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Developments in language theory [electronic resource] : 9th international conference, DLT 2005, Palermo, Italy, July 4-8, 2005 : proceedings / Clelia De Felice, Antonio Restivo (eds.)

Berlin ; New York : Springer, [2005]




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Environmental chemistry : a global perspective / Gary W. vanLoon (Department of Chemistry and School of Environmental Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario) and Stephen J. Duffy (Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Mount Allison Univers

VanLoon, Gary W., author




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The application of science in environmental impact assessment / Aaron J. MacKinnon, Peter N. Duinker and Tony R. Walker

MacKinnon, Aaron J., author




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Environmental impact assessment : a Guide to Best Professional Practices / Charles H. Eccleston

Eccleston, Charles H., author




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The solar entrepreneur's handbook / Geoff Stapleton, Lalith Gunaratne, Peter JM Konings

Stapleton, Geoff, author




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Woman raped in Bengal’s Nadia district,mob stones police vehicle



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

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Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers: Checking Out Baseball’s World Series in Washington 1924, 1925 and 1933

Game 3 of the 2019 World Series gets underway in Washington, DC, tonite and we're excited! Not since 1933 has Washington hosted the championship games of “America’s great pastime,” baseball! In 1924, Washington’s then-home baseball team, the Washington Senators, won the series and earned bragging rights in 7 games against the New York Giants. Not quite so successful in 1925 and 1933 against the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Giants again, respectively, the nation’s press still covered the sport in detail and with drama. Check out the newspaper coverage for each of these series or earlier World Series and read more about it! And be sure to follow us on Twitter @librarycongress #ChronAm for more fun snippets of old news!




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A century in stone [videorecording] : the Eston & California story / produced, writen and directed by Craig Hornby




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Review of mine-related research in the Alligator Rivers Region 1978-2002 : prepared for ARRTC9 meeting, 25-27 February 2002 / A. Johnston & A.R. Milnes

Johnston, Arthur




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Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum : September 18-19, 1995, Sheraton Hotel, Brisbane, Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services

Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum (1995 : Brisbane, Qld.)




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ALTA 1997 Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum : October 20-21, 1997, Sheraton Hotel, Brisbane, Australia

Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum (1997 : Brisbane, Qld.)




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ALTA 1996 Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum : October 14-15, 1996, Sheraton Hotel, Brisbane, Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services

Copper Hydrometallurgy Forum (1996 : Brisbane, Qld.)




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ALTA 1997 uranium ore to yellowcake seminar : February 20, 1997, Carlton Crest Hotel, Melbourne Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services




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Totley, a study of the silver mines at One Mile, Ravenswood district / by K.H. Kennedy, Peter Bell, Carolyn Edmondson ; with preface by B.J. Dalton

Kennedy, K. H. (Kett Howard), 1948-




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ALTA 2009 nickel/cobalt conference : May 25-27, 2009, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia




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ALTA 2009 copper conference : May 28-29, 2009, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia




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ALTA 2009 Uranium Conference : May 28-29 2009, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Uranium Conference (5th : 2009 : Perth, W.A.)




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ALTA 2008 Uranium Conference : June 19-20 2008, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Uranium Conference (4th : 2008 : Perth, W.A)




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ALTA 2008 Copper Conference : June 19-20, 2008, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Copper Conference (12th : 2008 : Perth, W.A)




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ALTA 2008 Nickel/Cobalt Conference : June 16-18, 2008 Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Nickel/Cobalt conference (13th : 2008 : Perth, Australia)




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ALTA 2010 Gold Ore Processsing Symposium : May 27-28, 2010, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Gold Ore Processing Symposium (1st : 2010 : Perth, W. A.)




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ALTA 2010 Uranium Conference : May 27-28 2010, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Uranium Conference (6th : 2010 : Perth, W.A.)




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ALTA 2010 Nickel/Cobalt/Copper Conference : May 24-26, 2010, Sheraton Hotel, Perth, Australia

ALTA Nickel/Cobalt/Copper Conference (1st : 2010 : Perth, W. A.)




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International Peirce-Smith converting centennial : held during TMS 2009 annual meeting & exhibition : San Francisco, California, USA : February 15-19, 2009 / edited by Joël Kapusta and Tony Warner




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Uranium mining : market prospects and environmental consequences : a background paper for delegates to the 1988 ALP National Conference / by Chas Collison and Peter Milton

Collison, Chas




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Merton's Reward Gold Mine : reconstructing the mine and deconstructing the myth / Marianne Diane [Peta] Chappell

Chappell, Marianne Diane, author




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029 JSJ Bower.js with Alex MacCaw and Jacob Thornton

Panel Alex MacCaw (twitter github blog) Jacob Thornton (Fat) (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Intro to CoffeeScript) Discussion Bower.js (web) Bower.js (twitter) Bower.js (github) SXSW Package managers ender-js BPM hem Benefits Small components Yeoman.io Browserify Dependencies Segmenting the community Transports Mozilla (github) Commands Building an actual package manager node.js Moving parts of a package manager Events Challenges Ember.js Mobile web application development Google Chrome apps Desktop apps in JavaScript Picks Kershaw Ken Onion Tactical Blur Folding Knife (AJ) The xx: Coexist (Jamison) Neil Armstrong’s Solemn but Not Sad Memorial Cathedral (Jamison) Collective Soul Cat (Jamison) Amazon Prime (Joe) Star Trek Original Series on Amazon Prime (Joe) Functional Programming Principles in Scala: Martin Odersky (Joe) Domo (hiring!) (Joe) Delegation in Google (Chuck) Civilization IV (Chuck) Fujitsu ScanSnap (Chuck) Bill Nye’s Twitter Account getting suspended was not cool (Jacob) Github + Twitter profile redesign (Jacob) Avoid 7/11 Hot Dog Flavored Chips (Jacob) The Big Picture (Alex) CoffeeScriptRedux (Alex) Stripe (Alex)




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079 Lo-Dash with John-David Dalton

The gang talks to Lo-Dash maintainer John-David Dalton about open source software, performant Javascript, Lo-Dash and Underscore




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082 JSJ JSHint with Anton Kovalyov

Anton Kovalyov joins the Jabber gang to talk about JSHint, linting, parsing, lexing and much more.




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MJS #034 John-David Dalton

Tweet this Episode

MJS 034: John-David Dalton

Today’s episode is a My JavaScript Story with John-David Dalton. JD talked about his contributions to the JavaScript community like Lo-Dash, Sandboxed Native, etc. Listen to learn more about JD!

[01:15] – Introduction to JD

JD has been on JavaScript Jabber. He talked about Lo-Dash.

[02:00] – How did you get into programming?

First website

This was when JD was a junior in high school. Then, he got involved with a flight squadron for a World War 1 online game. They needed a website so he created a GeoCities website for them. That’s what got him into JavaScript. He’d have to enhance the page with mouseover effects - cursor trail, etc.

JavaScript

From there, JD started created a Dr. Wiley little-animated bot that would say random things in a little speech bubble with the HTML on your page like a widget. He also passed an assignment turning a web page into an English class paper. He used to spend his lunch breaks learning JavaScript and programming. He also created a little Mario game engine – Mario 1 with movable blocks that you could click and drag and Mario could jump over it. That was back with the document.layers and Netscape Navigator.

Animation

JD wanted to be an animator in animation so he started getting into macro media flash. That led him to ActionScript, which was another ECMAScript-based language. He took a break from JavaScript and did ActionScript and flash animations for a while as his day job too.

PHP and JavaScript

JD started learning PHP and they needed to create a web app that got him right back into JavaScript in 2005. That was when AJAX was coined and that’s when Prototype JS came up. He was reading AJAX blog posts back then because that was the place to find all of your JavaScript news.

JS Specification

JD remembers being really intimidated by JavaScript libraries so he started reading the JavaScript specification. It got him into a deeper understanding of why the language does what it does and realized that there’s actually a document that he could go to and look up exactly why things do what they do.

[06:45] – What was it about JavaScript?

JD has been tinkering with programming languages but what he liked about ActionScript at the time was it is so powerful. You could create games with it or you could script during animations. He eventually created a tool that was a Game Genie for flash games that you could get these decompilers that would show you the variables in the game, and then, you could use JavaScript to manipulate the variables in the flash game. He created a tool that could, for example, change your lives to infinite life, grow your character or access hidden characters that they don’t actually put in the game but they have the animations for it.

JD was led to a page on the web archive called Layer 51 or Proto 51. That was a web page that had a lot of JavaScript or ActionScript snippets. There were things for extending the built-in prototypes - adding array methods or string methods or regex methods. That was how JavaScript became appealing to him. He has been doing JavaScript for almost 20 years. PHP also made him appreciate JavaScript more because, at the time, you couldn’t have that interface.

[09:30] – Lo-Dash, Sandboxed Native, Microsoft

Lo-Dash

Eventually, JD grew to respect jQuery because I became a library author. jQuery is the example of how to create a successful library. It’s almost on 90% of the Internet. He likes that right now but before, he was a hardcore Prototype fanboy. He didn’t like new tools either. He liked augmenting prototypes but over time, he realized that augmenting prototypes wasn’t so great whenever you wanted to include other code on your page because it would have conflict and collisions. Later on, he took Prototype, forked it, and he made it faster and support more things, which is essentially what he did with Lo-Dash.

Sandboxed Native

JD created something called Sandboxed Native, which got him into talking on conferences. Sandboxed Native extends the prototypes for the built-ins for your current frame. It would import new built-ins so you got a new array constructor, a new date constructor, a new regex, or a new string. It wouldn’t collide or step on the built-ins of the current page.

Microsoft

After that, JD ended up transitioning to performance and benchmarking. That landed him his Microsoft job a couple years later.

Picks

John-David Dalton

Charles Max Wood

 




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JSJ 279: ES Modules in Node Today! with John-David Dalton

Tweet this Episode

John-David Dalton is probably best known for the Lodash library. He's currently working at Microsoft on the Edge team. He makes sure that libraries and frameworks work well in Edge.

The JavaScript Jabber panel discusses the ECMAScript module system port to Node.js. John wanted to ship the ES module system to Node.js for Lodash to increase speed and decrease the disk space that it takes up. This approach allows you to gzip the library and get it down to 90 kb.

This episode dives in detail into:

  • ES Modules, what they are and how they work
  • The Node.js and NPM package delivery ecosystem
  • Module loaders in Node.js
  • Babel (and other compilers) versus ES Module Loader
  • and much, much more...

Links:

Picks:

Cory:

Aimee:

Aaron:

Chuck:

John:




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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:




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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:




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Yellowstone's wildlife in transition [electronic resource] / edited by P.J. White, Robert A. Garrott, Glenn E. Plumb




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Yii rapid application development hotshot [electronic resource] : become a RAD hotshot with Yii, the world's most popular PHP framework / Lauren J. O'Meara, James R. Hamilton III

O'Meara, Lauren J




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Young people and new media [electronic resource] : childhood and the changing media environment / Sonia Livingstone

Livingstone, Sonia M




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Young people, creativity and new technologies [electronic resource] : the challenge of digital arts / edited by Julian Sefton-Green ; foreword by David Puttnam




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Youth justice and child protection [electronic resource] / edited by Malcolm Hill, Andrew Lockyer and Fred Stone




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Horace Lurton Papers [Revised Finding Aid: Digitized Content Added]

Associate justice of the United States Supreme Court. Correspondence and telegrams, some written while Lurton was attending the University of Chicago (1857-1886) and while he was a prisoner in Camp Chase, Ohio, and at Johnson Island Prison during the Civil War.




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[ASAP] Ultrafast Optoelectronic Processes in 1D Radial van der Waals Heterostructures: Carbon, Boron Nitride, and MoS<sub>2</sub> Nanotubes with Coexisting Excitons and Highly Mobile Charges

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00504




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[ASAP] Additive Manufacturing of High-Refractive-Index, Nanoarchitected Titanium Dioxide for 3D Dielectric Photonic Crystals

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00454




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[ASAP] Reduction of Optical Gain Threshold in CsPbI<sub>3</sub> Nanocrystals Achieved by Generation of Asymmetric Hot-Biexcitons

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01079




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Marine biology / Peter Castro, Ph.D., California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, Michael E. Huber, Ph.D., Jacobs Australia ; original artwork by William C. Ober, M.D., Washington & Lee University, and Claire E. Ober, B.A., R.N

Castro, Peter, author




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Deep marine systems : processes, deposits, environments, tectonics and sedimentation / Kevin T. Pickering & Richard N. Hiscott ; with contribution from Thomas Heard

Pickering, K. T. (Kevin T.), author




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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)




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Biological sampling in the deep sea / edited by Malcolm R. Clark, Mireille Consalvey and Ashley A. Rowden (National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand)




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The Deep Sea Drilling Project--a decade of progress / based on a symposium sponsored by SEPM-AAPG, held at the annual meeting, Houston, Texas, 1979, with additional related contributions ; edited by John E. Warme, Robert G. Douglas, and Edward L. Winterer




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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




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Intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams : ecology and management / edited by Thibault Datry, Núria Bonada, Andrew Boulton




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Essentials of oceanography / Alan P. Trujillo (Distinguished Teaching Professor, Palomar College), Harold V. Thurman (Former Professor Emeritus, MT. San Antonio College)

Trujillo, Alan P., author