2017 Destination Imagination Globals Finals Tournament PEAT Results
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Second Session Issu July 20, 2016
July 18, 2016 – Second Session Issue July 18, 2016 – Second Session Issu July 20, 2016 – The Dance Night 2k16 Edition Dance Night 2k16 by Robbie Rolfe There could not have been a nicer evening for a very competitive dance night. Special hosts PETE “ME HOW TO DOUGIE” COLE, WILL “MACKERANER” LANE and myself, ROBBIE “ROCK AND ROLFE,” were flown in from all over the world for this spectacular event. Starting the night off were cabin 3. They stepped up on the outside stage, on the top Basketball courts, opposite Wasserman Hall with their song being Flo Rida’s “My House.” It was a brave move for them being the first ones up but they did a really good job with PIERCE MCKENZIE doing a black flip and AARON PELTS doing the worm. They also had some well thought of, homemade props as well to add to their opening routine. Cabin 4 and 5 did “Uptown Funk” by Bruno Mars and the, ever so popular dance move “The Dab” was featured several times during both cabins performances. Cabin 7 did a special performance which was inspired by our very own Woody! Lucky Canteen Number 81. They danced to Michael Jackson’s “Blame it on the Boogie,” and they did the dance routine that Woody teaches everyone during a game of Musical Chairs that he normally hosts during pre-camp or post- camp. Cabin’s 9 and 15 did the “Harlem Shake.” HUNTER ROBERTS was an expert at performing the dance move called “The Wobble,” CALEB SAKS and JACK SACKS picked ROBBIE YASTROW up and did a backwards flip and ZACH MEYERS did the worm very well too. -
106 INKSCAPE – FREE VECTOR GRAPHICS EDITOR Grabareva A
INKSCAPE – FREE VECTOR GRAPHICS EDITOR Grabareva A. Supervisor: Voevodina M. E-mail: [email protected], [email protected] Kharkiv, О.М. Beketov National University of Urban Economy in Kharkiv Inkscape is a cross-platform, powerful enough and in many ways competitive free vector graphics editor with open source code, and in which the SVG format is used as the main standard for work. It is convenient for creating both artistic and technical illustrations. Inkscape is an analogue of such graphic editors as Corel Draw, Adobe Illustrator, Xara X and Freehand. Intended use: - illustrations for office circulars, presentations, creation of logos, business cards, posters; - technical illustrations (diagrams, graphics, etc.); - vector graphics for high-quality printing (with preliminary import of SVG into Scribus); - web graphics – from banners to site layouts, icons for applications and website buttons, - graphics for games. Main characteristics of Inkscape: - the program is free and distributed under the GNU General Public License; - cross-platform; - the program supports the following document formats: import – almost all popular and frequently used formats: SVG, JPEG, GIF, BMP, EPS, PDF, PNG, ICO, and many additional ones, such as SVGZ, EMF, PostScript, AI, Dia, Sketch, TIFF, XPM, WMF, WPG, GGR, ANI, CUR, PCX, PNM, RAS, TGA, WBMP, XBM, XPM; export – the main formats are PNG and SVG and many additional EPS, PostScript, PDF, Dia, AI, Sketch, POV-Ray, LaTeX, OpenDocument Draw, GPL, EMF, POV, DXF; - there is support for layers; - -
Release Notes for Fedora 15
Fedora 15 Release Notes Release Notes for Fedora 15 Edited by The Fedora Docs Team Copyright © 2011 Red Hat, Inc. and others. The text of and illustrations in this document are licensed by Red Hat under a Creative Commons Attribution–Share Alike 3.0 Unported license ("CC-BY-SA"). An explanation of CC-BY-SA is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. The original authors of this document, and Red Hat, designate the Fedora Project as the "Attribution Party" for purposes of CC-BY-SA. In accordance with CC-BY-SA, if you distribute this document or an adaptation of it, you must provide the URL for the original version. Red Hat, as the licensor of this document, waives the right to enforce, and agrees not to assert, Section 4d of CC-BY-SA to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law. Red Hat, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Shadowman logo, JBoss, MetaMatrix, Fedora, the Infinity Logo, and RHCE are trademarks of Red Hat, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries. For guidelines on the permitted uses of the Fedora trademarks, refer to https:// fedoraproject.org/wiki/Legal:Trademark_guidelines. Linux® is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries. Java® is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates. XFS® is a trademark of Silicon Graphics International Corp. or its subsidiaries in the United States and/or other countries. MySQL® is a registered trademark of MySQL AB in the United States, the European Union and other countries. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. -
Camcorder Multimedia Framework with Linux and Gstreamer
Camcorder multimedia framework with Linux and GStreamer W. H. Lee, E. K. Kim, J. J. Lee , S. H. Kim, S. S. Park SWL, Samsung Electronics [email protected] Abstract Application Applications Layer Along with recent rapid technical advances, user expec- Multimedia Middleware Sequencer Graphics UI Connectivity DVD FS tations for multimedia devices have been changed from Layer basic functions to many intelligent features. In order to GStreamer meet such requirements, the product requires not only a OSAL HAL OS Layer powerful hardware platform, but also a software frame- Device Software Linux Kernel work based on appropriate OS, such as Linux, support- Drivers codecs Hardware Camcorder hardware platform ing many rich development features. Layer In this paper, a camcorder framework is introduced that is designed and implemented by making use of open Figure 1: Architecture diagram of camcorder multime- source middleware in Linux. Many potential develop- dia framework ers can be referred to this multimedia framework for camcorder and other similar product development. The The three software layers on any hardware platform are overall framework architecture as well as communica- application, middleware, and OS. The architecture and tion mechanisms are described in detail. Furthermore, functional operation of each layer is discussed. Addi- many methods implemented to improve the system per- tionally, some design and implementation issues are ad- formance are addressed as well. dressed from the perspective of system performance. The overall software architecture of a multimedia 1 Introduction framework is described in Section 2. The framework design and its operation are introduced in detail in Sec- It has recently become very popular to use the internet to tion 3. -
Content Project V7 English
Content Project V7 English Public Computer Entrepre- Climate Program- Solar Water Tech Leadership Agriculture Recycling Education neurship Change ming Energy Literacy Health Potential and Growth CD3W Videos BFOIT CD3W IEARN We Recycle Business Lessons Introduction Resources CD3W CD3W Resources Getting Where GirlRising Resources Resources Readings to on Solar Started with Class UNGEI How to Set Computer Energy on Water There Is No and Ubuntu Manage- Doctor Peace Up Nat’l Geo Program- 10.04 ment STEM Computer a Climate.gov ming Sanitation Corps UNESCO Khan Academy Books Refurbishing CLEAN Getting Empowering Center and more UN Lesson HIV/AIDS WikiSlice Plans on Started with Girls Library Ck-12 Textbooks Adrodok Water OpenOffice Intro to Computer Prog Empowering Medline Thinkersmith Vegetable How to Girls-School Computer Sci in a Box Garden Assemble a Computer Ubuntu Manual Life Skills Childhood LibreOffice Guides Healthy Illness Harvest Math Science Reference Writing Soc.Sci. Promoting Comp. for Class. Guidesl Powerful Health for People Health Wikipedia and Wikibooks Children Hesperian Health Guides Khan Video BlueMall Medline Learning Volunteer- Teach AIDS Khan Video Lessons Basic 20 Gigabytes with thousands of Health Medline Plus Lessons Spelling Center ism Activities for Language searchable articles using the Pop. Council Activities Ck-12 Kiwix offline wiki-reader Primary Gr. Ck-12 Textbooks Dictionary Common World Map Textbooks Sense Project HIV Toolkit Wiki HowTo Thousands of books for youth WikiSlice Compositio of all ages Unesco -Animals -
The Gnome Desktop Comes to Hp-Ux
GNOME on HP-UX Stormy Peters Hewlett-Packard Company 970-898-7277 [email protected] THE GNOME DESKTOP COMES TO HP-UX by Stormy Peters, Jim Leth, and Aaron Weber At the Linux World Expo in San Jose last August, a consortium of companies, including Hewlett-Packard, inaugurated the GNOME Foundation to further the goals of the GNOME project. An organization of open-source software developers, the GNOME project is the major force behind the GNOME desktop: a powerful, open-source desktop environment with an intuitive user interface, a component-based architecture, and an outstanding set of applications for both developers and users. The GNOME Foundation will provide resources to coordinate releases, determine future project directions, and promote GNOME through communication and press releases. At the same conference in San Jose, Hewlett-Packard also announced that GNOME would become the default HP-UX desktop environment. This will enhance the user experience on HP-UX, providing a full feature set and access to new applications, and also will allow commonality of desktops across different vendors' implementations of UNIX and Linux. HP will provide transition tools for migrating users from CDE to GNOME, and support for GNOME will be available from HP. Those users who wish to remain with CDE will continue to be supported. Hewlett-Packard, working with Ximian, Inc. (formerly known as Helix Code), will be providing the GNOME desktop on HP-UX. Ximian is an open-source desktop company that currently employs many of the original and current developers of GNOME, including Miguel de Icaza. They have developed and contributed applications such as Evolution and Red Carpet to GNOME. -
Resistance, Repression, Responsiveness
RESISTANCE, REPRESSION, RESPONSIVENESS: WORKERS AND THE STATE IN CHINA A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy By Isaac Manfred Elfstrom January 2017 © 2017 Isaac Manfred Elfstrom RESISTANCE, REPRESSION, RESPONSIVENESS: WORKERS AND THE STATE IN CHINA Isaac Manfred Elfstrom, Ph. D. Cornell University 2017 This dissertation examines the impact of labor unrest under authoritarianism. It uses evidence from China to explore the possibility that autocracies, especially state socialist and post-socialist ones, are uniquely vulnerable to worker resistance and therefore react to it in a dual manner, at once repressive and responsive. Drawing on an original dataset of strikes, protests, and riots by Chinese workers, I find that increases in unrest are correlated with both increases in public security spending (repression) and pro-labor rulings in formally adjudicated employment disputes (responsiveness). Using a “most similar” case comparison informed by field theory, I then show how in Jiangsu’s portion of the Yangtze River Delta, moderate industrial contention is paired with governance that can be characterized as preemption, caution, and nudging, while in Guangdong’s portion of the Pearl River Delta, high contention is paired with reaction, experimentation, and crackdowns. Thus, consistent with the dissertation’s quantitative analysis, repression and responsiveness are stronger where resistance is more widespread, but governance is also qualitatively different. I argue that, at the level of local governments and local officials, there is a logic to this divergence between the cases: militant workers make a liability of the state’s commitment to stability, thereby threatening the careers of officials, who must, as a consequence, demonstrate grit and creativity. -
This Is a Free, User-Editable, Open Source Software Manual. Table of Contents About Inkscape
This is a free, user-editable, open source software manual. Table of Contents About Inkscape....................................................................................................................................................1 About SVG...........................................................................................................................................................2 Objectives of the SVG Format.................................................................................................................2 The Current State of SVG Software........................................................................................................2 Inkscape Interface...............................................................................................................................................3 The Menu.................................................................................................................................................3 The Commands Bar.................................................................................................................................3 The Toolbox and Tool Controls Bar........................................................................................................4 The Canvas...............................................................................................................................................4 Rulers......................................................................................................................................................5 -
Arxiv:1901.04985V1 [Cs.DC] 12 Jan 2019 Computing Power of Embedded Or Edge Devices, Neural Net- Tion, Saving Computing Resources
NNStreamer: Stream Processing Paradigm for Neural Networks, Toward Efficient Development and Execution of On-Device AI Applications MyungJoo Ham1 Ji Joong Moon1 Geunsik Lim1 Wook Song1 Jaeyun Jung1 Hyoungjoo Ahn1 Sangjung Woo1 Youngchul Cho1 Jinhyuck Park2 Sewon Oh1 Hong-Seok Kim1,3 1Samsung Research, Samsung Electronics 2Biotech Academy, Samsung BioLogics 3Left the affiliation 1,2{myungjoo.ham, jijoong.moon, geunsik.lim, wook16.song, jy1210.jung, hello.ahn, sangjung.woo, rams.cho, jinhyuck83.park, sewon.oh, hongse.kim}@samsung.com Abstract 3. Reduce operating cost by off-loading computation to de- We propose nnstreamer, a software system that handles vices from servers. This cost is often neglected; it is, how- neural networks as filters of stream pipelines, applying the ever, significant if billions of devices are to be deployed. stream processing paradigm to neural network applications. We do not discuss the potential advantage, distributing work- A new trend with the wide-spread of deep neural network loads across edge devices, because it is not in the scope of applications is on-device AI; i.e., processing neural networks this paper, but of future work. directly on mobile devices or edge/IoT devices instead of On-device AI achieves such advantages by processing di- cloud servers. Emerging privacy issues, data transmission rectly in the nodes where data exist so that data transmis- costs, and operational costs signifies the need for on-device sion is reduced and sensitive data are kept inside. However, AI especially when a huge number of devices with real-time on-device AI induces significant challenges. Normally, edge data processing are deployed. -
The Foreign Service Journal, July 1949
DC Urs. Polly O’Bryan F 3 Copiss g/« AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE VOL. 26, NO. 7 JOURNAL JULY 1949 ymm 0-^JTM ‘THE GRAND REVIEW’ It gives us special satisfaction to supply I. W. Harper Whiskey to men and women in America’s foreign service. We are proud to serve you, and we value highly the example you set for your guests. For these reasons alone, you can depend on our safeguarding I. W. Harper’s unexcelled taste and quality. Cost is never consulted in making this superb whiskey. It’s made for you to pour with pride and drink with pleasure. i Distributed overseas by SCIIENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION THERE ARE NO FINER WHISKIES THAN AMERICAN WHISKIES I.W.HARPER AMERICAN AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE ASSOCIATION FOREIGN SERVICE HONORARY PRESIDENT DEAN ACHESON SECRETARY OF STATE HONORARY VICE-PRESIDENTS THE UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE JOURNAL THE ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE THE COUNSELOR THE LEGAL ADVISER NORMAN ARMOUR PRESIDENT GEORGE V. ALLEN VICE-PRESIDENT ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FRANK P. LOCKHART DIRECTOR MARSHALL GREEN SECRETARY-TREASURER ELBERT G. MATHEWS ASSISTANT SECRETARY-TREASURER EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GEORGE H. BUTLER CHAIRMAN SHELDON T. MILLS VICE CHAIRMAN ELBERT G. MATHEWS HERBERT P. FALES MARSHALL GREEN BROMLEY K. SMITH ALTERNATE PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY JOURNAL EDITORIAL BOARD THE AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE ASSOCIATION EDMUND A. GULLION CHAIRMAN FRANK S. HOPKINS JOHN M. ALLISON PAUL J. REVELEY JULY, 1949 BARBARA P. CHALMERS VOL. 26, NO. 7 ACTING MANAGING EDITOR FRANK P. LOCKHART BUSINESS MANAGER COVER PICTURE: "The Grand Review,” an oil painting by James E. Taylor, shows EDUCATION COMMITTEE the victorious Union troops being reviewed shortly after the Civil War by Presi¬ DuWAYNE G. -
Oppler, Alfred C.; Papers Ger016
Oppler, Alfred C.; Papers ger016 This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on March 01, 2021. M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections & Archives Oppler, Alfred C.; Papers ger016 Table of Contents Summary Information .................................................................................................................................... 3 Biographical Sketch ....................................................................................................................................... 3 Scope and Contents ........................................................................................................................................ 7 Arrangement of the Collection ...................................................................................................................... 8 Administrative Information ............................................................................................................................ 9 Controlled Access Headings .......................................................................................................................... 9 Collection Inventory ..................................................................................................................................... 10 Biographical Material ................................................................................................................................ 10 Harvard University ................................................................................................................................... -
Distributor Settlement Agreement
DISTRIBUTORS’ 7.30.21 EXHIBIT UPDATES DISTRIBUTOR SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT DISTRIBUTORS’ 7.30.21 EXHIBIT UPDATES Table of Contents Page I. Definitions............................................................................................................................1 II. Participation by States and Condition to Preliminary Agreement .....................................13 III. Injunctive Relief .................................................................................................................13 IV. Settlement Payments ..........................................................................................................13 V. Allocation and Use of Settlement Payments ......................................................................28 VI. Enforcement .......................................................................................................................34 VII. Participation by Subdivisions ............................................................................................40 VIII. Condition to Effectiveness of Agreement and Filing of Consent Judgment .....................42 IX. Additional Restitution ........................................................................................................44 X. Plaintiffs’ Attorneys’ Fees and Costs ................................................................................44 XI. Release ...............................................................................................................................44 XII. Later Litigating