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  • Installation guide Single-Frame front bumper HF 7651 for the Audi PDF
  • Installation guide Single-Frame front bumper HF 7651 for the Audi A8 D2 pre-facelift (1994-1998) 1. Removal of the original bumper: Remove all screws which hold the bumper. Remove the bumper together with the alloy bar. This is hold by two big screws. Remove the alloy bar from the original bumper and install it to the car. 2. Placement of the Hofele-Design front bumper on the car: Place the new bumper on the car but do not yet bolt it on. 3. Preparation of the bonnet: Remove the front grill and the rubber stripe behind it. Remove the bonnet/hood lock and replace the grip through a longer one (part of delivery) Install the front grill (HF 7354-V8, W12 or S8) in the extension piece. 4. Placement of the extension piece: Place the extension piece onto the bonnet/hood and fix it with adhesive tape. Align the front grill so that there is an even slit between bumper and grill. 5. Screwing of the bumper: After the alignment of the front bumper and the front grill you can screw the front bumper. Drill two holes through the flap of the bumper into the… Download Installation Guide Single-Frame Audi Manual
  • BMW Motorrad Maintenance schedule R1100RT/R1100RS/R850GS/R1100GS PDF
  • BMW Motorrad Maintenance schedule R1100RT/R1100RS/R850GS/R1100GS/R850R/R1100R Customer Licence No. Mileage A Job Order No. Date Mechanic’s signature BMW Inspection at 1000 km/600 miles BMW Maintenance Service every 10000 km/6,000 miles BMW Inspection every 20000 km/ 12,000 miles BMW Annual Service Change engine oil when engine is warm, renew oil filter cartridge for short-distance driving or outside temperatures below 0°C every 3 months, every 3,000 km (1,800 miles) at the latest Change oil in manual transmission and rear wheel drive when at operating temperature Retighten cylinder head nuts Adjust valve clearance Check spark plugs Renew spark plugs Renew fuel filter *) normally every 40,000 km (24,000 miles), but if fuel is of poor quality every 20,000 km (12,000 miles) Check battery acid level, if necessary top up with distilled water Clean and grease battery terminals Renew intake air cleaner in very dirty or dusty conditions, renew the intake air cleaner element every 10,000 km (6,000 miles), or even more frequently if necessary Check throttle cables for free movement, abrasion and kinking, renewing if necessary *) Download PDF of BMW Motorrad Maintenance schedule
  • Dell Precision M6300 Review pdf
  • When it comes to mobile computing systems few companies are able to claim families of products so successful as Dell which just announced the 10th anniversary of the Precision lineup and the company decided to launch a special edition laptop just for this occasion. The Precision M6300 notebook is here now to replace the older Precision M90 model and it is aimed at the business market. From the outside the new Dell laptop, the Precision M6300, features a “Road Ready” chassis design based on a magnesium alloy casing which allowed the manufacturing company to reduce the total weight of the laptop. On the hardware department, the Precision M6300 is based on Intel’s mobile computing platform, the Santa Rosa. As a central processing unit the M6300 comes equipped with an Intel Core 2 Duo X7900 CPU which has a standard running frequency of 2.8GHz as well as a frontside bus speed of 800MHz. Just like most other notebooks based on the Intel Santa Rosa platform, the new Dell comes with a maximum of 4GB DDR2 of random access memory which is fully supported thanks to the 36-bit addressing system, even for 32-bit operating systems. The M6300 comes with a discrete graphics card based on the Nvidia Quadro FX 1600M graphics processing units which has 256MB of dedicated video memory and can additionally share 256MB because of the implemented TurboCache technology. Review by: news.softpedia.com Download Dell Precision M6300 Review pdf
  • Using the Semantic Web for linking and reusing data across Web 2.0 communities
  • Large volumes of content (bookmarks, reviews, videos, etc.) are currently being created on the “Social Web”, i.e. on Web 2.0 community sites, and this content is being annotated and commented upon. The ability to view an individual’s entire contribution to the Social Web would be an interesting and valuable service, particularly important as social networks are often being formed through created content and things that people have in common (“object-centred sociality”). SIOC is a Semantic Web research project that aims to describe online communities on the Social Web. This paper describes how SIOC and the Semantic Web can enable linking and reuse scenarios of data from Web 2.0 community sites, and introduces a SIOC Types module to further specify the type of content items and act as a “glue” between user posts and the content items created and annotated by users. The Web is increasingly becoming a social place: there has been a shift from just existing on the Web to participating on the Web. Community applications such as collaborative wikis, blogging, photo and bookmark sharing, and online social networks have become very popular recently, both in personal/social and professional/organisational domains [1]. Most of these collaborative applications provide common features such as content creation and sharing (images, user profiles, bookmarks, articles, etc.), provisions for discussions related to the content (comments, talk pages) and user-to-user connections (circle of friends, private messaging, etc.) and networks of users are also forming through content items of common interest (in what has been termed “object-centred sociality”
  • PCLinuxOS Installation Guide with Screenshot PDF Manual
  • Its assumed that at least at first you will be setting up a dual boot system on your computer. That just means you will still be able to use the other operating system and PCLinuxOS. This is what most people new to the Linux operating system usually choose to do. It gives you the ability to fall back on something that you already comfortable with, and being able to still use the tools with which you are familiar if you need them will definitely ease the transition. You Really Don’t Have to Give Up Windows! Now possibly some of the terms in the two preceding paragraphs were unfamiliar and possibly just a little frightening. That’s alright, the next few sections of the guide will help you along the way. Download PCLinuxOS Installation Guide with Screenshot PDF Manual
  • Photoshop icycles Tutorial in PDF
  • Easy Icyicles tutorial at photoshop, Step 1 Create a new documents, make the background black and white and use the elliptical marquee tool to draw a circle and fill it with white. Step 2 Use Filter –> Stylize –> Extrude You might want to play with the values to create different shapes of icicles. Step 3 Now go to Filter –> Distort –> Polar Coordinates.. Choose Polar to Rectangular Step 4 Hit CTRL-U and pick a nice blue for your icicles (c) 2006 Photoshop Tutorials by Photoshop Jungle. Download Photoshop icycles Tutorial in PDF
  • How to Import Shapefiles into Microsoft Access
  • This tutorial demonstrates how to import an ESRI shapefile into an Access database using the ArcCatalog. Microsoft Access databases are compatible with ArcGIS, as tables within Access databases can be directly accessed by ArcGIS and added to ArcMap. When geographic boundary files are exported to an Access database, the database can then serve as a personal geodatabase: a container for organizing and storing multiple geographic boundary files and data tables. (see the How to Import Data into Microsoft Access tutorial for importing data tables into Access). If you do not already have an Access database where you intend to export the shapefile to, the first step is to create an empty database file (see the beginning of the How to Import Data into Microsoft Access tutorial for instructions on creating a new database). NOTE – if you are using ArcGIS 9.2, you MUST create the database within Arc Catalog by right-clicking in the table of contents, clicking new, and new personal geodatabase. You cannot import geospatial data into an Access database that was not created with ArcGIS 9.2. If you plan on using the database for just holding and working with tabular data, or you are using an earlier version of ArcGIS (8.3 to 9.1), you can safely create a database within Access, Windows Explorer, or ArcGIS, and it will work as a geodatabase. Once you have a database, the next step is to open the ArcCatalog, and drill down to the directory that has the shapefile. In this example, we are
  • MaUsE DoubleClick March 2006
  • What you are looking at is the March 2007 edition of the MaUsE DoubleClick monthly newsletter from the Macin- tosh Users East, (MaUsE), a motley collection of mostly harmless cranks who reside in Southern Ontario with their motley collection of old and new Macintosh computers. Unlike previous issues, the March 2007 DoubleClick is published using Quark XPress 7. This issue was created with help from an OWC Mercury Extreme 1.4 GHz G4 Power Macintosh AGP Graphics tower, (with our thanks to OWC), and a 1 GHz G4 iBook. A Kodak DX7590 is used for all pictures. Everything not specifically attributed to someone else can be blamed on me. Back issues can be downloaded from the website. Submissions from MaUsE Club members are almost always welcome. Send articles to < mause.doubleclick@gmail.com >, especially if there are files or pictures attached. I have never refused a submission yet. There is always room for an- other piece on ANY Mac-related topic and I’ll make room if there isn’t. I would like your submissions. But I won’t beg. Apple, Macintosh, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. The MaUsE (Macintosh Users East) is an in- dependent Mac user group and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved of by Apple Computer, Inc. Its very much like they don?t even know we exist. Download MaUsE DoubleClick March 2006
  • AJAX Design Strategies
  • Web applications have entered a new era driven by web site goals such as fast response to user actions and user collaboration in creating and sharing web site content. The popular term attributed to these highly responsive and often collaborative sites is Web 2.0. Some prime examples of Web 2.0 are web sites such as Google Maps and Flickr. Google Maps offers a highly responsive user interface (UI). For instance, you can view a map, then move your cursor across it to see adjacent areas almost immediately. Flickr is a site on which users store and share photographs -- users manage almost all the site's content. Other Web 2.0 sites provide a similarly rich user experience by doing things such as integrating services from other web sites or incorporating a steady stream of new information. For example, the Google map service can be brought into another web site, such as a site for purchasing cars, to present a map that highlights the location of auto dealerships that sell a particular car model. The term used for these site integrations is "mashups." Or a sports-oriented site can continually update scores without requiring the user to request a page update. What is AJAX? A number of excellent articles that describe AJAX are available, for example, Asynchronous JavaScript Technology and XML (AJAX) With Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition. In brief, AJAX is a set of technologies that together allows a web site to be -- or appear to be -- highly responsive. AJAX enables this because
  • Source Code Migration to DOT NET Framework: A Re-engineering Application Perspective
  • DOT NET is one of the key products that enable application development under the new vision. However, DOT NET is not quite backward compatible with prior versions like visual basic version 6. This makes migration a serious issue. Converting existing source code to DOT NET architecture is not just a matter of loading it to the new version. DOT NET has its built-in migration tool, which performs the vital task of converting the source code syntax. But that's just half of the work done. But before the converted code is actually compiled, the developer needs to enable it to smoothly fix lot of issues to fit into DOT NET architecture. In present efforts to find out solutions to these migration issues, a re-engineering Migration Model for Legacy Source Code (MMLC) has been proposed in this study. Proposed model has been further validated using a in-house project at one of the leading software development organisation. It is envisaged from the experimental try-out that the model would help the developer community to easily convert their legacy source code to DOT NET framework. The architecture of DOT NET offers several advantages, such as object-oriented features, ease of developing and deploying Windows and Web applications, ability to develop Web services and mobile applications, improved security features, ability to access data using disconnected record sets, backward compatibility etc. With all the above features, it becomes necessary to convert the legacy source code into DOTNET framework to sustain and improve the business[1]. It is evident form the literature