rem Fire In One Of The Remand Cells At Westgate By bernews.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Mar 2020 15:49:11 +0000 [Updated] There was a fire in one of the remand cells at the Westgate Correctional Facility this morning [March 10], with the fire extinguished by Corrections Officers, while the BF&RS “attended to ensure the safety and security of the area.” Minister of National Security Wayne Caines said, “First and foremost I want to thank the swift actions […](Click to read the full article) Full Article Accidents and fires All News #BermudaPrisons #Fires
rem Právnička Klára Sovová: Trestání firem? Méně je někdy více By www.reflex.cz Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:40:00 +0200 Mgr. Klára Sovová je nejvýše postavená právnička v České republice. Nikoliv funkcí, ale svou kanceláří. Kromě té pražské na Letné úřaduje i na Luční boudě v Krkonoších ve výšce 1410 m.n.m, kterou před mnoha lety koupila a mnoho let ji opravuje a zvelebuje. Dá se tedy seriozně říct, že má nadhled. Oslovil jsem ji proto, aby se jako špičková juristka vyjádřila k několika zdánlivě nepodstatným právním otázkám, které ale mají celospolečenský dopad. V tomto rozhovoru se zaměříme na trestní odpovědnost právnických osob – dá se vůbec trestat někdo, kdo vlastně fyzicky neexistuje? Full Article
rem Musicians: Bands/Groups – Troubles Removals By thefanlistings.org Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 12:03:39 +0000 Removed From Troubles – Problem Resolved (NOT open for application) Core of Soul Removed From Troubles – Removed From Network (OPEN for application) Finch; Nine Inch Nails Full Article Musicians: Bands/Groups
rem Video: "The 100" Season Premiere Trailer By www.thefutoncritic.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:01:00 GMT The show's final season kicks off Wednesday, May 20. Full Article
rem Jeremy Wade Explores World's Most Astounding Underwater Mysteries in All-New Discovery Channel Series, "Mysteries of the Deep" Premiering May 27 on Discovery Channel By www.thefutoncritic.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 11:06:00 GMT The series was previously scheduled to roll out Thursday, April 2 on sibling Science Channel. Full Article
rem Season Two of "Bulletproof" to Now Premiere Wednesday, June 10 on The CW By www.thefutoncritic.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:03:00 GMT Initially, the new season was slated to premiere Wednesday, June 17. Full Article
rem Surprising Home Remedies By www.oglaf.com Published On :: Sun, 04 Nov 2018 00:00:00 +0000 Full Article
rem Robot sweat regulates temperature, key for extreme conditions By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Jan 2020 17:05:35 EST Just when it seemed like robots couldn't get any cooler, Cornell University researchers have created a soft robot muscle that can regulate its temperature through sweating. Full Article
rem Utah Pulls Plug On Surveillance Contractor After CEO's Past As A White Supremacist Surfaces By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 13:53:02 PDT A couple of months ago, a records request revealed a private surveillance contractor had access to nearly every piece of surveillance equipment owned and operated by the state of Utah. Banjo was the company with its pens in all of the state's ink. Banjo's algorithm ran on top of Utah's surveillance gear: CCTV systems, 911 services, location data for government vehicles, and thousands of traffic cameras. All of this was run through Banjo's servers, which are conveniently located in Utah government buildings. Banjo's offering is of the predictive policing variety. The CEO claims its software can "find crime" without any collateral damage to privacy. This claim is based on the "anonymization" of harvested data -- a term that is essentially meaningless once enough data is collected. This partnership is now on the rocks, thanks to an investigation by Matt Stroud and OneZero. Banjo's CEO, Damien Patton, apparently spent a lot of his formative years hanging around with white supremacists while committing crimes. In grand jury testimony that ultimately led to the conviction of two of his associates, Patton revealed that, as a 17-year-old, he was involved with the Dixie Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. On the evening of June 9, 1990 — a month before Patton turned 18 — Patton and a Klan leader took a semi-automatic TEC-9 pistol and drove to a synagogue in a Nashville suburb. With Patton at the wheel, the Ku Klux Klan member fired onto the synagogue, destroying a street-facing window and spraying bullets and shattered glass near the building’s administrative offices, which were next to that of the congregation’s rabbi. No one was struck or killed in the shooting. Afterward, Patton hid on the grounds of a white supremacist paramilitary training camp under construction before fleeing the state with the help of a second Klan member. If you're wondering where the state of Utah's due diligence is in all of this, there's a partial explanation for this lapse: the feds, who brought Patton in, screwed up on their paperwork. Because Patton’s name was misspelled in the initial affidavit of probable cause filed in Brown’s case — an FBI agent apparently spelled Damien with an “o” rather than an “e” — any search of a federal criminal court database for “Damien Patton” would not have surfaced the affidavit. Now that his past has been exposed, the state of Utah has announced it won't be working with Banjo. The Utah attorney general’s office will suspend use of a massive surveillance system after a news report showed that the founder of the company behind the effort was once an active participant in a white supremacist group and was involved in the shooting of a synagogue. The AG's office can only shut down so much of Banjo's surveillance software. Other government agencies not directly controlled by the state AG are making their own judgment calls. The University of Utah is suspending its contract with Banjo, but the state's Department of Public Safety has only gone so far as to "launch a review" of its partnership with the company. City agencies and a number of police departments who have contracts with Banjo have yet to state whether they will be terminating theirs. And the AG's reaction isn't a ban. The office appears to believe it might be able to work through this. “While we believe Mr. Patton’s remorse is sincere and believe people can change, we feel it’s best to suspend use of Banjo technology by the Utah attorney general’s office while we implement a third-party audit and advisory committee to address issues like data privacy and possible bias,” Piatt said. “We recommend other state agencies do the same.” It's refreshing to hear a prosecutor state that it's possible for former criminals to turn their lives around and become positive additions to their communities, but one gets the feeling this sort of forgiveness is only extended to ex-cons who have something to offer law enforcement agencies. Everyone else is just their rap sheet for forever, no matter how many years it's been since their last arrest. The other problem here is the DA's office's tacit admission it did not take data privacy or possible bias into account before granting Banjo access to the state's surveillance equipment, allowing it to set up servers in government buildings, and giving it free rein to dust everything with its unaudited AI pixie dust. These are all steps that should have taken place before any of this was implemented, even if the state had chosen to do business with a company with a less controversial CEO. This immediate reaction is the right step to take, but a little proactivity now and then would be a welcome change. Full Article
rem As More Students Sit Online Exams Under Lockdown Conditions, Remote Proctoring Services Carry Out Intrusive Surveillance By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 19:31:16 PDT The coronavirus pandemic and its associated lockdown in most countries has forced major changes in the way people live, work and study. Online learning is now routine for many, and is largely unproblematic, not least because it has been used for many years. However, online testing is more tricky, since there is a concern by many teachers that students might use their isolated situation to cheat during exams. One person's problem is another person's opportunity, and there are a number of proctoring services that claim to stop or at least minimize cheating during online tests. One thing they have in common is that they tend to be intrusive, and show little respect for the privacy of the people they monitor. As an article in The Verge explains, some employ humans to watch over students using Zoom video calls. That's reasonably close to a traditional setup, where a teacher or proctor watches students in an exam hall. But there are also webcam-based automated approaches, as explored by Vox: For instance, Examity also uses AI to verify students' identities, analyze their keystrokes, and, of course, ensure they're not cheating. Proctorio uses artificial intelligence to conduct gaze detection, which tracks whether a student is looking away from their screens. It's not just in the US that these extreme surveillance methods are being adopted. In France, the University of Rennes 1 is using a system called Managexam, which adds a few extra features: the ability to detect "inappropriate" Internet searches by the student, the use of a second screen, or the presence of another person in the room (original in French). The Vox articles notes that even when these systems are deployed, students still try to cheat using new tricks, and the anti-cheating services try to stop them doing so: it's easy to find online tips and tricks for duping remote proctoring services. Some suggest hiding notes underneath the view of the camera or setting up a secret laptop. It's also easy for these remote proctoring services to find out about these cheating methods, so they're constantly coming up with countermeasures. On its website, Proctorio even has a job listing for a "professional cheater" to test its system. The contract position pays between $10,000 and $20,000 a year. As the arms race between students and proctoring services escalates, it's surely time to ask whether the problem isn't people cheating, but the use of old-style, analog testing formats in a world that has been forced by the coronavirus pandemic to move to a completely digital approach. Rather than spending so much time, effort and money on trying to stop students from cheating, maybe we need to come up with new ways of measuring what they have learnt and understood -- ones that are not immune to cheating, but where cheating has no meaning. Obvious options include "open book" exams, where students can use whatever resources they like, or even abolishing formal exams completely, and opting for continuous assessment. Since the lockdown has forced educational establishments to re-invent teaching, isn't it time they re-invented exams too? Follow me @glynmoody on Twitter, Diaspora, or Mastodon. Full Article
rem Anti-Trump Ad Demonstrates Both The Streisand Effect & Masnick's Impossibility Theorem By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 10:53:33 PDT Well, this one hits the sweet spot of topics I keep trying to demonstrate: both a Streisand Effect and Masnick's Impossibility Theorem. As you may have heard, a group of Republican political consultants and strategists, who very much dislike Donald Trump, put together an effort called The Lincoln Project, which is a PAC to campaign against Trump and Trumpian politics. They recently released an anti-Trump campaign ad about his terrible handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, called Mourning in America, which is a reference to Ronald Reagan's famous Morning in America campaign ad for the 1984 Presidential election. The new ad is, well, pretty powerful: And while it's unlikely to convince Trump fans deep into their delusions, it certainly got under the President's skin. He went on one of his famous late night Twitter temper tantrums about the ad, and later lashed out at the Lincoln Project when talking to reporters. He was super, super mad. And what did that do? Well, first it got the ad a ton of views. Earlier this week, one of the Lincoln Project's founders, Rick Wilson, noted that the ad had already received 15 million views across various platforms in the day or so since the ad had been released. Also, it resulted in the Lincoln Project getting a giant boost in funding: The Lincoln Project, which is run by Republican operatives who oppose President Donald Trump, raised $1 million after the president ripped the group on Twitter this week – marking it the super PAC’s biggest day of fundraising yet. Reed Galen, a member of the Lincoln Project’s advisory committee, told CNBC that the total came after the president’s Tuesday morning Twitter tirade in reaction to an ad titled “Mourning in America,” which unloads on Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. It recently aired on Fox News, which Trump often watches and praises. Galen said it was the Lincoln Project’s best single-day fundraising haul Not only that, but it has opened up more opportunity for the Lincoln Project team to get their word out. With so much interest in the ad, it opened up opportunities for the project members to get their message in various mainstream media sources. Reed Galen wrote a piece for NBC: What we accomplished this week was not something to be celebrated. No commercial should have the power to derail the leader of the free world. And another Lincoln Project founder, George Conway (who, of course, is the husband of Trump senior advisor Kellyanne Conway), wrote something similar for the Washington Post: It may strike you as deranged that a sitting president facing a pandemic has busied himself attacking journalists, political opponents, television news hosts and late-night comedians — even deriding a former president who merely boasted that “the ‘Ratings’ of my News Conferences etc.” were driving “the Lamestream Media . . . CRAZY,” and floated bogus miracle cures, including suggesting that scientists consider injecting humans with household disinfectants such as Clorox. If so, you’re not alone. Tens of thousands of mental-health professionals, testing the bounds of professional ethics, have warned for years about Trump’s unfitness for office. Some people listened; many, including myself, did not, until it was too late. That's the kind of media exposure you can't buy, but which you get when you have a President who appears wholly unfamiliar with the Streisand Effect. And that then takes us to the Impossibility Theorem, regarding the impossibility of doing content moderation at scale well. After Trump's ongoing tirade, Facebook slapped a "Partly False" warning label on the video when posted on Facebook. While the whole situation is ridiculous, it's at least mildly amusing, considering how frequently clueless Trumpkins insist that Facebook censors "conservative" (by which they mean Trumpian) viewpoints. Also, somewhat ironic in all of this: the only reason that Facebook now places such fact check labels on things is because anti-Trump people yelled at how Facebook needed to do more fact checking of political content on its site. So, now you get this. Part of the issue is that Politifact judged one line in the ad as "false." That line was that Trump "bailed out Wall St. but not Main St." Politifact says that since the CARES Act Paycheck Protection Program has given potentially forgivable loans to some small businesses, and because the bill was done by Congress, not the President, that line is "false." And yet, because angry (usually anti-Trump) people demanded that Facebook do more useless fact checking, the end result is that the video now gets a "false" label. Of course, this shows both the impossibility of doing content moderation well and the silliness of betting big on fact checking with a full "true or false" claim. One could argue that that line has misleading elements, but is true in most cases. Tons of small businesses are shuttering. Many businesses have been unable to get PPP loans, and under the current terms of the loans, they're useless for many (especially if they have no work for people to do, since the loans have to be mostly used on payroll over the next couple months). But does that make the entire ad "false"? Of course not. And Rick Wilson is super mad about this. He's right to be mad about Politifact's designation, though it's really a condemnation of the religious focus on "true or false" in fact checking, rather than in focusing on what is misleading or not: But the ad doesn’t actually claim that small businesses received zero help. Rather, it makes the point that Main Street America is still seriously struggling as the economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic continues. But Wilson is also mad at Facebook: Speaking exclusively to Mediaite, Wilson called the decision “the typical fuckery we’ve come to expect from both the Trump camp and their tame Facebook allies.” “Facebook is perfectly content to allow content from QAnon lunatics, anti-vaxxers, alt-righters, and every form of Trump/Russian — but I repeat myself — disinformation,” he pointed out. “This is a sign of just how powerfully ‘Mourning In America’ shook Donald Trump and his allies. Their attempt to censor our ad isn’t a setback for us; it’s a declaration of an information war we will win.” Separately, the Lincoln Project also sent out an email to supporters, again blaming Facebook: ... it's no secret that Facebook has stood by and done little to nothing as lie after lie — from the Liar-In-Chief himself — runs wild on their platform. (Oh, and let's also not forget the conspiracy theories, foreign disinformation campaigns and negligence that got Mark Zuckerberg questioned by the United States Congress.) But, this? This is an entirely different and dangerous kind of collusion. And what is Facebook's excuse for playing favorites with its recently-transferred former employees in the Trump campaign? They say a "fact-checker" labeled our claim that "Donald Trump helped bailout Wall Street, not Main Street" was untrue. ....Really? The email goes on to justify the "main street" line with a bunch of links, and then again argues that Facebook is "censoring the truth" to help Trump: Is that "Partly False?" Of course not. We told the truth about Donald Trump... He lost his damn mind over it on Twitter... Attacked us in front of Air Force One... Then sent his spin machine to discredit us... And now his allies at Facebook are doing his damage control by censoring the truth he doesn't like. I get the frustration -- and I find it at least a bit ironic that the whole "fact checking" system was a response to anti-Trump folks mad at Facebook for allowing pro-Trump nonsense to spread -- but this is just another example of the Impossibility Theorem. There is no "good" solution here. We live in a time where everyone's trying to discredit everyone they disagree with, and many of these things depend on your perspective or your interpretation of a broad statement, like whether or not Trump is helping "main street." We can agree that it's silly that Facebook has put this label on the video, but also recognize that it's not "Trump's allies at Facebook" working to "censor the truth he doesn't like." That's just absurd (especially given the reason the fact checking set up was put together in the first place). But, hey, outrage and claims of censorship feed into the narrative (and feed into the Streisand Effect), so perhaps it all is just designed to work together. Full Article
rem It's Not Even Clear If Remdesivir Stops COVID-19, And Already We're Debating How Much It Can Price Gouge By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 12:09:33 PDT You may recall in the early days of the pandemic, that pharma giant Gilead Sciences -- which has been accused of price gouging and (just last year!) charging exorbitant prices on drug breakthroughs developed with US taxpayer funds -- was able to sneak through an orphan works designation for its drug remdesevir for COVID-19 treatment. As we pointed out, everything about this was insane, given that orphan works designations, which give extra monopoly rights to the holders (beyond patent exclusivity), are meant for diseases that don't impact a large population. Gilead used a loophole: since the ceiling for infected people to qualify for orphan drug status is 200,000, Gilead got in its application bright and early, before there were 200,000 confirmed cases (we currently have over 1.3 million). After the story went, er... viral, Gilead agreed to drop the orphan status, realizing the bad publicity it was receiving. After a brief dalliance with chloroquine, remdesivir has suddenly been back in demand as the new hotness of possible COVID-19 treatments. Still, a close reading of the research might give one pause. There have been multiple conflicting studies, and Gilead's own messaging has been a mess. On April 23, 2020, news of the study’s failure began to circulate. It seems that the World Health Organization (WHO) had posted a draft report about the trial on their clinical trials database, which indicated that the scientists terminated the study prematurely due to high levels of adverse side effects. The WHO withdrew the report, and the researchers published their results in The Lancet on April 29, 2020. The number of people who experienced adverse side effects was roughly similar between those receiving remdesivir and those receiving a placebo. In 18 participants, the researchers stopped the drug treatment due to adverse reactions. But then... However, also on April 29, 2020, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) announced that their NIH trial showed that remdesivir treatment led to faster recovery in hospital patients with COVID-19, compared with placebo treatment. “Preliminary results indicate that patients who received remdesivir had a 31% faster time to recovery than those who received placebo,” according to the press release. “Specifically, the median time to recovery was 11 days for patients treated with remdesivir compared with 15 days for those who received placebo.” The mortality rate in the remdesivir treatment group was 8%, compared with 11.6% in the placebo group, indicating that the drug could improve a person’s chances of survival. These data were close to achieving statistical significance. And then... “In addition, there is another Chinese trial, also stopped because the numbers of new patients with COVID-19 had fallen in China so they were unable to recruit, which has not yet published its data,” Prof. Evans continues. “There are other trials where remdesivir is compared with non-remdesivir treatments currently [being] done and results from some of these should appear soon.” Gilead also put out its own press release about another clinical trial, which seems more focused on determining the optimal length of remdesivir treatment. Suffice it to say, there's still a lot of conflicting data and no clear information on whether or not remdesevir actually helps. Still, that hasn't stopped people from trying to figure out just how much Gilead will price gouge going forward: The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER), which assesses effectiveness of drugs to determine appropriate prices, suggested a maximum price of $4,500 per 10-day treatment course based on the preliminary evidence of how much patients benefited in a clinical trial. Consumer advocacy group Public Citizen on Monday said remdesivir should be priced at $1 per day of treatment, since “that is more than the cost of manufacturing at scale with a reasonable profit to Gilead.” Some Wall Street investors expect Gilead to come in at $4,000 per patient or higher to make a profit above remdesivir’s development cost, which Gilead estimates at about $1 billion. So... we've got a range of $10 to $4,500 on a treatment that we don't yet know works, and which may or may not save lives. But, given that we're in the midst of a giant debate concerning things like "reopening the economy" -- something that can really only be done if the public is not afraid of dying (or at least becoming deathly ill) -- the value to the overall economy seems much greater than whatever amount Gilead wants to charge. It seems the right thing to do -- again, if it's shown that remdesevir actually helps -- is to just hand over a bunch of money to Gilead, say "thank you very much" and get the drug distributed as widely as possible. Though, again, it should be noted that a decent chunk of the research around remdesevir was not done or paid for by Gilead, but (yet again) via public funds to public universities, which did the necessary research. The idea that it's Gilead that should get to reap massive rewards for that seems sketchy at best. But the absolute worst outcome is one in which Gilead sticks to its standard operating procedure and prices the drug in a way that millions of Americans can't afford it, and it leads to a prolonging/expanding of the pandemic. Full Article
rem 12/2/13 - To speak and remove all doubt By www.tinyghosts.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Dec 2013 Full Article
rem Get rid of your unwanted trash with skip bin removal By www.kimvazquez.com Published On :: Tue, 07 Jan 2020 04:46:10 +0000 Every house resident understands how quickly she or he can build up a lot of unwanted junk, broken items as well as simply simple rubbish. For those who often tend to hoard, or delay disposal of garbage, this buildup can… Continue Reading → Full Article General
rem Local microvascular leakage promotes trafficking of activated neutrophils to remote organs By www.jci.org Published On :: Increased microvascular permeability to plasma proteins and neutrophil emigration are hallmarks of innate immunity and key features of numerous inflammatory disorders. Although neutrophils can promote microvascular leakage, the impact of vascular permeability on neutrophil trafficking is unknown. Here, through the application of confocal intravital microscopy, we report that vascular permeability–enhancing stimuli caused a significant frequency of neutrophil reverse transendothelial cell migration (rTEM). Furthermore, mice with a selective defect in microvascular permeability enhancement (VEC-Y685F-ki) showed reduced incidence of neutrophil rTEM. Mechanistically, elevated vascular leakage promoted movement of interstitial chemokines into the bloodstream, a response that supported abluminal-to-luminal neutrophil TEM. Through development of an in vivo cell labeling method we provide direct evidence for the systemic dissemination of rTEM neutrophils, and showed them to exhibit an activated phenotype and be capable of trafficking to the lungs where their presence was aligned with regions of vascular injury. Collectively, we demonstrate that increased microvascular leakage reverses the localization of directional cues across venular walls, thus causing neutrophils engaged in diapedesis to reenter the systemic circulation. This cascade of events offers a mechanism to explain how local tissue inflammation and vascular permeability can induce downstream pathological effects in remote organs, most notably in the lungs. Full Article
rem Ursa Major Awards for 2019 Open for Voting - Fursuit and NonFiction categories removed for year By www.flayrah.com Published On :: Wed, 04 Mar 2020 03:47:20 +0000 The Ursa Majors are ready for votes and the nominees have been revealed. Voting can be found at their website and is open throughout the month of March. Two categories, however, received no nominees due to being an insufficient number of nominations and will not be put up to vote for a winner. Those two categories being Fursuits and Non-Fiction. If you enjoy film, fiction, art, or any other of the many items that are up for selection as the best of the best for the year of 2019 be sure to vote this month. If you like non-fiction or fursuits, well, you can always be sure to nominate next year. The nominees are: read more Full Article Ursa Major Awards
rem Oh, God, it's happening: Disney announces live action (...ish?) 'Robin Hood' remake By www.flayrah.com Published On :: Sun, 12 Apr 2020 03:21:18 +0000 Disney has announced that it will be producing a new Robin Hood movie. Yes, that Robin Hood. read more Full Article Disney movies Robin Hood
rem Telestream and IBM Aspera Enable Near Real-time Remote Live Video Capture and Production By www.ibm.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Sep 2017 01:45:49 GMT IBM and Telestream announced today at IBC 2017 a game-changing solution for high-speed capture and production of live, broadcast quality video from remote locations for faster production turnaround. Telestream Vantage powered by Aspera combines Aspera’s FASPStream high-speed streaming technology and Telestream Lightspeed Live Capture media processing platform to enable production teams to work on live video feeds from remote locations in near real time. Full Article Media & Entertainment
rem IBM Announces New Capabilities to Help On-Premises Customers Effectively Manage Compliance Data with Object Storage By www.ibm.com Published On :: Mon, 09 Oct 2017 02:01:10 GMT IBM today announced two significant milestones in making the on-premises IBM Cloud Object Storage System much more accessible for customers with new compliance-enabled vaults and concentrated dispersal mode capabilities. Full Article IBM Storage
rem IBM Breakthrough Captures High Speed Measurements of Individual Atoms By www.ibm.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 03:47:42 GMT Highlights IBM scientists have measured how long information can stay in an individual atom IBM breakthrough enables ability to actually record, study and visualize the magnetism of individual atoms at staggering speeds – one million times faster than previously possible Could be valuable tool to study solar cells, quantum computing and storage-class memory at the nanoscale Today IBM researchers published a breakthrough technique in the peer-reviewed journal Science that measures how long a single atom can hold information, and giving scientists the ability to record, study and "visualize" extremely fast phenomena inside these atoms. Full Article Investors
rem Ecodex incrementa servicios de certificación tributaria para empresas con soluciones inteligentes de IBM By www.ibm.com Published On :: jue, 04 dic 2014 04:35:50 GMT La empresa se afianza como líder de Proveedores Autorizados de Certificación (PAC) y logra procesar grandes volúmenes de transacciones de manera sencilla Full Article Software
rem IBM recibe premio como “Compañía de Nube de 2016” por Frost & Sullivan By www.ibm.com Published On :: mar, 01 nov 2016 04:32:03 GMT : IBM anunció que recibió el premio de “Compañía de Nube de 2016” de la firma líder Frost & Sullivan. El premio reconoce el liderazgo de IBM en el mercado entregando un completo y totalmente integrado set de servicios de nube incluyendo IaaS, Paas, y SaaS. Full Article Corporate
rem Premian Banorte e IBM apps de estudiantes del Tec de Monterrey que transforman servicios bancarios dirigidos a los jóvenes By www.ibm.com Published On :: mar, 29 sep 2015 04:33:08 GMT Tres proyectos que proponen mejorar la interacción y la experiencia de los jóvenes usuarios con servicios bancarios móviles, fueron reconocidos hoy por Banorte, IBM y el Tec de Monterrey como resultado del Reto Banorte en el marco de la Semana i, que la institución educativa llevó a cabo del 21 al 25 de septiembre en todo el país. Full Article Analytics
rem 【 remote shooting 】 By takuming.seesaa.net Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 23:15:11 +0900 Photo by 蜷川実花 Full Article 日記
rem Remembering Robyn Herrington 15 years on By sfwriter.com Published On :: Fri, 03 May 2019 19:12:26 +0000 Robyn Meta Herrington, active member of both SFWA and SF Canada, passed away fifteen years ago today, on Monday morning, May 3, 2004, in Calgary, Alberta, after a courageous multi-year battle with cancer. Robyn’s short fiction appeared in such places as On Spec, Talebones, Adventures of Sword and Sorcery, Parsec, and in Mike Resnick‘s DAW […] Full Article Anniversaries R.I.P.
rem Ve Škodě Auto pracovali nakažení koronavirem, obnovený provoz se nezastaví By www.idnes.cz Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 07:19:00 GMT U dvou zaměstnanců mladoboleslavské automobilky Škoda Auto byla zjištěna nákaza covid-19. Podle zjištění Práva to však nebude mít vliv na nedávno obnovený provoz závodu. Full Article Praha - Praha - zprávy
rem Hranice směrem k Česku otevřeme. Takový je plán, zní z Chorvatska By www.idnes.cz Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 10:00:00 GMT Istrie patří k nejoblíbenějším částem Chorvatska. Jako skoro všude na světě se tam hoteliérský a restaurační byznys letos v březnu úplně zastavil, což si ještě nedávno nikdo nedokázal představit. Teď se ale blíží oživení. „Ani přinejmenším ale neočekáváme, že zopakujeme výsledky loňského roku,“ říká v rozhovoru šéf turistického sdružení celé oblasti Denis Ivošević. Full Article Ekonomika - Zahraniční
rem Kinosálům začaly konkurovat premiéry z gauče. Pozice kin je však silná By www.idnes.cz Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:00:00 GMT Studio Universal na znovuotevření kin nečeká. Premiéru animovaného hitu Trollové: Světové turné pustilo na placených digitálních kanálech. Strategie se vyplatila a hollywoodský gigant zvažuje, že by kinům v budoucnu odepřel jejich exkluzivní právo promítat filmy měsíce před uvedením na jiných platformách. Full Article Ekonomika - Zahraniční
rem Distance runner Ritzenhein announces retirement By www.espn.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 13:30:21 EST Distance runner Dathan Ritzenhein announced his retirement Thursday, closing a career during which he made three Olympic appearances. Full Article
rem The Remaining By scans-daily.dreamwidth.org Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 13:54:40 GMT Posted by: history79( Read more... ) comments Full Article creator: kyle hotz genre: horror
rem Zvýšení ošetřovného byl krok správným směrem By www.idnes.cz Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 22:00:00 GMT Zaměstnaní rodiče mají od dubna nově nárok na ošetřovné ve výši 80 procent denního vyměřovacího základu. Důvod zvýšení je jasný. Původních 60 procent většině rodin na pokrytí nákladů na provoz domácnosti nevystačilo. Potvrzuje to i případ paní Anny. Full Article Finance - Finanční rádce
rem KOMENTÁŘ: Co bude klíčové po dvou měsících s koronavirem By www.idnes.cz Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 22:00:00 GMT Do pracovních i osobních životů vstoupila pandemie, jakou nikdo nepamatuje. Krize, která nastává, se dotkne všech. Nad aktuální situací a tím, co nás letos čeká a co je klíčové pro rozhýbání ekonomiky, se v komentáři zamýšlí personalista Tomáš Surka. Full Article Finance - Práce a podnikání
rem Kiasmos – Blurred + Remixes By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 20 Jul 2018 18:54:30 +0000 musicisart magazine Kiasmos – Blurred + Remixes Sometimes the best way to relax is to listen to calming, downtempo music. Kiasmos provide a modern twist to perfection. Duo producers Ólafur Arnalds and Janus Rasmussen allow their own creative abilities to gracefully combine. Together their meditative sounds present an ethereal atmosphere mixed with sophisticated storylines told without words, felt within the simplistic beats […] The post Kiasmos – Blurred + Remixes appeared first on musicisart magazine. Full Article 2018 Electronic Remix Blurred Bonobo Kiasmos
rem Remco Evenepoel: "Vandaag had een heel belangrijke dag moeten zijn" - sporza.be By news.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 16:38:10 GMT Remco Evenepoel: "Vandaag had een heel belangrijke dag moeten zijn" sporza.beRemco Evenepoel verkiest Giro boven Luik-Bastenaken-Luik | Wielrennen | Sport Het Laatste NieuwsContador over 20 minuten-test Evenepoel: “Als die klopt, kan hij nu al de Giro winnen” WielerFlits.bePatrick Lefevere bevestigt dat Remco Evenepoel de Giro gaat rijden Wielerkrant.beRemco Evenepoel rijdt Giro in het najaar: "Intriest dat hij Luik niet kan rijden" sporza.beHele verhaal bekijken via Google Nieuws Full Article
rem Remember… By www.joegage.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 11:35:44 +0000 Sunday is Mothers Day Streaming Love Full Article Uncategorized
rem A reminder: How to stimulate the appetite of a medical leech By www.improbable.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 13:44:42 +0000 The 1996 Ig Nobel Prize for biology was awarded to Anders Barheim and Hogne Sandvik of the University of Bergen, Norway, for their tasty and tasteful report, “Effect of Ale, Garlic, and Soured Cream on the Appetite of Leeches.” Recently, Bradley Allff, writing in Atlas Obscura, looked at the role medical leeches sometimes play in medicine in the USA. […] Full Article Improbable Investigators Research News
rem NIH clinical trial testing antiviral remdesivir plus anti-inflammatory drug baricitinib for COVID-19 begins - National Institutes of Health By news.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 17:51:22 GMT NIH clinical trial testing antiviral remdesivir plus anti-inflammatory drug baricitinib for COVID-19 begins National Institutes of HealthView Full coverage on Google News Full Article
rem Players to air concerns to Premier League executives over restart - The Guardian By news.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 21:08:55 GMT Players to air concerns to Premier League executives over restart The GuardianEvery Premier League Goal 2002/03: Baros and Murphy make their mark Liverpool FCProject Restart Q&A: What next for Premier League after government announcement? Sky SportsPremier League must be very careful or the empire will come crashing down The GuardianPremier League considering new broadcast access - including inside changing rooms Daily StarView Full coverage on Google News Full Article
rem This Remixed Church Sermon Became an Instant Thanksgiving Classic By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Nov 2016 06:00:00 -0800 What's your grandma cooking for Thanksgiving? These lucky people are dancing, parodying and rapping about all the delicious potential for tasty holiday foods. Full Article list thanksgiving rap parody Memes dance Video
rem The lingering and extreme impacts of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on the deep sea By www.deepseanews.com Published On :: Sun, 08 Sep 2019 22:21:09 +0000 From the darkness emerges a boot. An old leather, steel-toed, work boot. It shouldn’t be there resting on the seafloor nearly two kilometers deep. I’m… Full Article Conservation & Environment Industry & Government New Research Oil Spills Uncategorized benthic deep sea Deepwater Horizon Enviromental Gulf of Mexico impact Macondo oilspill
rem Open COVID Pledge: Removing Obstacles to Sharing IP in the Fight Against COVID-19 By creativecommons.org Published On :: Tue, 07 Apr 2020 21:42:20 +0000 Creative Commons has joined forces with other legal experts and leading scientists to offer a simple way for universities, companies, and other holders of intellectual property rights to support the development of medicines, test kits, vaccines, and other scientific discoveries related to COVID-19 for the duration of the pandemic. The Open COVID Pledge grants the … Read More "Open COVID Pledge: Removing Obstacles to Sharing IP in the Fight Against COVID-19" The post Open COVID Pledge: Removing Obstacles to Sharing IP in the Fight Against COVID-19 appeared first on Creative Commons. Full Article About CC covid-19 open covid pledge open patents
rem Home supervision requirements By feeds.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Wednesday, August 12, 2015 - 12:28 Home supervision requirements are a type of legal supervision order at home which is unique to the Scottish system of child legislation. Despite being the most common type of disposal used by the Children’s Hearing little is known about how HSRs work in practice or about its impact on young people and families. Using a multi-method approach that included secondary analysis of the Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration (SCRA) dataset; documentary analysis of social work case files; and in-depth interviews; this research seeks to find out more about the nature, scope and outcomes of HSRs from the perspective of those who are affected the most by this type of compulsory intervention – young people, their parents and social workers. Full Article
rem The Untouched Picture of Kim Jong-Un Started a Supreme Photoshop Battle By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 31 Aug 2019 07:00:00 -0700 North Korea released a smiling picture of Kim Jong-Un and were VERY specific about pointing out the fact that the image was untouched. Obviously the first thing the internet did when they got a hold of the image was to touch it up a bit. The results were glorious. Full Article kim jong-un Battle list photoshop image photoshop battle North Korea
rem #233: What's the deal with Remus? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 08 Feb 2011 17:00:00 +0000 PotterCast is back with a smattering of Canon Conclumdrums and more with guest host, Andrew Slack of the Harry Potter Alliance, and performances from The Remus Lupins and The Whomping Willows! Episode 233 — What's the deal with Remus? Find the latest episode and explore PotterCast interviews, discussions and more at PotterCast.com Visit the-leaky-cauldron.org for the latest and greatest from Harry Potter's Wizard World. Full Article
rem Social Care Online | Valuing retirement housing: exploring the economic effects of specialist housing for older people By feeds.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Tue, 06 Sep 2016 04:34:00 PDT https://t.co/tjwD5HQWM4 Valuing retirement #housing: explores economic effects of specialist housing 4 #olderpeople Strategic Society CentreSee it on Scoop.it, via Social services news Full Article
rem New 2020 NEC Requirement Helps Keep First Responders Safe from Electrical Hazards During Emergencies By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 08:00:00 PDT If we do some digging into the revision archives of the National Electrical Code (NEC), we can pretty much trace every requirement to one thing: saving lives! That is why the NEC exists; its purpose, the practical safeguarding of persons and property Full Article electrical nec nfpa 70 first responders first responder safety electrical safety codesandstandards worker safety 2020 nec
rem Now that's extreme By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 12:00:00 -0700 Full Article