SÍMBOLOS II of Éden
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
A Framework for Short Tweak Tweakable Block Cipher
Elastic-Tweak: A Framework for Short Tweak Tweakable Block Cipher Avik Chakraborti1, Nilanjan Datta2, Ashwin Jha2, Cuauhtemoc Mancillas Lopez3, Mridul Nandi2, Yu Sasaki1 1 NTT Secure Platform Laboratories, Japan 2 Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, India 3 Computer Science Department, CINVESTAV-IPN, Mexico [email protected], nilanjan isi [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Abstract. Tweakable block cipher (TBC), a stronger notion than stan- dard block ciphers, has wide-scale applications in symmetric-key schemes. At a high level, it provides flexibility in design and (possibly) better security bounds. In multi-keyed applications, a TBC with short tweak values can be used to replace multiple keys. However, the existing TBC construction frameworks, including TWEAKEY and XEX, are designed for general purpose tweak sizes. Specifically, they are not optimized for short tweaks, which might render them inefficient for certain resource constrained applications. So a dedicated paradigm to construct short- tweak TBCs (tBC) is highly desirable. In this paper, we present a ded- icated framework, called the Elastic-Tweak framework (ET in short), to convert any reasonably secure SPN block cipher into a secure tBC. We apply the ET framework on GIFT and AES to construct efficient tBCs, named TweGIFT and TweAES. We present hardware and software results to show that the performance overheads for these tBCs are minimal. We perform comprehensive security analysis and observe that TweGIFT and TweAES provide sufficient security without any increase in the number of block cipher rounds when compared to GIFT and AES. -
+1. Introduction 2. Cyrillic Letter Rumanian Yn
MAIN.HTM 10/13/2006 06:42 PM +1. INTRODUCTION These are comments to "Additional Cyrillic Characters In Unicode: A Preliminary Proposal". I'm examining each section of that document, as well as adding some extra notes (marked "+" in titles). Below I use standard Russian Cyrillic characters; please be sure that you have appropriate fonts installed. If everything is OK, the following two lines must look similarly (encoding CP-1251): (sample Cyrillic letters) АабВЕеЗКкМНОопРрСсТуХхЧЬ (Latin letters and digits) Aa6BEe3KkMHOonPpCcTyXx4b 2. CYRILLIC LETTER RUMANIAN YN In the late Cyrillic semi-uncial Rumanian/Moldavian editions, the shape of YN was very similar to inverted PSI, see the following sample from the Ноул Тестамент (New Testament) of 1818, Neamt/Нямец, folio 542 v.: file:///Users/everson/Documents/Eudora%20Folder/Attachments%20Folder/Addons/MAIN.HTM Page 1 of 28 MAIN.HTM 10/13/2006 06:42 PM Here you can see YN and PSI in both upper- and lowercase forms. Note that the upper part of YN is not a sharp arrowhead, but something horizontally cut even with kind of serif (in the uppercase form). Thus, the shape of the letter in modern-style fonts (like Times or Arial) may look somewhat similar to Cyrillic "Л"/"л" with the central vertical stem looking like in lowercase "ф" drawn from the middle of upper horizontal line downwards, with regular serif at the bottom (horizontal, not slanted): Compare also with the proposed shape of PSI (Section 36). 3. CYRILLIC LETTER IOTIFIED A file:///Users/everson/Documents/Eudora%20Folder/Attachments%20Folder/Addons/MAIN.HTM Page 2 of 28 MAIN.HTM 10/13/2006 06:42 PM I support the idea that "IA" must be separated from "Я". -
SZ 31082018 Tuija Komi Kopie
30. August 2018, 22:16 Uhr München Sing, sing, sing "Es war niemand dafür: nur ich", sagt die gebürtige Finnin Tuija Komi über ihren Entschluss, mit 37 Jahren den Job als IT-Projektmanagerin an den Nagel zu hängen und als Jazzsängerin ihr Geld zu verdienen. Mittlerweile hat sie ihr eigenes Quartett und fünf CDs aufgenommen. Von Franziska Gerlach Tuija Komi muss nicht lange überlegen, wie sich die Entscheidung für den Gesang angefühlt hat: Es waren nur noch wenige Tage bis Weihnachten, damals, im Jahr 2005, die Dunkelheit sank schon früh am Abend über die Münchner Straßen. Die gebürtige Finnin lag im Bett, äußerlich war sie ruhig, doch in ihr tobte der Kampf zwischen Gefühl und Vernunft. Bleib da, das ist ein sicherer Job, bleib da, habe der Kopf ihr geraten. Doch der Bauch, der wollte eben etwas anderes, ein Leben auf der Bühne. Noch immer spricht die Frau, die da mit einer türkisfarbenen Blume im hellblonden Haar auf der Veranda der Seidlvilla vor einem sitzt, von "einer Fügung", die sie zum Gesang gebracht hat. (Foto: Robert Haas) Am Ende gewann der Bauch dieses Kräfte verschlingende Hin und Her, gegen die Bedenken von Freunden und Kollegen. "Es war niemand dafür, nur ich." Doch das reichte: Komi, heute 50 Jahre alt, macht sich damals als Jazzsängerin selbständig, manchmal arbeitet sie auch als Sprecherin für finnische Hörbücher oder E-Learning- Programme, moderiert Musik- und Kulturfestivals oder gibt Workshops an der Münchner Volkshochschule. In ihren früheren Beruf als Projektmanagerin in der IT eines großen Münchner Unternehmens aber sollte sie nie wieder zurückkehren. Noch immer spricht die Frau, die da mit einer türkisfarbenen Blume im hellblonden Haar auf der Veranda der Seidlvilla vor einem sitzt, von "einer Fügung", die sie zum Gesang gebracht hat. -
The Case of Robert Gober = Der Fall Robert Gober
The case of Robert Gober = Der Fall Robert Gober Autor(en): Liebmann, Lisa / Nansen Objekttyp: Article Zeitschrift: Parkett : the Parkett series with contemporary artists = Die Parkett- Reihe mit Gegenwartskünstlern Band (Jahr): - (1989) Heft 21: Collaboration Alex Katz PDF erstellt am: 27.09.2021 Persistenter Link: http://doi.org/10.5169/seals-680389 Nutzungsbedingungen Die ETH-Bibliothek ist Anbieterin der digitalisierten Zeitschriften. Sie besitzt keine Urheberrechte an den Inhalten der Zeitschriften. Die Rechte liegen in der Regel bei den Herausgebern. Die auf der Plattform e-periodica veröffentlichten Dokumente stehen für nicht-kommerzielle Zwecke in Lehre und Forschung sowie für die private Nutzung frei zur Verfügung. Einzelne Dateien oder Ausdrucke aus diesem Angebot können zusammen mit diesen Nutzungsbedingungen und den korrekten Herkunftsbezeichnungen weitergegeben werden. Das Veröffentlichen von Bildern in Print- und Online-Publikationen ist nur mit vorheriger Genehmigung der Rechteinhaber erlaubt. Die systematische Speicherung von Teilen des elektronischen Angebots auf anderen Servern bedarf ebenfalls des schriftlichen Einverständnisses der Rechteinhaber. Haftungsausschluss Alle Angaben erfolgen ohne Gewähr für Vollständigkeit oder Richtigkeit. Es wird keine Haftung übernommen für Schäden durch die Verwendung von Informationen aus diesem Online-Angebot oder durch das Fehlen von Informationen. Dies gilt auch für Inhalte Dritter, die über dieses Angebot zugänglich sind. Ein Dienst der ETH-Bibliothek ETH Zürich, Rämistrasse 101, 8092 Zürich, Schweiz, www.library.ethz.ch http://www.e-periodica.ch L/Sd T/.EÄAMAGV THE BOBESZ GOBER, ZWZZTZED (7M/R OES/AOLS',)/OHNE TITEL (ZWEI BECKEN), 1985, PZASTBR, WOOD, R7RZZA7Z/, SPEEZ, SSM/- CASE OF GZOSS RAMMBZ PA/AIP, 2 P/SCSS/ GIPS, HOLZ, MASCHENDRAHT, STAHL, SEIDENGLANZ-EMAILFARBE, 2-TEILIG, OKERAZZ/ ZUSAMMEN: 50x 54*27 "/ 76 x213 x 68 cm. -
Tu; ?F/75 a Zerctctme Detector for Nuclear
TU; ?F/75 A ZERCTCTME DETECTOR FOR NUCLEAR FRAO1ENTS US I! IG CHANNEL FLECTRnN MULTIPLIER PLATES Bo Sundqvist Tanden Accelerator Laboratory, Uppsala, Sweden •Hr '.vACT: . *-. literature on zerotime detectors which use the emission of ". ocndary electrons from a thin foil is reviewed. The construction • a zerotiine detector using multiplication of the secondary •,'2Ctrons with two Mallard channel electron multiplier-plates (CEMP) •.' tandem is described. Results of tests of such a detector with a particles from a natural a source are given. Tstal time resolutions of about 200 ps (FVHM) with a Si(Sb) detector as the stop detector has been achieved. The contribution from the zerotiine detector is estimated to be less than 150 ps (FVJW). The application of this detector technique to the construction of a heavy-ion spectrometer o and a Be detector is discussed. This work was supported by the 9wedish Atomic Research Council CONTENTS 1 INTRODUCTION 3 2 A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE ON ZEROTIME DETECTORS USING 5 THIN ELECTRON EMITTING FOILS 3 THE CHANNEL ELECTRON HiLTTPLTER PLATE (CEHP), AND ITS 8 USE IN ZEROTIME DETECTORS i* THE CONSTRUCTION OF A ZEROTIME DETECTOR USING CEMP 10 MULTIPLICATION OF SECONDARY EMITTED ELECTRONS FROM A THEN FOIL 5 TESTS OF THE SEEZT-DETECTOF. AND DISCUSSION OF RESULTS lu 6 FUTURE APPLICATIONS OF THIS DETECTOR TECHNIQUE 17 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 19 REFERENCES 20 TABLE CAPTIONS 22 TÄBIZS 23 FIGURE CAPTIONS 25 FIGURES 25 1 INTRODUCTION The interest has recently been growing rapidly in the corrlex nuclear reactions in which the ingoing particles induce neny different reactions. To be able to study a particular reaction the fragments produced must be identified, i e the ness (M) the nuclear charge (Z) and the energy (E) of the different fragRjents have to be determined. -
A Structural Analysis of Mide Chants
A Structural Analysis of Mide Chants GEORGE FULFORD McMaster University Introduction In this paper I shall investigate the relationship between words and im agery in seven song scrolls used by members of an Ojibwa religious society known as the Midewiwin. These texts were collected in the late 1880s by W.J. Hoffman for the Bureau of American Ethnology and subsequently published in their seventh Annual Report (Hoffman 1891).1 All the pictographs which I shall discuss were inscribed on birch bark and used by members of the Midewiwin to record chants used in their ceremonies. According to Hoffman (1891:192) these chants consisted of only a few words or short phrases. They were sung by single individuals — never in chorus — and were repeated over and over again, usually to the accompaniment of a wooden kettle drum. In a previous study (Fulford 1989) I analyzed patterns of structural variation among these pictographs and outlined how three complex symbols — the otter, bear and bird — evolved from clan emblems into pictographic markers. The focus of my earlier study was purely iconographic; in this paper I shall explore the verbal structure of Midewiwin chants in order to show some of the ways in which they were pictographically encoded. For the sake of convenience, I have limited my discussion to song scrolls sharing the otter symbol. Six of the seven scrolls that I shall examine contain this marking device. Although one (designated Scroll C in the appendix) lacks an otter, it displays many other formal similarities with Hoffman published transcriptions and translations of 23 songs performed at the White Earth Reservation in northwestern Minnesota. -
Optimal Interleaving: Serial Phonology-Morphology Interaction in a Constraint-Based Model
OPTIMAL INTERLEAVING: SERIAL PHONOLOGY-MORPHOLOGY INTERACTION IN A CONSTRAINT-BASED MODEL A Dissertation Presented by MATTHEW ADAM WOLF Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY September 2008 Department of Linguistics © Copyright by Matthew Adam Wolf 2008 All Rights Reserved OPTIMAL INTERLEAVING: SERIAL PHONOLOGY-MORPHOLOGY INTERACTION IN A CONSTRAINT-BASED MODEL A Dissertation Presented by MATTHEW A. WOLF Approved as to style and content by: ____________________________________ John J. McCarthy, Chair ____________________________________ Joseph V. Pater, Member ____________________________________ Elisabeth O. Selkirk, Member ____________________________________ Mark H. Feinstein, Member ___________________________________ Elisabeth O. Selkirk, Head Department of Linguistics ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I’ve learned from my own habits over the years that the acknowledgements are likely to be the most-read part of any dissertation. It is therefore with a degree of trepidation that I set down these words of thanks, knowing that any omissions or infelicities I might commit will be a source of amusement for who-knows-how-many future generations of first-year graduate students. So while I’ll make an effort to avoid cliché, falling into it will sometimes be inevitable—for example, when I say (as I must, for it is true) that this work could never have been completed without the help of my advisor, John McCarthy. John’s willingness to patiently hear out half-baked ideas, his encyclopedic knowledge of the phonology literature, his almost unbelievably thorough critical eye, and his dogged insistence on making the vague explicit have made this dissertation far better, and far better presented, than I could have hoped to achieve on my own. -
The Unicode Standard 5.1 Code Charts
Cyrillic Supplement Range: 0500–052F The Unicode Standard, Version 5.1 This file contains an excerpt from the character code tables and list of character names for The Unicode Standard, Version 5.1. Characters in this chart that are new for The Unicode Standard, Version 5.1 are shown in conjunction with any existing characters. For ease of reference, the new characters have been highlighted in the chart grid and in the names list. This file will not be updated with errata, or when additional characters are assigned to the Unicode Standard. See http://www.unicode.org/errata/ for an up-to-date list of errata. See http://www.unicode.org/charts/ for access to a complete list of the latest character code charts. See http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/Unicode-5.1/ for charts showing only the characters added in Unicode 5.1. See http://www.unicode.org/Public/5.1.0/charts/ for a complete archived file of character code charts for Unicode 5.1. Disclaimer These charts are provided as the online reference to the character contents of the Unicode Standard, Version 5.1 but do not provide all the information needed to fully support individual scripts using the Unicode Standard. For a complete understanding of the use of the characters contained in this file, please consult the appropriate sections of The Unicode Standard, Version 5.0 (ISBN 0-321-48091-0), online at http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.0.0/, as well as Unicode Standard Annexes #9, #11, #14, #15, #24, #29, #31, #34, #38, #41, #42, and #44, the other Unicode Technical Reports and Standards, and the Unicode Character Database, which are available online. -
Manufacturing Technology of Diffusion-Bonded Compact Heat Exchanger (DCHE) Yasutake MIWA *1, Dr
Manufacturing Technology of Diffusion-bonded Compact Heat Exchanger (DCHE) Yasutake MIWA *1, Dr. Koji NOISHIKI *1, Tomohiro SUZUKI *2, Kenichi TAKATSUKI *2 *1 Products Development Dept., Development Center, Machinery Business *2 Takasago Equipment Plant, Energy & Nuclear Equipment Div., Machinery Business The Diffusion-bonded Compact Heat Exchanger (DCHE) fluid inside the core (Fig. 1). The core body includes is a compact heat exchanger, and the demand for it is multiple assemblies, each consisting of a parting expected to increase in applications for weight saving sheet, fin and side bar (Fig. 2), which are cut out in or those calling for a compact plot area, as well as for the required sizes. These assemblies are stacked and use in floating plants. Kobe Steel has been working on brazed together in a vacuum furnace to constitute the development and establishment of the manufacturing the core body. To ensure sound brazing and weight technology of DCHE, which is a compact and high reduction, aluminum alloy is used as the material. strength micro channel heat exchanger. Its heat transfer The production process of a DCHE is shown in performance has been evaluated by comparing it with Fig. 3. A DCHE has a stacked structure similar to the conventional shell & tube type heat exchanger, and that of an ALEX and is produced in almost the same its strength and fatigue have been evaluated using Kobe manner, but with some significant differences in Steel's stress analysis technology and fatigue test. This the flow-passage fabrication and joining. The flow paper introduces the features of DCHE and the activity passages of a DCHE are fabricated by chemical involved in its development. -
Pdf DCHE Brochure
Who We Are New to the Community The Dayton Council on Health Equity (DCHE) is Dayton and Montgomery County’s new local A Closer Look at the Problem office on minority health. As part of Public Health – Dayton & The health of many Americans has steadily declined. Montgomery County, DCHE is Unfortunately, studies show that the health status of four funded by a grant from the Ohio groups in particular – African Americans, Latinos, Asians and Native Americans – has declined much more than the Commission on Minority Health. general population. The goal of DCHE is to improve the health These four groups are experiencing significantly higher of minorities in Montgomery County, rates of certain diseases and conditions, poorer health, loss especially African Americans, of quality of life and a shorter lifespan. These differences Latinos/Hispanics, Asians and are known as “health disparities.” Native Americans. DCHE works with an Advisory Council that includes representatives from many areas: The Diseases and Conditions private citizens, clergy, community groups, DCHE is focusing on chronic, preventable diseases and education and health care organizations, conditions affecting these minority groups, such as: media, city planning and others. The Advisory Council is developing a u Cancer plan to inform, educate and empower u Cardiovascular (heart and blood vessel) disease 117 South Main Street individuals to understand and improve u Diabetes Dayton, Ohio 45422 their health status. u HIV/AIDS 937-225-4962 www.phdmc.org/DCHE u Infant mortality u Substance abuse u Violence Live Better. Live Longer. Good Health Begins with You!® The Good News Simple Steps to Healthier Living Many things are being done to improve the health of minorities. -
Florida Native Plants Ogam
Florida Native Plants Ogam OBOD Ovate Gift Dana Wiyninger Starke, Florida USA July 29, 2012 Introduction Moving to a new region with completely different plants and climate, and having to manage a neglected forest meant I had to really learn about and examine the trees and plants on our property. (No relying on my previous knowledge of plants on the west coast.) Even with the subtropical climate, we paradoxically have many temperate east coast trees in north Florida. To make sense of it all in context of the Ogam, I had to seriously study and search to find the plants in my Florida Ogam. I often had to make more intuitive associations when an Ogam plant species wasn‟t found here. I had vivid impressions from the Ogam (and other) plants- I later used these to find my path through the many interpretations authors have offered. Personally, I use my own Florida correspondences when I see many of these plants every day; the impressions and messages are just part of my perceptions of the plants now. Since using my correspondences I‟m more aware of the varying time streams the plants experience and the spirits associated with them. I feel a conduit with the plants, and the resulting insights are particularly useful to me and relevant to changes going on in my life. Not quite formal divination, I receive guidance none the less. I feel there may be a healing practice in my future that will incorporate the Ogam, but that is yet to come. So, as enjoyable as it was, learning the basics of the Ogam wasn‟t easy for me. -
How Children Learn to Write Words
How Children Learn to Write Words How Children Learn to Write Words Rebecca TReiman and bReTT KessleR 1 3 Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With offices in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press in the UK and certain other countries. Published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016 © Oxford University Press 2014 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by license, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reproduction rights organization. Inquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above. You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer. A copy of this book’s Catalog-in-Publication Data is on file with the Library of Congress ISBN 978–0–19–990797–7