December 14,1869

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

December 14,1869 ****** «• TUESDAY PORTLAND. MORNING. DECEMBER 14, 1869. 7W„,. ,aM „Zi„. — nri.» i>/irtlnawl Tlnilv __. —^_■ LV^mMALS, MlStiliLliAAKOUS. WANTED A Kidxapped Child.—Lately an adver- and Is published every day (Sundays excepted) by the daily press Gossip Glsawiags. tho DAILY PRESS. tisement appeared in the Boston papers offer- —Meu who the Portland R E M oYaL. Wanted. dot i’s.—Pugilists. Publishing Co., ing a reward of for the recovery of a I.oid SITUATION as Salesman or BUSINESS DIRECTORY. $1,000 Derby left a fortune of £190,0X1 a Bookkeeper, POBl’LANI). little At 109 Exchange Poitland. Choice A Address, “,J As PUB,” Portland, Me. girl seven years old, kidnapped from the year. Stbeet, dc5eod2w* Terms: WE SHALL OPEN* OCB Security! St. James Eight Dollars a Year in advance. Hotel in Boston. A Boston cor- Till-. Richardson affair lias been done In \Ye invite the attention of both City and Seven Per Cent. Tussiay Morning, December 14 1869. respondent of an inland paper explains the ballad. — The New Store 49 Gold, Tenement Wanted readers to the Maine State Press Exchange St,, Country following list of Port- advertisement by the following painful story: —Wisconsin has raised its Governor's sal- Free of Govexmext Tax. In a desirable six or for a — — locality, eight rooms, About PtMslied ox land BUSINESS The Division of Westbrook. nine years ago a “sweet sixleener,” ary to $7500. every Thursday Morning at small family, or a house for two families. Such HOUSES, which are among In a large and an immense became in- $2..>0 year; if in at a enjoying income, —An wants to paid advance, $2.00 (Hearty Ten Per Cent. Currency.) a tenement within a few weeks will be the The talk about a division of Westbrook Englishman know if the year. IVov. satisfactory. most reliable establishments in the City. fatuated with a pour handsome young man Monday, 15fh, Best of references. children of Ilam were Hamerlcans. suggests for consideration a topic of great named Lewis, whom she married, 'flu- fel- Bates or Address, “RENT,” low turned out to be a first-class scoundrel.— —The railroad trains in Alabama are Advertising.—Odc inchofspace, Will! A GOOD STOCK OF Advertising Agency. practical importance. The old of our ln First Bonds Dec 1869. dc7dtf Press AT W plan the length of column, constitutes a Mortgage 6, Office, ELL & CO., 174 Middle Street. Almost from the very day that matrimo- crowded on “square.” Puritan fathers cannot be too adher- every trip with emigrants their $1.50 per square daily first week. 75 cents OF strictly nial knot was tied, lie acted coldly toward his ed if way to Texas, per week after; three insertions, or less, $1.00; Wanted! A to, we would preserve their institutions wife, but she, him with an intense ar- Agricultural Implements Seeds. loving —A continuing every other day after first week, 50 other fail- governess, for a situation, New- York & Os wego rooms with board for gentleman and lady, SAWYER & WOODFORD, No. 119 Exchange St. in their ancient rigor. They believed that dor, overlooked this coldness with advertising cents. at west that FURNITURE! TWO end. Address, H. F., this office,for oue should ings, and squandered her money oa him with- says “she is a perfect mistress of her own Half square, three insertions or less, 75 cents; week. dc81w* eervy community govern itself, or con- Auciioncer. out stint. But the ungrateful dog turned up- I” one week, $1.00; 50 cents week after. trol its own in all of tongue per affairs, those particulars on her. He insulted and ill- Special one third additional. Midland Rail Road ? C. maligned, —Au old Notices, and W. HOLMES, No. 327 Congress Street. which tobacco chewer finds that the B1 UDder head of Crockery Glass WANTED. pertained to it alone. Upon this prin- treated her with a devilish spirit, until she Amusements,” $2.00 per Ware, hie sustains his favorite or These wa? found herself thousand out of habit. lie quotes: square per week; three insertions less S1.50. Bonds can be Registered Agencies for ciple the school district instituted. They forty pocket, Advertisements inserted in the Maine Sewing Machines. exclusive of thousand which she had “He that is let him be only consented to the of their twenty filthy, filthy still." State lias a circulation SIX MILLIONS OF DOLLARS PAID-UP STOCK to take the of CHAPIN & 86 enlarge range in a Press” (which large CARPETS, <fcc., place retiling EATON, Exchange Street, (Weed.) invested first-class house in Dorchester, —Odd facts in A house built in the for &c., APAIUNERpartners in one ot the oldest mercantile bouses W. S. duties and or to share them ornithology. every part ol Slate) $1.00 per square DYER, 158, Middle St, over II. II. Hay’s. responsibilities, to please him, and which the never oc- SUBSCRIPTIONS. No bonds issued on road un- in Portland. This is a good fora young or couple without has known to for first insertion, and 50 cents per square for opening HOBS & in on wings often been hate WHICH WE WILL SELL AT THE middle from or BAKER, 145 Middle St. (over Shaw’s.) with others, those cases where it was in- cupied, account of the eccentricities of the insertion. aged man, city country, with capital each subsequent der issue to and good business man. a construction; limited $20,000 per mile of qualifications, to enter into an on account of or Her nine years of married life were flight—of steps. Address all communications to established annual dispensable, great expense business of half a million dollars. Bakers. years ot continued and —Rival coal ill road built and in BEING with real till December inconvenience. the of struggle unhappiness. monopolies Pennsylvania PORTLAND PUBLISHING CO. running order, ONLY Address, name, 20th, In organization towns, The the held in ffjflwest Cash Prices! “CONFIDENTIAL.” W. C. COBB, No. 12 Pearl Street. high position lady society threaten the Scranton the in Company thuswlse: ABOUT HALF THE ACTUAL COST. Tbe road is dec4d2w* Portland, Me. community was of more consequence forbade her from making an exjiose of her JOHN B 22 Anderson “To suit our own action we must drive ‘u’ out MASTERl’ON, Street. their view than the did not situation, for her pride had already been BUSINESS CARDS built with tor territory. They of LOWELL being great economy cash; 15® Miles wounded. But “forbearance ceased to be a auction.’’ & HOYT, WANTED. enquire the extent of the Boots, Shoes, anti Rubbers. concerning latter, and she filed a libel lor a are already comp’eted iu tbe most virtue,” divorce. —Susan 15. Authony declares that she “will thorough manner, J. W. BOUCHER & No. 338 Street, but of the former. Common BONNEV & 40 CO., Congress rights, privi- About two years ago she refused to squander have PULLEN, No. the Female an assistant to Susan B. on her tombstone Excluiuge Street, equipped and and the whole Orphan Asylum, and mo’e and he Anthony running rogu’ar trains; AT aid the matron. leges, interests, they considered, consti- any money on her husband, was Boots and Shoes—Gents Custom Work. and no; relict of some fool of a man.” Hard Counsellors at no29ti to 98 Free street. tuted a too lazy and inclined to his Law, Between Middle and Pore. line (over 400 miles) it is expected will ho completed Apply community fit for a municipality, a wickedly practice WALTER BERRY, No. 101 Middle Street. profession, that of administering pills aud ap- on her father. No. 58 school district or a parish. Accordingly the Exchange Street, November 13,18C9. dtl within the ensuing year. It is one ot the most im- plying plasters. Lewis’s sudden transition —It is stated that the of Austria Eagle Sugar Refinery, town and the school Empress Booksellers and Stationers. district have been insti- trom poverty to riches, from an humble posi- PORTLAND. portant roads in the State ot‘ New York. It short- is at Rome In order to bo ! Fore Street, near Grand ft unk tutions dear to the hearts of tion to one on the notch of “fashionable shoitly expected REMOVAL. Depot, HOYT, FOOti & 92 Middle Street. New Englanders top Peuoival Bonnev. Stanley T. Pullen, BREED, dizzied him. He the rote ot present at the accouchment of the ex-Queeft nt*ilE Portland Water Co. lave removed their ens the route from New York t> Buffalo 70 from their earliest society” played Dec. 9, 1W59. ditv City history. Portland, 1 office to ihe room over the Eastern the millionaire, for several years, made a of Naples. Express Wants Flour Book-Binders. Little and, office on Plum Street near Middle Street. miles,and to 45 it traverses a Barrels. communities, his Oswego miles, populous 25,000 neighborhoods, having decided sensation. Leaving wile, lie visit- it is an it is a “T1'*'L. D. —Perhaps old, but certainly SBLPLEY, Sec’y. Price SO Cents. SMALL & SHACKFORD, No. 35 Plum Street. common duties, interests and aspirations, ed Long Blanch last season and succeeded in DR. CHARLESE, WEBSTER, district destitute of other railroad facilities, which felicitious, saying of Josh Billlogs, that “one have been sort of minor in which making the marriageable belles and girls November 20,1869. d2tn republics, will break Office and Residence No. 211 Con- must tarnish it a large and profitable local busi- Bonnet and Hat Blcachery. there believe that he was a “handsome young single hornet who feels well, up a removal^ all questions pertaining to them alone, have street. H. E. UNDERWOOD, No. 310) Congress "Street. bachelor” from Boston. lie rode in the finest gress And and it will be an large camp-meeting.” Ware-House to Let / ness; completed at aggregate cost been discussed and settled.
Recommended publications
  • Fonts & Encodings
    Fonts & Encodings Yannis Haralambous To cite this version: Yannis Haralambous. Fonts & Encodings. O’Reilly, 2007, 978-0-596-10242-5. hal-02112942 HAL Id: hal-02112942 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02112942 Submitted on 27 Apr 2019 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. ,title.25934 Page iii Friday, September 7, 2007 10:44 AM Fonts & Encodings Yannis Haralambous Translated by P. Scott Horne Beijing • Cambridge • Farnham • Köln • Paris • Sebastopol • Taipei • Tokyo ,copyright.24847 Page iv Friday, September 7, 2007 10:32 AM Fonts & Encodings by Yannis Haralambous Copyright © 2007 O’Reilly Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Published by O’Reilly Media, Inc., 1005 Gravenstein Highway North, Sebastopol, CA 95472. O’Reilly books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. Online editions are also available for most titles (safari.oreilly.com). For more information, contact our corporate/institutional sales department: (800) 998-9938 or [email protected]. Printing History: September 2007: First Edition. Nutshell Handbook, the Nutshell Handbook logo, and the O’Reilly logo are registered trademarks of O’Reilly Media, Inc. Fonts & Encodings, the image of an axis deer, and related trade dress are trademarks of O’Reilly Media, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Dylan Beattie @Dylanbeattie
    Algorithms Apps,& Abstractions Decoding our Digital World Dylan Beattie @dylanbeattie Good morning, DotNext! My name is Dylan Beattie, and over the next hour I'm going to take you on a journey right to the heart of the engineering achievements that power our digital world. 1 @dylanbeattie • Building websites since 1992 • Microsoft MVP • London .NET User Group • www.dylanbeattie.net • [email protected] But first, a little bit about me. This is me. I'm the CTO at Skills Matter in London, I'm a Microsoft MVP for Visual Studio and Development Tools, and I've been building websites and web applications since 1992 - which is basically forever, in internet years. And as you have probably noticed, I'm doing my talk today in English. 2 @dylanbeattie www.dylanbeattie.net Я не говорю по-русски еще! 3 4 Vey dolzhni vibrat: tort ili cmert'! 5 Moya loshad' ne khudozhnik, a arkhitektor. 6 Давным-давно, на далеком континенте… Anyway. So our talk starts here – a long time ago, on a continent far, far away… because that's where I was born. In Kenya, in Africa, in the late 1970s. My father is from England, and when I was born, he wanted to send a photograph of me to his family back home. So he took this picture… 7 …of me with my mother. He put it into an envelope with a hand-written letter, and posted it to my grandparents. It took about four weeks to get there. Four weeks for a 6x4" photograph; scanned at 300dpi, that would make a 250Kb JPEG image, and 250Kb in four weeks is..
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Exercises, Set 4. MACHINE REPRESENTATION of OTHER
    Exercises, set 4. MACHINE REPRESENTATION OF OTHER DATA FORMATS (TEXT CHARACTERS, STRINGS). 1. ASCII character encoding and extensions. The first widely used standardized binary code for alphanumeric characters (consider that Morse’s alphabet is also alphanumeric code, but maybe not so ”digital”) was implemented in early 1960-ties for teletypes (TTY – Tele Typewriters) by Bell company. Although TTY machines were in use many years before (see Fig. 1.), the standard introduced by Bell and ASA (American Standards Association, one of the former names of today’s ANSI – American National Standards Institute) was better ordered than other telegraphic codes to support sorting of the texts, and also had some features important for devices other than TYYs. The official name of this standard is ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange). First edition was published in 1963, most important revision in 1967 and last update in 1986. Fig. 1. Teletype machines used by RAF during the World War II. Generic ASCII code is based on 7-bit length code-word (Morse’s alphabet uses codes of different lengths, for example). Having Q = 27 = 128 different codes we can encode: upper-case letters of Latin alphabet (from A to Z) – 26 different characters; lower-case letters of Latin alphabet (from a to z) – next 26 different characters; decimal digits (from 0 to 9) – next 10 printable characters; Space – 1 character (not seen, but “printable”); punctuation marks (like dot, coma etc.) and a few miscellaneous symbols (like #, $, %, &, (, ), <, > etc.) – 32 different printable characters; some control characters (not printable), used to drive TTYs and transmission process (like STX – Start of Text, ETX – End of Text, BEL – Bell etc.) – 33 different codes (including BS – Backspace and DEL – Delete).
    [Show full text]
  • Content Negotiation Content Negotiation Functions
    Guides Products Changelog Reference Developer Hub Log in Try Fastly free VCL Content negotiation Content negotiation Functions ! accept.charset_lookup() Selects the best match from a string in the format of an Accept-Charset header's value in the listed character sets, using the algorithm described in Section 5.3.3 of RFC 7231. This function takes the following parameters: 1. a colon-separated list of character sets available for the resource, 2. a fallback return value, 3. a string representing an Accept-Charset header's value. Format STRING accept.charset_lookup(STRING requested_charsets, STRING default, STRING accept_header) Examples 1 set bereq.http.Accept-Charset = 2 accept.charset_lookup("iso-8859-5:iso-8859-2", "utf-8", 3 req.http.Accept-Charset); ! accept.encoding_lookup() Selects the best match from a string in the format of an Accept-Encoding header's value in the listed content encodings, using the algorithm described in Section 5.3.3 of RFC 7231. This function takes the following parameters: 1. a colon-separated list of content encodings available for the resource, 2. a fallback return value, 3. a string representing an Accept-Encoding header's value. This function does not have special handling of x-compress or x-gzip values. Format STRING accept.encoding_lookup(STRING requested_content_encodings, STRING default, STRING accept_header) Examples 1 set bereq.http.Accept-Encoding = 2 accept.encoding_lookup("compress:gzip", "identity", 3 req.http.Accept-Encoding); ! accept.language_%lter_basic() Similar to accept.language_lookup() , this function selects the best matches from a string in the format of an Accept- Language header's value in the listed languages, using the algorithm described in RFC 4647, Section 3.3.1.
    [Show full text]
  • Morse Code - Wikipedia Page 1 of 21
    Morse code - Wikipedia Page 1 of 21 Morse code From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Morse code is a method of transmitting text information as a series of on- off tones, lights, or clicks that can be directly understood by a skilled listener or observer without special equipment. It is named for Samuel F. B. Morse, an inventor of the telegraph. The International Morse Code[1] encodes the ISO basic Latin alphabet, some extra Latin letters, the Arabic numerals and a small set of punctuation and procedural signals (prosigns) as standardized sequences of short and long signals called "dots" and "dashes",[1] or "dits" and "dahs", as in amateur radio practice. Because many non-English natural languages use more than the 26 Roman letters, extensions to the Morse alphabet exist for those languages. Each Morse code symbol represents either a text character (letter or numeral) or a prosign and is represented by a unique sequence of dots and dashes. The duration of a dash is three times the duration of a dot. Each dot or dash is followed by a short silence, equal to the dot duration. The letters of a word are separated by a space equal to three dots (one dash), and the words are separated by a space equal to seven dots. The dot duration is the basic unit of time measurement in code transmission.[1] To increase the speed of the communication, the code was designed so that the length of each character in Morse varies approximately inversely to its frequency of occurrence in English. Thus the most common letter in English, the letter "E", has the shortest code, a single dot.
    [Show full text]
  • Text Analysis with Lingpipe 4
    Text Analysis with LingPipe 4 Volume I Text Analysis with LingPipe 4 Volume I Bob Carpenter LingPipe Publishing New York 2010 © LingPipe Publishing Pending: Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Carpenter, Bob. Text Analysis with LingPipe 4.0 / Bob Carpenter p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN X-XXX-XXXXX-X (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Natural Language Processing 2. Java (computer program language) I. Carpenter, Bob II. Title QAXXX.XXXXXXXX 2011 XXX/.XX’X-xxXX XXXXXXXX Text printed on demand in the United States of America. All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permis- sion of the publishers. Contents 1 Getting Started1 1.1 Tools of the Trade............................... 1 1.2 Hello World Example ............................. 9 1.3 Introduction to Ant ..............................11 2 Characters and Strings 19 2.1 Character Encodings..............................19 2.2 Encoding Java Programs ...........................27 2.3 char Primitive Type..............................28 2.4 Character Class................................30 2.5 CharSequence Interface ...........................34 2.6 String Class ..................................35 2.7 StringBuilder Class.............................41 2.8 CharBuffer Class...............................43 2.9 Charset Class .................................46 2.10 International Components for Unicode..................48 3 Regular Expressions 55 3.1 Matching and Finding.............................55 3.2 Character
    [Show full text]
  • Content Negotiation Content Negotiation Functions ! Accept.Charset Lookup()
    VCL Content negotiation Content negotiation Functions ! accept.charset_lookup() Selects the best match from a string in the format of an Accept-Charset header's value in the listed character sets, using the algorithm described in Section 5.3.3 of RFC 7231. This function takes the following parameters: 1. a colon-separated list of character sets available for the resource, 2. a fallback return value, 3. a string representing an Accept-Charset header's value. Format STRING accept.charset_lookup(STRING requested_charsets, STRING default, STRING accept_header) Examples 1 set bereq.http.Accept-Charset = 2 accept.charset_lookup("iso-8859-5:iso-8859-2", "utf-8", 3 req.http.Accept-Charset); ! accept.encoding_lookup() Selects the best match from a string in the format of an Accept-Encoding header's value in the listed content encodings, using the algorithm described in Section 5.3.3 of RFC 7231. This function takes the following parameters: 1. a colon-separated list of content encodings available for the resource, 2. a fallback return value, 3. a string representing an Accept-Encoding header's value. This function does not have special handling of x-compress or x-gzip values. Format STRING accept.encoding_lookup(STRING requested_content_encodings, STRING default, STRING accept_header) Examples 1 set bereq.http.Accept-Encoding = 2 accept.encoding_lookup("compress:gzip", "identity", 3 req.http.Accept-Encoding); ! accept.language_filter_basic() Similar to accept.language_lookup() , this function selects the best matches from a string in the format of an Accept-Language header's value in the listed languages, using the algorithm described in RFC 4647, Section 3.3.1. This function takes the following parameters: 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Songs by Artist
    Songs By Artist Artist Song Title Disc # Artist Song Title Disc # (children's Songs) I've Been Working On The 04786 (christmas) Pointer Santa Claus Is Coming To 08087 Railroad Sisters, The Town London Bridge Is Falling 05793 (christmas) Presley, Blue Christmas 01032 Down Elvis Mary Had A Little Lamb 06220 (christmas) Reggae Man O Christmas Tree (o 11928 Polly Wolly Doodle 07454 Tannenbaum) (christmas) Sia Everyday Is Christmas 11784 She'll Be Comin' Round The 08344 Mountain (christmas) Strait, Christmas Cookies 11754 Skip To My Lou 08545 George (duet) 50 Cent & Nate 21 Questions 00036 This Old Man 09599 Dogg Three Blind Mice 09631 (duet) Adams, Bryan & When You're Gone 10534 Twinkle Twinkle Little Star 09938 Melanie C. (christian) Swing Low, Sweet Chariot 09228 (duet) Adams, Bryan & All For Love 00228 (christmas) Deck The Halls 02052 Sting & Rod Stewart (duet) Alex & Sierra Scarecrow 08155 Greensleeves 03464 (duet) All Star Tribute What's Goin' On 10428 I Saw Mommy Kissing 04438 Santa Claus (duet) Anka, Paul & Pennies From Heaven 07334 Jingle Bells 05154 Michael Buble (duet) Aqua Barbie Girl 00727 Joy To The World 05169 (duet) Atlantic Starr Always 00342 Little Drummer Boy 05711 I'll Remember You 04667 Rudolph The Red-nosed 07990 Reindeer Secret Lovers 08191 Santa Claus Is Coming To 08088 (duet) Balvin, J. & Safari 08057 Town Pharrell Williams & Bia Sleigh Ride 08564 & Sky Twelve Days Of Christmas, 09934 (duet) Barenaked Ladies If I Had $1,000,000 04597 The (duet) Base, Rob & D.j. It Takes Two 05028 We Wish You A Merry 10324 E-z Rock Christmas (duet) Beyonce & Freedom 03007 (christmas) (duets) Year Snow Miser Song 11989 Kendrick Lamar Without A Santa Claus (duet) Beyonce & Luther Closer I Get To You, The 01633 (christmas) (musical) We Need A Little Christmas 10314 Vandross Mame (duet) Black, Clint & Bad Goodbye, A 00674 (christmas) Andrew Christmas Island 11755 Wynonna Sisters, The (duet) Blige, Mary J.
    [Show full text]
  • AR April 2016.Indd
    CW Today Louis Szondy VK5EEE e [email protected] Welcome to the 6 th edition of CW the long characters, and the dah- generally profi cient and most Today. In the 3rd edition we looked di-di-dah-dah-dah which means Russian amateurs on HF seem at some of the little known history of “switching to Japanese Morse”. To to be quite good at CW. A fun the interrupted carrier wave Morse switch back to International Morse and interesting award to chase code mode and why it would really the code di-di-di-dah-dit is sent. is the RDA Award – Russian be more accurate to call it the Gerke Thus one could say “good bye” Districts Award. This is akin to code. We have Friedrich Clemens in Japanese using International WAS (Worked All States) in USA Gerke to thank for creating a much Morse by sending SAYONARA or in only much more versatile, with a improved version of Morse code Japanese Morse as Sa-Yo-U-Na-Ra huge number of districts available. which went on to become what we which is dah-di-dah-di-dah dah- “Oblasts” or administrative states know as the International Morse dah di-di-dah di-dah-dit di-di-dit are characterised by two letters, code. Yet there are many languages and before this dah-di-di-dah-dah- and followed by two digits which that use non-Latin alphabets and dah to signify that what follows is are a smaller sub division. A nice some of them also have their own Japanese, and after it di-di-di-dah- addition to the shack are amateur Morse code versions.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 4 Character Encoding in Corpus Construction
    Chapter 4 Character encoding in corpus construction Anthony McEnery Zhonghua Xiao Lancaster University Corpus linguistics has developed, over the past three decades, into a rich paradigm that addresses a great variety of linguistic issues ranging from monolingual research of one language to contrastive and translation studies involving many different languages. Today, while the construction and exploitation of English language corpora still dominate the field of corpus linguistics, corpora of other languages, either monolingual or multilingual, have also become available. These corpora have added notably to the diversity of corpus-based language studies. Character encoding is rarely an issue for alphabetical languages, like English, which typically still use ASCII characters. For many other languages that use different writing systems (e.g. Chinese), encoding is an important issue if one wants to display the corpus properly or facilitate data interchange, especially when working with multilingual corpora that contain a wide range of writing systems. Language specific encoding systems make data interchange problematic, since it is virtually impossible to display a multilingual document containing texts from different languages using such encoding systems. Such documents constitute a new Tower of Babel which disrupts communication. In addition to the problem with displaying corpus text or search results in general, an issue which is particular relevant to corpus building is that the character encoding in a corpus must be consistent if the corpus is to be searched reliably. This is because if the data in a corpus is encoded using different character sets, even though the internal difference is indiscernible to human eyes, a computer will make a distinction, thus leading to unreliable results.
    [Show full text]
  • INM 2014 Course Notes
    Internet and New Media Course Notes Version of 03 Nov 2014 Ao.Univ.-Prof. Dr. Keith Andrews IICM Graz University of Technology Inffeldgasse 16c A-8010 Graz [email protected] Copyright 2014 Keith Andrews. Contents Contents iii List of Figures vii List of Tables ix List of Listings xi Preface xiii Credits xv 1 Introducing the Internet1 1.1 Internet Statistics . .3 1.2 Internet FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) . 14 1.3 Warriors of the Net . 20 2 Newsgroups 25 2.1 Usenet News . 26 2.2 Character Encodings and Plain Text . 31 2.3 Configuring Your News Reader . 40 2.4 Netiquette . 47 3 Electronic Mail 57 3.1 Starting with Email . 57 3.2 Different Kinds of Email Access . 59 3.3 Configuring Your Email Reader . 61 3.4 Using Email . 62 3.5 Securing Your Email . 69 4 Searching and Researching 73 4.1 Searching The Web . 74 4.2 Academic Research . 77 4.3 Browser Search Hacks . 79 4.4 Desktop Search . 80 i 5 Plagiarism and Copyright 81 5.1 Academic Integrity . 83 5.2 Copyright Law . 84 5.3 Quoting Text . 86 5.4 A Worked Example . 88 5.5 Quoting Images . 90 5.6 Plagiarism Policy and Consequences . 90 5.7 Breaches of Copyright . 90 6 Getting Connected 93 6.1 Hooking Up . 94 6.2 Types of Internet Connection . 96 6.3 How the Internet Works . 104 7 Staying Safe 113 7.1 The Bad Guys . 114 7.2 Privacy . 115 7.3 Prevention is Better than Cure . 116 8 File Transfer 129 9 The Web 133 9.1 The World Wide Web .
    [Show full text]
  • Codificación De Caracteres
    Codificación de caracteres Morse Baudot CCITT#2 5 bit Codificación binaria Combinaciones posibles 22: 4 23: 8 24: 16 25: 32 26: 64 27: 128 28: 256 216: 65536 ASCII American Standard Code for Information Interchange Desde la década anterior las empresas de comunicaciones como IBM y AT&T presionaban a la ASA, American Standart Asociation, para que adoptara una codificación de caracteres más amplia y eficaz. En 1966 varias compañías americanas de la industria de la comunicación entre las que se encontraban fabricantes de ordenadores y teletipos, optaron por un nuevo código que sustituyera el Baudot y se creó el código ASCII que incorporaría en 1967 las letras de caja baja. Caracteres gráficos Caracteres de control ASCII utilizaba en principio un código de 7 bits que permitía representar 128 caracteres. Con ello era posible un juego de 96 caracteres [letras mayúsculas y minúsculas, números del 0 al 9 y signos de puntuación] que ocupan las posiciones 32 a 126. Los caracteres de control [retorno de carro, salto de línea y retroceso] que ocupaban las primeras 32 posiciones. ASCII American Standard Code for Information Interchange EBCDIC IBM EBCDIC [Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code]. Se trataba de un código de 8 bits capaz de representar 256 combinaciones si bien sus caracteres alfabéticos no son secuenciales, es decir no se corresponden con números consecutivos como en ASCII. EBCDIC IBM Tarjetas perforadas Jospeh Marie Jacquard Hermann Hollerit ASCII American Standard Code for Information Interchange ISO 2022 Esta norma nació en 1973 y llegó hasta 1994. Es una tabla de 8 bits con 256 caracteres.
    [Show full text]