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  • Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard Owners Manual
  • Windows MobileTM 2003 Includes: Asus MyPal A620 iPAQ 2215 Dell Axim x3 iPAQ 4150 iPAQ 1940 iPAQ 4155 iPAQ 1945 iPAQ 4350 iPAQ 2210 iPAQ 4355 Pocket PC 2002 or Windows Mobile 2003 with Socket SD or CF cards. Keyboard Driver: Stowaway 4.0 Configuring the Keyboard to Your Pocket PC Device ENABLING THE KEYBOARD DRIVER 1. To enable the Stowaway BT keyboard, tap the Enable button on the Config screen of the keyboard application. This will open the Keyboard Setup Screen. NOTE: After the first installation of the driver the Device Setup Screen is opened automatically and this screen is skipped. 2. When the Device Setup Screen is shown, select the Bluetooth wireless keyboard option and tap Setup. This will show the Bluetooth keyboard status page of the Stowaway BT keyboard application. You may also open that page by selecting the BT tab. 3. When the set up begins, the driver will enable the Pocket PC Bluetooth system software; this is also known as the Bluetooth Stack. Download pdf Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard Owners Manual
  • Renault Autograph PDF
  • Renault Autograph Technical specification 1.2 16v 1.5 dci 65 1.5 dci 80 1.6 16v auto TECHNICAL CHARACTERISTICS Drag Co-efficient/Area (Cd/A)0.35 0.35 0.35 0.35 BODY TYPE Number of Doors 55 55 Body Type Classification MPV 5 door estate MPV MPV ENGINE Engine Capacity 1149 1461 1461 1598 Injection Type Multipoint Commonrail Direct Commonrail (turbo)Direct Multipoint Fuel Type Unleaded Diesel Diesel Unleaded Number of Cylinders 44 44 Number of Valves 16 8 8 16 Max engine power -kW (hp)rpm 55 (75)5500 65 (48)4000 60 (82)4250 70 (95)5000 Max torque -Nm (rpm)105 (3500)180 (2000)185 (1750)148 (3750) TRANSMISSION Type JB1 JC5 JC5 DPO Number of gears 5 5 5 auto BRAKING Front (discs)mm 259 259 259 259 Rear drum TT TT TYRES Tyre Size 175/65 R14 VP 165/70 R14 VP 175/65 R14 VP 175/65 R14 VP STEERING Turning circle between kerbs 10.4 10.4 10.4 10.4 CAPACITIES Fuel Tank -Litres (Gallons)50 (11)50 (11)50 (11)50 (11) Cargo volume under shelf (l)650 650 650 650 With rear bench seat folded (l)2600 2600 2600 2600 PERFORMANCE 0-62mph (0-100kph)14.2 16.3 12.5 12.4 Maximum Speed -mph (kph)96(154 )91 (146)96(155 )101(162 ) FUEL CONSUMPTION CO2 (g/km)165 146 139 190 Urban cycle-mpg 31.4 43.5 44.1 25.7 Urban cycle -litres/100km 9.0 6.5 6.4 11.0 Extra Urban -mpg 47.9 57.6 61.4 44.8 Extra Urban -litres/100km 5.9 4.9 4.6 6.3 Combined -mpg 40.4 51.4 53.3 35.3 Combined -litres/100km 7.0 5.5 5.3 8.0 WEIGHT Kerb weight -kgs 1035 1120 1095 1120 Gross vehicle weight -kgs 1570 1620 1630 1645 STYLE FEATURES Authentique Expression Body coloured bumpers
  • Eclipse Attacks on Overlay Networks: Threats and Defenses PDF Paper
  • Overlay networks are widely used to deploy func-tionality at edge nodes without changing network routers. Each node in an overlay network maintains connections with a number of peers, forming a graph upon which a distributed application or service is implemented. In an “Eclipse” attack, a set of malicious, colluding overlay nodes arranges for a correct node to peer only with members of the coalition. If successful, the attacker can mediate most or all communication to and from the victim. Furthermore, by supplying biased neighbor information during normal overlay maintenance, a modest number of malicious nodes can eclipse a large number of correct victim nodes. This paper studies the impact of Eclipse attacks on structured overlays and shows the limitations of known defenses. We then present the design, implementation, and evaluation of a new defense, in which nodes anonymously audit each other’s connectivity. The key observation is that a node that mounts an Eclipse attack must have a higher than average node degree. We show that enforcing a node degree limit by auditing is an effective defense against Eclipse attacks. Furthermore, unlike most existing defenses, our defense leaves flexibility in the selection of neighboring nodes, thus permitting important overlay optimizations like proximity neighbor selection (PNS). Download Eclipse Attacks on Overlay Networks: Threats and Defenses PDF Paper
  • Coarse-Grain Parallel Programming in Jade
  • The goal of our research is to provide programming language support for exploiting coarse-grain concurrency, or concurrency in which each unit of serial computation executes at least several thousand instructions. There are two major reasons why automatic techniques that extract static parallelism from sequential programs cannot fully exploit available coarse-grain concurrency. First, only the programmer has the high-level knowledge necessary to decompose his program into coarse-grain tasks. This information is lost once the program is encoded in a conventional programming language. Second, it is some- times important to exploit irregular, data-dependent concurrency available only as the program runs. The large grain size often makes it possible to pro?tably amortize the dynamic overhead required to exploit this last source of concurrency. Download pdf Coarse-Grain Parallel Programming in Jade
  • Minor Planet Software Rel. 9 Users Guide pdf
  • Installation Observer’s Location Orbital Elements Database Minor Planet Software a choice: Ephemeris b choice: Orbital Elements c choice: Height and Azimuth d choice: Orbit e choice: Objects in a selected Sky region f choice: Ephemeris of Groups u choice: Upgrade Orbital Elements Database x choice: Exit Acknowledgement Bibliography Minor Planet Software (MPS) is a set of computer programs, written by Sergio Foglia, S. Zani Observatory, to help minor planet observers in their researches. MPS runs under DOS and it works good also with Windows 95/98 operating systems. MPS contains some executable programs and system files, each routine is a single executable program. Orbital elements database consists of two files: ASTEROID.ELE and ASTEROID.IDX. They should be upgraded anytime using MPCORB.DAT or MPCORBCR.DAT from the Minor Planet Centre. MPS is freely-available on the World Wide Web at the following URL: http://www.uai.it/sez_ast/ You can distribute it freely but the following acknowledgement is welcome if you use this software in any publication:Foglia S., Minor Planet Software rel. 8, 2003, http://www.uai.it/sez_ast/ All programs are written using C language. Perturbations are not used in the ephemeris calculation and highly accurate results cannot be obtained more than one or two years from the epoch of osculation of the elements Download pdf Minor Planet Software Rel. 9 Users Guide
  • Forget Web 2.0, where’s SMS 2.0?
  • Last month I was fortunate enough to be invited to a private roundtable of operator executives and entrepreneurs asked to share their ideas and opinions on the opportunities and challenges facing the mobile data industry. Now it’s a very rare day when these two constituencies can agree on anything, so imagine my surprise when both camps reached a consensus on the positive impacts that Web 2.0 services will have on non-voice revenues. The operators expressed their envy and excitement about the pace of innovation and consumer adoption of Web 2.0 services on the internet, and with certainty predicted good fortunes and optimism for the entire value chain when these Web 2.0 services have been migrated to mobile. Indeed this group isn’t alone in its optimism for this “Web 2.0 to Mobile” migration strategy. It seems not a month went by in 2007 without an announcement by a handset vendor, a mobile operator, a media company, or hundreds of entrepreneurial software startups, investing in technical and marketing initiatives and ultimately clamoring to align themselves with one of the Web 2.0 superstars. Okay I admit it. I just don’t get it. Perhaps I’m slow because I’m Canadian, but I just don’t understand the business rationale or source of optimism related to this “Web 2.0 to Mobile” migration strategy. If this optimism is being driven by the scale of revenues that Web 2.0 companies generate from advertising on the internet, and how this can in some shape or form lead to a new revenue stream for mobile
  • VOIP NETWORKING SOLUTIONS
  • Validating the interoperability of Foundry's VoIP solutions, our. customers seamlessly integrate Foundry Layer 2/3 switches with a HIGH QUALITY VOIP NETWORKING SOLUTIONS Foundry VoIP switching architecture provides the highest performance, lowest-latency solution on the market, with guaranteed call quality for your VoIP traffic. Our wire-speed traffic prioritization capabilities eliminate packet-loss and eures VoIP traffic gets through loud and clear, even when there's high- volume data traffic. Our ASIC based QoS enforcement not only provides the industry's lowest latency switching, but does so without compromising performance. Foundry provides a rich set of QoS services for both Layer 2 and Layer 3 traffic,including support for DSCP,802.1p,QoS marking & remarking,ToS,and DiffServ.Our hardware based access control list and rate limiting features iure that voice traffic is given the highest priority and is never disrupted by data traffic. With automated voice discovery capability and QoS support, switches can dynamically discover IP phones. Download
  • Web 2.0 Ideas for Educators A Guide to RSS and More
  • RSS is an acronym that stands for Rich Site Summary, though it’s often alternatively defined as Really Simple Syndication. The simplest definition of RSS is an eXtensible Markup Language(XML) format that uses the Resource Description Framework (RDF) for representing information about resources on the World Wide Web. Similarly, Atom is another format based on XML technology. You might see buttons like these: There are a few types of feeds commonly found on web sites RSS 1.0, RSS 2.0 and Atom. There is quite a bit of debate about which type of xml format is better, but for the purpose of simplicity I will often be referring to feeds as RSS. RSS and Atom feeds are the structures that organize content which is being updated on a regular basis in order for others to retrieve it. This content could be articles, blog posts, photos, PDF documents, PowerPoint Presentations, audio files, video files, or other applications. If the content is the flesh of an orange then a feed would be its skin. The skin keeps the flesh in place so that it is easier to transport. In 2003, RSS was more commonly associated with weblogs, known as blogs. Blogs and RSS feeds almost seemed to be an isolated cause and effect. Where there was a blog, you would find an RSS feed. As this visualization shows, RSS feeds can more recently be seen being used for many different purposes. Bloggers created a different type of media, by adding audio and video files as the primary content
  • Setting Options and Customising Microsoft Excel 2002
  • Like all Microsoft Office products, Excel allows you to customise various settings to suit your own requirements. Whereas Microsoft Word has a default template called normal.dot, Excel has a special file called Excel.xlb in which your settings are stored. Note that not all settings are stored here, however - for example, each file has its own colour palette. Perhaps the most useful customisation centres around the toolbars and menus. You can decide which toolbars to display (and where you would like them positioned on the screen). If you want to, you can remove, add or rearrange the buttons on a toolbar (or the commands in a menu). You can even create your own toolbars and menus, adding either built-in commands or your own (using macros - see Writing Macros in Microsoft Excel 2003 for further information). Another common area of customisation concerns charts. You can create your own chart types and change the palette of colours used on charts. Defining your own types lets you apply a given layout to a set of charts - eg for a particular publication or thesis. While on the subject of colours, you can also modify the default colour palette used for fonts and filling cells. A further aspect of customisation centres around customised lists. A few lists are built into the system (eg the days of the week and months of the year) but you can create your own. These can then be used to fill further cells or to sort data in a particular order.
  • Google Technology PDF Book
  • In the beginning, there was BackRub, the service that became Google. Today, Google is most closely associated with its PageRank algorithm. PageRank is a voting algorithm weighted for importance. The indicators of a Web pages importance is the number of pages that link to a particular page. Messrs. Brin and Page soon added another factor which voted for the importance of a Web page. This idea was the number of people who click on a Web page. The more clicks on a Web page, the more weight that Web page was given. Over time, still other factors have been added to the PageRank algorithm; for example, the frequency with which content on a page is changed. Download Google Technology PDF Book