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E3 Show / Nokia N-gage Arenaprojection screens into the design of the Nokia N-gage booth. ... The installation of 3 Fogscreens at each end of the booth ...
Get PDFAten VS-0404 User Guide ManualThe VS-0404 Video Matrix Switch combines the capability of a video switcher and signal splitter. It duplicates and enhances the video and audio signals from up to four input sources (computers), and routes them to up to four output devices (monitors, projectors, etc.). The VS-0404 provides fast, flexible, reliable solutions for installations that require audio-visual information from multiple sources to be delivered to multiple destinations – such as: Broadcasting information to public locations (news, airline and train schedule and arrival/departure information)
Sporting events Theater and lecture overflow rooms Classroom and company training facilities Clearly marked front panel switches and LED indicators make it easy to link sources with desired output devices, creating a matrix of presentation possibilities. Features Front panel push button switches select the combination of video input to video output. Duplicates and enhances video signals up to 65 m (max.) Cascadable Audio enabled Installation Requirements A VGA, SVGA, XGA or Multisync monitor capable of the highest resolution that you will be using on any computer in the installation for each output port you will be using. Speakers for each output port you will be using. A video cable with HDB-15 connectors (male on one end and female on the other end) for each computer you will be installing.* An audio cable for each computer you will be installing.
Download pdf Aten VS-0404 User Guide ManualTCP/IP Internetworking With gawkThis chapter provides a (necessarily) brief introduction to computer networking concepts. For many applications of gawk to TCP/IP networking, we hope that this is enough. For more advanced tasks, you will need deeper background, and it may be necessary to switch to lower-level programming in C or C++.
There are two real-life models for the way computers send messages to each other over a network. While the analogies are not perfect, they are close enough to convey the major concepts. These two models are the phone system (reliable byte-stream communications), and the postal system (best-effort datagrams).
Reliable Byte-streams (Phone Calls)
When you make a phone call, the following steps occur:
1. You dial a number.
2. The phone system connects to the called party, telling them there is an incoming call. (Their phone rings.)
3. The other party answers the call, or, in the case of a computer network, refuses to answer the call.
4. Assuming the other party answers, the connection between you is now a duplex (two-way), reliable (no data lost), sequenced (data comes out in the order sent) data stream.
5. You and your friend may now talk freely, with the phone system moving the data (your voices) from one end to the other. From your point of view, you have a direct end-to-end connection with the person on the other end.
The same steps occur in a duplex reliable computer networking connection. There is considerably more overhead in setting up the communications, but once it’s done, data moves in both directions, reliably, in sequence.
Download pdfBloodrayne - Games Cheats Hints & Trainer PC GuideThe human race, being a constant prey for vampires has always been fascinated by the latter. And if the object of that fascination is a really hot vampire in a tight leather suit, the stage is set for a successful game. It is set in 1933 and 1938, just before World War II. As an agent of the Brimstone Society, Rayne is sent to a variety of locations (a small swamp town in Louisiana, a Nazi fortress in Argentina, and an ancient castle in Germany) to battle supernatural creatures as well as the Nazi army. Sounds familiar? Cheat mode: Enter the options menu and select “Cheat”.
Combine the columns of words to form one of the following codes. A message will appear to confirm correct code entry. Pause game play, then enable the cheat from the menu. God mode - TRIASSASSINDONTDIE Restore health - LAMEYANKEEDONTFEED Fill Bloodlust - ANGRYXXXINSANEHOOKER Time Factor mode - NAKEDNASTYDISHWASHERDANCE Level Select - ONTHELEVEL Enemy Freeze - DONTFARTONOSCAR Show Weapons - SHOWMEMYWEAPONS Gratuitous Dismemberment mode - INSANEGIBSMODEGOOD Juggy mode - JUGGYDANCESQUAD Programmer messages: Enter one of the following codes to view a programmer message.
Download pdf Bloodrayne - Games Cheats Hints & Trainer PC GuideMicrosoft Exchange ActiveSync Administrator's GuideMobile workers can have wireless access to Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 email and calendar information using the Treo™ 650smartphone by palmOnewith built-in Exchange ActiveSync ® technology. With this solution, companies don’t incur additional expense and management overhead involved in evaluating, purchasing, installing, and updating third party behind-the-firewall servers. While these additional servers do provide some unique benefits, many businesses won’t need more than what's offered through Exchange ActiveSync—functionality that’s built in to Exchange Server 2003 and the Treo 650 smartphone. With the latest mobile technology, Treo 650 smartphone users have fast and easy access to the most current email and calendar information on the corporate Exchange server wherever they can get a cellular signal.
How Exchange ActiveSync works on the Treo 650 smartphone
The Internet, wireless technology, mobile devices, and advanced software are allowing mobile workers access to business information without imposing time or location constraints, enabling them to be more competitive and have more freedom to shift their work hours and location. Whether their business information is on the web or on an Exchange server, mobile professionals want to access it.
The Treo 650 smartphone by palmOne has the portability and speed you won't get from a laptop computer. A Treo smartphone is much easier to carry than a laptop, and a Treo smartphone can be turned on and ready for work quicker than the fastest laptop. Smartphones broaden an organization's traditional computing model—a desktop computer accessing corporate server(s)—to include wireless access to information on the corporate server. Mobile professionals who carryProgramming Interrupts for DOS-Based Data Acquisition on 80×86-Based ComputersInterrupts are very important to the operation of any computer. Interrupts give the processor the ability to respond quickly to its peripherals (such as the keyboard and the hard disk) and to the outside world in general. Without interrupts, a processor would be unable to service more than one task efficiently and reliably. The importance of the interrupt is illustrated when comparing an interrupt to a doorbell. If your door did not have a doorbell, you would have to periodically go to the door to see if anyone happened to be there at that time. Of course, that would be very inefficient. With a doorbell, you only need to go to the door when the doorbell rings, and you are then confident that someone is there waiting.
Likewise, it is not efficient for the processor to continually check whether any of its peripherals require attention at a given time. An interrupt is a doorbell to the processor to signal that some device needs service. During normal execution of a program, instructions are read from memory and executed sequentially by the processor. The processor uses a special register called the instruction pointer to keep track of the next instruction to be executed. A set of general-purpose registers are used for manipulation and temporary storage of any data used by the program.
Download Programming Interrupts for DOS-Based Data Acquisition on 80×86-Based ComputersHarley-Davidson motorcycle: 10 million cells, 7 minutes CADHarley-Davidson motorcycle: 10 million cells, 7 minutes CAD to mesh. Solution from Fluent. Bell Helicopter: 1 million cells, 1 minute CAD to mesh Eiffel Tower: 4 million cells, 5 minutes CAD to mesh Iect: 4.7 million cells, 7 minutes CAD to mesh CEIs Harpoon Extreme Mesher Sets New Standards for Simplicity, Speed New software generates mesh in three mouse clicks; processes two million cells per minute on standard hardware APEX, N.C., March 27, 2003 - CEI has released Harpoon, new software that simplifies and speeds the process of generating high-quality meshes from standard CAD packages.
Harpoon tur a CAD file into a finished mesh with three clicks of a mouse. Proprietary meshing algorithms enable the software to process up to two million cells per minute on standard hardware. A HEX-dominant structure within Harpoon eures better quality cells, even if CAD data is poor. And, Harpoon automatically checks the generated mesh for incoistencies and repai any sub-par cells. Surface geometry is brought into Harpoon through STL (surface triangulation) files that can be created in any CAD package or in
Download PDF Why LAN Security is ImportantFederal Information. Processing Standards Publication 191. November 9, 1994. Specifications for. Guideline for The Analysis Local Area Network Security.
FIPS PUB 191 Federal Information Processing Standards Publication 191 November 9, 1994 Specificatio for Guideline for The Analysis Local Area Network Security Contents 1 INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.1 Why LAN Security is Important . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.2 Purpose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.3 Overview of Document
Get PDFSecuring Web 2.0: are your web applications vulnerable?The definition of Web 2.0 is still being debated despite extensive discussion. Its staunchest advocates proclaim it a complete philosophical and technological reworking of how the web functions. Others declare that it is meaningless. However, most agree on common characteristics of a Web 2.0 application, such as increased interactivity, the acceptance of user input for building community and a reliance on client-side functionality. Additionally, Web 2.0 applications can be more vulnerable to exploitation by hackers than their predecessors. Hackers spend most of their time gathering information. When Web 2.0 applications push functionality and code to users, they provide hackers with information that can be used for formulating attacks. Often, old attacks such as cross-site scripting become more dangerous when used against Web 2.0 applications. This white paper defines some of the common technological components of Web 2.0 applications and discusses ways of securing them against exploitation.
Web 2.0 components
Web 2.0 uses the web for delivering information that is often created through community contribution. Wikis and blogs are good examples of these types of appli cations. The main attribute of a Web 2.0 application is interactivity. More functionality is on the client, and less is on the server. As a result, requests are updated in the browser without refreshing the entire page. For example, consider Google Maps. Instead of a static page, you can drill down or zoom in and out of a map without making requests for a new page. You can use several key technologies—or more appropriately, groupings of differentMaking FITS available on DotNet ApplicationsThe Flexible Image Transport System (FITS) is a powerful and widely adopted means of exchanging Astronomical Data. There are also a great number of tools and libraries available on many platforms to facilitate working with FITS. We present the FitsLib 1, A library written to facilitate development of astronomical data analysis tools on the Microsoft.Net Platform. This has been developed as a wrapper over one of the very popular and time tested FITS libraries, CFITSIO. Fits.Net library merges the advantages of speed and ruggedness of CFITSIO with the language independence of the Microsoft.Net technology and a simple Document Object Model (DOM). We believe this library will be intuitive for .NET programmers. We present the design and usage patterns of the library in C-Sharp. We also discuss performance issues of the library. Finally we present a number of applications and web services, which are currently running on this library.
We wished to use the CFITSIO package in developing image cutout services on the Microsoft’s .Net Platform in the C-Sharp language. This is a comprehensive library and we did not feel translation was viable, C-Sharp does allow use of managed C++. We set out to wrap a minimal set of routines in the managed C++ programming environment.
This minimal set, however, grew larger as more functionality was required in C-Sharp. It became apparent that developing code with so many pointers and unmanaged data objects in C-Sharp would prove to be prohibitive, both for development and for maintenance. This led to the design of an