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The Stuttgart Region – Where Growth Meets Innovation Design: Atelier Brückner/Ph Oto: M
The Stuttgart Region – Where Growth Meets Innovation oto: M. Jungblut Design: Atelier Brückner/Ph CERN, Universe of Particles/ Mercedes-Benz B-Class F-Cell, Daimler AG Mercedes-Benz The Stuttgart Region at a Glance Situated in the federal state of Baden- The Stuttgart Region is the birthplace and Württemberg in the southwest of Germa- home of Gottlieb Daimler and Robert ny, the Stuttgart Region comprises the Bosch, two important figures in the history City of Stuttgart (the state capital) and its of the motor car. Even today, vehicle five surrounding counties. With a popula- design and production as well as engineer- tion of 2.7 million, the area boasts a highly ing in general are a vital part of the region’s advanced industrial infrastructure and economy. Besides its traditional strengths, enjoys a well-earned reputation for its eco- the Stuttgart Region is also well known nomic strength, cutting-edge technology for its strong creative industries and its and exceptionally high quality of life. The enthusiasm for research and development. region has its own parliamentary assembly, ensuring fast and effective decision-mak- All these factors make the Stuttgart ing on regional issues such as local public Region one of the most dynamic and effi- transport, regional planning and business cient regions in the world – innovative in development. approach, international in outlook. Stuttgart Region Key Economic Data Population: 2.7 million from 170 countries Area: 3,654 km2 Population density: 724 per km2 People in employment: 1.5 million Stuttgart Region GDP: 109.8 billion e Corporate R&D expenditure as % of GDP: 7.5 Export rate of manufacturing industry: 63.4 % Productivity: 72,991 e/employee Per capita income: 37,936 e Data based on reports by Wirtschaftsförderung Region Stuttgart GmbH, Verband Region Stuttgart, IHK Region Stuttgart and Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg, 2014 Stuttgart-Marketing GmbH Oliver Schuster A Great Place to Live and Work Top Quality of Life Germany‘s Culture Capitals 1. -
Cut Sets As Recognizable Tree Languages
Cut Sets as Recognizable Tree Languages Björn Borchardt and Andreas Maletti 1 Department of Computer Science, Dresden University of Technology, D-01062 Dresden, Germany Branimir e²elja and Andreja Tepav£evi¢ ∗,2 Department of Mathematics and Informatics, University of Novi Sad, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia and Montenegro Heiko Vogler Department of Computer Science, Dresden University of Technology, D-01062 Dresden, Germany Abstract A tree series over a semiring with partially ordered carrier set can be considered as a fuzzy set. We investigate conditions under which it can also be understood as a fuzzied recognizable tree language. In this sense, sucient conditions are presented which, when imposed, ensure that every cut set, i.e., the pre-image of a prime lter of the carrier set, is a recognizable tree language. Moreover, such conditions are also presented for cut sets of recognizable tree series. 1 Introduction There are two sources for the investigations in this paper, namely (i) fuzzy sets and (ii) tree series and recognizable tree series, in particular. Both sources ∗ Corresponding author. Address: Department of Mathematics and Informatics, Trg Dositeja Obradovi¢a 4, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia and Montenegro Email addresses: {borchard,maletti}@tcs.inf.tu-dresden.de (Björn Borchardt and Andreas Maletti), [email protected] (Branimir e²elja and Andreja Tepav£evi¢), [email protected] (Heiko Vogler). 1 Financially supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG, GK 334/3). 2 Financially supported by the Herbert Quandt Foundation and by the Serbian Ministry of Science, grant number 1227. Preprint submitted to Fuzzy Sets and Systems 6 October 2006 are derivatives of the concept of characteristic functions, where as usual, given a set S every characteristic function χ : S → {0, 1} on S identies the subset { s ∈ S | χ(s) = 1 } of S. -
Welcome Guide for Researchers Getting Started in Dresden‘S Research Landscape
WELCOME GUIDE FOR RESEARCHERS Getting started in Dresden‘s research landscape 1 INDEX Rector´s statement..................................................................................4 Before arrival Visa and entry..........................................................................................5 Travel health insurance and important documents..............................6 Family After arrival Dual Career Service ...................................................................30 Local registration .....................................................................................8 Childcare.................................................................................... 31 Residence and work permit .......................................................................9 School system........................................................................... 33 Funding...........................................................................................................10 School registration..................................................................... 34 Social security system.............................................................................12 Benefits for families...................................................................35 Health insurance.....................................................................................13 Having a baby............................................................................. 37 General information on housing................................................................14 -
Focus on European Cities 12 Focus on European Cities
Focus on European cities 12 Focus on European cities Part of the Europe 2020 strategy focuses on sustainable and There were 36 cities with a population of between half a socially inclusive growth within the cities and urban areas million and 1 million inhabitants, including the following of the European Union (EU). These are often major centres capital cities: Amsterdam (the Netherlands), Riga (Latvia), for economic activity and employment, as well as transport Vilnius (Lithuania) and København (Denmark). A further network hubs. Apart from their importance for production, 85 cities were in the next tier, with populations ranging be- cities are also focal points for the consumption of energy and tween a quarter of a million and half a million, including other materials, and are responsible for a high share of total Bratislava, Tallinn and Ljubljana, the capital cities of Slova- greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, cities and urban re- kia, Estonia and Slovenia. Only two capital cities figured in gions often face a range of social difficulties, such as crime, the tier of 128 cities with 150 000 to 250 000 people, namely poverty, social exclusion and homelessness. The Urban Audit Lefkosia (Cyprus) and Valletta (Malta). The Urban Audit also assesses socioeconomic conditions across cities in the EU, provides results from a further 331 smaller cities in the EU, Norway, Switzerland, Croatia and Turkey, providing valuable with fewer than 150 000 inhabitants, including the smallest information in relation to Europe’s cities and urban areas. capital -
Musical (And Other) Gems from the State Library in Dresden
Click here for Full Issue of EIR Volume 23, Number 20, May 10, 1996 Reviews Musical (and other) gems from the State Libraryin Dresden by Nora Hamennan One might easily ask how anything could be left of what was scribe, and illuminations by a Gentile artist painted in Chris once the glorious collection of books and manuscripts which tian Gothic style. An analogous "cross-cultural" blend is were the Saxon Royal Library, and then after 1918, Saxon shown in two French-language illuminated manuscripts of State Library in Dresden. After all, Dresden was razed to the works by Boccaccio and Petrarca, respectively, two of the ground by the infamous Allied firebombing in 1945, which "three crowns" of Italian 14th-century vernacular literature, demolished the Frauenkirche and the "Japanese Palace" that produced in the 15th-century French royal courts. Then had housed the library's most precious holdings, as well as comes a printed book, with hand-painted illuminations, of taking an unspeakable and unnecessary toll in innocent hu 1496, The Performanceo/Music in Latin by Francesco Gaffu man lives. Then, the Soviets, during their occupation of the rius, the music theorist whose career at the Milan ducal court eastern zone of Germany, carried off hundreds of thousands overlapped the sojourns there of Josquin des Prez, the most of volumes, most of which have not yet been repatriated. renowned Renaissance composer, and Leonardo da Vinci, The question is partially answered in the exhibit, "Dres regarded by contemporaries as the finestimprovisational mu den: Treasures from the Saxon State Library," on view at the sician. -
List of Doctors and Hospitals in Baden-Württemberg
List of Doctors and Hospitals in Baden-Württemberg The Frankfurt Consular District includes Hessen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Baden-Württemberg Nordrhein-Westfalen and the Saarland in the Federal Republic of Germany. (July 2014) The following is only a partial list of English-speaking medical professionals in the Frankfurt Consular District. The choice of a physician is a personal matter and the American Consulate is not in a position to make specific recommendations. The American Consulate General assumes no responsibility for the professional ability or integrity of the persons whose names appear on this list. The names are arranged alphabetically by city (according to field or specialty), and the order in which they appear has no significance. Important! American Citizens living or traveling abroad should be sure they have adequate medical insurance that will cover expenses incurred abroad. Medicare and Medicaid are only valid in the United States. Some private American medical insurance companies will pay for expenses abroad, but most require that the patient pay the bill first, then file for reimbursement. It is common practice in Germany for health care providers to expect payment up front before providing services to individuals not covered by the German health care system. The United States Consulate General does not have funding to help cover medical expenses of American citizens in Germany. Emergency phone numbers: Emergencies (all kinds): 110 Police 110 Ambulance 112 Fire 112 Poison Center for Baden-Württemberg: 0761-19240 Page 1 of 13 HOSPITALS AND CLINICS (Krankenhäuser und Kliniken) STUTTGART Bethesda Krankenhaus Stuttgart Hohenheimer Str. 21, 70184 Stuttgart GmbH Tel.: 0711-2156-0, Fax: 0711-2156-290 Website: www.bethesda-stuttgart.de Klinikum Stuttgart Bürgerhospital Tunzhofer Str. -
WORTH a LOOK Cartographic Sculpture Matthew Picton
Fig. 1 Detail and inset Dresden 1945, 2010. 47 x 47 x 2 in (119 x 119 x 5 cm). WORTH A LOOK Cartographic Sculpture Matthew Picton Matthew Picton’s work investigates a city’s narratives, its appearance of river systems, the recognition of which led history and its literary heritage, using texts and materials me to create Dura-Lar® (acetate plastic) sculptures of evocative of the events that define it. He achieves by building river systems. Whilst working on these I started to think cartographic representations from distinct periods in the city’s about creating three-dimensional layered sculptures of history. The paper sculptures are all made by hand each piece the mapped forms of cities. The works were created on cut and formed individually from folded archival papers. glass tables with the lines of the city infrastructure The pieces are then situated exactly upon a drawn template etched in clear plastic Dura-Lar®. After each layer was cut from enlarged maps. done, the roads, railways, rivers, subways, the transparent plastic was painted, stacked on top of each other and There is an innate beauty in the pattern of cities and pinned together. The sculptures are typically two to nature, something that is experienced in the view from four inches in height. above and by the mapped form. Cartography is During this process my mind would enter an something that I have always incorporated into my imagined entity of the city and start to reconstruct its work in, one way or another. From the very first history, so that in time I would start to layer the experiments in landscape painting to my current body previous incarnations of a particular city. -
Rome / Vatican City, 11–14 Dec 19)
Music, Performance, Architecture (Rome / Vatican City, 11–14 Dec 19) Rome / Vatican City, Dec 11–14, 2019 Tobias C. Weißmann Music, Performance, Architecture. Sacred Spaces as Sound Spaces in the Early Modern Period International and interdisciplinary conference Conference venues: German Historical Institute in Rome (12 December, 13 December morning) Biblioteca Vallicelliana (11 December afternoon) Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (13 December afternoon) S. Maria in Vallicella (11 December evening) Apostolic Palace (14 December morning) Concept and scientific organisation: Prof. Dr. Klaus Pietschmann and Dr. Tobias C. Weißmann (Research Project “CANTORIA – Music and Sacred Architecture”, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz) | German Historical Institute in Rome, Department of Music History Beginning in 15th century Italy, the polychoral musical performance practice and new compositio- nal developments in church music required the modification of venerable churches and the inte- gration of music spaces in new sacred buildings. This multifaceted change correlated with the rite and mass piety and enduringly affected the experience of liturgy and music. The most distinctive impact of this progress is epitomised by the installation of singer balconies and organ galleries on which top-class music ensembles and organists often performed and which served as stages for musical excellence. The permanent display of music advanced to become a core segment of sacred architecture while the potential of these spaces to promote identification becomes evident in numerous graffiti, as the singer pulpit in the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican exemplifies. The conference explores the complex interdependencies between architecture, acoustics, musi- cal performance practice and rite in the interdisciplinary discourse between musicology, art and architecture history. -
Third Announcement
- Third Announcement - SILVA Network Annual Conference (digital) 7 – 8 July, 2021 DIGITALIZATION IN HIGHER FORESTRY EDUCATION - TEACHING AND LEARNING REVISITED Host: SILVA Network, co-organized by the IUFRO Education Group Preliminary Programme Wednesday: 7th July 2021 13:30 – 13:40 Opening of the Conference Norbert Weber, President SILVA Network Welcome address: t.b.c. 13:40 – 14:00 Keynote speech 1 Mika Rekola, University of Helsinki; Coordinator IUFRO Research Group 6.09 ”Forest Education” 14:00 – 15:00 Keynote speech 2 Claus-Rainer Michalek, BOKU Wien (Austria), Head of Department of E- learning: Digitalisation in higher forestry education - from wishful thinking to a normality with further wishes 15:00 – 15:15 Virtual Coffee break 15:15 – 17:15 Technical session 1 Francesco Pirotti, University of Padova (Italy): Riding the forced change to online teaching towards a digital future: what are the pitfalls in forestry higher education? I.J. Diaz-Maroto, University of Santiago de Compostela (Spain): Digitalization to information on forestry education: key to improving the forestry professions in the curricula Oleksiy Sinkevych, Ukrainian National Forestry University (Lviv, Ukraine): Application of modern information and communication technologies to create a virtual learning environment at Ukrainian National Forestry University Martin Döllerer & Gerhard Müller-Starck, Technische Universität München (Germany): Wald Digital - a virtual laboratory for studies in (not only) forest science 17:30 end of first day 1 Thursday: 8th July 2021 09:00 -
Germany – Elbe from Dresden to Magdeburg Bike Tour 2021 Individual Self- Guided 8 Days / 7 Nights
Germany – Elbe from Dresden to Magdeburg Bike Tour 2021 Individual Self- Guided 8 days / 7 nights You arrive in the Florence of the Elbe, Dresden, which is beautifully located along the Elbe valley. Experience in Magdeburg the famous Cathedral and the Monastery. You arrive in the Florence of the Elbe, Dresden, which is beautifully located along the Elbe valley. Magdeburg offers lots of rambling parkways where you can relax. Experience also the famous Cathedral and the Monastery. OK Cycle & Adventure Tours Inc. - 666 Kirkwood Ave - Suite B102 – Ottawa, Ontario Canada K1Z 5X9 www.okcycletours.com Toll Free 1-888-621-6818 Local 613-702-5350 Itinerary Day to Day Day 1: Arrival to Dresden You arrive in the “Florence of the Elbe” Dresden, which is beautifully located along the Elbe valley. Whether the famous Zwinger, the Semper Opera or the Court Church – a tour of the former royal residence by bicycle is worth it. Day 2: Dresden – Meissen 30 km From far away you can already see the landmark of the city of Meissen: the impressive castle hill with the cathedral and Albrechtsburg castle. A visit to the world-famous Meissen porcelain factory is also a must. Enjoy a good wine in the evening as you are in the heart of one of the smallest yet most distinguished winegrowing regions of Germany. Day 3: Meissen – Riesa or Strehla 28 km or 36 km Today’s tour will take you along the picturesque wine villages located along the Elbe River. Next stop will be Riesa, the city of sports or Strehla with an enchanting rural atmosphere. -
Deutscher Städte-Vergleich Eine Koordinierte Bürgerbefragung Zur Lebensqualität in Deutschen Und Europäischen Städten*
Statistisches Monatsheft Baden-Württemberg 1/2008 Land, Kommunen Deutscher Städte-Vergleich Eine koordinierte Bürgerbefragung zur Lebensqualität in deutschen und europäischen Städten* Ulrike Schönfeld-Nastoll Die amtliche Landesstatistik untersucht Sach- nun vor und erste Ergebnisse wurden auf der verhalte und deren Veränderungen – auch für Statistischen Frühjahrstagung in Gera im März Kommunen. Sie untersucht grundsätzlich 2007 dem Fachpublikum vorgestellt. aber nicht die subjektiven Meinungen der Bürgerinnen und Bürger zu den festgestellten Erstmals ist es nun möglich, die Umfrageergeb- Sachverhalten und den Veränderungen. Das nisse der deutschen Städte miteinander zu ver- überlässt sie Demoskopen und in zunehmen- gleichen. Darüber hinaus besteht auch die Mög- dem Maße der Kommunalstatistik. Gerade die lichkeit, aus der EU-Befragung Ergebnisse der kommunalstatistischen Ämter und Dienst- anderen europäischen Städte gegenüberzu- Dipl.-Soziologin Ulrike stellen haben auf diesem Untersuchungsfeld stellen. Schönfeld-Nastoll ist einen eindeutigen Vorsprung gegenüber der Bereichsleiterin für Statistik und Wahlen der Stadt Landesstatistik. Kommunalstatistiker haben Oberhausen. das Ohr näher am Puls der Zeit und des Der EU-Fragenkatalog der Bürgerbefragung Ortes. Insgesamt wurden 23 Fragen zu drei Themen- Da in demokratisch orientierten Gesellschaften komplexen gestellt. * Ein Projekt der Städtege- die kollektiven Meinungen der Bürgerinnen meinschaft Urban Audit 1 n und des Verbands Deut- und Bürger für Entscheider und Parlamente Im ersten Komplex wurde die Zufriedenheit scher Städtestatistiker von großer Bedeutung sein können, haben mit der städtischen Infrastruktur und den (VDST). sich etwa 300 europäische Städte, darunter 40 deutsche, für ein Urban Audit entschieden. Dieses entwickelt sich zu einer europaweiten Datensammlung zur städtischen Lebensquali- S1 „Sie sind zufrieden in ... zu wohnen“ tät. Dazu werden 340 statistische Merkmale aus allen Lebensbereichen auf Gesamtstadt- ebene erhoben. -
Calibration of Artificial Athlete Berlin/Stuttgart Summary Of
Calibration of Artificial Athlete Berlin/Stuttgart Summary of Calibration Series Performed in 2000 1. Introduction and Rational The Artificial Athletes Berlin and Stuttgart were developed by the FMPA Stuttgart (Otto-Graf- Institut) of the University of Stuttgart around 1970. The tests, which are specified in the German standards DIN 18035-6 "Sports Grounds; Synthetic Surfaced Areas" and DIN 18032-2 "Sports Halls; Sports Surfaces – Requirements, Testing, Maintenance",. and have been adopted by various national and international bodies (FIH, IAAF, ASTM, ITF, CEN, FIFA, UEFA). Over the years, especially the past 10 years, modifications to these DIN standards have taken place, which were at times inconsistent, resulting in major questions and concerns regarding the proper design of the test apparatus, the test procedure, the evaluation of measurements and the accuracy of the test results. The IAAF Accredited Labs of the ISSS felt that the resolution of these uncertainties was crucial and, based on the lack of response by the DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung = German Institute of Standardization) to professional advice, took the initiative themselves to clarify the problems involved. As a first step, the ISSS called for papers analysing the structure of the Artificial Athletes and providing solutions for the pending problems. The submitted papers were received from Mark Harrison (GB), Dr. Konrad Binder (A), Dr. John Dunlop (AU) and Hans J. Kolitzus (D). The papers were published on ISSS's website www.isss.de. In a meeting held in Le Mans (F) in September 1999, the papers and problems were discussed in depth and a unanimous resolution was passed covering all open problems.