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  • Land Rover Operation Manual PDF
  • Content for this Land Rover Operation Manual Owners Manual | Operating Instructions | Service Manual | A Attachments, towing Additives, oil Additives, petrol Adjustment, brake Adjustment, clutch Adjustment, distributor Adjustment, fan belt Adjustment, reverse stop Adjustment, steering Adjustment, tappet Air cleaner Anti-freezing mixture Axles B Brake adjustment Brakes Brakes, bleeding Battery Box, control Bulbs C Cable, high tension Capacities (special note) Capacities Capacity, engine oil Capacity, petrol Capacity, water Capstan winch Carburettor Carrier, spare wheel Chaff guard Chassis lubrication Cleaner, air Clutch Clutch adjustment Clutch lubrication Coil Controls Control box Control, ignition Control, mixture Coolant, draining Cooler, oil Cooling system D Dampers, hydraulic Decarbonising Description Dimensions, vehicle Dimensions, engine Dipper switch, lamp Distributor adjustment Distributor lubrication Distributors. Rover (Overseas) 121-128 Doors 84 Draining Coolant 42 Dynamo 27, 66 E Electrical equipment 64-76 Engine governor 105 Engine timing 36 Engine lubrication 21 Engine dimensions 5 F Fan belt adjustment 42 Fault location 77-83 Filter, oil, external 26, 27 Foot pedals 10, 30 Foot pedal pads 95 Freewheel 6 Front axle lubrication 29 Front hub lubrication 29 Front wheel drive lock 13 Frost precautions 43 Fuel system 5, 44 Fuse 4, 67 G Gauge, petrol level 13 Gearbox 6 Gearbox lubrication 28 Gear changing 16-19 Gear ratios 6 Governor, engine 105 Guarantee 2 H Hand-rail, passenger 9 Heater, vehicle 93 Hoods 85-90 Horn 74 Horn button 10 Hub, front, lubrication 29 Hydraulic dampers 55 I Ignition 5, 68-71 Ignition control 36 Ignition switch 12 Ignition warning light 12 In case of trouble 77-83 Instruments 10
  • How To: Create a Service Account for an ASP.NET 2.0 Application
  • This How To shows you how to create and configure a custom least-privileged service account to run an ASP.NET Web application. By default, an ASP.NET application on Microsoft Windows Server 2003 and IIS 6.0 runs using the built-in Network Service account. In production environments, you usually run your application using a custom service account. By using a custom service account, you can audit and authorize your application separately from others, and your application is protected from any changes made to the privileges or permissions associated with the Network Service account. To use a custom service account, you must configure the account by running the Aspnet_regiis.exe utility with the -ga switch, and then configure your application to run in a custom application pool that uses the custom account's identity. By default, an ASP.NET application on Windows Server 2003 and IIS 6.0 runs in the application pool called ASP.NET V2.0. This application pool uses the built-in Network Service account. This account is least privileged, although it does have network credentials which means that you can use it to authenticate against network servers. The following scenarios may prevent you from using a network service account or a custom domain-level service account: - Your Web server is not in a domain. - Your Web server and downstream remote server are in separate domains with no trust relationship. - Your Web server and downstream remote server are separated by a firewall and you cannot open the ports required for NTLM or Kerberos authentication. In the above cases you can use mirrored
  • User's Guide for Nokia 6600
  • Suite for Nokia 6600?. The. installation wizard will guide you. through the installation process. Using your phone. as a modem. Use your phone as a User's Guide for Nokia 6600 Copyright © 2004 Nokia. All rights reserved. 3 DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY We, NOKIA CORPORATION declare under our sole respoibility that the product NHL-10 is in conformity with the provisio of the following Council Directive: 1999/5/EC. A copy of the Declaration of Conformity can be found at http://www.nokia.com/phones/declaration_of_conformity/ Copyright © 2004 Nokia. All rights reserved. Reproduction, trafer, distribution or storage of part or all of the contents in this document in any form without the prior written permission of Nokia is prohibited. Nokia and Nokia Connecting People are registered trademarks of Nokia Corporation. Other product and company names mentioned herein may be trademarks or tradenames of their respective owne. Nokia tune is a sound mark of Nokia Corporation. This product includes software liceed from Symbian Ltd © 1998-2004. © 1998-2004 Symbian Ltd. All rights reserved. Symbian and Symbian OS are trademarks of Symbian Ltd. All rights reserved. Java™ and all Java-based marks are trademarks or registered trademarks Download manual
  • Activote Quick Start Quide
  • Activote is Promethean’s integrated personal response system that is designed to encourage student participation and enhance learning. This could be as straightforward as determining whether pupils are following a lesson, or it could be the basis for planned discussion. And it's all done by asking students to make a choice and press a button. Capturing student responses when they are questioned can be a powerful tool in influencing the direction of a lesson or the planning of future work. Activote allows the answers of each pupil to be saved for retrieval later - individually or as a class. Results can also be exported to Excel for record keeping and further analysis where appropriate. Flexibility is key in any learning environment, which is why Activote can be used in several ways. Integrated into Promethean’s software, it can be used ad-hoc, allowing teachers to ask unplanned questions as they occur. However, it also works effortlessly over any application or website. Similarly, teachers can choose between using the supplied pre-prepared content and easily making their own with the aid of the built-in Question Master Wizard. Download pdf Activote Quick Start Quide
  • IBM ThinkPad 600 User’s Reference pdf
  • Selecting an IBM ThinkPad 600 Computer We have developed this ThinkPad computer to meet both your technical requirements and your high expectations. To help us continue to build products that address your mobile computing needs, please take a moment to complete the ThinkPad* Registration in the Setup Guide. Large color LCD The large TFT (thin-film transistor) or HPA (high performance addressing) display provides clear and brilliant text and graphics. Lithium-ion battery pack The large-capacity lithium-ion battery pack extends the operating time of your computer, further enhancing to its portability. Audio with 3D stereo sound Your computer is equipped with internal audio record and playback capabilities including 3D audio from just two speakers. When you enable the 3D stereo feature, sounds will appear to be generated all around you, even though only two speakers are used. The audio feature supports the following: Wave audio recording and playback of up to 16 bits, stereo, and 44 KHz sampling. DOS games using the Sound Blaster Pro** interface. Download IBM ThinkPad 600 User’s Reference pdf
  • Java Development Guide for Mac OS X pdf
  • Introduction to Java Development Guide for Mac OS X 7 Who Should Read This Document?7 Organization of This Document 8 See Also 8 Filing and Tracking Bugs 9 Overview of Java for Mac OS X 11 Java and Mac OS X 11 Java,Built In 12 The Aqua User Interface 12 Finding Your Way Around 13 JAVAHOME 14 Java Extensions 15 Output From Java Programs 15 HFS+16 Apple Developer Tools for Java 17 Java Tools on Mac OS X 17 Xcode Tools 17 Get the Current Tools 18 Xcode 18 Jar Bundler 19 Applet Launcher 19 Other Tools 19 Developer Documentation 20 Providing Documentation Feedback 20 Java Deployment Options for Mac OS X 21 Double-Clickable JAR Files 21 Mac OS X Application Bundles 22 The Contents of an Application Bundle 23 A Java Application s Info.plist File 25 Making a Java Application Bundle 26 Additional Considerations for Non-English Applications 27 Distributing Application Bundles 28 Java Web Start 28 The Java Plug-in 29 User Interface Toolkits for Java 31 Swing 31 JMenuBars 31 JTabbedPanes 32 Component Sizing 33 Buttons 34 AWT 35 Accelerator Key 35 Font Encoding 35 Minimum Window Size 35 Full-Screen Exclusive Mode 36 Accessibility 36 Security 36 Sound 37 Input Methods 37 Java 2D 37 Core Java APIs on Mac OS X 41 Networking 41 Preferences 41 JNI 41 The Java VM for Mac OS X 45 Basic Properties of the Java VM 45 Mac OS X Java Shared Archive 46 Generational Garbage Collection 46 The Advantages of the
  • Making Life Easier with Templates and Styles
  • Seasoned Microsoft Office users may be familiar with both templates and styles; in Office, they’re a key to increased productivity. However, many Office users never touch them. In OOo, styles and templates are even more important than in Office, and wise users will become familiar with both the concepts and the details of using them. What is a style? A style is a group of formatting characteristics gathered together and given a name. Styles offer a number of advantages. First, they make it easy to apply the same formatting to different parts of a document; just use the same style. Second, they make it easy to change formatting uniformly; change the formatting of the style and everything using that style changes. Finally, because you can save styles in templates (discussed later in this chapter), it’s easy to use the same formatting across a whole family of documents. For example, you may decide to write a document using 10-point Arial for the text and 14-point Arial for headings. If you later decide to change to Times New Roman, with styles, you make the change in two places—the definitions of your body text and heading styles. Without styles, you have to go through and change each paragraph. OpenOffice.org offers a variety of style types, varying with the application. Table 1 shows the types of styles available in the various applications. Download pdf Making Life Easier with Templates and Styles
  • Agile IMS Service Composition – How to Quicker Respond to New Market Demand
  • Data traffic in telco networks grow much faster and correspond to an increasing part of profits in telco operators. Operator’s dependence on voice services only is quickly diminishing in favor of higher valued data services. As these operators leave their relative comfort zone of supplying voice services in monopoly or oligopoly constructs the need for agility increases. The search for the Holy Grail – that is the next killer application – is happening everywhere. But what if there is no next one single killer application? What if the next killer is exposure of capabilities to be used in countless of use cases which no-one has thought of today? Or if it is the ability of quickly creating services supporting ever changing customer needs? This paper is about how to enable and support agile IMS service composition on both the service layer, that is in low-latency call control type of contexts, and in the Service Delivery Platform, SDP, that is higher level course grained services. What do we mean with Agile IMS Service Composition? • Agile: Focus is Customer Collaboration and Responding To Change • IMS: IP based network, with convergence in any dimension • Service Composition: Being able to create a new service by the combination of development and/or existing services composing these together. With the use of the techniques presented here you will be able to: • Quicker and with less risk try out new services much faster leading to increased profits from more services and more satisfied customer • Increase the number of end-user services available
  • First Hibernate example using Java
  • This tutorial shows a simple example using Hibernate. We will create a simple Java application, showing how Hibernate works. Hibernate is a solution for object relational mapping and a persistence management solution or persistent layer. This is probably not understandable for anybody learning Hibernate. What you can imagine is probably that you have your application with some functions (business logic) and you want to save data in a database. When you use Java all the business logic normally works with objects of different class types. Your database tables are not at all objects. Hibernate provides a solution to map database tables to a class. It copies the database data to a class. In the other direction it supports to save objects to the database. In this process the object is transformed to one or more tables. Saving data to a storage is called persistence. And the copying of tables to objects and vice versa is called object relational mapping. Download pdf First Hibernate example using Java
  • Using Microsoft Outlook 2003 A Beginners Guide Email and Calendars
  • This documentation is meant to function as a guide for individuals that may be unfamiliar with Microsoft Outlook. The more advanced features of Outlook are not included. This documentation covers the following topics: The Outlook Screen Working with Email Creating a Signature File Sending Email Additional Email Options Sending Attachments Receiving Email Replying to Email Forwarding Email Flagging Email for Follow-up Additional Options Out of Office Assistant Personal Address Lists (Contacts) Distribution Lists Saving and Storing Email (Personal Folders) Creating Personal Folders Moving Mail to a Personal Folder Working with Calendars Viewing the Calendar Creating an Appointment Creating a Recurring Appointment Scheduling Group Meetings Creating a Group Calendar Download pdf Using Microsoft Outlook 2003 A Beginners Guide Email and Calendars