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Memory Upgrade for Apple PowerBook G4 15? Installation Guide pdfLike most electrical components inside computers, memory is susceptible to damage by static electricity. NEVER handle memory our computer parts if you have any static electric-ity buildup. Before working with sensitive electronics, touch a large metal object to ground yourself. If you have an antistatic ground-ing strap, use it while working with your computer. Overview The memory modules for the PowerBook G4 are easy to install, but the steps in this guide should be followed exactly. Be sure to read this entire instruction guide before you begin.
TO INSTALL NEW MEMORY MODULES IN YOUR APPLE POWERBOOK G4: 1. Shut down your computer. Disconnect the power adapter, phone cord, and any other cables connected to the computer. Turn the computer over (See Figure 1) and remove the battery by using a coin or flathead screwdriver to turn the battery locking screw 90 degrees clockwise. (NOTE: Please follow all ESD requirements.) 2. Using a Phillips size 00 screwdriver, unscrew the memory door and remove it from the bottom of your computer (see Figure 2). 3. If you already have a memory card installed in the slot, and you wish to use your new memory card in addition to it, you must remove the existing card to gain access to a second slot underneath the existing memory card. Once you do that, you may insert either memory card in either slot. (If you intend to use ONLY your new memory card, install the new card in the upper slot and leave the lower slotOracle Database10g R2 (10.2.0.1) on openSUSE 10.2 Installation Introduction ManualInstallation Instruction is divided into two sections, Quick Steps for experts and Detailed Steps for beginers. Follow based on your comfort level. Quick Steps If you have installed Oracle database on SUSE Linux before using one of my old documents, then here are some quick steps to follow:
1. Install openSUSE 10.2 with “C/C++ Development” selection.
2. Download and Install orarun package.
3. Enable and set password for newly created user oracle by orarun.
4. Set updated kernel parameters by executing /etc/init.d/oracle start.
5. Download and unzip Oracle 10gR2 Database SW. Edit file database/install/oraparam.ini to add “SuSE-10? to line #39. 6. login as user oracle and run Oracle Universal Installer “database/runInstaller”.
Download Oracle Database10g R2 (10.2.0.1) on openSUSE 10.2 Installation Introduction ManualObject-Oriented JavaScriptIn this chapter, you'll learn about OOP (Object-Oriented Programming) and how it relates to JavaScript. As an ASP.NET developer, you probably have some experience working with objects, and you may even be familiar with concepts such as inheritance. However, unless you're already an experienced JavaScript programmer, you probably aren't familiar with the way JavaScript objects and functions really work. This knowledge is necessary in order to understand how the Microsoft AJAX Library works, and this chapter will teach you the necessary foundations. More specifically, you will learn:
What encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism mean
How JavaScript functions work
How to use anonymous functions and closures
How to read a class diagram, and implement it using JavaScript code
How to work with JavaScript prototypes
How the execution context and scope affect the output of JavaScript functions
How to implement inheritance using closures and prototypes
What JSON is, and what a JSON structure looks like
In the next chapters you'll use this theory to work effectively with the Microsoft AJAX Library.
Concepts of Object-Oriented Programming
Most ASP.NET developers are familiar with the fundamental OOP principles because this knowledge is important when developing for the .NET development. Similarly, to develop client-side code using the Microsoft AJAX Library, you need to be familiar with JavaScript's OOP features. Although not particularly difficult, understanding these features can be a bit challenging at first, because JavaScript's OOP model is different than that of languages such as C#, VB.NET, C++, or Java.
source: c-sharpcorner.com
Download pdf Object-Oriented JavaScriptTechnical Manual Creating Media for the Motorola E1000The Motorola E1000 Media Guide covers the following areas: ... The physical internal display characteristics of the Motorola E1000 are the following:
Technical Manual Veion 1.0 Creating Media for the Motorola E1000 2 Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS............................................................................................................................. 2 OVERVIEW ................................................................................................................................................. 3 G LOSSARY .................................................................................................................................................. 3 R EFERENCES ............................................................................................................................................... 4 DISPLAY ...................................................................................................................................................... 5 D ISPLAY I NFO ............................................................................................................................................. 6 GRAPHICS & VIDEO................................................................................................................................. 7 S UPPORTED P ICTURE F ORMATS ................................................................................................................... 7 V IDEO P LAYBACK ....................................................................................................................................... 8 G RAPHICS AND V IDEO C APTURE ............................................................................................................... 10 V IDEO T ELEPHONY ................................................................................................................................... 11 MMS/SMS S UPPORT ................................................................................................................................ 12 W ALLPAPER S UPPORT ............................................................................................................................... 12 T HEME S UPPORT ....................................................................................................................................... 13 I CON S PECIFICATIONS ............................................................................................................................... 14 SOUND........................................................................................................................................................ 15 A LERT T ONE S UPPORT .............................................................................................................................. 15 Ring Tones............................................................................................................................................ 15 S UPPORTED S OUND F ORMATS ................................................................................................................... 15 MIDI S UPPORT .......................................................................................................................................... 17 MIDI A UDIO G UIDELINES ......................................................................................................................... 19 MP3 A UDIO G UIDELINES .......................................................................................................................... 20 Available Sound Properties.................................................................................................................. 21 Design Guidelines ................................................................................................................................ 21 APPENDIX A: DRM.................................................................................................................................. 22 D IGITAL R IGHTS M ANAGEMENT ............................................................................................................... 22 S UPPORTED DRM S OLUTIONS ................................................................................................................... 23 D OWNLOAD ............................................................................................................................................... 23 I NSTALLATION .......................................................................................................................................... 23 R IGHT O BJECT ........................................................................................................................................... 24 F ILE T YPES ................................................................................................................................................ 25 APPENDIX B: MIME TYPES.................................................................................................................. 26 INDEX......................................................................................................................................................... 28 Overview 3 Overview Welcome to the Creating Media for the Motorola E1000 guide. This guide contai all the information you need to get started developing pictures, animation, and sounds for the Motorola E1000. The Motorola E1000 Media Guide cove the followingSPSS 16.0 Brief GuideThe SPSS 16.0 Brief Guide provides a set of tutorials designed to acquaint you with the various components of SPSS. This guide is intended for use with all operating system versions of the software, including: Windows, Macintosh, and Linux. You can work through the tutorials in sequence or turn to the topics for which you need additional information. You can use this guide as a supplement to the online tutorial that is included with the SPSS Base 16.0 system or ignore the online tutorial and start with the tutorials found here.
SPSS 16.0
SPSS 16.0 is a comprehensive system for analyzing data. SPSS can take data from almost any type of file and use them to generate tabulated reports, charts, and plots of distributions and trends, descriptive statistics, and complex statistical analyses.
SPSS makes statistical analysis more accessible for the beginner and more convenient for the experienced user. Simple menus and dialog box selections make it possible to perform complex analyses without typing a single line of command syntax. The Data Editor offers a simple and efficient spreadsheet-like facility for entering data and browsing the working data file.
Download pdf SPSS 16.0 Brief GuideBMW Motorcycle Service Manual PDFBMW Motorcycle Service Manual content:
Section 1 Rear belt wheel cracks. The latest technical findings on the rear belt wheel have made a re-issue of this technical campaign necessary. All of the motorcycles affected (as listed in the VIN Range Table below), including those that have already been checked, will have to be rechecked and addressed as necessary.
Following the instructions and visual information provided below, check and, as necessary, replace the rear belt wheel on the following VINs. Checks and repairs are to be claimed under Defect Code 00 00 27 06 00:
Download BMW Motorcycle Service Manual PDFSetting up the LitePro 580 ManualThis chapter describes how to position the LitePro for optimum viewing, how to connect computers and video equipment to the LitePro, and how to power up the projector. Getting started 1. Choose a location where you can dim the lighting. ” To use the LitePro in a well-lit room, use a special high gain screen, which you can obtain from your In Focus dealer. 2. Place the LitePro on a flat surface. 3. Orient the LitePro so that its lens is at a right angle to the projec-tion screen. ” If you want to use the LitePro s Rear Project feature, set it up behind a translucent screen. See Rear Proj on page 28. 4. Remove the lens cover. 5. Plug the power cord into the LitePro, then plug it into your elec-trical outlet. Always use the power cord that was shipped with your LitePro.
The LitePro accepts power from 110-120 VAC and 220-240 VAC, 50 or 60 Hz, three-wire type grounded sources. When you disconnect the LitePro, always remove the power cord from the electrical outlet first, then from the LitePro. It is recommended that you connect a power strip between the LitePro and your electrical outlet to protect against a power surge. Positioning the projector The distance from the LitePro 580 to the screen determines the size of the projected image. Use of the LitePro s X1.4 zoom lens also affects screen size. The table below indicates the size of the screen image when using the maximumSemantic Web meets Web 2.0: The Value of the Mundane for the Semantic WebWeb 2.0, not the Semantic Web, has become the face of “the next generation Web” among the tech-literate set, and even among many in the various research communities involved in the Web. Perceptions in these communities of what the Semantic Web is (and who is involved in it) are often misinformed if not misguided. In this paper we identify opportunities for Semantic Web activities to connect with the Web 2.0 community; we explore why this connection is of significant benefit to both groups, and identify how these connections open valuable research opportunities “in the real” for the Semantic Web effort.
In a recent blog entry on the tech-savvy O’Reilly site, the author queries “Is Web 2.0 killing the Semantic Web?” By way of background, Web 2.0 is elsewhere on O’Reilly described as a service delivered through the Web in a Web way, delivering a “rich user experience” [ref]. Exemplars offered are BitTorrent, Google and Blogs.
The blog writer who asks about Web 2.0 killing the Semantic Web sets his argument as Web 2.0’s instant superficial gratification of people vs the Semantic Web’s deep, meaningful and lasting relationship with data. Web 2.0, he says, is indifferent to technology and just wants to “’give power to the people’, quickly and efficiently” for superficial things like sharing files, opinions and photos. The author then goes on to state that the Semantic Web “is the polar opposite” being all about data and machine readability of that data and “sav[ing] lives.” It is because of Web 2.0’sBasic Praat TutorialsThis is a set of brief tutorials for how to do some basic things with Praat, the great free phonetics software created and maintained by Paul Boersma and David Weenink. The overall goal is to help you get oriented to the program in general and some of the more commonly used functions. This tutorial is mostly geared toward people that are completely new to the program, but there may be tips that are of some use to experienced users as well.
For completeness, this guide was written while I was using Praat version 5.0.27 on a Windows PC (running Vista, specifically). However, the material covered in this guide is very unlikely to change much if at all between versions or platforms. Feel free to distribute this guide (just don’t sell it), but if you do, I’d like to hear about it. I’d also like to hear about anything you find especially helpful or unhelpful, or if there’s something else you’d like to see a tutorial for.
Download pdf Basic Praat TutorialsSTXM 5.3.2 User ManualIn Scanning Transmission X-ray Microscopy (STXM) a micro focused soft x-ray beam is generated by a zone plate, illuminates the sample and the transmitted x-rays are detected. Transmission images are obtained by a raster scan of the sample. Spectra are obtained in point, line or image mode by acquiring signal at multiple photon energies. The 5.3.2STXM is an interferometrically controlled device mounted on a dedicated bending magnet beamline. The user controls both the beamline and the microscope from a single computer.
The primary signal measured in STXM is transmitted intensity (I) as a function of energy (spectra), or position (images). This signal, when converted to optical density (OD), is sensitive to sample thickness, density and composition, according to the following equation. (Io: incident photon flux intensity) where ? is the linear absorption coefficient, t is the thickness, µ is the mass absorption coefficient and ? is the density. The useful range of OD is from 0.1 to 3. If there is too little absorption (sample too thin) the signal is lost in the noise. If the absorption is too great, then various artifacts dominate the observed signal, which is no longer quantitative. For organic material with a density of 1 samples need to be between 50 and 300 nm. At higher energy edges or lower density samples, somewhat thicker samples are optimum.
Measuring a raster scanned set of pixels and converting with the incident flux (measured through a hole), gives an x-ray OD image at a single photon energy. Changing the photon