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The recent release of Pokémon Go has ushered in a new set of challenges for parents and pediatricians, highlighting the importance of parents setting guidelines for video game use with their children. Within 1 week of its launch, the game attracted over 65 million users, many of whom are young children. Despite the potential benefits of the game described in our article, this location-based game format poses specific threats to the safety and physical wellbeing of children. Reports have discussed both the benefits and adverse effects of this extremely | pubmed_abstracts |
Introduction {#sec1-1}
============
Androgens (testosterone and dihydrotestosterone) act through androgen receptor (AR) and this interaction is required for normal prostate development (Roy et al., 1999; Cunha et al., 1987). It is believed that prostatic carcinogenesis is androgen mediated, however serum androgens can't promote carcinogenesis alone, hence functional status of androgen receptor (AR) is the most important mediator of prostate cancer progression. Low serum testosterone in prostate cancer patients was found to be associated with high AR expression which in turn is linked to higher Gleason score (Schatzl et al., 2002). Recent studies also revealed that high AR expression was correlated with disease progression and lower recurrence free survival (Lee, 2003). Quantitative immunohistochemical (IHC) expression of AR has not been evaluated as a prognostic biomarker of prostate cancer in our population, therefore in the current study we aimed to evaluate the association of AR expression with various prognostic parameters like tumor quantification, gleason score, WHO grade group and perineural invasion.
Materials and Methods {#sec1-2}
=====================
Case Selection: Total 121 cases of biopsy proven prostatic acinar adenocarcinoma were selected from records of pathology department archives. All patients underwent surgeries at Liaquat National hospital, Karachi from January 2013 till December 2017 over a period of 5 years. The study was approved by research and ethical review committee of Liaquat National Hospital and informed written consent was taken from all patients at the time of surgery. Hematoxylin and eosin stained slides and paraffin blocks were retrieved and new sections were cut where necessary. Slides of all cases were reviewed by two senior histopathologists and pathologic characteristics like Gleason score, WHO grade, tumor quantification, perineural and lymphovascular invasion were evaluated. Specimens included prostatic chips and radical prostatectomies. Moreover, representative tissue blocks of all 121 cases were selected for AR immunohistochemistry (IHC).
Androgen Receptor (AR) Immunohistochemistry: AR IHC was performed using DAKO EnVision method using monoclonal mouse anti-human androgen receptor; clone AR441 according to manufacturer's protocol (dilution of 1:50). Nuclear staining for AR was both quantitatively and qualitatively evaluated. Intensity of staining was scored into no staining (0), weak (1+), intermediate (2+), strong (3+) while percentage of positively stained cells were scored as continuous variable ([figure 1](#F1){ref-type="fig"}). Intensity and percentage scores | pubmed_central |
Q:
mpich cluster test error, unable to change wdir
I have built up a mpich2 cluster, and the machinefile is:
pc3@ub3:4 # this will spawn 4 process on ub3
pc1@ub1 # this will spawn 1 process on ub1
when I run the test process, it should print:
Hello from processor 0 of 8
Hello from processor 1 of 8
Hello from processor 2 of 8
Hello from processor 3 of 8
Hello from processor 4 of 8
Hello from processor 5 of 8
Hello from processor 6 of 8
Hello from processor 7 of 8
But it returned:
pc1@ub1:~$ mpiexec -n 8 -f machinefile ./mpi_hello
[proxy:0:0@ub3] launch_procs (./pm/pmiserv/pmip_cb.c:648): unable to change wdir to /home/pc1 (No such file or directory)
[proxy:0:0@ub3] HYD_pmcd_pmip_control_cmd_cb (./pm/pmiserv/pmip_cb.c:893): launch_procs returned error
[proxy:0:0@ub3] HYDT_dmxu_poll_wait_for_event (./tools/demux/demux_poll.c:77): callback returned error status
[proxy:0:0@ub3] main (./pm/pmiserv/pmip.c:206): demux engine error waiting for event
[mpiexec@ub1] control_cb (./pm/pmiserv/pmiserv_cb.c:202): assert (!closed) failed
[mpiexec@ub1] HYDT_dmxu_poll_wait_for_event (./tools/demux/demux_poll.c:77): callback returned error status
[mpiexec@ub1] HYD_pmci_wait_for_completion (./pm/pmiserv/pmiserv_pmci.c:197): error waiting for event
[mpiexec@ub1] main (./ui/mpich/mpiexec.c:331): process manager error waiting for completion
I have successfully enable passwordless SSH so that pc1 can | stackexchange |
Because large storage capacity is typically desired to maximize the amount of available storage in portable devices, it is typically desirable to utilize dynamic random access memory (DRAM), which has a relatively large storage capacity, over other types of memories such as static random access memories (SRAM) and non-volatile memories such as FLASH memory. In a DRAM, the data is xe2x80x9cdynamicxe2x80x9d because the data stored in memory cells in the DRAM must be periodically recharged or xe2x80x9crefreshedxe2x80x9d to maintain the data, as will now be explained in more detail with reference to FIG. 1. FIG. 1 illustrates a portion of a conventional DRAM memory-cell array 100 including a plurality of memory cells 102 arranged in rows and columns, one of which is shown in FIG. 1. The memory cell 102 includes an access transistor 104 and a storage capacitor 106 connected in series between a digit line DL and a reference voltage VCC/2. The storage capacitor 106 includes a first conductive plate 107 coupled to the access transistor 104 and a second conductive plate 109 coupled to the reference voltage VCC/2.
A word line WL activates the access transistor 104 in the memory cell 102, and also activates the access transistors of all other memory cells (not shown) contained in the same row of the array 100 as the memory cell 102. To write data into the memory cell 102, a sense amplifier 108 drives the digit line DL and a complementary digit line DL*to complementary voltage levels corresponding to the data to be stored in the memory cell. The word line WL is then activated, turning ON the access transistor 104 and transferring charge through the access transistor to charge the storage capacitor 106 to the voltage level on the digit line DL corresponding to the data to be stored. The word line WL is thereafter deactivated, turning OFF the access transistor 104 and isolating the storage capacitor 106 from the digit line DL to thereby store the data in the form of a voltage across the storage capacitor.
To read data from the memory cell 102, the sense amplifier 108 equilibrates the digit lines DL, DL* to a predetermined voltage level and thereafter activates the word line WL to turn ON the access transistor 104. In response to the access transistor 104 turning ON, charge is transferred between the storage capacitor 106 and the digit line DL, causing the voltage on the digit line DL to be slightly higher or lower than the voltage on the digit line DL*. The sense amplifier 108 | uspto_backgrounds |
Al-Marzuban
Al-Marzuban (), was the thirteenth ruler of the Bavand dynasty from 979 to 986. He was the son and successor of Rustam II. In some sources, his name was changed to Rustam ibn al-Marzuban, which caused confusion among the historians, and made them think that they were two people.
Biography
According to the historian Hilal al-Sabi', al-Marzuban had a sister named Sayyida Shirin, who was the wife of the Buyid ruler Fakhr al-Dawla, and mother of Majd al-Dawla. However, according to the Qabus-nama made by the Ziyarid ruler Keikavus (who was of Bavandid descent), Sayyida Shirin was the niece of al-Marzuban. There have been several confusions about the reign of the Bavandid kings after the death of Rustam II. In 986, al-Marzuban is not longer mentioned as the ruler of the Bavand dynasty, and a certain Sharwin III is instead mentioned.
A certain Shahriyar III is later mentioned as the ruler of the Bavand dynasty in the following year. al-Marzuban is then once again mentioned in sources, as the having deposed Shahriyar III, and restored himself as the ruler of the Bavand dynasty. In 998, Shahriyar III returned to Tabaristan with Ziyarid aid, and wrested the Bavandid capital of Perim from al-Marzuban. However, al-Marzuban, with Buyid aid, managed to quickly repel him from the city. Shahriyar III shortly made another counter-attack, and defeated al-Marzuban. Shahriyar III then ascended the Bavandid throne, and declared independence from Ziyarid rule. al-Marzuban used this opportunity to become the vassal of the Ziyarids, and regain his throne. Shahriyar III then fled to Ray, where he died in 1000. In 999, the famous Persian scholar Al-Biruni, visited the court of al-Marzuban.
Al-Marzuban probably reigned until 1006, when the Bavand dynasty was put to an end by the Ziyarid ruler Qabus. | wikipedia_en |
We note that every endo-trivial structure is also retract-trivial. However, the reverse implication is not necessarily true: in Figure \[fig:Tournament6\] we give an example of a structure that is retract-trivial but not endo-trivial. This example is based on a digraph but is not itself a digraph. It is also possible to construct a retract-trivial digraph that is not endo-trivial [@Si17], but on reflexive tournaments both concepts do coincide.
A reflexive tournament is endo-trivial if and only if it is retract-trivial. \[lem:endo-retraction-trivial\]
(Forwards.) Trivial. (Backwards.) By contraposition, suppose $e$ is a non-trivial endomorphism of a reflexive tournament ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$. Consider $e({\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}})$ and build some function $e^{-1}$ from $e({\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}})$ to ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$ by choosing $e^{-1}(y)=x$ if $e(x)=y$ arbitrarily. Since ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$ is a (reflexive) tournament, $e^{-1}$ is an isomorphism, whereupon $e^{-1} \circ e$ is the identity automorphism when restricted to some subtournament ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}_0$ of ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$. Hence $e^{-1} \circ e$ is a non-trivial retraction of ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$ (to ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}_0$).
Essential Unarity and a Dichotomy for Reflexive Directed Cycles {#sec:Benoit}
===============================================================
In this section we give the first concrete application, of which we are aware, of the aforementioned result of Chen, formally stated below.
Let ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$ be a finite structure whose universe $V({\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}})$ has size strictly greater than $1$. If each polymorphism of ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$ is essentially unary, then [Surjective ${\ensuremath{\mathrm{H}}}$-Colouring]{} is [$\mathsf{NP}$]{}-complete. \[thm:Chen-hauptsatz\]
In order to this, we make use of the endomorphism graph and a result from Mároti and Zádori [@marz | arxiv |
bool extraValueJob;
};
ItemAlbumModel::ItemAlbumModel(QObject* const parent)
: ItemThumbnailModel(parent),
d(new Private)
{
qRegisterMetaType<QList<ItemListerRecord>>("QList<ItemListerRecord>");
d->refreshTimer = new QTimer(this);
d->refreshTimer->setSingleShot(true);
d->incrementalTimer = new QTimer(this);
d->incrementalTimer->setSingleShot(true);
connect(d->refreshTimer, SIGNAL(timeout()),
this, SLOT(slotNextRefresh()));
connect(d->incrementalTimer, SIGNAL(timeout()),
this, SLOT(slotNextIncrementalRefresh()));
connect(this, SIGNAL(readyForIncrementalRefresh()),
this, SLOT(incrementalRefresh()));
connect(CoreDbAccess::databaseWatch(), SIGNAL(collectionImageChange(CollectionImageChangeset)),
this, SLOT(slotCollectionImageChange(CollectionImageChangeset)));
connect(CoreDbAccess::databaseWatch(), SIGNAL(searchChange(SearchChangeset)),
this, SLOT(slotSearchChange(SearchChangeset)));
connect(AlbumManager::instance(), SIGNAL(signalAlbumAdded(Album*)),
this, SLOT(slotAlbumAdded(Album*)));
connect(AlbumManager::instance(), SIGNAL(signalAlbumDeleted(Album*)),
this, SLOT(slotAlbumDeleted(Album*)));
connect(AlbumManager::instance(), SIGNAL(signalAlbumRenamed(Album*)),
this, SLOT(slotAlbumRenamed(Album*)));
connect(AlbumManager::instance(), SIGNAL(signalAlbumsCleared()),
this, SLOT(slotAlbumsCleared()));
connect(AlbumManager::instance(), SIGNAL(signalShowOnlyAvailableAlbumsChanged(bool)),
this, SLOT(setListOnlyAvailableImages(bool)));
}
ItemAlbumModel::~ItemAlbumModel()
{
if (d->jobThread)
{
d->jobThread->cancel();
d->jobThread = nullptr;
}
delete d;
}
QList | github |
1) Any defective merchandise purchased from TLG Canada must be reported within 48 hours from delivery of merchandise. Please check all merchandise upon receipt! Failure to do so, will result in a 20% re-stocking fee.
2) We will issue a Return Authorization Number to you once you report defective merchandise within 48 hours.
3) Any items not reported to us within 48 hours to be returned to our office, shipping will be paid by buyer and 20% restocking fee will apply.
4) All defective merchandise MUST be returned to us in originally received condition with all original packaging, accessories and labels. If important inner boxes or packaging are missing, you will receive only partial credit/refund.
5) Any defective merchandise reported within 48 hours or longer but NOT returned to us within 30 days of purchase will NOT be accepted and no refund will be issued whatsoever.
Missing Items:
5) Please report any missing item(s) within your shipment to us within 48 hours.
6) Upon verification of missing items, we will send the missing items within 48 hours.
7) Should you want a refund in place of your missing item(s), we will issue a refund within 48 hours (you should receive your refund within 5 to 10 business days from confirmation of process).
Out of Stock Items
Although we strive to have a 100% fill rate on our goods, periodic stock outs are inevitable. Should we be out of stock on any or all of your items in your order:
8) We will notify you by phone or email of the stock-out items.
9) Upon receiving your further instructions, we will either ship the order as is with backorder, or we will notify you as soon as all of your merchandise is received and ready for a complete ship.
Refunds
10) All refunds will be processed within 48 hours of return of goods to our facility and should be expected to be received by customer within 5-10 business days from confirmation.
Shipping
Our shipping hours are from 9-4pm Mon-Fri. We do not ship on weekends. Orders can take up to 72 business hours to ship from order time due to higher than anticipated volumes as of recent. Orders placed after 2pm and during weekends will be shipped out the following business day with the 48 hour clause in place at this time.
We can ship to virtually any address in the world. Note that | pile-cc |
15*i**2
Suppose 5*i - 5 = 35. Let b(q) = q**3 - 9*q**2 + 7*q + 8. Let a be b(i). Find the first derivative of 0*g**2 - 4*g**2 + a*g**2 + 2 + 3*g**2 wrt g.
-2*g
Let v(z) = z**2 - 1. Let d(m) = m + 8. Let b be d(-10). Let h(u) = 7*u**2 + 5*u - 2. Let y(q) = b*v(q) + h(q). What is the second derivative of y(j) wrt j?
10
Let n be (-1)/(-6) - (-28)/(-168). Let r(z) be the third derivative of n + 4*z**2 + 1/8*z**4 + 0*z + 2/3*z**3. What is the derivative of r(b) wrt b?
3
Let g(s) be the second derivative of s**5/20 - s**4/3 + 3*s**2/2 + s. Let m be g(4). What is the third derivative of 3 - 2*c**2 - m*c**3 - 5 + 2 wrt c?
-18
Let h(j) be the second derivative of j**5/2 - 3*j**4/4 - 9*j. Find the third derivative of h(w) wrt w.
60
Let y(i) be the second derivative of -7*i**6/15 + 2*i**2 - 10*i. Find the first derivative of y(s) wrt s.
-56*s**3
What is the first derivative of 89*m**2 + 31 + 125*m**2 - 186*m**2 wrt m?
56*m
Let z(h) be the second derivative of h**8/1680 + h**5/120 - h**3/3 + 2*h. Let f(m) be the second derivative of z(m). Find the second derivative of f(n) wrt n.
12*n**2
Let b = -26 + 28. Find the first derivative of 10 + 0*a**2 - 4 | dm_mathematics |
From: David W Delainey 08/15/2000 03:28 PM
Sent by: Kay Chapman
To: Tim Belden/HOU/ECT@ECT, Kevin M Presto/HOU/ECT@ECT, John
Arnold/HOU/ECT@ECT, Scott Neal/HOU/ECT@ECT, Hunter S Shively/HOU/ECT@ECT,
Phillip K Allen/HOU/ECT@ECT, | enron_emails |
Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
Philip F. Hudock, Reston, Virginia; James C.T. Hsia, McLean,
Virginia, for Appellant. Savalle C. Sims, Ross Q. Panko, ARENT FOX
LLP, Washington, DC, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
PER CURIAM:
King’s International Multimedia Co., Ltd. (“King’s”),
appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment and
awarding damages and injunctive relief in favor of Discovery
Licensing, Inc. (“Discovery”), in this breach of contract action.
We have reviewed the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal and
find no reversible error in the court’s decision to grant summary
judgment in Discovery’s favor. To the extent King’s contends that
the affidavits submitted by Discovery in support of its summary
judgment motion did not comply with Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e), we find
that King’s has waived its challenge by failing to file a motion to
strike the affidavits in the district court. Jones v.
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., 69 F.3d 712, 718 (4th Cir. 1995).
We also find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s denial
of King’s’ request to extend discovery pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(f), see Ingle v. Yelton, 439 F.3d 191, 195 (4th Cir. 2006)
(stating standard of review), or in the court’s refusal to appoint
a special master, see Meeropol v. Meese, 790 F.2d 942, 961 (D.C.
Cir. 1986) (stating standard of review).
Accordingly, we affirm for the reasons stated by the
district court at the summary judgment hearing held on October 30,
2006, and in its subsequent written order. Discovery Licensing,
Inc. v. King’s Int’l Multimedia Co., Ltd., No. 8:04-cv-04055-RWT
(D. Md. filed Nov. 1 | freelaw |
My personal trick is comics. Asterix and Tin Tin were great for me.
It's spoken language written down with drawings to help along the way.
All you find there will be needed on a daily basis so it's very efficient.
------
dghughes
Calling it a 'foreign' language sounds odd to me.
As a Canadian French is not foreign as in not a language of this nation even
though I don't speak it. Maybe foreign to the person not to your nation is
what's meant.
Even in the US Spanish wouldn't be even though English is the only unofficial
official language. Even French is part of US languages from parts of Maine to
my Acadian neighbours who went to Louisiana.
------
simonswords82
Yet another "article" that is just a copy/paste of a Quora post. Seems to be
happening with more frequency.
~~~
refurb
Is this how Quora is trying to create revenue? Doesn't seem like it's going to
get them very far.
~~~
simonswords82
Interesting point! I hadn't thought of that, I simply put it down to lazy
journalism.
------
tokenadult
I've been developing a FAQ on language learning as this interest is mentioned
on Hacker News from time to time. The article kindly submitted here mentions
learning French in France by a (native?) speaker of English who had previously
learned Spanish. All of those are Indo-European languages, more or less
cognate with one another. I've taken on some tougher language-learning
challenges over the years. As I learned Mandarin Chinese up to the level that
I was able to support my family for several years as a Chinese-English
translator and interpreter, I had to tackle several problems for which there
is not yet a one-stop-shopping software solution.
I hope the FAQ information below helps hackers achieve their dreams. For ANY
pair of languages, even closely cognate pairs of West Germanic languages like
English and Dutch, or Wu Chinese dialects like those of Shanghai and Suzhou,
the two languages differ in sound system, so that what is a phoneme in one
language is not a phoneme in the other language.
[http://www.sil.org/linguistics/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerm | hackernews |
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), an incurable malignancy of mature B-lymphocytes involves blood, bone marrow, and secondary lymphoid organs. A role of the tissue microenvironment in the pathogenesis of CLL is hypothesized based on in vitro observations but its contribution in vivo remain ill-defined. To elucidate effects of tumor host interactions in vivo we purified tumor cells from 24 treatment nave patients. Samples were obtained concurrently from blood, bone marrow and/or lymph node and analyzed by gene expression profiling. | nih_exporter |
[A two-step approach for modeling tree mortality in Larix olgensis plantation based on effects of thinning].
Ten permanent plots of Larix olgensis plantation were established in 1972 and 1974 at Jiangshanjiao and Mengjiagang forest farms in Heilongjiang Province, respectively. The plots including 8 thinning plots and 2 control plots were measured annually. The effects of thinning on the probability of plot mortality and individual tree mortality were analyzed. Based on the | pubmed_abstracts |
Focused Ion Beam-Scanning Electron Microscopy (FIB-SEM)
-------------------------------------------------------
Focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy was performed as described previously ([@B55]).
Statistical Analysis
--------------------
All statistical analyses were performed with GraphPad Prism 6. Normality of representative data from CFU counts (*n* = 30) and PI staining (*n* = 15) was verified by D'Agostino and Pearson omnibus normality test. The different samples were compared using one-way ANOVA with *p*-values obtained from Bonferroni's multiple comparisons test.
Author Contributions
====================
Conceptualization, LD, NV, DP-M, WV, MF, and JM; Methodology, LD, NV, MF, and JM; Formal analysis, LD; Investigation, LD, MJ, TV, JB, DM; Writing -- original draft, LD; Writing -- Review and Editing, LD, NV, DP-M, KV, WV, MF, and JM; Visualization, LD; Supervision, NV, MF, and JM.
Conflict of Interest Statement
==============================
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
**Funding.** LD received a fellowship from the Fund for Scientific Research, Flanders (FWO). This work was supported by grants from the FWO (G.0471.12N, G.0B25.15N, 1522214N), KUL-BOF (CREA/13/019) and the Interuniversity Attraction Poles-Belgian Science Policy Office IAP-BELSPO (IAP P7/28). WV was supported by the Wellcome Trust (101824/Z/13/Z).
We thank Daniel Kahne (Harvard University) for providing us with the HSC085, HSC078, and HSC071 strains; Abram Aertsen (KU Leuven) for the *E. coli* MG1655 *hupA-venus-Cm^R^* strain; and Michael VanNieuwenhze and Yves V. Brun (Indiana University) for the HADA dye. FIB-SEM was performed by Anneke Kremer at the Bio Imaging Core facility of UGhent, Belgium and Frédéric Font | pubmed_central |
Q:
Css and JS files doesn't minify and concatenate when use gulp-jade and gulp-useref
I'm new with gulp and I'm trying to concatenate and minify my JS and CSS files. I'm using Jade.
gulpfile.js
gulp.task('jade2html', function() {
return gulp.src('app/*.jade')
.pipe(jade({pretty: true}))
.pipe(gulp.dest('dist'));
})
gulp.task('useref', function() {
return gulp.src('app/*.jade')
.pipe(useref())
.pipe(gulpIf('*.js', uglify()))
.pipe(gulpIf('*.css', cssnano()))
.pipe(gulp.dest('dist'))
})
index.jade
// build:css css/style.min.css
link(rel='stylesheet', href='/css/style.css')
link(rel='stylesheet', href='/css/print.css')
// endbuild
// build:js js/main.min.js
script(src='js/lib/a-library.js')
script(src='js/lib/another-lib.js')
script(src='js/main.js')
// endbuild
When I run my task useref and then I check my main.min.js or style.min.css the files are empty. So, I'm missing some step?
(When I don't use Jade and use just HTML everything works well).
A:
You're piping Jade templates into useref(). However gulp-useref has no clue how to parse Jade. It only knows HTML.
That means you need to compile your Jade templates to HTML before you pipe them to useref(). Doing it in a separate task jade2html like you're trying to doesn't really work (at least not the way you're doing it). Besides you only really need one task to begin with:
gulp.task('useref', function() {
return gulp.src('app/*.jade')
.pipe(jade({pretty: true}))
.pipe(use | stackexchange |
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to data processors and more particularly to the timing of the instruction fetch and instruction execute phases of a microprocessor.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Data processors which execute a plurality of instructions stored in a memory are well known in the art. A typical prior art microprocessor includes a uni-directional address bus and a bidirectional data bus which are coupled to memories which store instructions and data operands. The microprocessor forces an address onto the address bus which corresponds to the location in memory of either an instruction word or a data word. The address is received by the memory and the addressed location is accessed. The accessed instruction or data word is then driven onto the data bus by the memory and transferred to the microprocessor during an instruction fetch or a data read cycle. Alternately, for a data write cycle, the microprocessor drives the data to be written onto the data bus and the data is transferred to the memory for storage. A typical instruction includes a first group of data bits often referred to as an opcode which specifies a particular operation to be performed on a data word. A second group of bits commonly referred to as an address field specifies the address of the particular data word or operand to be operated upon.
Data processors typically operate in a synchronous mode wherein each transfer of digital information is timed by various clock signals. The time required for the microprocessor to address an instruction in memory and receive the addressed instruction from memory is typically referred to as one machine cycle. Thus, a typical instruction requires two machine cycles, a first machine cycle to access or fetch the instruction from memory, and a second machine cycle to access the operand specified by the instruction. Since both machine cycles require the use of the data bus (the first to transmit the instruction and the second to transmit the operand), the next instruction may not be fetched until the subsequent or third machine cycle. Microprocessors have been disclosed which seek to overcome the limitations set forth above by overlapping fetch and execute cycles. However, these prior art microprocessors include several disadvantages, among which are the necessity for separate address and data busses for coupling the instruction memory to the microprocessor, and the necessity for two or more data busses for coupling an arithmetic-logic unit (ALU) to a memory used to store data operands. Therefore, it will be appreciated that a microprocessor which permits the overlap of fetch and execute cycles and which reduces the number of required digital busses is more efficient | uspto_backgrounds |
In 1970, while he was teaching in Fraserburg, he published "Klein manifes van ’n reisiger" ("Little manifest of a traveller"), and in 1977, while teaching in Port Elizabeth, he published "Hoera, hoera die ysman" ("Hooray, hooray the iceman"). Poetry about love was included in these two: he married Celién Nel from Fraserburg in 1973 while he was staying in Kenhardt. They have two daughters, Melita and Siobhan.
While staying in South-West Africa from 1978 until 1989, George completed his doctorate and published his first collection of short stories, "Tuin van klip en vuur" ("Garden of stone and fire"), as well as releasing another poetry collection, "Uit hierdie grys verblyf" ("From this grey existence"). Three of his dramas was performed by the University of Namibia.
His first book aimed at the youth, "Los my uit, paloekas!", received the silver Sanlam Prize in 1992, and "Die optog van die aftjoppers" received gold in 1994. The latter also received the highly acclaimed Scheepers Prize in 1995, as well as a nomination by the Children's Book Forum as IBBY Honour Book for the International Board on Books for Young People.
In 1994 his second collection of short stories appeared, entitled "Die donker melk van daeraad".
In 1997 he published 'n Staning onder sterre, a collection of poetry; Nuwe stemme, an omnibus of the works of eleven debut poets, which George arranged; and his first adult novel, Die onderskepper ("The Interceptor"), about a mysterious woman from the city. The latter won the 1998 W.A. Hofmeyr prize and came second place in the De Kat novel competition.
In 1998 "Pella lê ’n kruistog vêr", a selection from his previous collections, was published, as well as a youth novel, "Dana se jaar duisend", which again won the Sanlam prize for Youth literature.
The novel "Draaijakkals" was published in October 1999.
His radio drama, "Lig", won the third place in the RSG competition for 2000/2001.
Until his retirement, George was a lecturer at | wikipedia_en |
Quark Diagrams
--------------
![$O(\alpha_s)$ quark diagrams for $\pi\gamma^*\to\gamma$ with $\times$ representing the virtual photon vertex. []{data-label="fig1"}](ktlc1.eps)
The loop integrals associated with the $O(\alpha_s)$ quark diagrams in Figs. \[fig1\](a)-(f), where the $\bar q$ quark carries the momentum $k=(xP_1^+,0,{\bf k}_T)$ and the $q$ quark carries $\bar k\equiv P_1-k$, are written, in the Feynman gauge, as $$\begin{aligned}
G^{(1)}_a(x,Q^2,k_T)&=& \frac{-i}{2}g^2C_F \mu^{2\epsilon}
\int\frac{d^{4-2\epsilon}l}{(2\pi)^{4-2\epsilon}}tr\left[
\not\epsilon\frac{\not P_2-\not k}{(P_2-k)^2}\gamma_\mu\frac{\not
\bar k}{\bar k^2}\gamma^\nu \frac{\not \bar k-\not l}{(\bar
k-l)^2}\gamma_\nu\not P_1\gamma_5\right] \frac{1}{l^2}\;,
\label{pga}\\
G^{(1)}_b(x,Q^2,k_T)&=& \frac{-i}{2}g^2C_F \mu^{2\epsilon}
\int\frac{d^{4-2\epsilon}l}{(2\pi)^{4-2\epsilon}}
tr\left[\gamma^\nu \frac{\not k-\not l}{(k-l)^2}\gamma_\nu
\frac{\not k}{k^2}\not\epsilon\frac{\not P_2-\not
k}{(P_2-k)^2}\gamma_\mu\not P_1 \gamma_5\right]
\frac{1}{l^2}\;, \label{pgb}\\
G^{(1)}_c(x,Q^2,k_T)&=&-ig^2C_F \mu^{2\epsilon}
\int\frac{d^{4-2\epsilon}l}{(2\pi | arxiv |
if( h != 0 )
{
*thread = h;
return 0;
}
else
{
return EAGAIN;
}
}
int pthread_join( pthread_t thread, void ** /*value_ptr*/ )
{
::WaitForSingleObject( thread, INFINITE );
::CloseHandle( thread );
return 0;
}
#endif
// template<class F> int lw_thread_create( pthread_t & pt, F f );
namespace boost
{
namespace detail
{
class lw_abstract_thread
{
public:
virtual ~lw_abstract_thread() {}
virtual void run() = 0;
};
#if defined( BOOST_HAS_PTHREADS )
extern "C" void * lw_thread_routine( void * pv )
{
std::auto_ptr<lw_abstract_thread> pt( static_cast<lw_abstract_thread *>( pv ) );
pt->run();
return 0;
}
#else
unsigned __stdcall lw_thread_routine( void * pv )
{
std::auto_ptr<lw_abstract_thread> pt( static_cast<lw_abstract_thread *>( pv ) );
pt->run();
return 0;
}
#endif
template<class F> class lw_thread_impl: public lw_abstract_thread
{
public:
explicit lw_thread_impl( F f ): f_( f )
{
}
void run()
{
f_();
}
private:
F f_;
};
template<class F> int lw_thread_create( pthread_t & pt, F f )
{
std::auto_ptr<lw_abstract_thread> p( new lw_thread_impl<F>( f ) );
int r = pthread_create( &pt, 0, lw_thread_routine, p.get() );
if( r == 0 )
{
p.release | github |
Love Problem And Solution In Vadodara
Love Problem And Solution In Vadodara
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Love Problem And Solution In Vadodara is a strong or really useful way, Apart from that, if you are dealing with love issues in your existence then you have to consult with love troubles solution Pandit ji because he has many years exquisite journey in their lifestyles associated to their work. Along with it, he is a gold medalist in his subject in his life. Apart from that, he is honored by using the government many instances in his lifestyles due to his great work. Along with it, Love Problem And Solution In Vadodara Pandit ji presents you some different facilities for the duration of cure of your problems | pile-cc |
Let l(h) = h. Let q be l(1). Suppose 4*k = 14*k + 20. Sort 3, k, q in ascending order.
k, q, 3
Let r(d) = -d**3 - 15*d**2 - d - 20. Let g be r(-15). Let c be (16 - 17) + g + 1. Sort 1, c, -1 in decreasing order.
1, -1, c
Let h be -3 - (3 + 9/(-3)). Suppose -2*w - 4*u = -30, -5*u = -4*w + 2*w - 15. Put w, 2, h, 6 in descending order.
6, w, 2, h
Suppose 0 = -3*m + 9 - 3. Let i be (-1 + 1)/(m + -3). Let l be (-10 + 572/39)*3/2. Sort i, l, -3.
-3, i, l
Let o = 3.9 + 1.1. Suppose 998*d - 965*d - 99 = 0. Put d, o, -2/5 in descending order.
o, d, -2/5
Let s = 32 - 27. Suppose 12 = s*t - 13. Put 2, -5, t, 1 in descending order.
t, 2, 1, -5
Let w = -2 + 3. Let h = 215 - 215. Put w, 2, -5, h in increasing order.
-5, h, w, 2
Suppose 34*w - 7 = 39*w - f, -4*w + 3*f = 10. Put w, -6, -4 in ascending order.
-6, -4, w
Let i(g) = 22*g - 237. Let a be i(11). Put -1, a, -9, -4 in decreasing order.
a, -1, -4, -9
Let c = -79 + -52. Let q = c - -136. Let k = 0.2 + -0.3. Sort k, q, 9 in increasing order.
k, q, 9
Let t = -33 + 18. Let a = t - -18. Let l = 12 + -107/9. Put | dm_mathematics |
-----Original Message-----
From: Landry, Chad
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 10:37 AM
To: Blanchard, Timothy; Bass, Eric; Lenhart, Matthew
Subject: what are teh odds
of this merger not going through? a pwr trader that reliant's ice (trading platform) is having record breaking days. just glad i never believed the "hype'
ck | enron_emails |
1. Timing of the Assessment or Definition of Tax Liability
Amstar claims that its tax liability was "well defined at the time it made its remittance" to the IRS. (Def.Mem. at 4). Amstar contends that its remittance was a payment because, inter alia, Amstar made precise calculations to determine the amount of the tax due, rather than simply making a lump sum payment. (Id. at 4-5, 8-9). The IRS counters that remittances made by a taxpayer and designated as cash deposits prior to the issuance of a notice of deficiency are treated as cash deposits. (Gov't Opp. at 16); see also Rev. Proc. 84-58 at 502, § 4.02 ("A remittance made before the mailing of a notice of deficiency that is designated by the taxpayer in writing as a deposit in the nature of a cash bond will be treated as such by the [IRS].").
At the time of payment by Amstar, by check dated December 13, 1990, Amstar had received a Notice of Proposed Adjustment ("NOPA") from the IRS, dated August 28, 1990. (Gowan Decl., Ex. 14; Def. *242 Mem. at 4-5).[11] Amstar's remittance was sent before the IRS had audited Amstar's 8908 return, issued a notice of deficiency, or otherwise assessed tax liability. The fact that an assessment had not yet been made suggestsâ but is not conclusive of the conclusionâ that the 1990 remittance was a deposit rather than a payment. See, e.g., Crosby v. United States, 889 F.Supp. 143, 146-47 (D.Vt.1995).
2. Amstar's Intent
The cover letter accompanying the remittance check to the IRS states: "We respectfully request that this deposit be identified as a cash bond in your records." (Gowan Decl., Ex. 24). Amstar seeks to diminish the significance of its (own) language by claiming that "Mr. Twenty's letter was simply a cover letter for the check" and "Mr. Twenty was not authorized to waive interest for Amstar." (Def.Mem. at 11). Amstar also asserts that circumstantial evidence would demonstrate an intent to make a payment of tax because Amstar: (i) did not remit the money under protest; (ii) deducted the interest remitted from | freelaw |
Lot's of real-person reviews exist on many platforms, and reading through a
few often gives you a decent idea of what you're getting yourself into.
Paid-for reviews are certainly a scourge, and one business getting loyalists
to down-vote a competitor is also a problem. But that's been a thing since the
beginning of recommendation features, and we should celebrate a little bit
that we're more hip and conscious today to these operations.
~~~
ghaff
The real question is: What is the alternative?
There are some useful review sites like Wirecutter that arguably cut through
the clutter in a lot of cases. But the amount of "stuff" and experiences (e.g.
restaurants) out there is pretty overwhelming for what's left of professional
reviewers outside of some fairly narrow domains.
I do a lot of travel. Are Yelp and TripAdvisor reviews of restaurants great?
Not really. Are they generally better--given _some_ critical mass--than
picking a restaurant at random or because it has a cool name? Almost
certainly. (Of course, online menus and the like can be somewhat useful as
well.)
~~~
rorykoehler
We're building Bibimapp so you can get recommendations from your direct and
extended network. Personal recommendations from people you trust.
[https://bibimapp.com](https://bibimapp.com)
~~~
frutiger
Off-topic: is the name related to this delicious Korean dish?
[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibimbap](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibimbap)
~~~
interestica
It has to be. This article has peaked my cynicism and I suspect your comment
is just intended to seem like an organic response to legitimize that app plug.
To keep it on topic, I suppose that's the result of the modern review-scape:
I'm sceptical of any review or comment about a product.
~~~
defined
Nitpick: “piqued”, not “peaked” (though it’s a homonym)
~~~
interestica
Weird. I know this. Maybe I added it in to make my comment seem more
legitimate and to trigger a response. ;) All swell that ends | hackernews |
Schizophrenia (SZ) is undoubtedly etiologically heterogeneous with contribution to risk from both genetic and non-genetic factors. The identification of etiologically more homogeneous groups is important to developing our knowledge about the multiple pathophysiological pathways that are associated with SZ etiology. In this study, we will examine SZ etiology from a new perspective by incorporating data on individual exposure to Toxoplasma gondii (Toxo), a well supported SZ risk factor, into our existing genome-wide association | nih_exporter |
The compressible silicone rubber prosthesis in temporomandibular joint disease.
An alternative technique for temporomandibular joint arthroplasty is described, in which the mandibular condyle is replaced by a soft compressible silicone rubber prosthesis. A modified Nicolle-Calnan metacarpo-phalangeal joint prosthesis was used to reconstruct 31 joints in 24 patients. Results suggest that in those patients where there has been no loss of the prosthesis, function continues to be markedly improved when compared with the pre | pubmed_abstracts |
Participants
------------
Twenty-two female and 7 male V elderly living in a vegetarian senior citizens home in the Netherlands (female: 84.1 ± 5.1yrs, male: 80.5 ± 7.5yrs) and 23 female and 7 male NV elderly living in a regular senior citizens home in the Dutch speaking part of Belgium (female: 84.3 ± 5.0yrs, male: 80.6 ± 7.3yrs) volunteered to participate in this study. All subjects were \"apparently healthy\", which was defined as free of major disease or physical handicap. In agreement with the university ethics committee, all participants received explanation about the purpose and procedures of the study and signed an informed consent statement before participating.
Measures and procedure
----------------------
Dietary intake (Food Frequency Questionnaire, FFQ), blood profile, anthropometrics, and handgrip strength were registered.
During our visit at their respective senior citizens homes, all V and NV participants completed a validated semi-quantitative 104 items FFQ \[[@B36]\] to estimate their dietary intakes over the last 6 months. A standard portion size and 9 possible food-frequency categories, ranging from never or less than 1 time per month to 6 or more times per day, were given for each food items. The FFQ was completed in the presence of the researcher, allowing clarification and help when necessary.
Blood samples were collected after an overnight fast and analysed for haemoglobin, red cell count, serum iron, transferrine, ferritine, white cells, ureum, albumin, serum calcium, serum zinc, vitamin B12, folic acid, triglycerides, total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol in the clinical biology laboratory of the university hospital of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, following validated standard procedures.
Anthropometric variables were registered in order to determine the body mass index (BMI, kg/m^2^) and the waist-hip ratio. Additionally, triceps and subscapular skinfolds and upperarm girth were taken. The handgrip strength was measured using a hand dynamometer grip strength meter. Measurements were carried out according to standardized techniques \[[@B37],[@B38]\].
Statistical analysis
--------------------
In case of different reference values \[[@B17],[@B18]\] for men and women, males and females were analysed separately. After testing for normality (Kolmogorov Smirnov Goodness of Fit | pubmed_central |
gives you the same result as declaring x = [] and appending two the results of two expressions.
That would make the list comprehension
[
[i + 1, list(word)[i]]
for i in range(len(list(word)))
]
Next, you don't need to call list(word) to get the length of a string or to address individual characters. Strings are already sequences, so len(word) and word[i] also work:
[
[i + 1, word[i]]
for i in range(len(word))
]
Next, if you used the enumerate() function, you can generate both a running index to replace the range() loop, and get access to the individual characters of word without having to index; you can start the running index at 1 with a second argument to enumerate() (the default is to start at 0):
[[i, char] for i, char in enumerate(word, 1)]
If you don't have to have a list for each pair, just use enumerate(word, 1) directly in loops and get tuples:
list(enumerate(word, 1))
Demo:
>>> word = "in_str"
>>> list(enumerate(word, 1))
[(1, 'i'), (2, 'n'), (3, '_'), (4, 's'), (5, 't'), (6, 'r')]
>>> [[i, char] for i, char in enumerate(word, 1)]
[[1, 'i'], [2, 'n'], [3, '_'], [4, 's'], [5, 't'], [6, 'r']]
A:
Please try this line:
[(i + 1, l) for i, l in enumerate(word)]
Or with lists:
[[i + 1, l] for i, l in enumerate(word)]
or a version from the comments (by @tobias_k):
list(enumerate(word, start=1))
A:
You have a varitey options with this one, and more that arent listed
l = [[idx, item] for idx, item in enumerate(word, 1)]
l = list(map(list, enumerate(word, 1)))
l = | stackexchange |
In order to provide strength to the flashlight, and protect the batteries, the casing is normally made from a hard, rigid plastic or metal material. Battery contacts and wiring are disposed within the interior of the hard plastic casing.
One end of the casing is typically closed, and the other end of the casing is open. The open end of the casing often includes a threaded end surface for threadedly receiving a light assembly, that when joined to the casing forms a part of the overall flashlight housing. The light assembly includes an axially facing, radially extending lens cover, that covers over a highly reflective parabolic or conical dish. The dish includes a light bulb placed at the base of the dish.
A switch member is usually mounted on the outwardly facing, cylindrical side surface of the flashlight. Typically, either a push button-type switch or a slide switch is employed to enable the user to turn the light on and off. Examples of such flashlights are shown in Shiu. U.S. Pat. No. D524,972; Lynch, U.S. Pat. No. D425,231; and Leopoldi, U.S. Pat. No. 4,399,495.
Flashlights of this type have been produced in many sizes and shapes and have been used for many years, and are still in widespread use. Although such flashlights are often large and cumbersome, they have significant utility because the size of the interior of the rigid casing can be made large enough to hold a plurality (e.g. 2-5) of large batteries, such as C or D cells, to provide the flashlight with sufficient candle power (or lumen) to cast a bright light on the surrounding areas, and sufficient power reserves to produce light for relatively long periods of time. Because of this large battery capacity, flashlights of this type are often used in work and safety-related applications and are often carried by police officers and other security and safety personnel. Additionally, the Applicant has been an inventor in the field of flashlights and other lighted devices. See, Killion, U.S. Pat. No. 6,773,991; Killion et al., U.S. Pat. No. D636,509; Killion et al., U.S. Pat. No. D636,510; and Killion, Published Patent Application No. 2010/0110670 A1.
Although the rigid casing of the flashlights described above are usually cylindrical, advances in | uspto_backgrounds |
After victory in the war, Salter returned to Toronto to continue teaching personality psychology, conducted research, and worked with Klopfer on a revision of the Rorschach. She married Leonard Ainsworth, a graduate student in the Psychology department of University of Toronto, in 1950 and moved to London with him to allow him to finish his PhD at University College London. Although they divorced in 1960, the 10 years of accompanying Leonard to different places for his career gave Mary the opportunity to meet and work with many influential psychologists including John Bowlby, as well as the occasion when they moved to Kampala, Uganda where her first "mother-infant" observation was done.
After many other academic positions, including a long tenure at Johns Hopkins University, she eventually settled at the University of Virginia in 1975, where she remained for the rest of her academic career until 1984. From then she became a professor emeritus and stayed active until the year of 1992. While working at Johns Hopkins, Ainsworth did not receive the proper treatment considering her skills and expertise, such as a proper salary she deserved considering her age, experience, and contribution to the job. She had to wait two years for an associate professor position even though her qualifications surpassed the job description. At the time, women had to eat in separate dining rooms than men, which ultimately meant women could not meet male head department members the "normal way".
Ainsworth received many honors, including the G. Stanley Hall Award from APA for developmental psychology in 1984., the Award for Distinguished Contributions to Child Development in 1985 and the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association in 1989. She was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1992. She died on March 21, 1999 at the age of eighty-five due to a stroke.
Early work
During graduate school, Mary studied under the mentorship of William E. Blatz. Blatz focused on studying what he referred to as "security theory." This theory outlined Blatz's idea that different levels of dependence on parents meant different qualities of relationships with those parents, as well as, the quality of relationships with future partners. His tiers of dependence were labeled secure dependence, independent security, immature dependent security, and mature secure dependence. Blatz theorized that the more secure and mature that the interaction was between individuals, the more likely the relationship to be healthy and without insecurities.
After leaving the Canadian Women's corps she returned to Toronto to continue teaching personality | wikipedia_en |
R. Fiebrink, P. R. Cook, and D. Trueman. Human model evaluation in interactive supervised learning. In [*Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems*]{}, pages 147–156, 2011.
J. Fran[ç]{}oise. . PhD thesis, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, 2015.
J. Fran[ç]{}oise, N. Schnell, R. Borghesi, and F. Bevilacqua. Probabilistic models for designing motion and sound relationships. 2014.
M. Fuller and O. Goriunova. . University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, MN, 2019.
N. Gillian and J. A. Paradiso. The gesture recognition toolkit. , 15(1):3483–3487, 2014.
M. Gillies. Understanding the role of interactive machine learning in movement interaction design. , 26(1):1–34, 2019.
M. Gillies, R. Fiebrink, A. Tanaka, J. Garcia, F. Bevilacqua, A. Heloir, F. Nunnari, W. Mackay, S. Amershi, B. Lee, et al. Human-centred machine learning. In [*Proceedings of the 2016 CHI Conference Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems*]{}, pages 3558–3565, 2016.
G. Hinton, L. Deng, D. Yu, G. E. Dahl, A.-r. Mohamed, N. Jaitly, A. Senior, V. Vanhoucke, P. Nguyen, T. N. Sainath, et al. Deep neural networks for acoustic modeling in speech recognition: The shared views of four research groups. , 29(6):82–97, 2012.
K. H[ö]{}[ö]{}k. Transferring qualities from horseback riding to design. In [*Proceedings of the 6th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Extending Boundaries*]{}, pages 226–235, 2010.
H. Hutchinson, W. Mackay, B. Westerlund, B | arxiv |
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Step Four: Make your rocky outcroppings… well… rocky.Using your cheap kitchen knife, use a combination of cuts and gouges to carve the rough edges of your rocky outcroppings. This can be done by sinking the edge of the knife into the foam at an angle and then tearing the section out, making a rough triangular shape. Do this at random to your edges EXCEPT YOUR FLAT EDGE until you are happy. Then, beat them unmerciful with your rock just like you did the large foam sheets. Treat them like they owe you lunch money. Do this to the edges as well (again, except the flat edge) so they also take the rock texture. If you are making a thicker outcropping with layers, then make sure that your angle cuts go into all of the layers to help make it look like one, large rock. Once the carving is done on layers, use the drywall filler to blend the seams together. You can easily do this by putting a bit on your finger and rubbing it onto the piece to get it to blend into the cracks. the filler can be smoothed or thinned with a bit of water applied to your finger and rubbed over the piece.
With this portion done, you may wish to add a bit of extra texture to the layered pieces to make it look a bit more realistic. Taking some white glue, place a dab down near the corners of the layers and place some small stones there. Once you get those in place, put more glue down and in between the stones and add the ballast. Let it all dry.
I will state it all again. LEAVE YOUR MEASURED FLAT EDGES ALONE! These are vital to help with the modular build.
Step Five: Paint all of the rocky portions, flat edges, and large squares in umber.Cover it all. Then, when dry, look for any exposed foam and cover it again. Then when that layer is dry, check for thin spots and any exposed areas you missed and paint them again. Repeat until it is all brown.
Step Six: Drybrush all of the rocky portions with the gray.I hope we all know to drybrush at this point. If not, add a dab of paint to the brush and wipe it until there is barely any paint on the brush. Then using even strokes, apply it to the pieces, catching all of the raised portions of the rocky sections. This may take a few | pile-cc |
1/3
Three letters picked without replacement from vadbdto. What is prob of picking 1 t and 2 d?
1/35
What is prob of picking 1 a and 1 c when two letters picked without replacement from clubbba?
1/21
Two letters picked without replacement from {p: 6, v: 3, a: 6}. What is prob of picking 2 p?
1/7
Calculate prob of picking 2 v and 2 h when four letters picked without replacement from vyzzvhhbhhvbvvzbbzb.
5/323
Calculate prob of picking 2 t when two letters picked without replacement from tflvvvyyyvvt.
1/66
Calculate prob of picking 1 u and 2 m when three letters picked without replacement from guukuukmbbubgrumkr.
1/136
Two letters picked without replacement from {q: 4, a: 3}. What is prob of picking 2 q?
2/7
Calculate prob of picking 1 n and 1 z when two letters picked without replacement from fnnfzlfzfll.
4/55
What is prob of picking 2 e when two letters picked without replacement from {i: 11, e: 5}?
1/12
Three letters picked without replacement from {k: 1, m: 2, i: 1, b: 1, q: 2}. What is prob of picking 1 q, 1 k, and 1 m?
4/35
What is prob of picking 1 q, 2 l, and 1 p when four letters picked without replacement from bbbtttttpqlqbffltf?
1/1530
What is prob of picking 1 p and 2 j when three letters picked without replacement from {j: 3, p: 15}?
15/272
Three letters picked without replacement from {j: 3, g: 1, w: 1, m: 3, s: 3}. What is prob of picking 3 j?
1/165
Two letters picked without replacement from xnvsnqssnnnqvzs. What is prob of picking 1 v and 1 z?
2/105
Calculate prob of picking 1 b and 1 q when two letters picked without replacement from ourxqbb.
2/21
Calculate prob of picking 3 t when three letters picked without replacement from {p: 1, t: 7}.
5/8
What is prob | dm_mathematics |
Kay Mann@ENRON
08/22/2000 04:33 PM
To: [email protected], [email protected], Scott
Dieball/ENRON_DEVELOPMENT@ENRON_DEVELOPMENt, Roseann
Engeldorf/Corp/Enron@ENRON, Martin W Penkwitz/NA/Enron@Enron, Sheila
Tweed/ | enron_emails |
V. ORDER
For the foregoing reasons and as set forth above,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the motion of defendant for summary judgment (Doc. 37) is sustained as to certain issues and otherwise denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a status and scheduling hearing is set for Friday, June 20, 2008, at 2:00 p.m.
NOTES
[1] In her pretrial deposition Denise Harris testified that despite the language of the quitclaim deed she "understood" that she and her husband both owned the Grace Ave. property. She further testified that this belief was based upon financing documents. "I believe sometime when the mortgage come in they acknowledge myself and my husband." Denise Harris added that, "[w]hen I get the mortgage statements or ... [Chase] needs to speak with us, they may put both of our names...."
However, she agreed that all of the available title documents indicate that after the April 20, 2005 quitclaim deed she was the only owner of 3430 Grace Ave., and that after that date Pierre Harris was not an owner of the property. (Doc. 38, Ex. 5 at 9, 10-11, and 13.) Pierre Harris testified during his deposition that he believed he and his wife each owned the Grace Ave. property for investment purposes and in fact had rented it. (Doc. 38, Ex. 9 at 6-8.)
[2] AMHIC asserts that the formal appraisal process began on October 18, 2006, after the two parties were unable to settle the claim. (Doc. 38, Ex. 14 at 1.) Harris asserts that the formal appraisal process began on October 10, 2006, when AMHIC received Harris's appraisal demand letter. (Doc. 38, Ex. 17; Doc. 43, Ex. B at 9.)
[3] AMHIC argues that Grimes did not calculate the actual cash value of the property as part of his appraisal. (Doc. 38, Ex. 8 at 14.) Harris argues that Grimes calculated the actual cash value of the property in determining the damage award. (Doc. 38, Ex. 18 at 7.)
[4] AMHIC argues that Grimes refused Dooling access to the property. (See Doc. 38, Ex. 15 at 7.) Harris argues that Dooling did not contact Grimes until November 27, 2006. (See Doc. 43, Ex. D at 1-2.)
[ | freelaw |
And discord had a very nice article on this as well:
[https://blog.discordapp.com/how-discord-stores-billions-
of-m...](https://blog.discordapp.com/how-discord-stores-billions-of-
messages-7fa6ec7ee4c7)
Great work, I think there is a lot of exciting stuff you can add to it!
~~~
sajal83
That's cool. Last week I tried googling for similar stuff but all I could find
was people asking "How to run postgres on S3"...
------
vtuulos
We use a similar approach with TrailDB. You can make S3 access totally
seamless with user-space page fault handling, which is pretty cool:
[http://tech.adroll.com/blog/data/2016/11/29/traildb-
mmap-s3....](http://tech.adroll.com/blog/data/2016/11/29/traildb-mmap-s3.html)
~~~
sajal83
This is pretty cool. Do you invalidate all pages if the file changes upstream
on S3?
~~~
vtuulos
In our case all blobs in S3 are immutable, so no need to invalidate anything.
------
udkl
How is this different than AWS Athena ? -
[https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-athena-
interactive-s...](https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-athena-interactive-
sql-queries-for-data-in-amazon-s3/)
Also why don't you dump the log data into a NoSQL like dynamoDB instead of S3
?
~~~
sajal83
Athena looks cool. Didn't know about it. It probably describes what I'm trying
to do.
> Also why don't you dump the log data into a NoSQL like dynamoDB instead of
> S3 ?
Price.
~~~
eropple
Maybe you should take another look at pricing? DynamoDB is like
$0.002/GB/month more expensive than S3 for storage. Requests are | hackernews |
The effects of marihuana on human female reproductive physiology are unknown. Quantitative confirmation of anecdotal marihuana use is now possible by our separate delta 9-THC, 11-nor-9-carboxy-delta 9-THC and toal cannabinoid radioimmune assays of blood and urine. Female marihuana users (pregnant and non-pregnant) will be compared to a non-user control group. Accurately measured body fluid | nih_exporter |
Treatment and relapse prophylaxis of duodenal ulcer with pirenzepine and cimetidine.
The effect of pirenzepine and cimetidine on healing, symptoms and relapse rate of duodenal ulcer was studied in a placebo-controlled double-blind trial. Cimetidine (1 g daily) was superior at the beginning of therapy to a low dose of pirenzepine (75 mg daily) and placebo with regard to symptoms. No significant differences in ulcer healing were found | pubmed_abstracts |
Kim-1 and NGAL have been proposed as kidney injury markers \[[@B23],[@B24]\]. Kim-1 is a type 1 transmembrane glycoprotein with an immunoglobulin and mucin domain, and NGAL is a protein of the lipocalin family consisting of 8β-strands that form a β-barrel enclosing calyx \[[@B23],[@B24]\]. After renal injury, they are highly up-regulated in damaged renal proximal tubular cells, and can be detected in urine. The degree of renal injury is correlated with the increased urine concentration of NGAL and Kim-1 \[[@B23],[@B24],[@B47],[@B48]\]. The functions of Kim-1 and NGAL are unclear, but their relations with apoptosis have been documented \[[@B48]-[@B50]\]. According to the severity of renal damage, both the number of apoptotic cells and the expression of Kim-1 were increased, and Kim-1 was expressed in all the tubules displaying apoptotic labeling \[[@B47]\]. In addition, the up-regulation of Kim-1 and NGAL was identified in CsA-induced renal injury, suggesting that renal tubular cells are injured by CsA \[[@B51],[@B52]\]. We confirmed the reno-protective effect of BIL by the significant reduction of urine Kim-1 and the decreased tendency of urine NGAL concentration, indicating that BIL helps to prevent epithelial cell injury. Histologic improvements in arteriolopathy, tubulointerstitial fibrosis, and tubular injury were found in BIL-treated rat kidneys, and these recoveries appeared to be associated with the reduction of oxidative stress, apoptosis, and tubular damage. The administration of bilirubin could be a target for protecting against the progression of renal injury, but further studies will be needed to facilitate such a potential therapy.
Conclusions
===========
We showed that the direct administration of BIL protected against CsA-induced tubular injury via inhibition of oxidative stress and apoptosis. BIL may be a protective agent against renal tubular injury, but further studies are needed to develop this potential therapy.
Competing interests
===================
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contribution
=====================
SWO and ESL performed the experiments, SWO and HJC analyzed and interpreted the data, SWO and ESL prepared the figures for publication, SWO drafted the manuscript, HJC, SK, KYN, DW C, and SK revised the manuscript, all authors approved the final version of the manuscript, HJC conceived and designed the | pubmed_central |
On a blog I'm coding the admin can edit existing posts.
I want to let an error-message appear when the $_POST['title'] for e.g is empty(There will be displayed:"Your post should have a title"). I also do it if the subheading, content or category are empty.
The errors work just fine if one or some of them is/are empty. As soon I load the page to edit a post every error is displayed from the beginning.
How do I make them only appear when one or some $_POST's are empty after the <input type="submit .../> is clicked (they shouldn't be there when the site has loaded)?
This is the function in the PostsAdminController.php that checks the $_POST's and renders the site:
public function edit()
{
$error = "";
$id = $_GET['id'];
$entry = $this->postsRepository->find($id);
$categoryFId = $this->categoryRepository->getOneCatFromId($entry->c_Id);
$savedSuccess = false;
$abort = false;
if ($this->loginService->check()) {
if (!empty($_POST['title'])) {
$entry->title = $_POST['title'];
} else {
$error .= "Your post should have a title.";
$abort = true;
}
if (!empty($_POST['subheading'])) {
$entry->subheading = $_POST['subheading'];
} else {
$error .= "A good subheading is nothing you should just leave out.";
$abort = true;
}
if (!empty($_POST['content'])) {
$entry->content = $_POST['content'];
} else {
$error .= "Your post should have content, you know, it wouldn't be a 'post' then.";
$abort = true;
}
if (!empty($_POST['category'])) {
$entry->c_Id = $_POST['category'];
}
if ($abort == false){
$this->postsRepository->update($entry);
$savedSuccess = true;
}
} else {
$error = "You have no permission to do this, how the hell did | stackexchange |
Arterial blood pressure measurements provide valuable information about a patient's condition. The heart's cyclical action produces a blood pressure maximum at systole, called systolic pressure, and a minimum pressure at diastole, called diastolic pressure. While the systolic and diastolic pressures are themselves important in gauging the patient's condition, other useful parameters are the mean (average) blood pressure during a heart cycle, and the pulse pressure, which is the arithmetic difference between the systolic and diastolic pressures.
The importance of arterial blood pressure has spurred the development of numerous methods of determining it. The most widely used method is probably the familiar blood pressure cuff, which consists of an expandable ring (1) inflated to stop arterial blood flow and (2) then gradually contracted. Using a stethoscope, medical personnel listen to the artery to determine at what pressure blood flow begins, establishing the systolic pressure, and at what pressure flow is unrestricted, establishing the diastolic pressure. More advanced blood pressure monitoring systems plot the arterial blood pressure through a complete heart cycle. Typically, these systems use catheters having piezoelectric pressure transducers that produce output signals dependent upon the instantaneous blood pressure. The output signals are monitored and used to determine the arterial blood pressures over a complete heart cycle. These systems are advantageous in that the blood pressure is continuously measured and displayed.
While prior art methods are useful, they have disadvantages. Cuff-type systems require restricting arterial blood flow and are not suitable for continuous use. The piezoelectric-type systems generally require undesirable invasive techniques, costly disposable materials, and time and skill to set-up. However, during certain critical periods, such as surgery, continuous arterial blood pressure monitoring is highly desirable. Therefore, it would be beneficial to have a method of continuously and non-invasively measuring a patient's blood pressure.
Photoplethysmographs are well-known instruments which use light for determining and registering variations in a patient's blood volume. They can instantaneously track arterial blood volume changes during the cardiac cycle. Since photoplethysmographs operate non-invasively, much work has gone into using them to determine blood pressure. In 1983, inventor Warner was issued U.S. Pat. No. 4,418,700 on a method of determining circulatory parameters, wherein signals from a photoplethysmograph were used to determine arterial blood pressure.
Significant problems were found when investigating the Warner method. Therefore, it is clear that the need for a practical method of continuously and non-invasively monitoring | uspto_backgrounds |
Hynek Martinec (born 12 November 1980 in Broumov) is a Czech painter, who graduated from the Studio of Classical Painting Techniques under the supervision of Prof. Zdeněk Beran at the Academy of Fine Arts, Prague. After his studies he left for Paris (2005-2007) and since 2007 has been living in London. He received the prestigious BP Young Artist Award (2007) for his hyperrealistic portraits. His paintings are inspired by Old Masters and/or photographs, which link the past with the future, using modern technologies.
Life
In his hometown of Broumov and its surroundings Hynek Martinec was able to absorb the architecture of Dientzenhofer together with Czech Baroque painting. Since his childhood he drew extensively and already when he was 8-9 years old he discovered the world of classical music. As an 11-year-old boy, in 1991, he was successful in an art competition in Náchod and one painter of the jury offered him private classes and a thorough training in realistic painting. A year later he was taking classes from another painter, who exposed him to the world of abstract art.
After finishing primary school Martinec studied design at Uherské Hradiště for one year and then transferred to the Secondary Art School of Václav Hollar in Prague. Between 1999 and 2005 he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Prague at the Studio of Classical Painting Techniques under the supervision of Prof. Zdeněk Beran. During his studies he spent an exchange year at Middlesex University, London (2002) and a six-month exchange at the Cooper Union in New York (2004). In 2003, he received a studio award from the Academy of Fine Arts and in 2004 he was awarded as the best Academy student.
Following graduation he spent two years in Paris in a rented studio before deciding to move to London after receiving the Young Artist Award for artists under 30 in 2007, and at the same time the BP Visitor Choice for his portrait of Zuzana in Paris Studio (2006-2007). The painting was chosen among 60 finalists from 1,870 applications. In 2008 he received the Changing Faces Prize organised by the National Portrait Gallery, London for the painting Bagram in New York (2004) and BP Visitor Choice at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh.
Hynek Martinec lives and works in London and is | wikipedia_en |
$$L(\Omega_\Lambda, \alpha,\beta, v_0, r_s)=\prod\limits_i\frac{1}{(2\pi \sigma_i^2)^{1/2}}\exp(-\chi^2/2)$$
The probability for a particular $\Omega_\Lambda$ is calculated according to the following marginalization
$$P(\Omega_\Lambda)=\int L(\Omega_\Lambda, \alpha,\beta, v_0, r_s) M(\Omega_\Lambda, \alpha,\beta, v_0, r_s)d\alpha d \beta d v_0 d r_s$$
![ The $\chi^2$ vs. $\Omega_\Lambda$. Here $\alpha$, $\beta$, $v_0$ and $r_s$ are not fixed.[]{data-label="chi2"}](chi2-1.eps){width="8cm"}
![ The probability ration vs. $\Omega_\Lambda$. We marginalize $\alpha$, $\beta$, $v_0$ and $r_s$ parameters, and assume the prior probability function is a constant. $P_0$ is the maximum probability. []{data-label="like"}](like.eps){width="8cm"}
Here $M$ is a prior probability function. It depends on several parameters, but in general $M$ is assumed to be a constant. Figure \[like\] shows the likelihood ratio under this assumption. Again the small $\Omega_\Lambda$s are ruled out immediately. But we must emphasize that the minimum $\chi ^2$s appearing in $30\mbox{Mpc}<R_v<40\mbox{Mpc}$ and $40\mbox{Mpc}<R_v$ cases are not reasonable and therefore $M$ cannot be taken as only a constant. A further study of the prior probability is needed.
Conclusion
==========
In this paper, we studied the properties (orientation and density profiles) of the cosmological voids using the SDSS10 data. We first confirmed that the voids’ orientation is not purely random as one might naively expect. This effect has been first noticed by Foster etc[@Foster2009]. Later, Sutter etc. have found a constant empirical stretching factor using numerical simulations, and applied the stretching factor to SDSS DR10 data[@Sutter:2014oca; @Lavaux]. They found that the voids’ orientation can be used as | arxiv |
def close(self):
if self.dict is None:
return
try:
self.sync()
try:
self.dict.close()
except AttributeError:
pass
finally:
# Catch errors that may happen when close is called from __del__
# because CPython is in interpreter shutdown.
try:
self.dict = _ClosedDict()
except:
self.dict = None
def __del__(self):
if not hasattr(self, 'writeback'):
# __init__ didn't succeed, so don't bother closing
# see http://bugs.python.org/issue1339007 for details
return
self.close()
def sync(self):
if self.writeback and self.cache:
self.writeback = False
for key, entry in self.cache.items():
self[key] = entry
self.writeback = True
self.cache = {}
if hasattr(self.dict, 'sync'):
self.dict.sync()
class BsdDbShelf(Shelf):
"""Shelf implementation using the "BSD" db interface.
This adds methods first(), next(), previous(), last() and
set_location() that have no counterpart in [g]dbm databases.
The actual database must be opened using one of the "bsddb"
modules "open" routines (i.e. bsddb.hashopen, bsddb.btopen or
bsddb.rnopen) and passed to the constructor.
See the module's __doc__ string for an overview of the interface.
"""
def __init__(self, dict, protocol=None, writeback=False,
keyencoding="utf-8"):
Shelf.__init__(self, dict, protocol, writeback, keyencoding)
def set_location(self, key):
(key, value) = self.dict.set_location(key)
f = BytesIO(value)
return (key.decode(self.keyencoding), Unpickler(f).load())
def next(self):
(key, value | github |
The ALB-G Premium Three Ring Archival Album for G Series Album Pages is a premium oversized album with a padded cover and black embossed exterior for the feel of leather. Protect and archive you most precious photographic memories.
Adhesive Hinge Strips - Introducing the simplest way to bind work into a portfolio book: the Adhesive Hinge Strip. To use, start by peeling back the release liner to expose the archival adhesive. Then adhere your artwork to the adhesive edge and place the sheet into your portfolio book or binder.
Adhesive Hinge Strips - Introducing the simplest way to bind work into a portfolio book: the Adhesive Hinge Strip. To use, start by peeling back the release liner to expose the archival adhesive. Then adhere your artwork to the adhesive edge and place the sheet into your portfolio book or binder.
The crystal clear clarity of PolyGlass is now available for our refillable binders; the most superior refill pages available on the market today at a value price. ITOYA's exclusive PolyGlass Pages, featuring ten popular digital imaging sizes.
The Print File 44-8P Archival Storage Page for 8 Prints holds eight of your Polaroid, instagram, and 4 x 4.5 inches prints. A single page features four 4.1 x 4.6 inches pockets on each side. The pages are seven-hole punched for secure binding and handling. The page is made high-clarity, 8 mil...
Introduced over a decade ago, the Itoya Art Profolio 17 x 22 In. Crystal Clear PolyGlass Pages is the new yardstick in storage and presentation books for the discerning Artist and Photographer. Its quality construction, flexible sizes and trademark Acid-Free mounting paper inserts have made the...
Pina Zangaro classic welded polypropylene sheet protectors have become the industry standard for high quality archival preservation and presentation of artwork and documents. The weld parallel to the binding edge acts as a hinge, allowing the sheets to lie perfectly flat, making these sheets...
Adhesive Hinge Strips - Introducing the simplest way to bind work into a portfolio book: the Adhesive Hinge Strip. To use, start by peeling back the release liner to expose the archival adhesive. Then adhere your artwork to the adhesive edge and place the sheet into your portfolio book or binder.
Adhesive | pile-cc |
12*sqrt(2)
Simplify (sqrt(45)/(sqrt(576)*-1) + (sqrt(75)/sqrt(3))/sqrt(5)*3)*-1.
-23*sqrt(5)/8
Simplify 6*(-1 + sqrt(275) + sqrt(11) - (-1*sqrt(99))**2) + (-2*(sqrt(396) - sqrt(396)*-2)*3)**2.
36*sqrt(11) + 127704
Simplify 4 + (3 + -2 + sqrt(288))**2 - (sqrt(6)/sqrt(3)*-4 + sqrt(2) + -2*sqrt(4)/sqrt(2)).
29*sqrt(2) + 293
Simplify (sqrt(80) - (sqrt(80) + 2*sqrt(80)*3))/(sqrt(1440)*-4 + sqrt(1440) - sqrt(1440)).
sqrt(2)/4
Simplify (-2 + -3*sqrt(200))**2*-2 + 0.
-3608 - 240*sqrt(2)
Simplify -5*(-3*(3 + sqrt(288)*3))**2.
-117045 - 9720*sqrt(2)
Simplify (-1*sqrt(8)*3)/(sqrt(16)/(sqrt(4) - sqrt(4)*-1)) - (sqrt(20)/sqrt(2)*4)/(sqrt(125)*-2).
-28*sqrt(2)/5
Simplify (-2 + ((sqrt(1088)*3 - sqrt(1088)) + 4 + (sqrt(1088) + -1 - sqrt(1088))*4 + sqrt(1088))*-3)**2.
288*sqrt(17) + 88132
Simplify (sqrt(156)*3*-6)/(sqrt(12)*-2*6).
3*sqrt(13)/2
Simplify (5 + -2 + 0 + -1*-1*sqrt(300)*-3)**2.
-180*sqrt(3) + 2709
Simplify (((sqrt(612) - -4*sqrt(612)) + sqrt(612) - sqrt(612))*3 + (sqrt(612) + 0 + 0 + sqrt(612) - sqrt(612)))**2.
156672
Simplify 3 + (sqrt(2448) + -3*sqrt(2448))**2 - (sqrt(2448) - (3 + sqrt( | dm_mathematics |
Got your message on the work e-mail, but then decided to get that out of my
system. Don't want anyone at corporate reading how I was in your bed last
night. Ha! I am glad that you are recognizing exactly how cool I actually
am! (Bad grammar on that line).
Miss Barbara is doing good today. It has been a semi-slow day. Kind of
working at my own pace and not feeling in a rush | enron_emails |
Plaintiff Yorkshire Condominium Association, Inc., a condominium homeowners' association responsible for the management and maintenance of the common elements of Yorkshire Townhomes, filed this action against defendant Hershiser, owner of a condominium unit of Yorkshire Townhomes, to collect certain condominium assessments or fees, along with interest and attorney fees.
On August 9, 1990, plaintiff moved for summary judgment supported by an affidavit of Michele Young. On September 20, 1990, defendant filed her cross motion for partial summary judgment and for payment of attorney fees. Plaintiff filed a supplemental affidavit of Ms. Young on October 23, 1990, and on October 26, 1990, the affidavit of plaintiff's counsel. On October 29, 1990, defendant filed a brief in support of oral objections made at the summary judgment hearing to plaintiff's use of the supplemental affidavit of Ms. Young and the affidavit of plaintiff's counsel.
The state court granted plaintiff's motion for summary judgment, awarding damages of $1,059.70 in principal, $114.78 in interest, and $5,251.15 in attorney fees for a total judgment of $6,425.63. The defendant's motions for partial summary judgment, attorney fees, and to strike affidavits were denied. Defendant appeals from the grant of plaintiff's motion for summary judgment and from the denial of her motions for partial summary judgment and to strike affidavits. Held:
1. OCGA § 9-11-6 (d) provides in part, "When a motion is supported by affidavit, the affidavit shall be served with the motion." While this statutory rule is not absolute and trial judges may exercise their discretion to permit the late filing of affidavits, the party seeking to file affidavits late must make a motion and obtain an extension from the court pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-6 (b). Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank v. Dorsey, 159 Ga. App. 784, 785 (1) (285 SE2d 242). No such request for an extension of the time within which to file and serve the affidavits having been made in the case sub judice and no finding of excusable neglect in failing to timely file and serve the affidavits having been made by the state court, we must conclude that plaintiff failed to proceed in a manner that would permit the state court to exercise its discretion under OCGA § 9-11-6 (b). It follows that the state court erred in considering (in relation to plaintiff's motion for summary judgment), over defendant | freelaw |
1\. SQLite must be in all the browsers (at least until IDB proves itself apart
from political support from Mozilla). SQLite is probably the most widely-
deployed embedded database and IDB is a far cry away.
2\. Users must be able to grant storage quotas to web apps directly (without
requiring that they be installed through some web store).
This will only happen if we the developers start to get active on these issues
and stop assuming that the W3C committee will get everything right without our
involvement.
~~~
paulirish
Storage quota management is coming out in Chrome 13. You'll like it.
[https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/group/chromium-
html...](https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/group/chromium-
html5/msg/5261d24266ba4366)
~~~
jorangreef
That's good news.
------
AretNCarlsen
How does the browser know the set of pages to be cached for a particular
offline app, though? Do you have to provide a static sitemap at a known URL?
But to support multiple apps deliverable from a single subdomain, you would
need to specify the sitemap's URL in some webpage, perhaps as an attribute to
some HTML element. So each sitemap would be a sort of Manifest which controls
the Cache for an app.
By the way, the app's cache obviously ought to be isolated from other apps'
caches, right? Especially if you let the user grant an enlarged cache as a
per-app permission. And the user might want to clear the miscellany browser
cache without clearing the app cache, so we had better give this Application
Cache a distinct name.
~~~
AffableSpatula
That's a decent point about clearing the cache - it should be distinct from
flushing assets indicated for offline use. That distinction could be drawn by
determining whether or not each asset was served with stale-if-error.
------
newhouseb
We use a similar strategy for our HTML5-based IOS app, however the issue is
that it might take a few seconds to realize that an error has occurred and the
resource should be served stale, which pretty obnox | hackernews |
The aim of this proposal is to develop an effective and rapid method for disrupting the poultry-to-human transmission of avian influenza by in ovo injection of adenovirus-vectored avian influenza vaccines that can be mass-produced in cultured cells and mass-administered with a mechanized injector. The hypothesis is that mass-vaccination of poultry against an outbreak of avian influenza reduces the dissemination of the virus to new flocks and consequently the risk to humans. As avian influenza gets more | nih_exporter |
Thymidine phosphorylase expression in endometrial carcinomas.
Thymidine phosphorylase (TP) is a potent angiogenic molecule shown to induce endothelial cell migration and proliferation. We investigated the expression of TP in a series of 156 endometrial carcinomas, using immunohistochemical methods. Histopathological parameters of known prognostic significance and the molecular factors of p53, bcl-2 and angiogenesis were also assessed. Thymidine phosphorylase was expressed in cancer cells, stromal fibroblasts and myometrial cells. The | pubmed_abstracts |
Deletion of the 11p15.4 region is associated with autosomal dominant hereditary persistence thalassemia (HPFH, OMIM: 141749) and autosomal recessive beta-thalassemia (OMIM: 141900) \[[@B11], [@B12]\].
We report on a preterm infant who had intrauterine growth retardation and developed hemihypertrophy during the postnatal stay. The microdeletion of 11p15.4 that was found in our case is likely to be paternally derived, since the patient\'s half-sister had an inherited anemia (family history). The additional features (abnormal physical findings) in our patient have not been previously reported with deletion of the 11p15.4 region. Microdeletions of 11p15 are rare. There have been limited reports of patients with interstitial deletions involving band 11p15.4. To our knowledge none have reported clinical features in a neonate with the same deletion as in our case. Here, we provide additional human genetic evidence that the 11p15.4 deletion contains regulatory elements that play a mechanistic role in the hemihypertrophy BWS phenotype and intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR).*It remains unclear what exactly is the relation between this deletion and the BWS/hemihypertrophy associated genes.*
In summary, we report a novel case of a dysmorphic preterm neonate with*microdeletion* 11p15.4. These findings may help identify the gene implicated in BWS and IUGR.
Consent
=======
Written informed consent was obtained from the parents of the patient for publication of this case report and any accompanying images. A copy of the written consent is available for review by the editor-in-chief of this journal.
Conflicts of Interest
=====================
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Authors\' Contributions
=======================
All authors are equally involved in drafting, literature search, and writing of the paper.
{#fig1}
{#fig2}
{#fig3}
{#fig4} | pubmed_central |
I know there has to be a way to do this, but I'm at a loss. Thanks for any help you've got!
EDIT: At request, I've attached a dput() of tstat. Not a big data frame.
structure(list(VarNames = structure(c(4L, 1L, 3L, 2L, 5L, 6L,
4L, 1L, 3L, 2L, 5L, 6L), .Label = c("Dry Deposition", "MEGAN Acetone",
"MEGAN Terpenes", "Monoterpene Yield", "Ocean", "Photolysis"), class = "factor"),
Mu = c(2703.09, 8066.01, 6566.6, 19741.7, 5809.6, 14231.8, 1493.56, 3067.54, 3631.32, 9951.06, 8748.95, 7967.93),
Sigma = c(3478.28, 8883.23, 7276.49, 18454.4, 6218.8, 14989.7, 1925.14, 3410.27, 4017.64, 9289.57, 9354.64, 8403.1),
Hemisphere = structure(c(1L, 1L, 1L, 1L, 1L, 1L, 2L, 2L, 2L, 2L, 2L, 2L),
.Label = c("Northern", "Southern"), class = "factor")),
.Names = c("VarNames", "Mu", "Sigma", "Hemisphere"),
class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, -12L))
A:
You can use scale_fill_manual:
tstat <- structure(list(VarNames = structure(c(4L, 1L, 3L, 2L, 5L, 6L,
4L, 1L, 3L, 2L, 5L, 6L), .Label = c("Dry Deposition", "MEGAN Acetone",
"MEGAN Terpenes", "Monoterpene Yield", "Ocean", "Photolysis"), class = "factor"),
Mu = c(2703. | stackexchange |
In modern medicine there are numerous treatment situations in which it is desirable to create shunts or flow-through connections between blood vessels and/or other anatomical structures of the body. Such treatments include, for example, hemodialysis, hemofiltration, hemodiafiltration, plasmapheresis, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). In many cases, open surgical techniques have been used to form anatomic connections or fistulas between adjacent vessels of body structures. More recently, percutaneous catheter-based techniques and devices have been developed for creating channels or passageways between adjacent vessels or anatomical structures.
In addition to the above-listed treatments, arteriovenous (AV) shunt devices have been proposed for treating chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and drug-resistant hypertension. COPD, also called chronic obstructive airway disease, is a syndrome that may be caused by a number of different diseases, all of which damage the alveoli and bronchioles, leading to impaired lung function. These diseases include asthmatic bronchitis, chronic bronchitis (with normal airflow), chronic obstructive bronchitis, and emphysema. As the alveoli and bronchial tubes are destroyed, the remaining healthy lung tissue must work harder to provide the required amount of blood oxygenation. The need for more air leads to lung over-inflation. As the lung over-expands, it gradually enlarges, completely filling the chest cavity and causing a sense of shortness of breath. The lung eventually loses its elasticity and the combination of a larger, less elastic lung and damaged, nonfunctioning tissue leads to slower airflow into and out of the lung, resulting in the feeling in the patient of an obstructed airway.
One manner of treating COPD is oxygen therapy, which requires a patient to remain near a stationary oxygen source or carry a bulky portable oxygen source when away from home or a treatment facility. Understandably such oxygen therapy has many disadvantages. One surgical treatment that has been proposed for treating patients with COPD is lung reduction surgery. Such surgery, however, can be used on only a small percentage of the total patient population, requires long recovery times, and does not always provide a clear patient benefit.
Arteriovenous (AV) shunt devices for treating COPD provide a fistula between an artery and a vein that are anatomically parallel to each other. The approach is to create an arteriovenous fistula by implanting a shunt-like device between two major blood vessels in the leg, utilizing cardiovascular | uspto_backgrounds |
Subsets and Splits