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  • 2001 Pontiac Firebird Owner’s Manual PDF
  • You can be severely injured or killed in a crash if you aren’t wearing your safety belt — even if you have air bags. Wearing your safety belt during a crash helps reduce your chance of hitting things inside the vehicle or being ejected from it. Air bags are “supplemental restraints” to the safety belts. All air bags are designed to work with safety belts, but don’t replace them. Air bags are designed to work only in moderate to severe crashes where the front of your vehicle hits something. They aren’t designed to inflate at all in rollover, rear, side or low-speed frontal crashes. And, for unrestrained occupants, air bags may provide less protection in frontal crashes than more forceful air bags have provided in the past. Everyone in your vehicle should wear a safety belt properly — whether or not there’s an air bag for that person. Download 2001 Pontiac Firebird Owner’s Manual PDF
  • 60-66 Tech tips Manual
  • TOYOTA STEERING RETURN FEELING/RACK GUIDE REPLACEMENT To provide a smoother steering return feeling on 1998-2000 Siennas, the steering rack guide has been changed. Use the following procedures to solve this problem upon customer complaint. Power Steering Gear Removal: 1. Mark the outer tie rod ends/tie rod lock nut and the inner tie rod prior to removing the steering gear. 2. Mark the intermediate shaft to the steering rack pinion shaft (control valve shaft) prior to removing the steering gear. 3. Disconnect the clamp plate attached on the steering gear. 4. Disconnect the steering pressure lines from the steering gear. Steering Rack Guide Replacement: 1. Using SST 09922-10010, remove the rack guide spring cap lock nut. Note: Use SST 09922-10010 in the direction shown in Fig. 1. 2. Remove the rack guide spring cap, rack guide spring and rack guide subassembly. a. Using SST 09612-10022 and a 21 mm box end wrench, remove the cap. b. Remove the spring and rack guide. 3. Install a new rack guide subassembly. Reuse the original rack guide spring and rack guide spring cap. a. Apply approximately 2 grams of chassis grease to the surface of the new… Download PDF 60-66 Tech tips Manual
  • Servoy & MySQL Mini HowTo
  • This is not meant to be a full tutorial on installing and administering MySQL but a short guide to get you started to make Servoy and MySQL live happily together. Why MySQL? Why using MySQL when Servoy ships with the excellent DB server from Sybase bundled? 1) Because it's possible. (my favorite one!); 2) Because you or your customer already have a MySQL database running; 3) Because you need to access the database from applications other than Servoy and the bundled Sybase license does not allow to do this; 4) Because you want to access the same data that is published trough Apache/PHP on your own or your customer's website; 5) Because otherwise the Servoy Forum would be a boring place. Anyways, spend five minutes of your spare time reading the MySQL License before deciding what DB Server you are going to build your Revolutionary App™ on... it is an unusual license and a lot of people are still uncertain if it's a free software or not. You decide. Download pdf Servoy & MySQL Mini HowTo
  • Voice over IP: what it is, why people want it, and where it is going
  • Table 1: VoIP Protocol stack and comparison with the OSI model ...... VoIP technologies (based around the H.323 protocol) are being used in advanced Voice over IP: what it is, why people want it, and where it is going Jane Dudman Contributing author: Gaynor Backhouse This report was peer reviewed by: Roger Bolam Content Delivery Manager UKERNA Arron Bowley Voice Technical Specialist UKERNA Raza Rizvi Head of Technical Services Opal solutio High Wycombe JISC Technology and Standards Watch, September 2006 Voice over IP 1 CONTENTS Executive Summary 2 1. What is VoIP? 3 1.1 An introduction to VoIP 1.2 How VoIP works 1.2.1 The Basics 1.2.2 What you need to make a VoIP call 1.3 How VoIP is used, its background and history 1.4 The scope of this report 2. Technology, standards and challenges 7 2.1 Protocols 2.2 Codecs 2.3 Facto to be coidered when implementing VoIP 2.3.1 Voice Quality 2.3.2 Peer-to-peer networking (e.g. Skype) 2.3.3 Net Neutrality and packet shaping 2.3.4 Directories and addressing 3. Why people want it 17 3.1 Network convergence 3.2 Application convergence 3.2.1 VoIP and Itant Messaging (IM) 3.2.2 VoIP and multimedia 3.2.3 VoIP and Web 3.3 Wireless VoIP 4. VoIP in Higher and Further Education 21 Download
  • Mac OS X Tiger Version 10.4 Product Guide Manual
  • Tiger Key new features in Mac OS X Tiger include the following: • Spotlight. Find anything on your computer instantly with Spotlight, a new desktop search engine completely integrated into Mac OS X. Spotlight quickly searches everything on your personal computer—including documents, images, movies, music, email, contacts, appointments, and system preferences—and finds what you need with pinpoint accuracy. • Dashboard. A dazzling way to quickly access a new class of handy, lightweight applications called widgets. Click the Dashboard icon, and a stunning animation whisks your widgets onscreen or off. You can get your information quickly and get back to work immediately. Tiger includes the Stocks, Weather, Flight Tracker, Unit Converter, World Clock, Dictionary, Phone Book, Translation, Calendar, iTunes, Tile Game, Stickies, Calculator, and Address Book widgets. • iChat AV. Video conference with up to three friends in a virtual meeting space with high-quality audio and sharp H.264-quality video. Or gather up to nine colleagues for an audio conference over the Internet. • Automator. Easily automate complex or repetitive tasks without programming. The point-and-click, drag-and-drop simplicity of Automator makes it easy to create and share custom workflows. • Safari. Safari uses the RSS standard to display the latest information, news headlines, and article summaries from leading news organizations and other sites, including Yahoo!, the New York Times, CNN, and the BBC. You can create a personal news service by bookmarking searches on topics of interest to you; Safari will automatically update the search results as new articles become available. • QuickTime 7.
  • Slabsmith™ Tutorial
  • Slabsmith is a collection of tools for the stone counter-top industry. These tools include digital slab creationand management as well as template nesting on slabs, ( both natural and man-made.) This tutorial is an excellent way to learn to use the most common tools provided by Slabsmith. A few minutes spent going through this tutorial will save you time every time you work with Slabsmith. Setting up the photostation and taking a calibration photo The first two steps are covered in detail in the in a separate manual,“Photostation Setup and Calibration “. You can find the Photostation Setup and Calibration manual in the Help | Manuals menu of Slabsmith’s home tab, and also in the help menu of the calibration module. Please refer to this manual for photostation setup and calibration. Download pdf Slabsmith™ Tutorial
  • Google Desktop 4 (beta) Reviewer's Guide
  • Google Desktop is a free downloadable application that offers an easy way to search for information on your computer, across your personal computer network and from the web. It includes full text search over your primary computer’s email, files, music, photos, chats and web pages you’ve viewed. By making your computer searchable, Desktop puts your information easily within your reach and frees you from having to manually organize it. Searching your computer is now as easy as searching the web with Google. Google Desktop also gives you one-glance access to personalized and up-to-the-minute information from the web with Sidebar and Google Gadgets, which can be placed anywhere on your desktop to show you new email, weather, stock information, photos, personalized news, RSS/Atom feeds, and more. Sidebar is personalized automatically, with no manual configuration required (though you can make customizations if you like.) New features • You can now customize your desktop with Google Gadgets, visually appealing interactive mini-applications of any shape and size that can be anything from games to weather globes to media players. • You can also save your gadget content and settings online in order to protect your info from computer crashes and access it from other computers by signing into your Google Account with Google Desktop. For instance, you can now ‘synch’ the To Do list on both your laptop and your desktop. • Google Desktop will recommend new gadgets and can also automatically create a personalized Google homepage for you based on the subjects you’re most interested in. For example,
  • Microsoft PowerPoint - Nokia N70_DataSheet
  • Nokia N70. Battery BL-5C. Compact Charger AC-3. Charging Adapter CA-44. Connectivity Cable (USB) CA-53. User Guide, Quick Start Guide and Add-on Application Download manual
  • A Globus Primer
  • Everything You Wanted to Know about Globus, but Were Afraid To Ask Describing Globus Toolkit Version 4 An Early and Incomplete Draft Please send comments, criticisms, and suggestions to: foster@mcs.anl.gov Preface The Globus Toolkit (GT) has been developed since the late 1990s to support the development of service-oriented distributed computing applications and infrastructures. Core GT components address basic issues relating to security, resource access and management, data movement and management, resource discovery, and so forth. A broader “Globus universe” comprises numerous tools and components that build on core GT4 functionality to provide many useful application- level functions. These tools have been used to develop many Grid systems and applications. Version 4 of the Globus Toolkit, GT4, released in April 2005, represents a significant advance relative to the GT3 implementation of Web services functionality in terms of the range of components provided, functionality, standards conformance, usability, and quality of documentation. This document is intended to provide a first introduction to key features of both GT4 and associated tools, and the ways in which these components can be used to develop Grid infrastructures and applications. Its focus is on the user’s view of the technology and its application, and the practical techniques that should be employed to develop GT4-based applications. We discuss in turn the applications that motivate the development of GT4 and related tools; the four tasks involved in building Grids: design, deployment, application, operations; GT4 structure, including its Web services (WS) and pre-WS components; the Globus universe and its various
  • Riding the Waves of Web 2.0
  • “Web 2.0” has become a catch-all buzzword that people use to describe a wide range of online activities and applications, some of which the Pew Internet & American Life Project has been tracking for years. As researchers, we instinctively reach for our spreadsheets to see if there is evidence to inform the hype about any online trend. What follows is a short history of the phrase, along with some data to help frame the discussion. Let’s get a few things clear right off the bat: 1) Web 2.0 does not have anything to do with Internet2: 2) Web 2.0 is not a new and improved internet network operating on a separate backbone: and 3) It is OK if you’ve heard the term and nodded in recognition, without having the faintest idea of what it really means. When the term emerged in 2004 (coined by Dale Dougherty and popularized by O’Reilly Media and MediaLive International), it provided a useful, if imperfect, conceptual umbrella under which analysts, marketers and other stakeholders in the tech field could huddle the new generation of internet applications and businesses that were emerging to form the “participatory Web” as we know it today: Think blogs, wikis, social networking, etc.. And while O’Reilly and others have smartly outlined some of the defining characteristics of Web 2.0 applications —utilizing collective intelligence, providing network-enabled interactive services, giving users control over their own data—these traits do not always map neatly on to the technologies held up as examples. Google, which demonstrates many Web 2.0