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Organizational Framework of the G-77
17 CHAPTER 2 ORGANIZATIONAL FRAMEWORK OF THE GROUP OF 77 by Lydia Swart …neither the Western media nor Western scholars pay much attention to the multilateral policies and practices of the states variously described as the South, the third world, or developing countries. In particular, patterns of cooperation among these states in pursuit of common interests at the UN are often ignored or dismissed as of little consequence. Sally Morphet, 2004 Institutional Arrangements: UNCTAD The institutional arrangements of the G-77 developed slowly. In its first years, the G-77’s activities primarily coalesced around UNCTAD as it was regarded by the South as the key locus to improve conditions of trade for development and to form a counterbalance to the Bretton Woods Institutions dominated by the North. The G-77 focus on UNCTAD was so pronounced that until 1976—when it held a Conference on Economic Cooperation among Developing Countries—the group only convened high-level meetings in preparation for UNCTAD sessions. These ministerial meetings to prepare for UNCTAD started in 1967 at the initiative of the Group of 31, consisting of developing countries that were members of UNCTAD’s Trade and Development Board (TDB), represented by Ambassadors in Geneva.10 The first G-77 ministerial meeting in 1967 adopted the Charter of Algiers, which details the G-77’s programme of action but is rather short on internal institutional issues. It is only at the very end of the Algiers Charter that a few organizational aspects are mentioned. The G-77 decided to meet at the ministerial level as “often as this may be deemed necessary” but “always prior to the convening of sessions” of 10 Later referred to as preparatory meetings. -
Topics in Computational Mathematics
Topics in Computational Mathematics Notes for Computational Mathematics (MA1611) Information Technology (AS1054) Dr G Bowtell Contents 1 Curve Sketching 1 1.1 CurveSketching ................................ 1 1.2 IncreasingandDecreasingFunction . .... 1 1.3 StationaryPoints ................................ 2 1.4 ClassificationofStationaryPoints. ...... 3 1.5 PointofInflection-DefinitionandComment . ..... 4 1.6 Asymptotes................................... 5 2 Root Finding 7 2.1 Introduction................................... 7 2.2 Existence of solution of f(x) = 0 ....................... 8 2.3 Iterative method to solve f(x) = 0 byrearrangement . 10 2.4 IterationusingExcel-Method1. ... 11 2.5 Newton’s Method to solve f(x) = 0 ...................... 12 2.6 IterationusingExcel-Method2. ... 14 2.7 SimultaneousEquations- linearand non-linear . ........ 15 2.7.1 Linearsimultaneousequations . 15 2.7.2 MatrixproductandinverseusingExcel . .. 18 2.7.3 Non-linearsimultaneousequations . ... 20 3 Financial Functions in Excel 27 3.1 Introduction................................... 27 3.2 GeometricProgression . 27 3.3 BasicCompoundInterest . 28 3.4 BasicInvestmentProblem. 29 3.5 BasicFinancialWorksheetFunctionsinExcel . ....... 31 3.6 Further Financial Worksheet Functionsin Excel . ........ 34 4 Curvefitting-InterpolationandExtrapolation 39 4.1 Introduction................................... 39 4.2 LinearSpline .................................. 42 4.3 CubicSpline-natural ............................. 45 4.4 LinearLeastSquaresFitting. ... 49 4.4.1 Linear -
Techmatters: Further Adventures in the Googleverse: Exploring the Google Labs
LOEX Quarterly Volume 31 TechMatters Further Adventures in the Googleverse: Exploring the Google Labs Krista Graham, Central Michigan University Little did I know when I set out to write my last Tech price as well as compare prices between online retailers. In Matters column that the folks at Google were going to addition, Froogle provides store and product reviews and steal my thunder by announcing not one, but two, signifi- ratings. Overall, Froogle can be a very useful tool for stu- cant development initiatives. Over the last few months, dents and general consumers looking for product informa- these two projects dubbed Google Scholar and Google tion. Print have been a major topic of conversation in libraries, on library discussion lists, and even in the national press. Discussion and debate regarding the implications and Google Deskbar potential impact of these new search tools on libraries, Google deskbar is an application that allows users to search librarians, and library services abound. But where did the web without opening a web browser. Similar in concept they come from? Although it may seem as though these to the Google toolbar, the deskbar program places a search two developments sprang fully formed from the techno- box in the taskbar that appears at the bottom of every Win- logical ooze, they actually started in a lesser known, (but dows screen. Search results appear in a “mini-viewer” that mighty powerful), corner of the Googleverse know as the allows users to preview search results prior to launching a Google Labs. browser session. Using the deskbar, a student writing a re- search paper in Word could quickly use Google’s diction- ary, calculator, or web search features without leaving his/ What is Google Labs? her document to “check the web”. -
Getting the Most out of Information Systems: a Manager's Guide (V
Getting the Most Out of Information Systems A Manager's Guide v. 1.0 This is the book Getting the Most Out of Information Systems: A Manager's Guide (v. 1.0). This book is licensed under a Creative Commons by-nc-sa 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/ 3.0/) license. See the license for more details, but that basically means you can share this book as long as you credit the author (but see below), don't make money from it, and do make it available to everyone else under the same terms. This book was accessible as of December 29, 2012, and it was downloaded then by Andy Schmitz (http://lardbucket.org) in an effort to preserve the availability of this book. Normally, the author and publisher would be credited here. However, the publisher has asked for the customary Creative Commons attribution to the original publisher, authors, title, and book URI to be removed. Additionally, per the publisher's request, their name has been removed in some passages. More information is available on this project's attribution page (http://2012books.lardbucket.org/attribution.html?utm_source=header). For more information on the source of this book, or why it is available for free, please see the project's home page (http://2012books.lardbucket.org/). You can browse or download additional books there. ii Table of Contents About the Author .................................................................................................................. 1 Acknowledgments................................................................................................................ -
Merrillville Community School Corporation 10/13/2016 Gmail, Calendar, Contacts and Chrome Tips Pin a Tab in Chrome to Have It Op
Merrillville Community School Corporation 10/13/2016 Gmail, Calendar, Contacts and Chrome Tips Pin a Tab in Chrome to have it open every time you launch chrome: 1. Open your chrome browser and go to the website you would like to open every time you launch chrome. Right click the tab at where it says the name of the website and click pin tab. 2. You can pin multiple tabs and arrange them as you want. The tab on the far left will be the default page that loads on top every time you launch chrome. Access Shared Calendars: 1. In your email you should have received an email from google saying you have access to each individual shared calendar for your building if you building has calendars for things like labs. 2. After you click the link in the email to add the calendar, go to calendar from the boxes in the upper right of chrome or go to http://calendar.google.com 3. On the left side under “My Calendars” you should see each of the calendars you have clicked the link from in your email. 4. To add an event to the calendar, click the time slot on the screen you are wishing to select and click edit event. 5. Change the time to your desired time and make sure you are selecting the correct calendar from the drop down window. 6. If you wish to send the calendar invite to other people, you may add their email addresses in the box to the right under “Add Guests” 7. -
The Emerging Economies and Climate Change
SHIFTING POWER Critical perspectives on emerging economies TNI WORKING PAPERS THE EMERGING ECONOMIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE A CASE STUDY OF THE BASIC GROUPING PRAFUL BIDWAI The Emerging Economies and Climate Change: A case study of the BASIC grouping PRAFUL BIDWAI* Among the most dramatic and far-reaching geopolitical developments of the post-Cold War era is the shift in the locus of global power away from the West with the simultaneous emergence as major powers of former colonies and other countries in the South, which were long on the periphery of international capi- talism. As they clock rapid GDP growth, these “emerging economies” are trying to assert their new identities and interests in a variety of ways. These include a demand for reforming the structures of global governance and the United Nations system (especially the Security Council) and the formation of new plurilateral blocs and associations among nations which seek to challenge or counterbalance existing patterns of dominance in world economic and political affairs. BASIC, made up of Brazil, South Africa, India and China, which acts as a bloc in the negotiations under the auspices of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), is perhaps the most sharply focused of all these groupings. Beginning with the Copenhagen climate summit of 2009, BASIC has played a major role in shaping the negotiations which were meant to, but have failed to, reach an agreement on cooperative climate actions and obligations on the part of different countries and country-groups to limit and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. These emissions, warn scientists, are dangerously warming up the Earth and causing irreversible changes in the world’s climate system. -
Larry Page Developing the Largest Corporate Foundation in Every Successful Company Must Face: As Google Word.” the United States
LOWE —continued from front flap— Praise for $19.95 USA/$23.95 CAN In addition to examining Google’s breakthrough business strategies and new business models— In many ways, Google is the prototype of a which have transformed online advertising G and changed the way we look at corporate successful twenty-fi rst-century company. It uses responsibility and employee relations——Lowe Google technology in new ways to make information universally accessible; promotes a corporate explains why Google may be a harbinger of o 5]]UZS SPEAKS culture that encourages creativity among its where corporate America is headed. She also A>3/9A addresses controversies surrounding Google, such o employees; and takes its role as a corporate citizen as copyright infringement, antitrust concerns, and “It’s not hard to see that Google is a phenomenal company....At Secrets of the World’s Greatest Billionaire Entrepreneurs, very seriously, investing in green initiatives and personal privacy and poses the question almost Geico, we pay these guys a whole lot of money for this and that key g Sergey Brin and Larry Page developing the largest corporate foundation in every successful company must face: as Google word.” the United States. grows, can it hold on to its entrepreneurial spirit as —Warren Buffett l well as its informal motto, “Don’t do evil”? e Following in the footsteps of Warren Buffett “Google rocks. It raised my perceived IQ by about 20 points.” Speaks and Jack Welch Speaks——which contain a SPEAKS What started out as a university research project —Wes Boyd conversational style that successfully captures the conducted by Sergey Brin and Larry Page has President of Moveon.Org essence of these business leaders—Google Speaks ended up revolutionizing the world we live in. -
An Audio Indexing System for Election Video Material
AN AUDIO INDEXING SYSTEM FOR ELECTION VIDEO MATERIAL Christopher Alberti, Michiel Bacchiani, Ari Bezman, Ciprian Chelba, Anastassia Drofa, Hank Liao, Pedro Moreno, Ted Power, Arnaud Sahuguet, Maria Shugrina, Olivier Siohan Speech Research Group, Google Inc. 79 Ninth Ave, New York, NY ABSTRACT (b) Workflow In the 2008 presidential election race in the United States, the manager prospective candidates made extensive use of YouTube to post video (a) material. We developed a scalable system that transcribes this ma- terial and makes the content searchable (by indexing the meta-data YouTube videos Video DB Waveform and transcripts of the videos) and allows the user to navigate through transcoder the video material based on content. The system is available as an (f) iGoogle gadget1 as well as a Labs product (labs.google.com/gaudi). (c) Utterance DB Whole Given the large exposure, special emphasis was put on the scalability (d) and reliability of the system. This paper describes the design and ASR servers waveforms ASR servers Transcription implementation of this system. ASR servers (g) client Index Terms Index — Large Vocabulary Automatic Speech Recogni- Transcribed serving tion, Information Retrieval, User Interfaces (e) segments (h) 1. INTRODUCTION User Given the wide audience that is reached by the YouTube Interface (www.youtube.com) video sharing service, the candidates involved in the 2008 United States presidential election race have been mak- Fig. 1. Block diagram of the complete audio indexing system. ing use of this medium, creating channels for election video material they want to disseminate2. The popularity of this medium is so large Section 3 describes the transcription system. -
Term Paper Google Labs, Fascinating Examples
Term paper Google Labs, fascinating examples Winter Semester 2011/2012 Submitted to Prof. Dr. Eduard Heindl Prepared by Yongwoo Kim Fakultät Wirtschaftsinformatik Hochschule Furtwangen University <References> ¥ ¡ ¢ £ ¤ ¦ § ¨ © © © $ $ ! " % # l / 1 1 222 $ $ 1 © © © ¡ - © 0 )% )) % ) " )) ! 3 ' '( # ' . *+ , l & © © / © 6 2 © 6 © 6 - ! " !% % % 7% 7 " % % )7 ' # 5' 5 ' 3 ' . 8 , , 4 4 l 4 : 62 : / 11 / 6 $ 1 / - © !% % %7% ! 0 ) %) ! ) " ! ' ' # # # ' ' . 9 # * * * * * , 6 6 7 " % !%)7 '' 3 ' . * * *; ++< $ $ / 1 1 ! ! ! 0 . # . # l ## $ 222 $ ! ' l # # 222 $2 6 $ %7 % % # l ' <Table of contents> 1. Introduction 2. Various Projects of Google Labs 2.1. Fast Flip 2.2. Earth Engine 2.3. Scribe 2.4. Follow Finder 2.5. Apps for Android 3. Art Project 3.1. Zooming in High-Level Detail View 3.2. Inside the Museums View 3.3. Creating Individual Collection 4. Strategy and the Future of Google 1. Introduction Since a few years, Google has become perhaps a single vision of the Internet – from Google search and YouTube to Gmail and Android phones. When most people, including me and you, use the Internet, they normally use Google to search for information on a regular basis. But you probably don't exactly know about all of the interesting things going on at Google that is available to you online. To keep people in the Google way of life, the company constantly launches new services. In fact, Google has an official "20 percent" rule that asks every employee to spend "one day a week working on projects that aren't necessarily in our job descriptions." These extracurricular experiments lived at GoogleLabs.com where anyone could try out the almost-finished projects. -
1- in the United States District Court for the District Of
Case 1:18-cv-00917-MN Document 134 Filed 09/26/19 Page 1 of 72 PageID #: 4378 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE VIRENTEM VENTURES, LLC, D/B/A ) ENOUNCE ) ) C.A. No. 18-917-MN ) Plaintiff, ) ) JURY TRIAL DEMANDED v. ) ) YOUTUBE, LLC; GOOGLE, LLC. ) ) Defendants. ) ) VIRENTEM VENTURES, LLC D/B/A ENOUNCE’S SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT FOR PATENT INFRINGEMENT Plaintiff, Virentem Ventures, LLC d/b/a Enounce, (“Plaintiff” or “Virentem” or “Enounce”), for its Second Amended Complaint against Defendants, YouTube, LLC (“YouTube”) and Google, LLC (“Google”) (collectively “Defendants”) alleges: THE PARTIES 1. Plaintiff Virentem, d/b/a Enounce, is a Delaware limited liability company duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, with a principle place of business in the State of California. The address of the registered office of Virentem is 2666 E Bayshore Rd Ste C, Palo Alto, CA 94303. 2. On information and belief, Defendant YouTube is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, having its principal place of business at 901 Cherry Ave., San Bruno, CA 94066. 3. On information and belief, Google is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, having its principle place of business at 1600 Amphitheatre Pkwy, Mountain View, CA 94043. -1- Case 1:18-cv-00917-MN Document 134 Filed 09/26/19 Page 2 of 72 PageID #: 4379 JURISDICTION 4. This is an action arising under the patent laws of the United States. Accordingly, this Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. -
Weathering the Climate Crisis: the Way of Ecological Agriculture
WEATHERING THE CLIMATE CRISIS: The Way of Ecological Agriculture PESTICIDE ACTION NETWORK ASIA AND THE PACIFIC WEATHERING THE CLIMATE CRISIS The Way of Ecological Agriculture 1 PESTICIDE ACTION NETWORK ASIA AND THE PACIFIC WEATHERING THE CLIMATE CRISIS The Way of Ecological Agriculture Copyright © Pesticide Action Network Asia and the Pacific, 2010. All rights reserved. Pesticide Action Network Asia and the Pacific (PAN AP) encourages the reproduction and use of this publication as long as PAN AP is properly acknowledged as the source and provided with a copy of the final work. For further information, contact: EMPOWERING PEOPLE FOR CHANGE ANAP PESTICIDE ACTION NETWORK ASIA & THE PACIFIC Pesticide Action Network Asia and the Pacific (PAN AP) PO Box 1170, 10850 Penang, Malaysia Tel: (604) 657 0271/656 0381 Fax: (604) 658 3960 Email: [email protected] Webpage: www.panap.net Writer: K Prabhakar Nair Editor-in-Chief: Sarojeni V Rengam Editors: Biju Negi and Gilbert Sape Production Assistants: Teh Chun Hong, Mohd. J. Firdaus, Brione Bruce, Tersem Kaur, Evelyn Cubelo, Virgilio Tamayao, Jr. Copy Editor: Patrick Limcaco Cover Design: Dennis Longid (Red Leaf Designs) WEATHERING THE CLIMATE CRISIS: The Way of Ecological Agriculture TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD vii INTRODUCTION 1 Chapter 1: WHAT IS CLIMATE CHANGE? 7 Sources and shares of GHGs 9 Chapter 2: THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE 10 Climate change consequences and impacts 15 Changes in rainfall patterns and distribution 15 Sea level rise and the threat of coastal flooding 16 Depleting water resources -
International Climate Negotiations – on the Road to Paris Issues at Stake in View of COP 21
DIRECTORATE GENERAL FOR INTERNAL POLICIES POLICY DEPARTMENT A: ECONOMIC AND SCIENTIFIC POLICY International Climate Negotiations – On the Road to Paris Issues at Stake in View of COP 21 STUDY Abstract This study presents a brief history of the climate negotiations, with a focus on the preparations for a legally binding agreement, to be finalised at the climate change conference in Paris in December 2015. The positions of the main Parties, negotiating groups and other stakeholders are highlighted, as well as the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) submitted during 2015. The study was provided by Policy Department A at the request of the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety (ENVI). IP/A/ENVI/2015-09 November 2015 PE 569.970 EN This document was requested by the European Parliament's Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety (ENVI). AUTHORS Lorenz Moosmann, Umweltbundesamt (Austria) Katja Pazdernik, Umweltbundesamt (Austria) Andrea Prutsch, Umweltbundesamt (Austria) Klaus Radunsky, Umweltbundesamt (Austria) RESPONSIBLE ADMINISTRATOR Tina Ohliger EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Eva Asplund LINGUISTIC VERSIONS Original: EN ABOUT THE EDITOR Policy departments provide in-house and external expertise to support EP committees and other parliamentary bodies in shaping legislation and exercising democratic scrutiny over EU internal policies. To contact Policy Department A or to subscribe to its newsletter please write to: Policy Department A: Economic and Scientific Policy European Parliament B-1047 Brussels E-mail: [email protected] Manuscript completed in November 2015 © European Union, 2015 This document is available on the Internet at: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/studies DISCLAIMER The opinions expressed in this document are the sole responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the European Parliament.