dvag3170i block msn Result Search:
Toshiba SD-H903A Introduction in pdfToshiba Storage Device Division (SDD) today announced the world s first half-height HD DVD writer, providing high-definition video editing and content creation capabilities on desktop systems and media centers using this increasingly popular next-generation DVD technology. Like Toshiba s slim-line HD DVD writer launched in 2006, the new SD-H903A provides read and write support for legacy formats, enabling users to enjoy existing CD and DVD material along with high-definition DVD content. Ideally designed for single-bay desktop PCs with its multi-functional capabilities, Toshiba s SD-H903A is the perfect solution for professional high-definition content creation.
In addition, consumers can capture content, edit home videos and create vast digital content repositories for movies, music and photos. With dual layer discs, HD DVD provides 30GB of storage capacity, which can accommodate up to eight hours of HD DVD movie content with extended cuts and interactive features, up to five full-length standard DVD films, up to 7,500 MP3 songs or up to 30,000 high-quality images. In addition, HD DVD provides massive data back-up capabilities for commercial applications. This functionality is ideal for archiving graphic, legal, financial and technical data, which require reliable, high-quality back-up solutions. Featuring six times better resolution than standard DVD, the HD DVD format delivers an enhanced viewing experience with brighter colors and greater detail, using the same physical structure of standard DVD technology. As a result, the SD-H903A allows PC and CE manufacturers to make a smooth and affordable transition to high-definition offerings from existing DVD platforms. The SD-H903A features a SerialControl Abstraction in Parallel Programming LanguagesControl abstraction is the process by which programmers de ne new control constructs, specifying a statement ordering separately from an implementation of that ordering. We argue that control abstraction can and should play a central role in parallel programming. Control abstraction can be used to build new control constructs for the expression of parallelism. A control construct can have several implementations, representing the varying degrees of parallelism to be exploited on different architectures. Control abstraction also reduces the need for explicit synchronization, since it admits a precise specification of control ow. Using several examples, we illustrate these benefits of control abstraction. We also show that we can efficiently implement a parallel programming language based on control abstraction. We conclude that the enormous benefits and reasonable costs of control abstraction argue for its inclusion in explicitly parallel programming languages.
Sequential programming languages use sequencing, repetition, and selection to define a total ordering of statement executions in a program. Parallel programming languages use additional control ow constructs, such as fork, cobegin, or parallel for loops, to introduce a partial order on statement executions, which admits a parallel implementation. Since parallelism is primarily an issue of control ow, the control constructs provided by the language can either help or hinder attempts to express and exploit parallelism.
Download pdf Control Abstraction in Parallel Programming LanguagesThe Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine PDFWe present Google, a prototype of a large-scale search engine which makes heavy use of the structure present in hypertext. Google is designed to crawl and index the Web efficiently and produce much more satisfying search results than existing systems. The prototype with a full text and hyperlink database of at least 24 million pages is available at http://google.stanford.edu/ To engineer a search engine is a challenging task. Search engines index tens to hundreds of millions of web pages involving a comparable number of distinct terms. They answer tens of millions of queries every day. Despite the importance of large-scale search engines on the web, very little academic research has been done on them. Furthermore, due to rapid advance in technology and web proliferation, creating a web search engine today is very different from three years ago.
This paper provides an in-depth description of our large-scale web search engine — the first such detailed public description we know of to date. Apart from the problems of scaling traditional search techniques to data of this magnitude, there are new technical challenges involved with using the additional information present in hypertext to produ e better search results. This paper addresses this question of how to build a practical large-scale system which can exploit the additional information present in hypertext. Also we look at the problem of how to effectively deal with uncontrolled hypertext collections where anyone can publish anything they want.
Download The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine PDFF-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange Administrators Guide ManualF-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange Administrators Guide is divided into the following chapters: Chapter 1. Introduction. General information about F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange and other F-Secure Anti-Virus Mail Server and Gateway products. Chapter 2. Deploying F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange. Instructions and examples how to set up your network environment before you can install F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange. Chapter 3. Installing F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange. Instructions how to install and set up F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange.
Chapter 4. Using F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange. Instructions how to use and administer F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange. Chapter 5. Updating Virus and Spam Definition Databases. Instructions how to update your virus definition database. Chapter 6. Setting and Statistics in Centrally Managed Environment. Instructions how to remotely administer F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange and F-Secure Content Scanner Server when they have been installed in centralized administration mode. Chapter 7. Settings and Statistics in Locally Managed Environment. Instructions how to locally administer F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange and F-Secure Content Scanner Server when they have been installed in the stand-alone mode. Chapter 8. Administering F-Secure Spam Control. General information about and instructions on how to configure F-Secure Spam Control. Chapter 9. Troubleshooting. Solutions to some common problems, Appendix A. Variables in Warning Messages. Lists variables that can be included in virus warning messages. Appendix B. Services and Prcesses. Describes services, devices and processes of F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange. Technical Support. Contains the contact information for assistance. About F-Secure Corporation. DescribesHP LaserJet III Repair First Check:. 1.) Switch off the printer and disconnect the power cord. ....Comment: The above described repair also helps if the ?50 SERVICE? error is
Troubleshooting: HP LaserJet III Malfunction „50 SERVICE“ Veion Info: This is the second, optimized veion of the troubleshooting description „HP-LaserJet-III_Repair.doc.pdf“ dated mid 2003. Helping Internet Links: Additional information concerning this item can be found in the Internet at the following links: http://www.johannes-schubert.de/LaserDrucker/seiten/index.htm http://carnot.pathology.ubc.ca/laserjetiii.html http://carnot.pathology.ubc.ca/fusercon.pdf http://www.mxbtv.de/hp/hp.htm Error „50 Service“: If the HP LaserJet III printer shows „50 SERVICE“ after power up and the fuser is o.k. … then maybe the „AC Driver / Safety Circuit“ board of the „AC Power Module“ is defect. This PCB with part number „RG1- 1438“ is made from cheap PCB base material which can render a conductive path between adjacent feedthrough holes if it is old or was over heated. Fit Check: 1.) Switch off the printer and disconnect the power cord. 2.) Check the fuser module (see below) or replace it by a functioning one. 3.) If this does not help then replace
DownloadSqueezebox v3 Owner's GuideSqueezebox lets you play your digitized music collection through your stereo system using your wireless or ethernet network. With Squeezebox, you can also listen to internet radio stations, set alarms, display RSS feeds, and more! This user guide includes setup and basic operating instructions for your new player. Since Slim Devices is continually adding new features to Squeezebox, some new capabilities may not be covered here. You can find additional information about the latest Squeezebox features, as well as detailed documentation for developers, on the Slim Devices web site, http://www.slimdevices.com/.
Squeezebox is powered by the open source SlimServer software, which is the result of the efforts of software developers worldwide working together in an open community. We are grateful to everyone in the Slim Devices community who helped create Squeezebox. We hope you enjoy Squeezebox and that you’ll tell a friend about Slim Devices.
System Requirements
• Macintosh: Mac OS X 0.3 or later, 256MB RAM, ethernet or wireless network, and 20MB of hard disk space for SlimServer
• Windows XP/2000/NT: 733 MHz Pentium, 256MB RAM, ethernet or wireless network, and 20MB hard disk space for SlimServer
• Linux/BSD/Solaris/Other: Perl 5.8.3 or later, 256MB RAM, ethernet or wireless network, and 20MB hard disk space for SlimServer
• Broadband internet connection for internet radio and SqueezeNetwork
Download Squeezebox Owner's GuideC# Tutorial for Mobile Device pdfThis tutorial provides an introduction to coding for mobile devices using C# and Visual Studio. There are many topics to cover, so unfortunately we will not be able to go into much depth in the time available. However, feel free to contact any of the organisers after the tutorial if you have any questions. We are all postgraduate students who completed our undergraduate degrees in computing science at Glasgow, and we are happy to chat about your projects or anything else to do with software development.
Topics covered
This is a basic introduction to coding C# for mobile devices. However, at the end of the tutorial you should be able to:-
• Create a basic GUI application for Windows desktop machines
• Create a basic GUI application for Windows Mobile devices
• Create your own Dynamic Link Libraries (DLLs)
• Link to and use DLLs in your code
• Call native Windows API code from inside C# applications
It is vital that throughout the tutorial you try to understand the code you are entering and what it does. Please ask about anything that might not be clear in the tutorial text or anything you want more information about.
Creating a solution
Before we begin coding, we must create a solution in Visual Studio 2005. A solution can be thought of as a meta-project. It can store many sub-projects within it, and is simply a useful way of organising your development tasks. Open Visual Studio 2005 (Start->Programs->Compilers) and select File->New->Project from the menu. A window will appear showing different project types.Ajax fingerprinting for Web 2.0 ApplicationsFingerprinting is an age old concept and one that adds great value to assessment methodologies. There are several tools available for fingerprinting operating systems (nmap), Web servers (httprint), devices, etc. Each one of these tools uses a different method – inspecting the TCP stack, ICMP responses, HTTP responses. With this evolution of Web 2.0 applications that use Ajax extensively, it is important to fingerprint Ajax tools, framework or library used by a particular web site or a page. This paper describes the method of doing Ajax fingerprinting with a simple prototype serving as an example.
Ajax fingerprinting can help in deriving the following benefits:
• Vulnerability detection – Knowledge of the framework on which a web application is running, allows the mapping of publicly known vulnerabilities found for that particular framework. Example – DWR client side vulnerability
• Architecture enumeration – On the basis of derived information from fingerprinting it is possible to guess application architecture and inner working of a system. Example – Atlas (.NET application framework), DWR (Servelet/JavaScript combo)
• Assessment methodology – Derived information from the fingerprinting phase can help in defining future assessment path and vulnerability detection methods. Example – Deciding on JavaScript-scanning
Download pdf Ajax fingerprinting for Web 2.0 ApplicationsTaming the Multi-core BeastProfessor Brian Vinter Concurrency vs. Parallelism Designing parallel systems is very hard • But sometimes necessary • Designing concurrent systems is surprisingly easy Concurrent systems can transparently utilize an underlying parallel system If your program is concurrent, and with sufficient concurrent operations, you don’t have to design for a specific number of processors Parallelism News flash: Moore’s law is dead since October 2004
This means that increased performance must come from using more processors How much of a Pentium 4 processor is actual processing power? Next generation processors are all multi-core Concurrency Concurrency it the natural way of things Serial algorithms are just the way we are trained… All (most) new CPUs are hardware threaded • Why? (hint: how far is a nano-second?) The basic assumption behind hardware threading is that your application is multithreaded • Otherwise there is little advantage
Download Taming the Multi-core BeastAutoCAD 2000 in 3D - A Monkish Shot Tower Tutorial ManualThis tutorial introduces the concepts and techniques used to build 3D models in AutoCAD 2000. As a vehicle for learning these techniques, we develop a model of a whimsical structure that I have called the Monkish Shot Tower after a group of imaginary Monks who have refined the technology of manufacturing lead shot for firearms, and the like. The tower is designed around the perfect number 7, features an external spiral stair, an elaborate canopy on top, and a hole down the centre. The final structure is illustrated in Figure 1 below.
This tutorial will introduce the following concepts and techniques: • simple solid modelling with solid primitives & CSG operations (the tower); • construction of complex solid objects (stair and landing); • user coordinate systems and positioning of objects (external stairs); • advanced use of the CSG operations (tapering the stairs); • simple surface modelling (the roof canopy and handrails); • surface modelling versus solid modelling (the handrails); • meshed surfaces (the landing “sails” for shading).
Download PDF for AutoCAD 2000 in 3D - A Monkish Shot Tower Tutorial Manual