maya 2008 material sample Result Search:
BMW R 1200 RT Bike Fitting Guide with Music System PDF SheetTake off wing mirror covers surrounding glass. Remove the x2 T25 screws holding left hand side dash in position and the two other screws on top of the dash. Remove the x2 T25 screws under the clocks joining fairing and dash together. Remove the x2 T25 screws from the fairing where the the top fairing and bottom fairing are joined. Remove the T25 screws at the bottom of the dash surround. Remove Dash.
Source: autocom.co.uk
Download BMW R 1200 RT Bike Fitting Guide with Music System PDF Sheetm-Dvara 2.0: Mobile & Web 2.0 Services Integration for Cultural HeritageWeb 2.0 marks a new philosophy where user is the main actor and content producer: users write blogs and comments, they tag, link, and upload photos, pictures, videos, and pod- casts. As a step further, Mobile 2.0 adapts Web 2.0 technol- ogy to mobile users. We intend to study how Web 2.0 and Mobile 2.0 together can be applied to the cultural heritage sector. A number of cultural institutions and museums are introducing in their projects some Web 2.0 applications, but the main knowledge source remains a small group of a few experts.
Our approach is different: we plan to let all the users, the crowd, to be the main contents provider. We aim to the crowdsourcing, the long tail power, as we call fuel of cultural heritage system. In this paper, we describe the m-Dvara 2.0 project, whose aim is a system that lets users to create, share, and use cultural contents including mobile context-aware features.
With Web 2.0 and social software we represent all webbased services with “an architecture of participation”, that is, one in which users interact and generate, share, and take care of the content (http://museumtwo.blogspot.com). Mobile 2.0 is the evolution of mobile technology to let us “capturing the content at the point of inspiration” (http://blog.comtaste.com/2007/06/what_is_social_in_mobile_web_2.html), that is, in the exact moment in which the inspiration and the opportunity exist to do it. Nowadays, Cultural Heritage Organizations (museums, archaeological sites, historical towns, even libraries, etc.) are trying to understand the evolution of the Web, but they tend toiPod nano Features GuideiPod nano Features Guide 2 2 Contents Chapter 1 4 iPod nano Basics 5 iPod nano at a Glance 5 Using iPod nano Controls 7 Disabling iPod nano Controls 8 Using iPod nano Menus 9 Connecting and Disconnecting iPod nano Chapter 2 14 Music Features 14 About iTunes 15 Importing Music Into Your Computer 19 Organizing Your Music 20 Downloading Music and Podcasts to iPod nano 24 Playing Music 29
Listening to Podcasts 30 Listening to Audiobooks 30 Listening to FM Radio Chapter 3 31 Photo Features 31 Downloading Photos 34 Viewing Photos Chapter 4 36 Extra Features and Accessories 36 Using iPod nano as an External Disk 37 Using Extra Settings 41 Synchronizing Contacts, Calenda, and To-Do Lists 43 Storing and Reading Notes 43 Learning About iPod nano Accessories Chapter 5 45 Tips and Troubleshooting 45 General Suggestio 50 Updating and Restoring iPod Software Contents 3 Chapter 6 52 Safety and Cleaning 52 Setup Safety Itructio 52 General Safety, Cleaning, and Handling Guidelines Chapter 7 54 Learning More, Service, and Support Index 57 1 4 1 iPod nano Basics Congratulatio on purchasing your iPod nano. Read this section to learn about the features of your iPod nano, how
Download PDFAmigo Training Document: UMPSThis tutorial teaches how to use the User modeling and profiling service (UMPS). UMPS provides the methodology to enhance the effectiveness and usability of services and interfaces in order to (a) tailor information presentation to user and context, (b) reason about user’s future behavior, (c) help the user to find relevant information, (d) adapt interface features to the user and the context in which it is used, (e) indicate interface features and information presentation features for their adaptation to a multi-user environment
This document is a tutorial about how to use the User modeling and profiling service (UMPS). UMPS provides the methodology to enhance the effectiveness and usability of services and interfaces in order to (a) tailor information presentation to user and context, (b) reason about user’s future behavior, (c) help the user to find relevant information, (d) adapt interface features to the user and the context in which it is used, (e) indicate interface features and information presentation features for their adaptation to a multi-user environment. The tutorial will teach how to use the tools that come along with UMPS and how to access user information via the UMPS API.
Download pdf Amigo Training Document: UMPS3-D model-based tracking of humans in action: a multi-view approachWe present a vision system for the 3-D model- based tracking of unconstrained human movement. Using image sequences acquired simultaneously from multiple views, we recover the 3-D body pose at each time instant without the use of markers. The pose- recovery problem is formulated as a search problem and entails finding the pose parameters of a graphical human model whose synthesized appearance is most similar to the actual appearance of the real human in the multi-view images. The models used for this purpose are acquired from the images. We use a decomposition approach and a best-first technique to search through the high dimensional pose parameter space. A robust variant of chamfer matching is used as a fast similarity measure between synthesized and real edge images.
We present initial tracking results from a large new Humans-In-Action (HIA) database containing more than 2500 frames in each of four orthogonal views. They contain subjects involved in a variety of activities, of various degrees of complexity, ranging from the more simple one-person hand waving to the challenging two-person close interaction in the Argentine Tango.
The ability to recognize humans and their activities by vision is a key feature in the pursuit to design a machine capable of interacting intelligently and effortlessly with a human-inhabited environment. Besides this long-term goal, there are many applications possible in the more near term, e.g. in virtual reality, smart" surveillance systems, motion analysis in sports, choreography of dance and ballet, sign language translation and gesture-driven user interfaces. In many of theseDesigner's Guide to Brand StrategyPrior to this Guide, I prepared a short handbook on Brand Strategy for a specific target audience and for a specific problem. Called ‘The Good Fun Guide to Brand Strategy’ it served its intended purpose by being badly written and well illustrated. However, in spite of this, many others who also read it suggested that it was a good document and one worth extending. Though perhaps being written better.
My interest is in business behaviour and the contributions of that behaviour to how a company, product or service acts and is perceived. I’ve often worked for clients in developing the final designs that ultimately shape how the customer or target individual perceives the client firm. I’ve also seen all too often the disconnect between the involved parties that help shape the client’s identity and the problems in how the client manages its design.
In writing this Guide I’ve tried to outline the basic elements to the process of design and development of brand strategy in a way that would best support the people involved in actually designing brands. This is not to say that designers can’t read eight hundred page books on Managing Brand Equity; but there are some very simple elements of developing the attributes of business behaviour, and all designers should understand their vital role in improving business behaviour.
My hope is that I’ve been able to simplify the topics involved and display them in a practical way that makes it easier for most designers to recognize where in their ownNotebook Power Adapter User Manual Model 303088 pdfNotebook Power Adapter, Model 303088. Ideal for power supply replacement, upgrade or spare power needs, this device features six DC output plug tips that match popular Acer, Asus, BenQ, Compaq, HP, Hitachi, Medion, MSi, Sony, Twinhead and Toshiba models (as listed on pages 4-7). SPECIFICATIONS & FEATURES • Input: 100 – 240 V AC (for worldwide use). • Output: 19 V DC (compatible with most Notebook computers). • Power Factor Correction circuitry capable of reducing energy loss. • Over-voltage and over-current protection (input and output). • Output short protection. • Over-temperature protection. • Ripple noise reduction circuitry. • Meets EMC standards EN55022 and EN55024. • Approvals: CB, TUV, NEMKO, UL, VDE, CSA, BSMI, C-TICK.
This MANHATTAN® Notebook Power Adapter is compatible with the following notebook models:
ACER FT8850, TI Ferrari 3000, TF6720, TF6760 AcerNote 300, 350, 352, 355, 356, 358, 361, 370 and 850C series Aspire 1200 and 1300 Lifenote 373 Light 350, 356, 358, 360, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 380 and 382 series TI Extensa 350, 355, 360, 365, 366, 367 368, 390, 390C, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, , , 500, 501, 502, 503, 505, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517 550, 600, 610/CD/CDT, 616, 620, 690, 700, 710, 711, 712 and 900 series TravelMate 200, 201, 202, 210, 212, 220, 270, 290, 291, 330, 332, 333, 340, 341, 342, , , 343, 345T, 350, 351, 360, 505, 506, 507 508, 510, 512, 513, 514, 515, 517 520, 521, 524, 525, 600, 602, 603, 630, 720, 721, 722,How to Connect Technology and Passion in the Service of LearningThe digital age has vastly expanded people's access to all sorts of information and resources, including educational materials. The Internet has also fostered a new culture of sharing, one in which content is freely contributed and distributed with few restrictions. Indeed, the latest evolution of the Internet, Web 2.0, is creating a new kind of participatory medium that is ideal for encouraging multiple types of learning. Web 2.0 has blurred the line between producers and consumers of content and has shifted attention from access to information toward access to other people. New kinds of online resources — social-networking sites, blogs, wikis, and virtual communities — have allowed people with common interests to meet, share ideas, and collaborate in innovative ways.
Two of those ways involve social learning, based on the premise that our understanding of content is socially constructed, through conversations about that content and through interactions around problems or actions. The focus is not so much on what we learn as on how we learn. In addition, social learning concerns not only "learning about" the subject matter but also "learning to be" full participants in the field. That involves acquiring the practices and norms of established practitioners in that field or acculturating into a community of practice, such as an open-source community, where you are required to assimilate the sensibilities and ways of seeing the world embodied within that community.
That culture of sharing and participation usually starts with the students themselves, as we see vividly in the complex, multiplayer gameA Guide to Best-Fit Applications for Active RFID System AlternativesWireless systems have evolved to successfully penetrate the world of personal communications, where virtually all people can talk as needed on-demand with a feature rich and flexible set of alternatives. This world of people talking is now being complemented with a wireless world of all things “talking” – in other words, all things are becoming wireless. As these new systems continue to evolve to meet their best-fit applications in the enterprise, matching each one’s unique characteristics to the application is not always clear to the prospective end user or even to a providing system integrator.
Passive RFID system solutions are well known for their strengths and weaknesses in various tagging applications from access control to the supply chain. Active RFID/RTLS offers many more application opportunities for labor free automatic identification, counting, locating, sensing and protecting of assets; however, active RFID solutions today are being addressed using a handful of different system architectures. The mapping of best-fit characteristics for each is critical to achieving a workable system with the necessary reliability and at the lowest cost. What follows is a best-fit application analysis of the various active RFID system architecture alternatives for enterprise tagging solutions.
The Foundation
Enterprise RFID systems can generally be categorized as either “passive” or “active,” with passive tags using the received signal for power and active tags using an embedded battery for power. Passive deployments typically occur in the high-frequency and ultra-high-frequency (HF/UHF) radio bands with applications such as the tracking of goods in the supply chain. They typically haveAdvanced Tools for Operators at Amazon.comDespite significant efforts in the field of Autonomic Computing, system operators will still play a critical role in administering Internet services for many years to come. However, very little is know about how system operators work, what tools they use and how we can make them more efficient. In this paper we study the practices of operators in a large-scale Internet service Amazon.com and propose a new set of tools for operators. The first tool lets the operators explore the health of system components and dependencies between them; the other monitors the actions of operators and automatically suggests solutions to recurring problems.
Large-scale Internet services invest significant amount of time and money to achieve high availability of their service, typically in the form of labor-intensive monitoring and response teams. Despite the high human resource expenditures, software and hardware failures still occur, and the human-intensive approach to monitoring and troubleshooting scales poorly as the service’s complexity and workload grow [1]. We hypothesize that the right kind of visualization and automation can reduce the human effort required for monitoring and repairing failures, allow operators to more quickly recognize a problem as recurrent, and facilitate better knowledge transfer in quickly-growing or high-turnover teams.
One of the authors spent three months working alongside the Amazon.com team responsible for real-time monitoring of hardware and software and for providing monitoring tools for the rest of the company. We collected quantitative data via interviews and surveys and analyzed the data in the trouble ticket database that contains information about