Oracle Outside in Technology 8.3.7 Supported Formats
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Docuarchive Product Sheet
DocuArchive Product Sheet Contents 1 What this document contains ............................................................................................... 3 2 DocuArchive Server components ........................................................................................ 3 2.1 DocuArchive ArchiveServer ..................................................................................................... 3 2.1.1 Hardware and software requirements ...................................................................................... 3 2.1.2 Runtime environment ............................................................................................................... 3 2.1.3 Supported storage technologies .............................................................................................. 4 2.1.4 Quantitative characteristics ...................................................................................................... 5 2.2 DocuArchive MediaServer ....................................................................................................... 6 2.2.1 Runtime requirements .............................................................................................................. 6 2.2.2 Hardware and software requirements ...................................................................................... 6 2.3 DocuArchive DBServer ............................................................................................................ 6 2.3.1 Hardware and software requirements ..................................................................................... -
8000 Plus Magazine Issue 17
THE BEST SELLIINIG IVI A<3 AZI INI E EOF=t THE AMSTRAD PCW Ten copies ofMin^g/jf^^ Office Professional to be ISSUE 17 • FEBRUARY 1988* £1.50 Could AMS's new desktop publishing package be the best yet? f PLUS: Complete buyer's guide to word processing, accounts, utilities and DTP software jgl- ) MASTERFILE 8000 FOR ALL AMSTRAD PCW COMPUTERS MASTERFILE 8000, the subject of so many Any file can make RELATIONAL references to up enquiries, is now available. to EIGHT read-only keyed files, the linkage being effected purely by the use of matching file and MASTERFILE 8000 is a totally new database data names. product. While drawing on the best features of the CPC versions, it has been designed specifically for You can import/merge ASCII files (e.g. from the PCW range. The resulting combination of MASTERFILE III), or export any data (e.g. to a control and power is a delight to use. word-processor), and merge files. For keyed files this is a true merge, not just an append operation. Other products offer a choice between fast but By virtue of export and re-import you can make a limited-capacity RAM files, and large-capacity but copy of a file in another key sequence. New data cumbersome fixed-length, direct-access disc files. fields can be added at any time. MASTERFILE 8000 and the PCW RAM disc combine to offer high capacity with fast access to File searches combine flexibility with speed. variable-length data. File capacity is limited only (MASTERFILE 8000 usually waits for you, not by the size of your RAM disc. -
Openoffice.Org Теория И Практика
В серии: Библиотека ALT Linux OpenOffice.org Теория и практика Иван Хахаев Вадим Машков Галина Губкина Инна Смирнова Дмитрий Смирнов Роман Козодаев Елена Смородина Татьяна Турченюк Москва ALT Linux; БИНОМ. Лаборатория знаний 2008 УДК 004.91 ББК 32.97 O60 Авторы: Хахаев И., Машков В., Губкина Г., Смирнова И., Смирнов Д., Козодаев Р., Смородина Е., Турченюк Т. OpenOffice.org: Теория и практика / И. Хахаев, В. Машков, O60 Г. Губкина и др. М. : ALT Linux ; БИНОМ. Лаборатория знаний, 2008. 319 с. : ил. (Библиотека ALT Linux). ISBN 978-5-94774-891-8 Данная книга открывает многие нетривиальные возможности офис- ного пакета OpenOffice.org (версии 2 и выше), которые поясняются на примерах конкретных задач. Рассмотрены автоматическая нумерация и перекрестные ссылки при оформлении курсовой работы, тонкости на- бора математических формул, вычислительные возможности электрон- ных таблиц на примере задач из курсов экономического цикла, создание презентаций и составление собственной галереи элементов для создания схем и многое другое. Для широкого круга пользователей офисных при- ложений. Сайт книги: http://books.altlinux.ru/openoffice. На сайте книги вы найдёте: • Обновлённую электронную версию текста книги с исправлениями. • Файлы примеров, использованных в книге. • Дополнительные материалы, не вошедшие в книгу. УДК 004.91 ББК 32.97 Как приобрести печатный экземпляр книги? Приобрести книгу в интернет-магазине ALT Linux. По вопросам оптовых и мелкооптовых заку- пок обращайтесь на [email protected]. Каждый имеет право воспроизводить, распространять и/или вносить измене- ния в настоящий Документ в соответствии с условиями GNU Free Documentation License, Версией 1.2 или любой более поздней версией, опубликованной Free Software Foundation; Данный Документ содержит следующий текст, помещаемый на первую стра- ницу обложки: ¾В серии “Библиотека ALT Linux”¿. -
Teaching Students to Model Neural Circuits and Neural Networks Using an Electronic Spreadsheet Simulator
Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers 1985, 17(2),339-344 SESSION XI TEACHING APPLICATIONS OF MICROCOMPUTERS N. John Castellan, Presider Teaching students to model neural circuits and neural networks using an electronic spreadsheet simulator THOMAS T. HEWETT Drexel University, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania An electronic spreadsheet simulator can be used to enable students to conduct simulated micro electrode recording experiments. In addition, it can be used both to let students explore the oper ation of models of hypothetical neural networks and to let them design and develop their own neural models. A recent paper (Smith et al., 1984) described the educa demand. This calculation cycle often involves recalcula tional goals of student ownership of a personal microcom tion of new values for previously entered formulas that puter at Drexel University. In a later paper, Hewett and depend upon still other values that may have been changed Perkey (1984) argued that many computer programs in during or since the last calculation cycle. The typical tended for instructional purposes are impractical or of little spreadsheet simulator also offers a number of program use when each student has a personal machine. However, ming language capabilities, including the ability to required student access to a personal computer creates new manipulate strings and to do iterative calculations. In ad opportunities for the use of microcomputer applications dition, built-in functions can be combined to produce a programs. One obvious, but nontrivial, example is the im limited plotting capability, thereby providing both a pact of the word processor on what is considered accept graphical and a numerical method for illustrating relational able written work, from lab reports to term papers. -
E^SEBHC to Meet at HUGCON'87
2J Saving Onr HEATH Eight-Bit Machines! > Volume 1, Number 11 *2.50 a copy, *15.00 a rear June-July, 1987 E^SEBHC To Meet At HUGCON’87 =12 Full Two 1 SEBHC JOURNAL Volume 1, Number 11, Page 2 The Details The First Annual General Meeting of the Society of Heath Eight-Bit Com- puterists will be held at the Chicago O’Hare Hyatt Regency hotel some time during Friday, 21 August, 1987. Exact time and location will be displayed from noon, Friday on the hotel lobby information terminals. The Society presently is informal—no officers or committees—and the only "official office holder" is L.E. Geisler, editor and publisher of the SEBHC JOURNAL. In the remote possibility that some SEBHC members want to establish a formal society, we advise them to send a proposed outline of same to the SEBHC JOURNAL. We will publish all those received before 5- Aug-87 in issue number 12 (August, 1987). The August JOURNAL issue will be available in the meeting room from about 13:00, Friday. Interested members can read what others have proposed in this issue, and may then discuss the proposals with other members also attending. If desired, they can draft a formal proposal for establishing a government, constitution and bylaws for the Society BEFORE meeting and acting on Lhe proposal. Note: This meeting will be quite brief, as most members are expecting to attend HUGCON-VI, and we don’t want them missing that. Subscribers visiting the meeting room may pick up their Aug-87 copy of the SEBHC JOURNAL there. -
The Origins of Word Processing and Office Automation
Remembering the Office of the Future: The Origins of Word Processing and Office Automation Thomas Haigh University of Wisconsin Word processing entered the American office in 1970 as an idea about reorganizing typists, but its meaning soon shifted to describe computerized text editing. The designers of word processing systems combined existing technologies to exploit the falling costs of interactive computing, creating a new business quite separate from the emerging world of the personal computer. Most people first experienced word processing using a word processor, we think of a software as an application of the personal computer. package, such as Microsoft Word. However, in During the 1980s, word processing rivaled and the early 1970s, when the idea of word process- eventually overtook spreadsheet creation as the ing first gained prominence, it referred to a new most widespread business application for per- way of organizing work: an ideal of centralizing sonal computers.1 By the end of that decade, the typing and transcription in the hands of spe- typewriter had been banished to the corner of cialists equipped with technologies such as auto- most offices, used only to fill out forms and matic typewriters. The word processing concept address envelopes. By the early 1990s, high-qual- was promoted by IBM to present its typewriter ity printers and powerful personal computers and dictating machine division as a comple- were a fixture in middle-class American house- ment to its “data processing” business. Within holds. Email, which emerged as another key the word processing center, automatic typewriters application for personal computers with the and dictating machines were rechristened word spread of the Internet in the mid-1990s, essen- processing machines, to be operated by word tially extended word processing technology to processing operators rather than secretaries or electronic message transmission. -
Microsoft Exchange 2007 Journaling Guide
Microsoft Exchange 2007 Journaling Guide Digital Archives Updated on 12/9/2010 Document Information Microsoft Exchange 2007 Journaling Guide Published August, 2008 Iron Mountain Support Information U.S. 1.800.888.2774 [email protected] Copyright © 2008 Iron Mountain Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. Trademarks Iron Mountain and the design of the mountain are registered trademarks of Iron Mountain Incorporated. All other trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Entities under license agreement: Please consult the Iron Mountain & Affiliates Copyright Notices by Country. Confidentiality CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY INFORMATION OF IRON MOUNTAIN. The information set forth herein represents the confidential and proprietary information of Iron Mountain. Such information shall only be used for the express purpose authorized by Iron Mountain and shall not be published, communicated, disclosed or divulged to any person, firm, corporation or legal entity, directly or indirectly, or to any third person without the prior written consent of Iron Mountain. Disclaimer While Iron Mountain has made every effort to ensure the accuracy and completeness of this document, it assumes no responsibility for the consequences to users of any errors that may be contained herein. The information in this document is subject to change without notice and should not be considered a commitment by Iron Mountain. Iron Mountain Incorporated 745 Atlantic Avenue Boston, MA 02111 +1.800.934.0956 www.ironmountain.com/digital -
What Is PC MOUSE????
PC MOUSE FACT SHEET September 1983 What is PC MOUSE???? PC Mouse is a small hand-held pointing and selecting device used to move the cursor on your screen. As you slide PC Mouse on the mouse pad, the cursor moves correspondingly. Three buttons on top of mouse allow you to activate functions by the use of pop-up menus. PC Mouse software with pop-up menus has been created for some of your favorite software programs: Lotus 1 -2-3™, Personal Editor™, VisiCalc®, WordStar®, Volkswriter™ and Multiplan™. The pop-up menus are transparent to the underlying program, and no modification to your existing software is required. Pop-up menus allow you to select and execute commands at the press of a button. No longer do you have to memorize commands. Even if you are an expert typist, moving around in spreadsheets and wordprocessors will be faster and easier than ever before. PC Mouse interfaces through an RS-232 asynchronous communication port. Since there are no moving parts, no maintenance or cleaning is required. PC Mouse software is compatible with PC-DOS 1.10 and 2.00. Only 10K of memory and disk space are used by the mouse driver. ""—signifies manufacturers' trademark -"'—signifies manufacturers' registered trademark APPLICATION: With the help of the function buttons/pop-up menus, PC Mouse can be used to do word processing, spreadsheets and graphics. PC MOUSE PACKAGE INCLUDES: HARDWARE Optical mouse and pad, RS-232 interface box and cable, and a power supply. SOFTWARE Pop-up menu software Version 2.0 provides pop-up menus for Lotus 1 -2-3, Personal Editor, VisiCalc, WordStar, Volkswriter, and Multiplan. -
Unit 6: Computer Software
Computer Software Unit 6: Computer Software Introduction Collectively computer programs are known as computer software. This unit consisting of four lessons presents different aspects of computer software. Lesson 1 introduces software and its classification, system software which assists the users to develop programs for solving user problems is presented in Lesson 2. Many programs for widely used applications are available commercially. These programs are popularly known as application packages or package programs or simply packages. Advantages of package programs and brief outline of popular packages for word-processing, spreadsheet analysis, database management systems, desktop publication and graphic and applications are discussed in Lesson 3. Tasks for developing computer programs and brief introduction to some common programming languages are presented in Lesson 4. Lesson 1: Introduction and Classification 1.1 Learning Objectives On completion of this lesson you will be able to • understand the concept of software • distinguish between system software and application software • know components of system software and types of application software. 1.2 Software Software of a computer system is intangible rather than physical. It is the term used for any type of program. Software consists of statements, which instruct a computer to perform the required task. Without software a computer is simply a mass of electronic components. For a computer to input, store, make decisions, arithmetically manipulate and Software consists of output data in the correct sequence it must have access to appropriate statements, which instruct programs. Thus, the software includes all the activities associated with a computer to perform the required task. the successful development and operation of the computing system other than the hardware pieces. -
Package 'Gnumeric'
Package ‘gnumeric’ March 9, 2017 Version 0.7-8 Date 2017-03-09 Title Read Data from Files Readable by 'gnumeric' Author Karoly Antal <[email protected]>. Maintainer Karoly Antal <[email protected]> Depends R (>= 2.8.1), XML Imports utils Description Read data files readable by 'gnumeric' into 'R'. Can read whole sheet or a range, from several file formats, including the native format of 'gnumeric'. Reading is done by using 'ssconvert' (a file converter utility included in the 'gnumeric' distribution <http://projects.gnome.org/gnumeric/>) to convert the requested part to CSV. From 'gnumeric' files (but not other formats) can list sheet names and sheet sizes or read all sheets. License GPL (>= 2) Repository CRAN Date/Publication 2017-03-09 13:20:28 NeedsCompilation no R topics documented: read.gnumeric.sheet . .2 read.gnumeric.sheet.info . .6 read.gnumeric.sheets . .7 Index 9 1 2 read.gnumeric.sheet read.gnumeric.sheet Read data from a gnumeric (or MS Excel, Openoffice Calc, Xbase, Quatro Pro, Paradox, HTML, etc) spreadsheet or database file using ssconvert from the gnumeric distribution Description Read data from a sheet of a gnumeric (or other common spreadsheet or database) file to a data.frame. Requires an external program, ‘ssconvert’ (normally installed with gnumeric in ‘PATH’. (Gnumeric home page is http://projects.gnome.org/gnumeric/) (Note: last gnumeric release for windows is 1.12.17 from 2014) Calls ‘ssconvert’ to convert the input to CSV. ‘ssconvert’ can read several file formats (see Details below). Note: During conversion to CSV ‘ssconvert’ also evaluates formulas (e.g. ‘=sum(A1:A3)’) in cells, and emits the result instead of the formula. -
CORE 5.21 Supported Data Formats Rev.: 2020-Feb-04
CORE 5.21 Supported Data Formats Revised: 2020-Feb-04 Contents 1 Supported Data Formats 3 1.1 Different Supported Formats in Updated Projects 3 1.2 Data Display 4 1.3 Archive Formats 4 1.4 Bloomberg Formats 6 1.5 Database Formats 7 1.6 Email Formats 8 1.7 Multimedia Formats 10 1.8 Presentation Formats 11 1.9 Raster Image Formats 13 1.10 Spreadsheet Formats 15 1.11 Text And Markup Formats 19 1.12 Vector Image Formats 20 1.13 Word Processing Formats 24 1.14 Other Formats 29 2 Terms of Use 31 CORE 5.21 - Supported Data Formats 2 1 Supported Data Formats 1 Supported Data Formats The CORE system supports indexing and retrieval, including conceptual search, for all data formats listed in this section. Note: Support of certain formats depends on the use case and must be assessed and set up by Customer Support. Additional formats to the ones listed here might be supported, but need testing for the specific use case and additional configuration. Note: The MIME types are assigned for mapping purposes within CORE only. They are usually, but not necessarily compatible with the official registry of media types maintained by IANA. 1.1 Different Supported Formats in Updated Pro- jects Projects created with versions prior to CORE 5.16/Axcelerate 5.10/Decisiv 8.0 use Oracle Outside In 8.5.1, which does not cover some recent data formats. To ensure con- sistent hash value computation, required, for example, for duplicate detection, this Oracle Outside In version is preserved for existing and new data sources. -
Layout Inference and Table Detection in Spreadsheet Documents
Layout Inference and Table Detection in Spreadsheet Documents Dissertation submitted April 20, 2020 by M.Sc. Elvis Koci born May 09, 1987 in Sarande, Albania at Technische Universität Dresden and Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya Supervisors: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Wolfgang Lehner Assoc. Prof. Dr. Oscar Romero IT BI D C 2 THESIS DETAILS Thesis Title: Layout Inference and Table Detection in Spreadsheet Documents Ph.D. Student: Elvis Koci Supervisors: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Wolfgang Lehner, Technische Universität Dresden Assoc. Prof. Dr. Oscar Romero, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya The main body of this thesis consists of the following peer-reviewed publications: 1. Elvis Koci, Maik Thiele, Oscar Romero, and Wolfgang Lehner. A machine learning approach for layout inference in spreadsheets. In IC3K 2016: The 8th International Joint Conference on Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Man- agement: volume 1: KDIR, pages 77–88. SciTePress, 2016 2. Elvis Koci, Maik Thiele, Oscar Romero, and Wolfgang Lehner. Cell classification for layout recognition in spreadsheets. In Ana Fred, Jan Dietz, David Aveiro, Kecheng Liu, Jorge Bernardino, and Joaquim Filipe, editors, Knowledge Discovery, Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management (IC3K ‘16: Revised Selected Papers), volume 914 of Communications in Computer and Information Science, pages 78–100. Springer, Cham, 2019 3. Elvis Koci, Maik Thiele, Oscar Romero, and Wolfgang Lehner. Table identification and reconstruction in spreadsheets. In the International Conference on Advanced Infor- mation Systems Engineering (CAiSE), pages 527–541. Springer, 2017 4. Elvis Koci, Maik Thiele, Wolfgang Lehner, and Oscar Romero. Table recognition in spreadsheets via a graph representation. In the 13th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems (DAS), pages 139–144.