I can only go to doctors who accept my insurance. Consequently my access is limited. However, I can still go to any emergency room just like any uninsured person.
Another question that violates one of the rules of good survey question making which says to write questions so everyone understand them the same way. Ask ten medical professionals what the "current problems" in medicine are and I bet you get ten different answers.
Yet another ambiguous and consequently invalid question. For Doctor A the wrong track of the current path could mean no universal health care. For Doctor B it could be too much government regulation. For Doctor C it could mean the high prices of drugs.
Whoa, not much wiggle room on that question, eh?
Cathy McMorris Rodgers and her fellow Republican House members will vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act--again. Because it's a far more pressing matter than climate change, Wall Street thievery, war, the gradual creation of a police state, cell phone tracking, etc.
Monday, July 9, 2012
This morning I remembered to have a look at my rear tire to check the wear. I didn't want it to get as bad as that one time. Well it wasn't as bad as that time but it didn't have much to go.
So I took this morning's commute nice and easy. No tight turns, hard braking, or speeding. I know I shouldn't have, but after seeing how bad the tire could get that one time I figured
|
pile-cc
|
-7*l - 2
Let j(s) = 9*s**3 - 5*s + 68. Let y(p) = -5*p**3 + 2*p - 29. Calculate 3*j(m) + 5*y(m).
2*m**3 - 5*m + 59
Let s(z) = 8*z**3 + 2*z**2 - 4*z + 1. Let u(n) be the third derivative of -n**6/15 - n**5/30 + n**4/8 - 2552*n**2. Give -3*s(h) - 4*u(h).
8*h**3 + 2*h**2 - 3
Let x(c) = -c**3 - c**2 + 5*c. Let f(q) = -q**2 - q - 1. Suppose 5*z + 3 = -3*s, -83 = 4*s - 2*z - 79. Give s*x(g) - 2*f(g).
g**3 + 3*g**2 - 3*g + 2
Let w(g) = -9*g**3 + 5*g**2 + 28*g + 7. Let r(o) = -8*o**3 + 3*o**2 + 22*o + 6. Determine 7*r(y) - 6*w(y).
-2*y**3 - 9*y**2 - 14*y
Let q(v) = -10*v**3 + 3*v**2 - 3*v - 3. Let a(w) = w**3 - w**2 + w + 1. Suppose 0 = -3*z + 12. Let c be (-8)/60 - (z - (-77)/(-15)). Calculate c*q(n) + 3*a(n).
-7*n**3
Let s(m) = 2*m**3 - 4*m**2 + m + 4. Let k(j) = 1. Let h be -8 + (8/(-16))/(12/(-168)). Give h*s(b) + 4*k(b).
-2*b**3 + 4*b**2 - b
Let b(c) = -25*c**2 -
|
dm_mathematics
|
We agree
---------------------- Forwarded by Melissa Jones/Texas Utilities on
02/27/2001
10:33 AM ---------------------------
"Eileen Ponton" <kponton@duke-energy.com> on 02/27/2001 09:46:26 AM
To: David Avila/LSP/ENSERCH/US@TU, Charlie Stone/Texas Utilities@TU, Melissa
Jones/Texas Utilities@TU
|
enron_emails
|
2
Claims 1 through 7 relate to a process and an apparatus for making, by "spot" welding (i. e., electrical resistance welding) electrical connections between electrical conductors, one or more of which is embedded in thermoplastic (heat sensitive) insulating material.
3
The process (claims 2, 3, 5 and 6) involves the following steps: First, the conductors that are to be welded together are juxtaposed and an electrode positioned at the outer side of each one. Second, the electrodes are then heated and are simultaneously pressed against the conductors. Finally, when the heat and pressure have softened and displaced the thermoplastic insulation and the conductors have made electrical (i. e., metal-to-metal) contact, a welding current is passed from the one electrode through the conductors to the other electrode, causing a welded electrical connection at the point of contact between the two conductors.
4
1. The record manifests that the process employed to effect such joinder is wholly within the ingenuity and skill of the ordinary mechanic in the art to which the subject matter pertains. Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 86 S.Ct. 684, 15 L.Ed.2d 545 (1966). Several "prior art" patents are especially pertinent to this conclusion: U.S. Patent No. 1,613,959, issued in 1927 to Harry DeForrest Madden, relates to a method and machine to weld a coated (i. e., insulated) lead-in wire to the base of an incandescent lamp. "A preferable mode of practicing the present invention," says the patent description, "is to provide a heating element comprising a resistance body, such as a rod of carbon, tungsten or the like, and to pass a current therethrough to permit the resistant property of the element to generate the proper degree of heat therein. The heating element may be moved in contact with a wire positioned for welding in order to heat treat and render the coating non-resistant, after which suitable cooperating mechanism may be utilized to cause a welding operation by permitting a flow of electrical current through the bodies to be welded. The heating element may serve to impart heat to the body to be welded and as a terminal or electrode to carry a welding current."
5
U.S. Patent No. 2,977,672, issued in 1961 to T. A. Telfer, teaches a
|
freelaw
|
~~~
DanielRibeiro
You can release multiple products with different names and even different
brands (you use different accounts if needed). It may not be cheap, but it is
possible. This way you will have the huge spike over and over again (you may
change name/logo for different experiments). And please don't use vanity
metrics[1] for measuring the outcome.
[1] <http://techcrunch.com/2011/07/30/vanity-metrics/>
~~~
DanielRibeiro
This interview directly talks about iphone apps and MVPs on its first 5
minutes:
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Z...](http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Zo6JYfLFEVQ)
------
tlack
Looks great, congratulations. Three comments:
1\. On Chrome in Windows, the smaller fonts look a bit scrunched in a way that
makes my eyeballs hurt. Is this configurable?
2\. I notice that you say to bookmark the URL, and I presume my user id is
stored in a cookie. What happens if I want to read from another device or if I
clear my cookies? It would be awesome if you could generate a unique URL for
each user. Bonus points if it's easy to say over the phone or type in by
hand/from memory (I use at 4-5 devices to browse the web daily - 2 x laptops,
Playbook, and my BB).
3\. That Tweet sidebar thing is interesting but feels a little laggy. Is there
a way to turn it off?
------
pauljonas
1\. Formatting is FUBARed when zooming in (Chrome browser).
2\. OPML import? Already have a set of RSS subscriptions, need to be able to
import existing feed list, don't wish to reenter all these in…
/goodluck on the venture.
~~~
voidfiles
In edit subscriptions you can do an OPML import. I had the same first thought.
What is broken though is they don't seem to support folders.
~~~
pauljonas
/thanks, found it! Cannot believe I did not see it there earlier
|
hackernews
|
This protocol is designed to compare different methods for managing a patient in whom a central venous catheter has been inserted and to determine the optimal clinical life span of such catheters. The primary goal is to assess whether the incidence of infection differs when catheters are replaced only when clinically necessary compared to replacement on a regular (i.e., weekly) schedule. A second goal is to examine whether sequential replacement of catheters over guide wires results in a different incidence of infection than sequential replacement at new sites. The
|
nih_exporter
|
Elastic properties of ascending aorta and ventricular-arterial coupling in women with previous pregnancy complicated by HELLP syndrome.
To compare the elastic properties of the ascending aorta and ventricular-arterial coupling (VAC) in women with a previous pregnancy complicated by hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets (HELLP) syndrome, women who experienced preeclampsia, and healthy controls. Women with a history of preeclampsia (n = 60) or HELLP syndrome (n
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
To understand the phylogenetic relationship with *Arabidopsis* PTKs and to identify the subfamily of kinases, rice PTK sequences were used as query and 18 *Arabidopsis* homologs were identified. The analysis of homologs in the phylogenetic tree revealed that most of the *Arabidopsis* homologs of rice PTKs belonged to group VII of receptor-like cytoplasmic kinases (RLCKs), which are mainly AVRPPHB SUSCEPTIBLE 1 (PBS1)-like 1 (PBL) proteins ([Figure 4](#plants-09-00664-f004){ref-type="fig"}). The orthologs of *OsPTK1*, *OsPTK4* and *OsPTK15* in *Arabidopsis* encode PBL proteins. The PBL proteins are involved in plant innate immunity \[[@B27-plants-09-00664],[@B28-plants-09-00664],[@B29-plants-09-00664],[@B30-plants-09-00664]\]. Besides their role in innate immunity, *OsPTK1* orthologs of Arabidopsis *PBL34* (AT3G01300) and *PBL35* (AT3G01300) have also been shown to regulate vitamin E biosynthesis in seeds \[[@B31-plants-09-00664]\]. Orthologs of *OsPTK6* and *OsPTK12* in Arabidopsis *COLD-RESPONSIVE PROTEIN KINASE 1* (*CRPK1*, AT1G16670) \[[@B32-plants-09-00664]\] and *Calcium/Calmodulin-Regulated Receptor-Like Kinase 1* (*CRLK1*, AT5G54590) \[[@B33-plants-09-00664]\], respectively, have been shown to regulate cold tolerance. RLKs contain a ligand binding ectodomain, a transmembrane domain, and a cytoplasmic kinase domain \[[@B34-plants-09-00664]\]. RLCKs are a subfamily of RLKs which lack transmembrane domains and ligand binding domain but retain the intracellular domains with kinase activity. There are about 162, 160, and 402 *RLCK* genes in maize, rice, and *Arabidopsis*, respectively \[[@B35-plants-09-00664],[@B36-plants-09-00664],[@B37-plants-09-00664]\]. Based on phylogenetic analysis these RLCKs have been divided into 15--17 subgroups in *Arabidopsis*, rice and maize \[[@B
|
pubmed_central
|
Sun has confirmed to me by email that this is a new bug (6827648 in their bug database).
A:
You get the same behaviour with JDK 1.6, including update 14, build 04, using G1 doesn't change the behaviour, (though G1 appears to work really well).
Monitoring javac with jvisualvm, repeated thread dumps show the main thread spending lots of time in
at com.sun.tools.javac.code.Types.isSubSignature(Types.java:1846)
at com.sun.tools.javac.code.Symbol$MethodSymbol.overrides(Symbol.java:1108)
at com.sun.tools.javac.code.Symbol$MethodSymbol.implementation(Symbol.java:1159)
at com.sun.tools.javac.comp.Check.checkCompatibleConcretes(Check.java:1239)
at com.sun.tools.javac.comp.Check.checkCompatibleSupertypes(Check.java:1567)
at com.sun.tools.javac.comp.Attr.attribClassBody(Attr.java:2674)
at com.sun.tools.javac.comp.Attr.attribClass(Attr.java:2628)
at com.sun.tools.javac.comp.Attr.attribClass(Attr.java:2564)
at com.sun.tools.javac.main.JavaCompiler.attribute(JavaCompiler.java:1036)
at com.sun.tools.javac.main.JavaCompiler.compile2(JavaCompiler.java:765)
at com.sun.tools.javac.main.JavaCompiler.compile(JavaCompiler.java:730)
at com.sun.tools.javac.main.Main.compile(Main.java:353)
at com.sun.tools.javac.main.Main.compile(Main.java:279)
at com.sun.tools.javac.main.Main.compile(Main.java:270)
at com.sun.tools.javac.Main.compile(Main.java:69)
at com.sun.tools.javac.Main.main(Main.java:54)
and churning through a large number of short lived instances of these
|
stackexchange
|
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a process for producing formed structures using specific forming solutions comprising aromatic polyamides.
2. Description of the Related Art
Aromatic polyamides--also known as aramids--are known fiber-forming materials of high chemical resistance. Aramid fibers are notable in particular for good mechanical properties, such as high strengths and moduli.
Aramids are usually produced by solution polycondensation of dichlorides of aromatic dicarboxylic acids with aromatic diamines and either formed directly from the solution or precipitated from the solution and converted by renewed dissolving in a suitable solvent into a forming solution. The polycondensation gives rise to hydrogen chloride, which is unwelcome in the forming stage and is usually bound by neutralizing the reaction solution with a base. Usually the forming solution has salts for enhancing the solubility of the aramid added to it or such salts are formed as a consequence of the neutralization of the reaction solution.
It has also already been attempted to produce formed aromatic polyamide structures from salt-free forming solutions.
For instance, DE-B-2,204,075 describes forming solutions which consist of an aromatic polyamide consisting mainly of meta units and a specific N-alkyllactam as solvent.
Furthermore, DE-B-2,225,735 describes a process for preparing homogeneous forming solutions wherein an aromatic polyamide consisting of mainly meta units is suspended in N-methylpyrrolidone (NMP) in the absence of salts within a certain temperature range and dissolved in the NMA by heating to a certain temperature range. EP-A-522,418 discloses a process for producing solvent-spun aramid fibers. The processes for which concrete descriptions are given involve the use of forming solutions which are obtained by polycondensation of monomers to give the aramid and subsequent addition of neutralizing agent. These forming solutions are then directly spun.
There continues to be a need for processes for producing formed structures wherein forming solutions can be used in forming processes directly and without further process measures following the polycondensation of the aramid.
It has now been found that certain para-aramids can be polycondensed in specific solvents and directly converted into formed structures without a neutralization step. This omission of the neutralization step means an appreciable facilitation of process management, since a process stage can be dispensed with. It was further found that unneutralized solutions of certain para-aramids in certain solvents are stable over certain temperature
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
Playing career
Jones played for Halifax amateur teams, Ovenden and King Cross before turning professional and signing for Halifax. He made his first team début aged 17 years and 200 days in what was to be his only Super League appearance, Halifax's last game of Super League VIII in 2003. He remained with Halifax until 2006 when he joined Keighley Cougars for the start of the 2007 season. After four seasons with Keighley, he returned to Halifax for the 2011 season but then moved back to Keighley in 2012.
International honours
Jones was a Wales international, having made his début in a defeat by Italy in 2010. He was named in the Wales squad for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup.
Death
During a League 1 match between Keighley Cougars and London Skolars on 3 May 2015, Jones was substituted in the fourth minute of the game after reporting feeling unwell. Soon after he went into cardiac arrest, he received treatment at the scene by the match doctor and was transferred by air ambulance to the Royal Free Hospital where he subsequently died. The match was abandoned after the incident. A post-mortem revealed that the cardiac arrest was caused by a previous undetected, hereditary, heart disease.
Keighley announced on 4 May that the number 6 shirt number worn by Jones during the 2015 season would be retired with immediate effect. The main stand at Cougar Park was named The Danny Jones Stand at the end of May.
Jones's widow, Lizzie, performed the traditional Challenge Cup Final hymn, Abide With Me before the 2015 Challenge Cup Final, to say "thank you to players, fans and officials for their support since her husband's death" .
Lizzie also sang Danny Boy at the BBC Sports personality of the Year awards on 20 December 2015.
References
External links
Profile at keighleycougars.com (archived by web.archive.org)
Video "Danny Jones Scores in every 2009 match. Only UK player to achieve this" at youtube.com
Category:1986 births
Category:English rugby league players
Category:English people of Welsh descent
Category:Wales national rugby league team players
Category:Keighley Cougars players
Category:Halifax R.L.F.C. players
Category:Rugby league halfbacks
Category:2015 deaths
Category:Sport deaths in England
|
wikipedia_en
|
In the framework of the classical Besov spaces, it is well known that $\cx \in B^s_{p,q} (\rn)$ if and only if $$\begin{aligned}
\label{eq-000}
\mbox{either} \quad s=1/p \quad \mbox{and} \quad q= \infty
\qquad \mbox{or} \quad s<1/p\quad \mbox{and} \quad q\in(0,\infty]\, ;\end{aligned}$$ see [@RS Lemma 2.3.1/3]. This means that, for fixed $p \in (0,\fz]$, the smallest Besov space, which the function $\cx$ belongs to, is given by $B^{1/p}_{p,\infty} (\rn)$. Now we turn to the smoothness of $\cx$ and $h_{i,j,m}$ with respect to the scale ${{B}_{p,q}^{s,\tau}(\rn)}$.
\[charact\] Let $s \in \rr$ and $p$, $q\in (0,\fz]$.
1. Let $\tau \in(1/p,\fz)$. Then $\cx \in {{B}_{p,q}^{s,\tau}(\rn)}$ if and only if $s \le n (1/p - \tau )$.
2. Let $\tau \in [0, 1/p]$. Then $\cx \in {{B}_{p,q}^{s,\tau}(\rn)}$ if and only if either $$\begin{aligned}
\label{eq-001}
s = \frac 1p,\, \qquad q=\infty \qquad \mbox{and}\qquad s \le n \lf(\frac 1p - \tau \right)\end{aligned}$$ or $$\begin{aligned}
\label{eq-002}
s < \frac 1p,\, \qquad q\in(0, \infty] \qquad \mbox{and}
\qquad s \le n \lf(\frac 1p - \tau \right)\, .\end{aligned}$$
3. All elements of $H$ have the same smoothness properties with respect to Besov type spaces, i.e., $h_{i,j,m} \in {{B}_{p,q}^{s
|
arxiv
|
func CheckRangeStringRunes(pass *analysis.Pass) (interface{}, error) {
for _, ssafn := range pass.ResultOf[buildssa.Analyzer].(*buildssa.SSA).SrcFuncs {
fn := func(node ast.Node) bool {
rng, ok := node.(*ast.RangeStmt)
if !ok || !IsBlank(rng.Key) {
return true
}
v, _ := ssafn.ValueForExpr(rng.X)
// Check that we're converting from string to []rune
val, _ := v.(*ssa.Convert)
if val == nil {
return true
}
Tsrc, ok := val.X.Type().(*types.Basic)
if !ok || Tsrc.Kind() != types.String {
return true
}
Tdst, ok := val.Type().(*types.Slice)
if !ok {
return true
}
TdstElem, ok := Tdst.Elem().(*types.Basic)
if !ok || TdstElem.Kind() != types.Int32 {
return true
}
// Check that the result of the conversion is only used to
// range over
refs := val.Referrers()
if refs == nil {
return true
}
// Expect two refs: one for obtaining the length of the slice,
// one for accessing the elements
if len(FilterDebug(*refs)) != 2 {
// TODO(dh): right now, we check that only one place
// refers to our slice. This will miss cases such as
// ranging over the slice twice. Ideally, we'd ensure that
// the slice is only used for ranging over (without
// accessing the key), but that is harder to do because in
// SSA form, ranging over a slice looks like an ordinary
// loop with index increments and slice accesses. We'd
// have to look at the associated AST node to check that
// it's a range statement.
return true
}
pass.Reportf(rng.Pos(), "should range over string, not
|
github
|
MJ
Hipsters? LOL The troll is weak in you...
X-47B
Google may stop calling Android open source, and be done with it. This pseudo-open source stance is a big joke and a slap in the face.
"If a device implementation is already launched on an earlier Android version with full-disk encryption disabled by default, such a device cannot meet the requirement through a system software update and thus MAY be exempted."
Since I've never had a device encrypted by default, let me ask you guys a question about the user experience. My Nexus 5 is encrypted and when I reboot I am asked for a password before the OS actually boots to decrypt everything. No password, no start.
How do these default encrypted devices handle reboots? Does it only require passwords once you've set a screen pin?
Those are managed devices, I assume? That may be a feature of KNOX for Samsung, and it's possible the device admin features for Android already have boot PIN as a flag that can be enabled in the console.
Mgamerz
May be KNOX now, but I know before KNOX was a thing things like the Droid 4 had it. Our users hated it. They still do but now we encrypt laptops too heh.
Ah, I've only ever owned Nexus devices, so I didn't realize it wasn't standard. When you say "an option" do you mean that this is something you can disable in Android on a Nexus or just that it is a thing that it does once encrypted?
No it isn't. It's part of the encryption feature on all 3.0+ devices, and it uses whatever your device's screen lock is, so it doesn't have to necessarily be a PIN.
Tassadar
When devices are encrypted by default, they have password "default_password". They work exactly the same as you are used to on your Nexus 5, except if you don't change the password from the default one, it will enter it automatically during boot - that way you don't see the "enter password" screen during boot unless you changed the lockscreen to pin/gesture/password (encryption and lockscreen are tied together).
Yeah, the encryption by default is useless unless you use pin/gesture/password for the lockscreen. The difference is that when you do use it, you don't have to
|
pile-cc
|
How many kilometers are there in 1.94494nm?
0.00000000000194494
How many millilitres are there in fourty-four fifths of a litre?
8800
How many micrometers are there in 5/8 of a millimeter?
625
What is 618.0969 weeks in days?
4326.6783
How many months are there in 3/8 of a century?
450
Convert 1.664624 kilometers to millimeters.
1664624
What is 770302.1 litres in millilitres?
770302100
What is 428.177 millilitres in litres?
0.428177
What is 0.670566 centuries in millennia?
0.0670566
Convert 589.249 millimeters to nanometers.
589249000
What is 3/128 of a week in seconds?
14175
What is 94.77239 micrograms in milligrams?
0.09477239
What is 71/5 of a meter in millimeters?
14200
How many months are there in 3/5 of a millennium?
7200
What is 2/15 of a day in minutes?
192
What is 1/20 of a litre in millilitres?
50
What is 23/6 of a decade in months?
460
What is 1/6 of a day in hours?
4
How many micrograms are there in eleven halves of a milligram?
5500
Convert 697014.8ng to grams.
0.0006970148
Convert 79.54991 weeks to nanoseconds.
48111785568000000
How many grams are there in 1/20 of a kilogram?
50
Convert 2.657367mg to nanograms.
2657367
Convert 0.3804459l to millilitres.
380.4459
Convert 20515.82l to millilitres.
20515820
What is nineteen quarters of a day in hours?
114
What is 2.830842 months in decades?
0.02359035
What is 1.391158 kilometers in nanometers?
1391158000000
What is 3/50 of a microgram in nanograms?
60
What is 0.6463837ug in tonnes?
0.0000000000006463837
What is five quarters of a milligram in micrograms?
1250
|
dm_mathematics
|
Futures Settlements DIFFS VS NG (USD/ MMBTU) (CDTY-
NG)
NG CL BRT HO GSL HU PN
$/MMBtu $/MMBtu $/MMBtu $/MMBtu $/MMBtu $/MMBtu $/MMBtu
APR1 0.00 -0.86 -1
|
enron_emails
|
I
Before its repeal in 1982,[1] CETA provided for grants of federal funds to certain qualified entities known as "prime sponsors," principally state and local governments, for programs "provid[ing] job training and employment opportunities for economically disadvantaged, unemployed, or underemployed persons," 29 U. S. C. § 801 (1976 ed., Supp. V).[2] The statute contains detailed requirements concerning the operation of a CETA program and the training, pay, and terms of employment of participants in a program, see §§ 823-827. A prime sponsor must submit to the Secretary a plan detailing the operation of the proposed program and containing assurances that the program will comply with the statute and with the Secretary's regulations, § 813.
CETA grants the Secretary broad authority to ensure that CETA funds are used in accordance with the statute and regulations. The Secretary may audit a grant recipient, and in connection with such an audit may inspect records, question employees, and enter any premises upon which the program is conducted. § 835(a)(2). Any interested person, such as a participating employee, may file a complaint with the Secretary alleging that a grant recipient is failing to comply with the applicable standards. § 816.
Section 106(b), 29 U. S. C. § 816(b), which is the provision at issue in this lawsuit, requires that whenever the Secretary *256 has reason to believe, through a complaint, an audit, or otherwise, that any grant recipient is misusing CETA funds or violating any statutory or regulatory standards, the Secretary "shall investigate the matter."[3] The same section goes on to require that the Secretary "shall" determine "the truth of the allegation or belief involved, not later than 120 days after receiving the complaint."
II
Respondent is a county in the State of Washington that received CETA funds from 1974 through 1977 pursuant to two separate grants. On September 19, 1978, the Labor Department's Office of Special Investigations filed an audit report concerning respondent's first grant. That Department's Grant Officer issued a final determination on February 13, 1981, disallowing approximately $110,000 in costs incurred by respondent on the grounds that those costs related to employees who were not eligible to participate in a CETA program. On December 11, 1978, the Department's Office of the Inspector General filed an audit report with respect to the second grant, again raising questions concerning ineligible *
|
freelaw
|
Is a Perfect Storm Forming For Distributed Social Networking? - edw519
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/is_a_perfect_storm_forming_for_distributed_social_networking.php
======
anigbrowl
Quite likely, though not for the exact reasons the author thinks. I have this
theory that while some sites trade on content (this one for example), those
that trade on specific functionality tend to be just incubators for technology
that becomes widespread if its any good.
People inside the full-service site enjoy a more structured net experience
that would be difficult to create otherwise, as well as a multiplicity of
special features that are unique. But eventually, the overhead of maintaining
existing features means change takes place slowly within the site compared to
what's taking place outside, and those who relied heavily on it as a portal
eventually discover that the benefits offered by the site are no longer unique
and disperse.
Remember when CompuServe and AOL towered above all other virtual communities?
------
m_eiman
Interesting. Maybe there's a slight chance someone will be interested in my
toy project at the moment, a distributed replacement for Twitter (as opposed
to the other five hundred ones like it... But it's a fun exercise).
"Only" need to time the release with a particularly bad case of downtime for
Twitter and have suitable connections to media. Did someone say that the
better tech doesn't always win? ;)
------
socratees
Users experience a feeling of betrayal? Users know the service is going to be
sold to someone at some point, and that's why the service was created in the
first place. And investor knows that the only way to make a profit is to sell
the service.
~~~
rpdillon
Yeah, but just because something is sold doesn't mean it has to die. In the
case of FriendFeed, Facebook has all but said it's going to kill it; they
bought FriendFeed because they wanted the people, not the product.
Not so in the case of Google with Writely (Docs) or Grand Central (Google
Voice).
~~~
bkudria
Or Dodgeba..oh wait, no, never mind. (What was the point of that again?)
------
sahaj
check
|
hackernews
|
In single celled eukaryotes, the pathways that monitor nutrient availability are central to regulating the meiotic program and spore development. However, how metabolic inputs influence meiotic progression and gametogenesis remains poorly understood in metazoans. Our current studies focus on understanding how metabolism influences meiotic progression and oocyte development. Target of rapamycin complex 1 (TORC1) is a master regulator of metabolism in eukaryotes that integrates information from multiple upstream signaling pathways. The GATOR1 complex inhibits T
|
nih_exporter
|
Seasonal and Annual Source Appointment of Carbonaceous Ultrafine Particulate Matter (PM0.1) in Polluted California Cities.
Samples of ultrafine particle matter mass (PM0.1) were collected over 12 months at three cities in California: Los Angeles, East Oakland, San Pablo, and over six months at Fresno. Molecular markers adjusted for volatility and reactivity were used to calculate PM0.1 source contributions. Wood burning was a significant source of PM0.1
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
###### Colorectal liver metastases treatment technique and results in different series.
{#pone-0114404-t003-3}
Trial Study type Technique Tumor characteristics PFS 30-day mortality 5-year OS
------------------------ --------------------- --------------------------------------- ----------------------- ------------------------------- ------------------ -------------------- ------- -------
MSKCC^6^ Retrospective Resection plus ablation 4 -- no -- 2.1% 56%
CLOCC^2^ Randomized Phase II Resection plus ablation 4 43% synchronous no 3-year 28% 1.7% 40%
ARF2003^8^ Phase II Resection plus ablation 5 84% bilateral no 3-year 10% 1.9% 43%
Beaujon series^5^ Retrospective Resection 100% PVO 6 84% synchronous, 78% bilobar no 3-year 17% 10.3% 40.5%
MD Anderson^17^ Retrospective Resection plus 3% ablation, 70% PVO 6 80% synchronous, 100% bilobar no 3-year, 5-year 20% 6.4% 51%
Paul Brousse series^3^ Retrospective Resection plus 21% ablation, 60% PVO 5 71% synchronous, 76% bilobar 13.5% 5-year 19% 0% 33%
Present study Retrospective Resection plus 100% ablation, 10% PVO 5 73% synchronous, 88% bilobar 8% 5-year 13% 1% 37%
\*Median; **Abbreviations**: CLM = colorectal liver metastasis, PVO = portal vein occlusion; PFS = progression-free survival, OS = overall survival
In this analysis, post-operative complications remain a major prognostic factor for 5-year OS, since they reduce drastically patients\' chance for OS, from 25.6% with complications to 43.6% without. The negative impact of perioperative morbidity has been demonstrated in several other malignancies, including CLM [@pone.0114404-Matsuda1]. While this association has been clearly established, it is unclear
|
pubmed_central
|
Getting the surface from Draggable
Please guys, help me out. I have this code:
var image = new ImageSurface({
size: [300, 300],
properties: {
border: '4px solid white'
}
});
image.setContent('/img/' + _.random(1,7) + '.jpg');
var draggable = new Draggable({scale: 1});
image.pipe(draggable);
draggable.on('end', function(e) {
// SURFACE????
});
var stateModifier = new StateModifier();
node.add(stateModifier).add(draggable).add(image);
stateModifier.setTransform(
Transform.translate(100, 10, 0),
{ duration : 1000, curve: Easing.outElastic }
);
How can I get the Surface object from the draggable event? The parameter from the event is just the position.
A:
First, I am wondering why you need to get the surface from the event. If you have one draggable per surface, then you could do something with simple data binding.
eg..
var draggable = new Draggable({scale: 1});
draggable.image = image;
draggable.on('end', function(e) {
var image = this.image;
});
If you really need to get the surface from the event you will have to edit the code that emits the event.
Just for the case of the end event..
Starting at line 129 of Draggable.js
function _handleEnd() {
if (!this._active) return;
this.eventOutput.emit('end', {position : this.getPosition()});
}
Could be changed to..
function _handleEnd() {
if (!this._active) return;
this.eventOutput.emit('end', {position : this.getPosition(), originalEvent:event });
}
Now you can do..
var draggable = new Draggable({scale: 1});
draggable.on('end', function(e) {
var image = e.originalEvent.origin;
});
|
stackexchange
|
The present invention relates generally to data processing and more specifically to cache access mechanisms in data processing systems.
2. Description of the Related Art
A conventional multiprocessor data processing system may comprise a system bus to which a system memory and a number of processing units that may each include a processor and one or more levels of cache memory are coupled. Caches are temporary storage facilities utilized to store subsets of the overall memory of a data processing system at varying latencies. At the various levels of a cache hierarchy, a tradeoff is made between the size and the access latency of the cache at the given hierarchy level. The cache most directly coupled to a processing unit, typically referred to as the level one or “L1” cache, usually has the lowest latency but is the smallest of the various caches. Likewise, the cache at the lowest level of the hierarchy usually has a larger storage capacity, often one or two orders of magnitude larger that the L1 cache, but at a higher access latency.
It is often the case, though not required, that the cache at a lower level of the cache hierarchy contains a copy of all the data contained in the caches at higher levels of the cache hierarchy. This property is known as “inclusion” and necessarily leads to the condition that a cache at a lower level of the cache hierarchy be at least as large as the cache at the next higher level of the hierarchy in order to allow the lower level cache to include the contents of memory cached at the next higher level. Those skilled in the art are familiar with the notion of constructing a multi-level cache hierarchy that optimizes the access latency and size characteristics of the various cache hierarchy levels according to available implementation technologies, leading to optimal system performance.
A cache, at a given level of hierarchy, is typically comprised of a number of components often including a cache directory array, a cache data array, and those functional logic units necessary to update and manage the cache. The data array portion of a cache is a set of data storage elements utilized to store copies of portions of main memory. The data array is divided into a series of so called “cache blocks”. These cache blocks are storage regions utilized to hold copies of contiguous portions of the main memory within the data processing system. These blocks are typically on the order of 128 bytes in size and are further arranged into groups, known as “sets”, of usually 8 to 16 blocks. The overall data array contains of a number of these sets. When placing a portion of memory within the cache,
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
Career
With the onset of the Great Depression causing her concern about finding a post-doctoral internship, a former professor of McGraw advised her to talk to Fred Tilney, the director of the Neurological Institute of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia. She was appointed associate director of the Normal Child Development Study at Babies Hospital in New York City by Tilney in 1930. Her work involved experimental research on child development of the neuromuscular system as a complement to Tilney's own studies of animal neural systems and behavior, and their correlation to humans. McGraw collaborated with Tilney and neuroembryologist George Coghill, and incorporated the ideas of John Dewey, to try and understand the growth process.
Her work combined observation with some then-unique approaches to study environmental effects that could optimize motor development in an infant. She became the first to demonstrate a swim reflex in 2–4 month old babies. For several years she performed twin studies, which led to a heralded comparison study titled Growth: A Study of Johnny and Jimmy published in 1935. Among the experiments, she was able to place 13-month old subject Johnny in roller skates and teach him to skate, much to the interest of her fellow researchers and the press. The press retained an interest in this experiment from 1933 to 1942, although the supposed performance differences created between the two due to lab research turned out not to be as significant as initially supposed. McGraw's work continued until the Normal Child Development Study ended early in 1940 due to the war. She remained at the Babies Hospital long enough to complete her second book, The Neuromuscular Maturation of the Human Infant, published in 1943.
A focus of her studies was to unite concepts in biology and physics to reach an understanding of the neurobehavioral development in an infant. She was critiqued as a maturationist by some, but her analysis of neurobehavior was actually more complex. Her work, in collaboration with others including John Dewey, advanced a focus on the reciprocal relationship between experience and the process of neural growth during early development. In this, she disagreed with Arnold Gesell's view on the role of maturation. Her insights have influenced the work of other scientists, including Ronald Oppenheim, Gilbert Gottlieb, Esther Thelen, and Adele Diamond. Her work also influenced the development of water birthing as well as parents applying swimming lessons for infants to encourage motor skill development.
Domestic life
Dr.
|
wikipedia_en
|
\[bigon0\]
{width="4cm"} \[annulus1\]
{width="4cm"} \[annulus2\]
{width="4cm"} \[annulus3\]
{width="5cm"} \[bigon1\]
{width="5cm"} \[bigon2\]
{width="5cm"} \[bigon3\]
When $k= 2$, note the useful fact that whenever two curves $\gamma,\eta \in \Gamma$ have homotopic projections in $S_{g,n-1}$, we must have that $\gamma,\eta$ are disjoint: If not, there are subarcs $\gamma_p,\eta_p$ of $\gamma,\eta$ that bound a once-punctured bigon in $S_{n}$, punctured by $p$. The assumption that $\gamma$ and $\eta$ are homotopic after filling $p$ implies that $\gamma \setminus \gamma_p$ and $\eta \setminus \eta_p$ must jointly bound another bigon on $S_{n-
|
arxiv
|
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetByte() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setByte(0, (byte) 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetShort() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setShort(0, (short) 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetMedium() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setMedium(0, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetInt() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setInt(0, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetLong() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setLong(0, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetBytes1() throws IOException {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setBytes(0, (InputStream) null, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetBytes2() throws IOException {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setBytes(0, (ScatteringByteChannel) null, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetBytes3() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setBytes(0, (byte[]) null, 0, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetBytes4() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setBytes(0, (ChannelBuffer) null, 0, 0);
}
@Test(expected = UnsupportedOperationException.class)
public void shouldRejectSetBytes5() {
unmodifiableBuffer(EMPTY_BUFFER).setBytes(0, (ByteBuffer) null
|
github
|
Grant Summary
Usher syndrome is a genetic condition causing both hearing loss and vision loss, and is the most common cause of deafblindness in the Western world. Some individuals with Usher syndrome have moderate hearing loss, where others are born totally deaf. With the advent and increasing availability of the cochlear implant, the hearing loss in Usher syndrome can be managed and even, in many cases, cured. The vision loss in Usher syndrome, however, results from retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a progressive disorder of the retina for which there is no known cure or effective treatment. The progressive vision loss resulting from RP is therefore the most disabling aspect of this condition. Finding and delivering effective treatment for RP is the urgent mission of our research.
Accurate monitoring of retinal function in retinitis pigmentosa requires the use of several test methods, including assessment of the visual field and the electroretinogram (ERG). The visual field test quantifies visual field loss, while the ERG measures the electrical impulses of the retina to quantify retinal cell function. Over the last 30 years, the Oregon Retinal Degeneration Center (ORDC), under the direction of Dr. Richard Weleber, has become one of the premier centers in the world for the measurement and standardization of retinal function in RP. As a direct result of Dr. Weleber’s passion and expertise, the ERG has evolved into a highly accurate, sensitive, and reproducible test method. The visual field, however, while extremely informative, has a high degree of test-retest variability. This variability decreases the utility of the visual field test in clinical treatment trials, where accurate, sensitive, and reproducible test measures are vital for monitoring treatment effectiveness. In fact, the lack of acceptable visual field testing for retinal dysfunction is now a limiting factor in initiating clinical trials for RP and Usher syndrome. Dr. Weleber has joined with Dr. Chris Johnson, an internationally known visual field expert with over 20 years of experience in glaucoma research and test development, to refine and develop visual field testing techniques specific to field loss in RP.
This study will assess and optimize computerized visual field test methods for patients with RP by addressing the following three specific aims: to ascertain the test-retest variability of visual field measurements in RP, to spatially characterize visual field losses specific to particular subtypes of RP (including Usher syndrome), and to develop novel testing algorithms that will enable us to move forward with clinical treatment trials. At the conclusion of this study, we will publish our
|
pile-cc
|
-3.6 * 0.055
-0.198
What is 3 times -244?
-732
Product of -0.02 and 0.51.
-0.0102
Multiply -0.4 and 66.
-26.4
1*-0.0734
-0.0734
-5*61
-305
Work out 162.59 * 0.2.
32.518
Multiply -171 and 0.1.
-17.1
What is 0.0037 times -0.3?
-0.00111
161 times -48
-7728
What is the product of -4 and 13?
-52
What is 6 times -5.72?
-34.32
What is 19 times 0?
0
Multiply -16.74 and 0.3.
-5.022
Product of 0.13 and 0.087.
0.01131
Work out -6652 * -5.
33260
83 * -134
-11122
What is -0.3 times -5136?
1540.8
2*103
206
Product of -50 and 48.
-2400
What is the product of -0.4 and 435.4?
-174.16
What is -2316 times -0.4?
926.4
Calculate -3*-357.
1071
-1101 times -20
22020
-0.2*265
-53
-8 * 0.08
-0.64
-6.16*0.4
-2.464
Work out 1.36 * 0.04.
0.0544
1*-0.4
-0.4
Multiply -0.2335 and 0.4.
-0.0934
-0.018 times -9
0.162
-0.0654 * 4
-0.2616
Product of -0.1 and -0.02366.
0.002366
0.3 times 67
20.1
Calculate 1329*-3.
-3987
Work out 0.5 * 7.9.
3.95
0.159*-2
-0.318
478*0.4
191.2
Calculate -16*-0.2.
3.2
|
dm_mathematics
|
-- Federal grand jury in Virginia adds new charges against American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh and returns 10 indictments.
Watch CNN or log on to http://CNN.com /AOL Keyword: CNN for the latest news.
********** Exclusive CNN Video ************************************
Get a 14 day free trial to CNN's web exclusive Quickcast and Uncut.
Watch constantly updated online newscasts and unedited interviews with Real One.
Click here for more information http://
|
enron_emails
|
The Assistant State's Attorney who tried this case testified in this Court that one of the reasons for halt of the trial and going into the Judge's chambers was because he and the Judge felt that Buxton was prejudicing the defendant in the presence of the jury.
A few days after this trial and on behalf of the Macon County Bar Association, the Assistant State's Attorney who had tried the case prepared and filed an information in the Circuit Court of Macon County seeking to disbar and suspend the Attorney Buxton from practice in the Circuit Court of Macon County, because of Buxton's alleged subornation of perjury in another case tried about that time and partly because of his demonstrated incompetence in the trial of this petitioner. In that petition it was alleged and afterwards found by the Circuit Court who tried this case that Buxton was not capable of protecting the rights of litigants in any Court, either civil or criminal, or of practicing law before any Court and suspended him from practice. His name was afterwards, on his own motion, stricken from the roll of attorneys by the Supreme Court of Illinois, so he is no longer an attorney of the Bar of this State.
It would have been possible in this case with available funds to have given this Court a much clearer picture of what actually happened in this trial and it would have been much more satisfactory to the Court if the Attorney General had seen fit to call the Trial Judge to the witness stand while he was sitting in Court. It is difficult to get an actual picture of what actually happened in the courtroom during this trial from what has been presented, but the petitioner presented a long list of witnesses whom he wished called and who could not be called because of their distance from Chicago and the lack of money to advance their mileage and witness fees at approximately $25 each, or even to take their depositions at considerable stenographic charge. The Attorney General could have brought in this evidence, and to some degree I think myself justified in drawing unfavorable inferences from his failure to do so. Clearly there is enough before the Court to justify the inferences I have drawn and it is certain that the people of the State of Illinois possess the resources to have given a more complete picture of the matter had they seen fit to do so. There is in the record a copy of a petition sent to the Parole Board of Illinois, asking release of this prisoner, a statement that he did not have a fair trial which is signed by 53 residents of Decatur and the first signer was foreman of the jury
|
freelaw
|
------
scott_s
The paper itself is quite readable:
[http://www.q-group.org/archives_folder/pdf/spring2008/ChenBe...](http://www.q-group.org/archives_folder/pdf/spring2008/ChenBehavioralBiases.pdf)
------
libraryatnight
The writing is atrocious. "...are the two researchers who have had made the
study." or "It’s exactly this selfish desires that they tried to exploit and
experiment with great success..."
I barely made it through.
~~~
scott_s
The experimental description also leaves out key information in understanding
what they did. I linked to the real paper in this thread which seems much more
readable.
------
reuser
Token economies are as old as the hills. It's also called "secondary
reinforcement" - although cognitive psychologists will be bothered on
ideological grounds if you reference any psychology from before 1950 or so
------
jonhendry
I think Santos gave a TED talk, which might be better than this article.
I saw her talk at Harvard Medical School when I was working there. She's a
good speaker and gives an entertaining talk.
<http://www.ted.com/talks/laurie_santos.html>
------
brohee
Fascinating. I didn't read (yet) the paper linked in the article, but was the
prostitution case a male buying service from a female or something else?
~~~
simcop2387
I took a look and couldn't find it anywhere in there. I think this may have
come from outside the paper.
------
spacefungus
The description given is kind of weak in this particular article, but the
other papers linked in this comment thread are pretty good. Apparently they're
working on finding physiological mechanisms for this stuff, I was reading
about it recently. Like, literally what chemicals in brains cause this sort of
behavior. If I can find the link I'll post it...
------
vorg
1\. Teach some monkeys about money.
2\. Let them loose in South America.
3\. Wait a while.
4\. Get some monkeys addicted to tobacco, let them loose, and wait longer.
5\. Install surveillance stations in the jungle and
|
hackernews
|
The long-term goal of the proposed research is to clarify the molecular mechanisms underlying the detection and discrimination of chemicals through contact chemosensation in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. Contact chemosensation allows flies to distinguish sweet from bitter molecules, as well as nonvolatile pheromones. Insect gustatory organs express a diversity of candidate molecular detectors. These include gustatory receptors (GRs), TRP channels, ionotropic receptors (IRs) and odorant binding proteins (OB
|
nih_exporter
|
Chronic hypoxia and tubulointerstitial injury: a final common pathway to end-stage renal failure.
Recent studies emphasize the role of chronic hypoxia in the tubulointerstitium as a final common pathway to end-stage renal failure. When advanced, tubulointerstitial damage is associated with the loss of peritubular capillaries. Associated interstitial fibrosis impairs oxygen diffusion and supply to tubular and interstitial cells. Hypoxia of tubular cells leads to apoptosis or epithelial-mesenchymal trans
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
For the Rotameter test the animals were i.p. injected with 5 mg/kg amphetamine hydrochloride (Sigma-Aldrich) and placed into a transparent cylindrical container (Rotameter, Harvard Apparatus, Holliston, MA, USA). After 10 minutes of habituation, animal behavior was recorded with a high resolution webcam for 20 minutes. The resulting movies were analyzed for the amount of rotations per mouse. After the movies were taken, the mice were fixed into an adjustable harness connected by a flexible wire to a digital rotation sensor (LE 902/Sr, Harvard Apparatus), which counted the rotation of the mice at four points of a complete circle. After five minutes of habituation, measurement was started. Video (data not shown) and harness analysis showed the same tendencies between control and Minocycline treated animals.
Statistical analysis
--------------------
Statistical analysis was done using Microsoft Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, WA, USA) and SigmaPlot (Systat Software, Inc., San Jose, CA, USA). Statistical tests were used as indicated in the figure legends. The number of animals used in each experiment was as indicated in the figure legends. All statistics from cell culture experiments are based on 700 to 1,450 counted cells. For the migration experiments, between 3,000 to 16,850 nuclei were counted per treatment group. For the EdU and Dcx quantifications in the pRMS and the SVZ between 14,400 to 41,600 nuclei were counted per treatment group.
Ethical considerations
----------------------
All animal experiments were conducted in accordance with the German Federal law on the Care and Use of laboratory animals. The corresponding licenses were granted by the Landesamt fuer Natur, Umwelt und Verbraucherschutz Nordrhein-Westfalen (Germany).
Results
=======
Among the factors characterizing neuroinflammation is the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α, which is released by activated microglia cells \[[@B22]\]. *In vitro*neural stem cells only express the TNF-α Receptor I (TNFRI), but not the TNFRII (Additional file [1](#S1){ref-type="supplementary-material"}, Figure S1). Additionally, components of the downstream nuclear factor \'kappa-light-chain-enhancer\' of activated B-cells (NF-κB)- and mitogen-activated-protein-kinase (MAPK)-pathways are expressed.
Because the chronicity of neuroinfl
|
pubmed_central
|
Can anyone see why this would work in FF but not Safari? When I alert the return from my CF script that processes the image and returns the image name it works in FF. No go in Safari...
$( "#uploadform" ).submit(function( objEvent ){
//alert("Submit");
var jThis = $( this );
var strName = ("uploader" + (new Date()).getTime());
var jFrame = $( "<iframe name=\"" + strName + "\" src=\"about:blank\" />" );
jFrame.css( "display", "none" );
jFrame.load(function( objEvent ){
var objUploadBody = window.frames[ strName ].document.getElementsByTagName( "body" )[ 0 ];
var jBody = $( objUploadBody );
var objData = eval(jBody.html());
var thumb = ('holding/' + eval(jBody.html()));
setTimeout(function(){
jFrame.remove();
},100);
if (objData !== '') {
// Put the preview here and load another form that has a hidden element capturing the image name
// then use a button to save the image, close the window and update the database with all the info
// and relaod the main page with a location.reload
$('#imagePreview').attr('src', thumb );
$('#imageName').html(thumb);
$('#imagePreview').click(function(){
rebinder();
});
} else {
alert("no thumbnail");
}
});
$( "body:first" ).append( jFrame );
jThis
.attr( "action", "upload_act_single.cfm" )
.attr( "method", "post" )
.attr( "enctype", "multipart/form-data" )
.attr( "encoding", "multipart/form-data" )
.attr( "target", strName );
});
I'm thinking I must have some syntax errors messing up the works but I'm new enough to this to not see it. When I use the alert to call out the objData variable it says 'undefined' in Safari. It acts like it
|
stackexchange
|
One of conventional manufacturing methods of MOS type LDD structure transistors is illustrated in FIGS. 1A to 1F. First in this method, a transfer gate oxide film 3 is formed in an element forming region surrounded by an element isolation insulating film 2 on a P-type semiconductor substrate 1 by so-called LOCOS (Local Oxidation of Silicon) method (FIG. 1A). Next, for controlling the threshold voltage, p-type impurity such as boron ion is directed all over the semiconductor substrate 1 to form ion-implanted regions 4 (FIG. 1B). Subsequently, a polysilicon film is deposited all over the transfer gate oxide film 3 by the low pressure CVD (Chemical Vapor Deposition) method to form a transfer gate electrode 5 by the photolithography technique and the reactive ion etching technique (FIG. 1C). Alternatively, as the transfer gate electrode 5, a two-layer film of refractory metal such as tungsten, molybdenum and titanium or silicidized version thereof, and polysilicon can be used in place of the polysilicon. Phosphorus ions are doped into the transfer gate electrode 5 to increase its conductivity. In this case, the transfer gate electrode 5 becomes n-type, which is the same as that of the channel or the source/drain. Accordingly, even when a gate voltage is not applied to the transfer gate electrode 5, the p-type channel surface is in such a state as a positive gate voltage is effectively applied because of the difference between work functions of the n-type transfer gate electrode 5 and the p-type channel surface.
This is described as follows according to the band theory. First, with no n type transfer gate electrode 5 on the channel surface, bands of the transfer gate electrode 5, transfer gate oxide film 3 and the p type semiconductor substrate 1 appear as shown in FIG. 1G. When a transfer gate electrode 5 is formed on the channel surface with a transfer gate oxide film 3 provided therebetween, the bands change as shown in FIG. 1H. The change of bands occurs because the Fermi level E.sub.FG of the transfer gate electrode 5 and the Fermi level E.sub.FS of the semiconductor substrate 1 become equal to produce balanced conditions and the band in the vicinity of the surface of the semiconductor substrate 1 is bent downwards under the effect of the electric field by the transfer gate electrode 5. After forming the transfer gate 5, as shown in FIG. 1H, free electrons are induced in
|
uspto_backgrounds
|
Craftsbury Academy
Craftsbury Academy is a term that is generally applied to the high school portion of the Craftsbury School System located in Craftsbury, Orleans County, Vermont, although occasionally it is extended to include the middle school as well, because it shares many resources with the high school.
The school has operated continuously since 1832, making it one of the oldest in the state. It faces Craftsbury Common. In the 21st century various building projects have upgraded the aging facilities, including a complete renovation of the old Academy Building, the annex (a relocated historic church converted into classroom space), and the World War II Memorial gymnasium. Once the renovations are complete the school board has stated that the campus will be up to modern building codes, and will be among the most energy efficient schools in New England.
History
Craftsbury Academy was incorporated in October, 1829. The early school held classes in foreign languages, fine arts, and other liberal arts. The founders intended to support the school with the lease or development of on land belonging to the school, a typical hope of the time.
The first building was erected in 1832, a two-story brick structure. This structure became unsound and was replaced by a wood structure in 1868. This building, together with most of the school furniture, was destroyed by fire in 1879. With the insurance money and the subscriptions of the townspeople a new building was erected, designed to accommodate about eighty pupils.
A campus structure, Minden Hall, preserves the original name of the town. This building contains the middle school portion of the Craftsbury School System, although many resources are shared with other grade levels. Minden Hall was built in 1980 and has been lightly renovated as part of the much more intensive renovations being done on the older structures on campus.
Academics
Craftsbury Schools offers a K-12 education program. The high school program includes instruction in science, social studies, mathematics, and English comparable to neighboring schools, and also offers a range of electives including arts, physical education, and Spanish. In 2012, Craftsbury Academy began a partnership with The Virtual High School, which allows students access to a range of online elective courses.
In September classes hike local mountains. In January and February students participate in the Physical Education program, which gives students various options for off-campus physical education opportunities, including ice skating, downhill
|
wikipedia_en
|
[Proof.]{} Let us compute the function $K_{22}=-iW$ given by (\[kmatrix\]). We have $$K = \Psi_0 S^{-1}(\Phi_0, \Psi_0) \Gamma \Phi_0^\top \Gamma^{-1} =$$ $$\Psi_0 S^{-1} \left(\begin{array}{cc} 0 & 1 \\ -1 & 0 \end{array}\right)
\left(\begin{array}{cc} \varphi_1 & \varphi_2 \\ -\bar{\varphi}_2 & \bar{\varphi}_1 \end{array}\right)
\left(\begin{array}{cc} 0 & -1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{array}\right) =$$ $$=
\frac{1}{|r|^2}
\left(\begin{array}{cc} \psi_1 & -\bar{\psi}_2 \\ \psi_2 & \bar{\psi}_1 \end{array}\right)
\left(\begin{array}{cc} -ix^3 + x^4 & x^1 + ix^2 \\ -x^1 +ix^2 & ix^3 + x^4 \end{array}\right)
\left(\begin{array}{cc} \bar{\varphi}_1 & \bar{\varphi}_2 \\ -\varphi_2 & \varphi_1 \end{array}\right),$$ where $|r|^2 = \sum_{k=1}^3 (x^k)^2$, and conclude that, by (\[normal\]), $$K_{22} = \frac{1}{|r|^2} (x^1
(\psi_2\varphi_1 -\bar{\psi}_1\bar{\varphi}_2)+ ix^2 (\psi_2\varphi_1 +\bar{\psi}_1\bar{\varphi}_1)+ ix^3
(\bar{\psi}_1\varphi_1 - \psi_2 \bar{\varphi}_2) +$$ $$+ x^4 (\bar{\psi}_1 \varphi_1 + \psi_2 \bar{\varphi}_2) ) = - \frac{i}{|r|^2} \langle r, \p\rangle.$$ Proposition is proved.
An integrable example of “conformal” transformations of the spectral curve and of the Floquet functions
=======================================================================================================
Let the potential $U$ is double-
|
arxiv
|
Random.seed!(1793) # now use deviations
out_dev = impulse_responses(dsgevar, jlddata["data"], deviations = true, normalize_rotation = false)
Random.seed!(1793) # flip shock
out_dev_flip = impulse_responses(dsgevar, jlddata["data"], deviations = true,
flip_shocks = true, normalize_rotation = false)
Random.seed!(1793) # draw shock
out_dev_draw = impulse_responses(dsgevar, jlddata["data"], deviations = true,
draw_shocks = true, normalize_rotation = false)
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq jlddata["rotation_irf_by_shock"] out
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq jlddata["flip_rotation_irf_by_shock"] out_flip
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq out out_MM1
@test !(out ≈ out_MM2)
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq out out_X̂
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq jlddata["rotation_irf_draw_shock"] out_draw
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq out_dev jlddata["deviations_rotation_irf_by_shock"]
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq out_dev_draw jlddata["deviations_rotation_irf_draw_shock"]
@test @test_matrix_approx_eq out_dev -out_dev_flip
end
@testset "Impulse responses of a VAR approximation to a DSGE (or λ = ∞)" begin
m = AnSchorfheide()
m <= Setting(:impulse_response_horizons, 10)
Random.seed!(1793)
observables = [:obs_gdp, :obs_nominalrate, :z_t]
shocks = collect(keys(m.exogenous_shocks))
fp = dirname(@__FILE__)
jlddata = load(joinpath(fp, "../../../reference/var_approx_dsge_irfs
|
github
|
We use cookies
to optimise your experience on our website.
If you continue we'll assume that you are happy to receive our cookies.
However, if you would like to, you can
change your cookie settings
at any time.
Contacting Rightmove
Selling or renting your home and would like to advertise on Rightmove?
That's great! Simply select from one of our many member agents advertising in your area, enter your location in to our
'Agents' search, then select and instruct your property with your chosen Rightmove member agent.
Property professionals
Interested in how Rightmove can support the growth of your business? We would love to talk to you about how we can support your business in promoting your properties and brand in the largest property marketplace. If you are setting up a new business or have years of experience behind you we are here and happy to help you.
If you would like to speak with one of our experts about how we can support your business and are interested in joining Rightmove contact us using the below links.
Estate & Lettings Agents
To become a member contact join_us@rightmove.co.uk
Existing members contact customersupport@rightmove.co.uk
New Homes Developers & Housing Associations
To become a member contact joinnewhomes@rightmove.co.uk
Existing members contact newhomes.developers@rightmove.co.uk
Non-residential Agents & Landlords
To become a member contact commercial@rightmove.co.uk
Existing members contact commercial.support@rightmove.co.uk
Need some help?
For anything else please contact talk-to-us@rightmove.co.uk
Accessibility
If you are experiencing any accessibility issues with Rightmove.co.uk, please let us know by emailing accessibility@rightmove.co.uk.
Overseas property owners/advertisers
Rightmove Overseas is our dedicated overseas property site where developers, agents and owners of overseas property can advertise their property abroad for sale.
Private Sellers
If you own a property overseas and are looking to advertise, please click here
Estate Agents
If you are an Estate Agent with properties outside of the UK, please click here
Developers
If you are a developer with a
|
pile-cc
|
Let b(n) = -4*n**2. Let h(i) = 4*i**2 - 3*i. Let c(l) be the first derivative of l**3 - l**2 + 1. Let a(j) = 6*c(j) - 4*h(j). Calculate a(b(p)).
32*p**4
Let p(j) = j**2. Let x(g) be the first derivative of 2 - g**2 + 0*g**2 + 0*g**2. Determine p(x(i)).
4*i**2
Let a(j) be the first derivative of 0*j**2 + 0*j + 1 + 2/3*j**3. Let c(u) = -2*u**2. What is a(c(r))?
8*r**4
Let f(y) = -y**2. Let v(u) = 0 + 0 + 34*u**2 - 18*u**2. What is f(v(k))?
-256*k**4
Let q(c) = 2*c**2. Let d(b) = -3*b**2 - 4. Let m(x) = -x**2 - 1. Let r(l) = d(l) - 4*m(l). Determine r(q(i)).
4*i**4
Let w(r) = -4*r**2. Let x(o) be the second derivative of o**3/6 - o. What is x(w(u))?
-4*u**2
Let v(w) = -3*w. Let c(j) = -2*j**2 - 3*j**2 + 6*j**2. Give c(v(y)).
9*y**2
Let q(g) = -2*g. Let o(b) = -310*b**2 + 2. Calculate q(o(v)).
620*v**2 - 4
Let c(k) = 86*k**2. Let q(v) = -3*v**2 - 4*v - 4. Let o(n) = n**2 + n + 1. Let p(f) = -4*o(f) - q(
|
dm_mathematics
|
call and return the call as soon as possible.
Thank you.
INTERNAL INTERCOM/EMAIL LIST
Alexey Golubov
Alex@pira.com
Allan Stewart
astewart@pira.com
AJ Conley
ajconley@pira.com
Bill Fuller
billfuller@pira.com
Bill Kraeff
|
enron_emails
|
Before: LEAVY, HAWKINS, and TALLMAN, Circuit Judges.
Arturo Leon-Vazquez, a native and citizen of Mexico, petitions pro se for
review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ order dismissing his appeal from an
immigration judge’s decision denying cancellation of removal. We have
jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252. We review for substantial evidence the
*
This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent
except as provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3.
**
The panel unanimously concludes this case is suitable for decision
without oral argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2).
agency’s factual findings, and review de novo questions of law. Najmabadi v.
Holder, 597 F.3d 983, 986 (9th Cir. 2010). We deny the petition for review.
Substantial evidence supports the agency’s finding that Leon-Vazquez was
confined to a penal institution for an aggregate period of more than 180 days
during the statutory time period, and therefore cannot show good moral character
for cancellation of removal. See 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101(f)(7), 1229b(b)(1)(B); Arreguin-
Moreno v. Mukasey, 511 F.3d 1229, 1233 (9th Cir. 2008) (“[W]hen pre-trial
detention is credited against the sentence imposed upon conviction, the period of
pre-trial detention must be considered as confinement as a result of a conviction
within the meaning of § 1101(f)(7).”)
We reject Leon-Vazquez’s challenges to the good moral character
requirement. See Romero-Ochoa v. Holder, 712 F.3d 1328, 1331 (9th Cir. 2013)
(concluding that 8 U.S.C. § 1101(f)(7) is constitutional in the context of
cancellation of removal and voluntary departure under 8 U.S.C. §§ 1229b(b)(1),
1229c(b)(1)).
PETITION FOR REVIEW DENIED.
2 16-740
|
freelaw
|
~~~
syllogism
Thanks!
Yeah the active learning is one reason we made it a downloadable tool. We
couldn't figure out how to make that work well as a SaaS.
That said, there's definitely advantages to the SaaS design too, so I think
the products take different shapes. It's good to see more tools in this space,
and your free usage for open data plan should be really useful for
researchers.
~~~
brd
Could you elaborate on the reasons you didn't go SaaS? Were there other
reasons besides technical configurability and sheer scale of data?
To provide a little context, we're currently building an annotation tool that
will be accessible by clients and seriously considered prodigy. I'm curious to
know what pitfalls we may not be anticipating with that model.
P.S. Your work on SpaCy is nothing short of awesome. Thanks you.
~~~
syllogism
Well, a major consideration is that uploading data to a third party is a huge
barrier. Imagine you want to work on internal messages between your users, or
support tickets, or emails within your company. Because spaCy is open-source,
we already had a lot of users where data privacy was a 100% non-negotiable
requirement. There are already a lot of people doing cloud stuff, so it made a
lot of sense for us to think about self-hosted tools.
We also had a slightly different idea about what makes annotation or data
collection "hard" or painful.
If you start back at a business or product need, you first have to sketch out
how you're going to structure your solution before you can start annotating
the data. For instance, you might need to decide whether to do sentence
classification, or tag spans of text, or recognize structured relations. You
need to figure out how to select which texts to annotate, or which parts.
Maybe your documents are long, and it's efficient to annotate only the start
of the document. Maybe the information is rare, and a lot of effort should go
into getting the right filtering process before you annotate your text.
These types of considerations are really basic -- they arise on every new
thing you do. You can develop better or worse intuitions, but in the end you
have to
|
hackernews
|
The Molecular Medicine Training Program of the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine is specifically designed to train pre-doctoral students to take scientific advances from bench to bedside. It takes advantage of four factors to create an environment particularly suited to this purpose. First, this Program is located in the Lerner Research Institute where physicians and scientists from both the Cleveland Clinic and the School of Medicine have historically worked closely together to focus cutting edge research upon the causes and treatments of human illness. Second, a novel core curriculum has
|
nih_exporter
|
The adverse mental health of carers: Does the patient diagnosis play a role?
The adverse mental health effects of caring have been studied, frequently in carers of people with dementia. Less is known about the mental health of carers of people with other conditions. This study compared depression and burden in older carers looking after people with a variety of conditions. Over 200 older carers interested in participating in the Improving Mood through Physical Activity in Carers and Care-recipient Trial were included in
|
pubmed_abstracts
|
Mycobacterial mmpL proteins have been well documented to be involved in the biosynthesis and export of cell wall lipid constituents, and play a role in mycobacterium pathogenesis^[@CR38]^. In addition, recent studies on VDAC have generated strong evidence on its association/interaction with host lipids^[@CR39],\ [@CR40]^. The ability of VDAC to influence the cholesterol distribution of mitochondrial membrane has been also recently demonstrated^[@CR41]^, and cholesterol and ergosterol have been found to form complex with purified VDAC protein^[@CR42]^. It also has been established that the oligomerization of VDAC can be significantly influenced by lipids^[@CR40]^. In attempts to investigate the possible relation between VDAC, mmpL4 proteins and *M. avium* surface-associated lipid export into macrophages, we pretreated THP-1 cells with DIDS for 4 hours and then infected cells with Texas red hydrazide-labeled *M. avium*. The DIDS was kept up to 24 h in the culture medium and lipid release from bacterial surface was analyzed by fluorescent microscopy. THP-1 cells without DIDS treatment served as a control. As previously identified by Beatty *et al*.^[@CR15]^, the extensive release of the Texas red label from mycobacterial surface was observed at 24 h post-infection of THP-1 (Fig. [5A](#Fig5){ref-type="fig"}). In contrast, macrophages treated with DIDS had the red fluorescent label markedly contained within *M. avium* phagosomes, suggesting the involvement of VDAC in bacterial cell wall component translocation. Evaluation of two hundred *M. avium*-infected THP-1 cells without DIDS treatment confirmed the observation that majority (87%) of the host macrophages permeated the red fluorescence that was released from the Texas Red-labeled bacteria. Conversely, only 19% of the DIDS treated macrophages had a positive staining (Fig. [5B](#Fig5){ref-type="fig"}). Results were further confirmed using the flow cytometry (Fig. [5C](#Fig5){ref-type="fig"}). To insure that the fluorescent labeling of host cells was not the result of *M. avium* presence in the cytosol, the percentage of Rab5 positive phagosomes were calculated in THP-1 cells with and without DIDS treatment and the co-localization rate of Rab5 in both groups were observed to be similar (Fig. [5D](#Fig5){
|
pubmed_central
|
SQL - how to select all rows between two tables with relations,
First of all, I'm sorry with my bad english.
I wanted to select all row in this two table (Company and Contacts), but when there's a related data between two tables then display as 1 rows.
Table Company:
+---------+-----------+----------+
| cmpy_id | Company | Cntct_id |
+---------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Company 1 | 1 |
| 2 | Company 2 | |
| 3 | Company 3 | |
+---------+-----------+----------+
Table Contacts:
+----------+-----------+
| Cntct_id | Contact |
+----------+-----------+
| 1 | Contact 1 |
| 2 | Contact 2 |
| 3 | Contact 3 |
+----------+-----------+
Result I need:
+-----------+------------+
| Contact | Company |
+-----------+------------+
| Contact 1 | Company 1 |
| Contact 2 | |
| Contact 3 | |
| | Company 2 |
| | Company 3 |
+-----------+------------+
How can i achieve that result?
A:
SELECT Contact,Company
FROM Contacts contact
LEFT JOIN Company company ON company.Cntct_id=contact.Cntct_id
UNION
SELECT Contact,Company
FROM Contacts contact
RIGHT JOIN Company company ON company.Cntct_id=contact.Cntct_id;
Explanation:
First LEFT JOIN would get us all the records from the left table(Table:Contacts) regardless of whether or not they have a match in the right table(Table : Company), like this:
SELECT Contact,Company
FROM Contacts contact
LEFT JOIN Company company ON company.Cntct_id=contact.Cntct_id;
Contact Company
==============================
Contact 1 Company 1
Contact 2 NULL
Contact 3 NULL
Then the second RIGHT JOIN would get us all the records from the right table(Table : Company) regardless of whether or not they have a match in the left table(Table:Contacts), like this:
SELECT Contact,Company
FROM Contacts
|
stackexchange
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.