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  • Microsoft Application Center & iControl - Case Study
  • The goal for F5 and Microsoft® was to enable applications to send control messages to network devices, providing a layer between the network and the application as it added new intelligence. With this capability, the network can inform applications about availability, and the application instructs the network on where to direct traffic – without manual intervention and its associated costs. With this highly available, extremely secure solution in place, enterprises can expect increased ROI from their Web applications. Challenge Today’s applications consist of many bits and pieces that a limited workforce of skilled Web administrators may not have the time or resources to adequately manage and control. And efficiently managing application deployment and availability for large-scale web applications from multiple locales has been difficult at best. “Customers are moving from a client-server architecture to a predominantly web-based distributed architecture,” said Garth Fort, Group Project Manager, Microsoft. “Microsoft’s .NET vision is about evolving our tools and our platform to help customer build the next generation applications. F5 Networks has built-out a comprehensive suite of products to manage the delivery of those applications in a distributed environment. It’s an ideal fit.” The goal for both F5 and Microsoft was to enable applications to send control messages to network devices, providing a layer between the network and the application as it added new intelligence. With this capability, the network can inform applications about availability, for instance, and the application instructs the network on where to direct traffic – without manual intervention. F5 realized that using XML
  • PHP Leads Web 2.0
  • Everyone is currently talking about Web 2.0, it is the next big thing in the IT industry. But most people have only a vague idea of what Web 2.0 is about — and what it is not. They tend to think of Web 2.0 as a collection of websites and fancy web-based applications. What they don’t see is the shift of paradigm that Web 2.0 brings — and the emergence of new technologies under the surface. Defining Web 2.0 If you ask 20 people in the IT industry to define what Web 2.0 is, it is most likely that you will receive 20 different answers. This shows one of the main problems when talking about it: Web 2.0 is not a fixed standard or product, and the viewpoint of the individual influences his perception of Web 2.0. For consumers or journalists outside the industry, Web 2.0 is a number of applications, websites and interfaces — Google, Flickr.com or even eBay. From a developer’s perspective, it is a collection of APIs, formats and code. And a CIO or CTO of a large company might see a new approach for software architecture that helps him to improve his application landscape. But it is hard to write an article about a new trend without giving a proper definition of it, isn’t it? Though my definition is definitely subjective, I tried to find some least common denominators. In my opinion, Web 2.0 usually includes one or more of these elements: • Rich Web Applications are most likely built
  • Big Brain Academy Instruction Manual pdf
  • How to Begin Nintendo’s game pages, at www.nintendo.com/games, feature walkthroughs, frequently-asked questions, and codes for many of our games. If your answer isn’t there, check out our forums where you can exchange tips with other gamers online. For more information about our forums, visit www.nintendo.com/community. If you don’t have access to the web-site, recorded tips for many titles are available on Nintendo’s Power Line at (425) 885-7529. This may be a longdistance call, so please ask permission from whoever pays the phone bill. Make sure that the Nintendo DS is turned off. (To turn the power on or off, press and hold .) Insert your Big Brain Academy DS Card into the top slot of your DS system, then press until you hear a click.. Touch the Big Brain Academy panel on the DS Menu Screen. If your system has been set to Auto Mode, you can skip this step. See the Nintendo DS instruction booklet for more information. Controls The game is controlled with the Touch Screen and a stylus. (See the “Categories and Activities” section on Pgs. 10-15 for more information.) Homeroom Touch the title screen to enter the Homeroom – where you can create save files. Touch an empty slot to start a new file, or touch a name to continue a previously saved game. Continuing a Game Touching a name will take you to the Select Class screen (Pg. 6). …….Return to the previous screen. Starting a New File If you touch the button marked
  • Getting Start OJB
  • This document will guide you through the very first steps of setting up a project with OJB. To make this easier, OJB comes with a blank project template called ojb-blank which you're encouraged to use. You can download it here. For the purpose of this guide, we'll be showing you how to setup the project for a simple application that handles products and uses MySQL. This is continued later on in the next tutorial parts. First off, OJB uses Ant to build, so please install it prior to using OJB. In addition, please make sure that the environment variables ANT_HOME and JAVA_HOME are correctly set to the top-level folders of your Ant distribution and your JDK installation, respectively. Next download the latest ojb-blank and OJB binary distributions. You can also start with the source distribution rather than the binary as the unit tests provide excellent sample code and you can build the ojb-blank project on your own with it. The ojb-blank project contains all libraries necessary to get running. However, there may be additional libraries required when you venture deeper into OJB's APIs. See here for a list of additional libraries. Most notably, you'll probably want to add the jdbc driver for you database unless you plan to use the embedded Hsqldb database for which the ojb-blank project is pre-configured (including all necessary jars). Download pdf Getting Start OJB
  • Making Web 2.0 Work for Your Enterprise
  • The introduction of Web 2.0 technologies into the enterprise greatly increases the value of your company?s most important asset: employees? knowledge, relationships and initiative. Increased collaboration accelerates productivity. Making knowledge more visible increases innovation and shortens turnaround times. Your company transforms into a more socially connected organization that reacts faster and more effectively to the market. The Consumer Web has shown us the power of the Internet as a social, collaborative platform, particularly when compared to existing rigid corporate environments. Wikis, blogs, RSS feeds, social networks, tagging and mashups are flexible, user-driven tools that have the potential to bring many benefits to the enterprise. Leading companies are harnessing Web 2.0 and applying it to build their next-generation workplaces. The new, Enterprise 2.0 workplace becomes an Internet-powered, user-focused and community-centric social fabric. This social Web ties together people, ideas, content, processes, systems and other enterprise artifacts. Importantly, these connections are both explicit (e.g. let?s have a meeting) and implicit (e.g. tracking user activities to rank the relative value of documents). In addition to connections, another key aspect of the social Web is its participative or do-it-yourself (DIY) nature. Employees are empowered to create and publish content that is easily consumable throughout the company and externally by customers and partners. The social Web captures and makes accessible previously invisible knowledge, an ignites new conversations among employees that lead to new innovations that would not have previously occurred. However, Web 2.0 in the enterprise has significant differences from the Consumer Web. Enterprises have many mission critical
  • HOW TO DEVELOP A MOBILE 2.0 APPLICATION
  • As we all know, online (or virtual) communities are groups of people that primarily or initially interact with each other over the Internet. People who are active in the same social spaces on a regular basis will probably start to recognize other visitors after a while [Wolf, 2006]. With some of them, they will interact by sharing or exchanging information or thoughts. Communication plays an important role in everybody’s life, professionally as well as personally. Lately, the demand for efficient communication ‘tools’ has steadily increased. Most newly developed technologies have resulted from this trend. The main drivers involved are users’ mobility and their continuous need for ubiquitous communication: mobile applications make it possible to communicate whenever and wherever people want [Jaokar & Fish, 2006; Lacohée, Wakeford & Pearson, 2003]. The A4MC³ project (Architecture for Mobile Community Content Creation), involves the development of a mobile application used within a city context to allow users, i.e. (mainly) city inhabitants, to communicate and share information with one another. This application aims to connect users and to serve a variety of heterogeneous goals, ranging from maintaining social contacts to sharing content, from publishing in an online newsletter (like a city blog or forum) to advertising a business in a user-tailored way. In the context of this project, an empirical study was conducted on the use of mobile technologies by people in a city context and on their impact on the formation of the community by the exchange of content in the form of photos and
  • STXM 5.3.2 User Manual
  • In 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
  • Delphi/400 for PHP RAD for the Web Reaches System
  • Delphi/400 is a suite of application modernization tools designed to enable System i application developers to build completely new Web applications or build new Web interfaces to existing applications. For the System/i developer, there is lots of good news. The approach is based on the same notion of holistic application design and user interface / logic separation that System i developers have been using since the box you and I love was once called the System/38 Delphi/400 is the toolset that best addresses the notion of the application factory of rapid application development. It is the natural next step in a progression of tools from those with sophisticated names such as "Intelligent Development Environment," "Componentization," and "Visualization." Yes, It is all of those and more. It does its thing by asking the developer to think about the whole application, not just one Web page at a time. Isn't that how System i developers already think? Time to Look to a Leader After many years of hope, with V6R1 of i5/OS and its supporting cast of programs, IBM has yet to provide the long-hinted, if not often promised natural Web interface. After 18 years, for System i developers, name changes come more quickly. Isn't it time to stop waiting? Of course this means that neither RPG developers nor COBOL developers will be replacing their green screen oriented display files with an IBM packaged natural object with HTML or XML GUI. This will not be happening because IBM does not want it to happen.
  • Panasonic CF-74 Operating Instructions Manual
  • For optimum performance and safety, please read these instructions carefully. Some illustrations are simplified to help your understanding and may look different from the actual unit. If you do not log on as an administrator, you cannot use some functions or cannot display some screens. Refer for the latest information about optional products to the catalogs, etc. In these instructions, the names and terms are referred as follows. • “Microsoft® Windows® XP Professional Service Pack 2 with Advanced Security Technologies” as “Windows” or “Windows XP” • “WinDVD™ 5 (OEM Version)” as “WinDVD” • “B’s Recorder GOLD8 BASIC” as “B’s Recorder” • “B’s CLiP 6” as “B’s CLiP” • DVD-ROM & CD-R/RW drive, and DVD MULTI drive as “CD/DVD drive” • Circular media including DVD-ROM and CD-ROM as “discs” The display modes are referred as follows. ( ) indicates the terms in [Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator Driver for Mobile] screen. To display the screen, click [start] - [Control Panel] - [Other Control Panel Options] - [Intel(R) GMA Drive for Mobile]. • Internal LCD (Notebook): The computer’s display • External display (Monitor): External display • Simultaneous display (Intel® Dual Display Clone): The same screen is displayed on the internal LCD and the external display. Download Panasonic CF-74 Operating Instructions Manual
  • Basic Praat Tutorials
  • This 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 Tutorials