arti

Poroelastic properties of hydrogel microparticles

Soft Matter, 2020, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00191K, Paper
Joseph D. Berry, Matthew Dominic Biviano, Raymond Dagastine
Hydrogels can be formed in a number of different geometries depending upon desired function. However, due to the lack of appropriate models required to interpret experimental data, it remains unclear...
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




arti

Participating in the internet for the future


The three pillars of Ciscoâ€TMs “Internet for the Future†strategy are its investments in silicon, optics, and software.
More RSS Feed for Cisco: newsroom.cisco. ...




arti

[ASAP] Colored Radiative Cooling Coatings with Nanoparticles

ACS Photonics
DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.0c00513




arti

Italian populism and constitutional law: strategies, conflicts and dilemmas / Giacomo Delledonne, Giuseppe Martinico, Matteo Monti, Fabio Pacini, editors

Online Resource




arti

The commander's dilemma: violence and restraint in wartime / Amelia Hoover Green

Dewey Library - JC328.6.H67 2018




arti

We decide!: theories and cases in participatory democracy / Michael Menser

Dewey Library - JF799.M47 2018




arti

Wartime sexual violence against men: masculinities and power in conflict zones / Élise Féron

Dewey Library - HV6558.F47 2018




arti

The class of '74: Congress after Watergate and the roots of partisanship / John A. Lawrence

Dewey Library - JK1059 94th.L39 2018




arti

Strategy, evolution, and war: from apes to artificial intelligence / Kenneth Payne

Dewey Library - U162.P39 2018




arti

Responsible parties: saving democracy from itself / Frances McCall Rosenbluth and Ian Shapiro

Dewey Library - JF2051.R67 2018




arti

Votes that count and voters who don't: how journalists sideline electoral participation (without even knowing it) / Sharon E. Jarvis and Soo-Hye Han

Dewey Library - JK1965.J37 2018




arti

Disarming Doomsday: the human impact of nuclear weapons since Hiroshima / Becky Alexis-Martin

Dewey Library - U263.A44 2019




arti

Headquarters Gandhinagar: A chosen few charting Modi's course to Delhi

A software produces charts mapping Modi's time, ti avoid clutter and have fair distribution.




arti

Surat: Diamond baron gifts cars to artisans

Of the 2,000 employees in his factory, 100 met annual targets; 70 got cars, 30 cash up to Rs 3 lakh.




arti

Control of coupled partial differential equations [electronic resource] / Karl Kunisch [and others], editors

Basel, Switzerland ; Boston [Ma.] : Birkhäuser, [2007]




arti

Global forest governance and climate change : interrogating representation, participation, and decentralization / Emmanuel O. Nuesiri, editor




arti

Artificial intelligence and conservation / edited by Fei Fang (Carnegie Mellon University), Milind Tambe (University of Southern California), Bistra Dilkina (Georgia Institute of Technology), Andrew J. Plumptre (Key Biodiversity Areas Secretariat)




arti

New media and intercultural communication : identity, community, and politics / edited by Pauline Hope Cheong, Judith N. Martin, Leah P. Macfadyen




arti

Jadavpur stalemate ends: Vice-Chancellor Abhijit Chakrabarti agrees to step down as Mamata Banerjee intervenes



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

arti

Gold nanoparticles for physics, chemistry and biology / Catherine Louis, Olivier Pluchery

Louis, Catherine Dr




arti

Gold nanoparticles for physics, chemistry, and biology / editors, Catherine Louis, Olivier Pluchery




arti

227 JSJ Fostering Community Through React with Benjamin Dunphy, Berkeley Martinez, and Ian Sinnott

03:08 - Benjamin Dunphy Introduction

04:07 - Berkeley Martinez Introduction

04:19 - Ian Sinnott Introduction

05:19 - The React Codebase

12:38 - Other Important Parts of the React Ecosystem

14:22 - The Angular vs the React Ecosystem and Community

22:07 - Community

Developer Experience

26:56 - Getting Connected to the React Community

29:34 - Conferences

33:28 - Technology From the Community

40:19 - The Future of React

42:39 - Starting More Communities

 

Picks




arti

JSJ 310: Thwarting Insider Threats with Greg Kushto

Panel:

  • Charles Max Wood
  • Cory House
  • AJ O’Neal
  • Aimee Knight

Special Guests: Greg Kushto

In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss thwarting insider threats with Greg Kushto. Greg is the vice president of sales engineering for Force 3 and has been focused on computer security for the last 25 years. They discuss what insider threats are, what the term includes, and give examples of what insider threats look like. They also touch on some overarching principles that companies can use to help prevent insider threats from occurring.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Greg intro
  • Insider threats are a passion of his
  • Most computer attacks come from the inside of the company
  • Insider threats have changed over time
  • What does the term “insider threats” include?
  • Using data in an irresponsible manner
  • Who’s fault is it?
  • Blame the company or blame the employee?
  • Need to understand that insider threats don’t always happen on purpose
  • How to prevent insider threats
  • Very broad term
  • Are there some general principles to implement?
  • Figure out what exactly you are doing and documenting it
  • Documentations doesn’t have to be a punishment
  • Know what data you have and what you need to do to protect it
  • How easy it is to get hacked
  • Practical things to keep people from clicking on curious links
  • The need to change the game
  • Fighting insider threats isn’t fun, but it is necessary
  • And much, much more!

Links:

Picks:

Charles

Cory

  • Plop
  • VS code sync plugin

Aimee

  • Awesome Proposals GitHub

AJ O’Neal

Greg




arti

JSJ 378: Stencil and Design Systems with Josh Thomas and Mike Hartington

Sponsors

Panel

  • Aimee Knight

  • Chris Ferdinandi

  • Joe Eames

  • AJ O’Neal

  • Charles Max Wood

With Special Guests: Josh Thomas and Mike Hartington

Episode Summary

Today’s guests Josh Thomas and Mike Hartington are developers for Ionic, with Josh working on the open source part of the framework on Ionic. They talk about their new compiler for web components called Stencil. Stencil was originally created out of work they did for Ionic 4 (now available for Vue, React, and Angular) and making Ionic 4 able to compliment all the different frameworks. They talk about their decision to build their own compiler and why they decided to open source it. Now, a lot of companies are looking into using Stencil to build design systems

The panel discusses when design systems should be implemented. Since Ionic is a component library that people can pull from and use themselves, Jeff and Mike talk about how they are using Stencil since they’re not creating a design system.

The panel discusses some of the drawbacks of web components. They discuss whether or not Cordova changes the game at all. One of the big advantages of using Stencil is the code that is delivered to a browser is generated in such a way that a lot of things are handled for you, unlike in other systems.The panelists talk about their thoughts on web components and the benefits of using a component versus creating a widget the old fashioned way. One such benefit of web components is that you can change the internals of how it works without affecting the API. Josh and Mike talk about some of the abilities of Stencil and compare it to other things like Tachyons. There is a short discussion of the line between frameworks and components and the dangers of pre optimization. If you would like to learn more about Stencil, go to stenciljs.com and follow Josh and Mike @Jtoms1 and @mhartington.

Click here to cast your vote NOW for JavaScript Jabber - Best Dev Podcast Award

Links

Follow DevChat on Facebook and Twitter

Picks

Aimee Knight:

AJ O’Neal:

Chris Ferdinandi:

Charles Max Wood:

Joe Eames:

Josh Thomas:

Mike Hartington:




arti

JSJ 396: Publishing Your Book with Jonathan Lee Martin

Jonathan Lee Martin is an instructor and developer. He got his start in teaching at Big Nerd Ranch doing 1-2 week trainings for mid to senior developers, and then transitioned to 16 week courses for career switchers. He also worked for Digital Crafts for a year, and then wanted to focus on building out his own personal teaching brand. One of his first steps toward building his own brand was to publish his book, Functional Design Patterns for Express.js.The inspiration for Jonathan’s book came from his experience teaching career switchers. He wanted to experiment in the classroom with teaching functional programming in a way that would be very approachable and applicable and dispel some of the magic around backend programming, and that became the template for the book. 

Jonathan loves the minimalist nature of Express.js and talks about its many uses. He believes that it knowing design patterns can take you pretty far in programming, and this view is related to his background in Rails. When he was working in Rails taming huge middleware stacks, he discovered that applying design patterns made builds take less time. He talks about other situations where knowing design patterns has helped. Express.js leans towards object oriented style over functional programming, and so it takes to these patterns well. Express.js has its shortcomings, and that’s where Jonathan’s favorite library Koa comes into play. 

The conversation switches back to Jonathan’s book, which is a good way to start learning these higher level concepts. He purposely made it appealing to mid and senior level programmers, but at the same time it does not require a lot of background knowledge. Jonathan talks about his teaching methods that give people a proper appreciation for the tool. Jonathan talks more about why he likes to use Express.js and chose to use it for his book. He cautions that his book is not a book of monads, but rather about being influenced by the idea of composition over inheritance. He talks about the role of middleware in programming. 

The panel asks about Jonathan’s toolchain and approach to writing books, and he explains how his books are set up to show code. They discuss the different forms required when publishing a book such as epub, MOBI, and PDF. Jonathan found it difficult to distribute his book through Amazon, so he talks about how he built his own server. Charles notes that your method of distributing your book will depend on your goal. If you want to make the most money possible, make your own site. If you want to get it into as many hands as possible, get it on Amazon.

Many of the JavaScript Jabber panelists have had experience publishing books, and Jonathan shares that you can reach out to a publisher after you’ve self-published a book and they can get it distributed. Jonathan believes that If he had gone straight to a publisher, he would have gotten overwhelmed and given up on the book, but the step by step process of self-publishing kept things manageable. The panelists discuss difficulties encountered when publishing and editing books, especially with Markdown. Jonathan compares the perks of self-editing to traditional editing. Though he does not plan to opensource his entire editing pipeline, he may make some parts available. The show concludes with the panelists discussing the clout that comes with being a published author. 

Panelists

  • Charles Max Wood

  • Christopher Buecheler 

  • J.C. Hyatt

With special guest: Jonathan Lee Martin

Sponsors

Links

Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter

Picks

Christopher Buecheler:

J.C. Hyatt:

Charles Max Wood:

Jonathan Lee Martin:




arti

MJS 126: Eduardo San Martin Morote

In this episode of My JavaScript Story is Charles talks to Eduardo San Martin Morote. Eduardo is a freelance developer, a core team member of Vue.js, and loves contributing to open source. Eduardo started web development with games. He then majored in Computer Science and Mathematics.

Eduardo works as a freelancer so he can work on Open Source projects in his free time. One of the problems he draws attention to is the sustainability of Open Source Projects. The developers that maintain the projects on Open Source are not funded, and even though many companies use Open Source code they don't have sponsor it even though they have the financial means to do so.

Charles Max Wood recommends another podcast Devchat.tv hosts, Sustain Our Software that addresses this problem among others for Open Source.

Eduardo and Charles talk about characters that have accents that have to be encoded and how they deal with this problem. Eduardo then talks about some of the projects he is working on currently with Vue.js.

Sponsors

Host: Charles Max Wood

Joined by Special Guest: Eduardo San Martin Morote

Links

Picks

Eduardo San Martin Morote

Charles Max Wood




arti

MJS 128: Mike Hartington

In this episode of My JavaScript Story is Charles talks to Mike Hartington. Mike Hartington is a Developer Advocate for Ionic Framework and a Google Developer Expert, but he is most famous in the developer community because of his beard.

Charles asks how Mike got introduced to development. Mike tried to code Tic-Tac-Toe and that was a challenge because knowing the rules to the game and trying to tell a computer the rules are two very two different things.

Mike then majored in Graphic Design at Rhode Island College, and started learning Flash and ActionScript. Mike talks about what kind of projects he created with Flash and ActionScript and then the process of teaching himself JavaScript.

Host: Charles Max Wood

Joined by Special Guest: Mike Hartington

Links

Sponsors

Picks

 Mike Hartington

Charles Max Wood:




arti

MJS 133: Jonathan Martin

My JavaScript Story this week welcomes Jonathan Lee Martin. Jonathan is an educator, speaker, and author. He has been a developer since high school and he started out by teaching at Big Nerd Ranch and currently has his own teaching brand. He teaches career switchers and senior developers and also has written a book "Functional Design Patterns for Express.js". Teaching career switchers has led him to adopt a pedagogy approach to teaching where he focuses on getting people to absorb relevant information faster. Some of the lessons he has learned when working with career switchers is the role of failure in the classroom. He noticed when something did not work in their code career switchers tended to want to start out again instead of debugging what was wrong with the code. Jonathan had to show that most of developing is turning failure into success and getting code that doesn't work bu debugging and asking for help.

Host: Charles Max Wood

Joined By Special Guest: Jonathan Martin

Sponsors

______________________________________

"The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today!

______________________________________

 

Links

Picks

Charles Max Wood:

Jonathan Martin:




arti

Years of plenty, years of want [electronic resource] : France and the legacy of the Great War / Benjamin Franklin Martin

Martin, Benjamin F., 1947-




arti

While avoiding overt discrimination, parties stoke voters’ prejudices subliminally

The disappearance of inflammatory communal slogans from political speeches suggests development is the agenda for 2014.




arti

[ASAP] Enhanced Nonlinear Light Generation in Oligomers of Silicon Nanoparticles under Vector Beam Illumination

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00393




arti

[ASAP] Self-Regulated Phenomenon of Inorganic Artificial Solid Electrolyte Interphase for Lithium Metal Batteries

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01400




arti

[ASAP] Multimodal Enzyme Delivery and Therapy Enabled by Cell Membrane-Coated Metal–Organic Framework Nanoparticles

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01654




arti

[ASAP] Core–Shell C@Sb Nanoparticles as a Nucleation Layer for High-Performance Sodium Metal Anodes

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01257




arti

The functionality of riparian zones in flat sandy catchments / Peter Martin O'Toole

O'Toole, Peter Martin, author




arti

Stressors in the marine environment : physiological and ecological responses; societal implications / edited by Martin Solan (University of Southampton, UK), Nia M. Whiteley (Bangor University, UK)




arti

River science : research and management for the 21st century / edited by David J. Gilvear, Malcolm T. Greenwood, Martin C. Thoms, Paul J. Wood




arti

Bush Heritage Australia : restoring nature step by step / Sarah Martin

Martin, Sarah, author




arti

Marine plankton : a practical guide to ecology, methodology and taxonomy / edited by Claudia Castellani (Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science, Plymouth, UK) and Martin Edwards (Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science, Plymouth, UK and Uni




arti

Decolonizing nature [electronic resource] : strategies for conservation in a post-colonial era / edited by William M. Adams and Martin Mulligan




arti

Nanoparticles : building blocks for nanotechnology / edited by Vincent Rotello




arti

Surface effects in magnetic nanoparticles / edited by Dino Fiorani




arti

Focus on Nanotube research / Delores A. Martin (editor)




arti

Metal nanoparticles and nanoalloys / edited by Roy L. Johnston, J.P. Wilcoxon




arti

Nanotechnology for a sustainable world : global artificial photosynthesis as nanotechnology's moral culmination / T. Faunce

Faunce, T




arti

Complex-shaped metal nanoparticles : bottom-up syntheses and applications / edited by Tapan K. Sau and Andrey L. Rogach ; with a foreword by Catherine J. Murphy




arti

Engineered nanoparticles : structure, properties and mechanisms of toxicity / Ashok K. Singh

Singh, Ashok K., author




arti

Nanoparticles in the fight against parasites / Heinz Mehlhorn, editor




arti

Biogenic production of gold and silver nanoparticles using extracts from indigenous Australian plants : their synthesis, optimisation, characterisation and antibacterial activities / Monali Shah

Shah, Monali, author




arti

Designing nanoparticle systems for catalysis : London, UK, 16-18 May 2018

Designing nanoparticle systems for catalysis (2018 : London).