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Catalyst-Controlled Formal [4+1] Annulation of N-Vinyl Fluorenone Nitrones and Allenoates to Prepare Spirofluorenylpyrrolines

Org. Chem. Front., 2020, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/D0QO00224K, Research Article
Cui Wei, Jin-Qi Zhang, Jia-Jie Zhang, Cui Liang, Dong-Liang Mo
We report a readily commercial Gimeracil-catalyzed formal [4+1] annulation approach for the synthesis of spirofluorenylpyrrolines in good yields with high diastereoselectivity from easily available N-vinyl fluorenone nitrones and allenoates. The...
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Targeted Isolation of Two Disesquiterpenoids Macrocephadiolides A and B from Ainsliaea macrocephala using Molecular Networking-based Dereplication Strategy

Org. Chem. Front., 2020, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/D0QO00030B, Research Article
Yong-Mei Ren, Shuaizhen Zhou, Tian Zhang, Meijia Qian, Rui Zhang, Sheng Yao, Hong Zhu, Chunping Tang, Ligen Lin, Yang Ye
A molecular networking-based dereplication strategy was applied to the phytochemical investigation of Ainsliaea macrocephala, leading to the isolation of two novel disesquiterpenoids macrocephadiolides A (1) and B (2). Their structures,...
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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The art of scientific writing : from student reports to professional publications in chemistry and related fields / Hans F. Ebel, Claus Bliefert, William E. Russey

Ebel, Hans Friedrich




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Nanostructured titanium dioxide materials : properties, preparation and applications / Alireza Khataee, G. Ali Mansoori

Khataee, A. R. (Ali Reza), 1977-




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[ASAP] Ship-in-a-Bottle Preparation of Long Wavelength Molecular Antennae in Lanthanide Metal–Organic Frameworks for Biological Imaging

Journal of the American Chemical Society
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c01426




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[ASAP] Discovery of Potent Cyclic Sulfopeptide Chemokine Inhibitors via Reprogrammed Genetic Code mRNA Display

Journal of the American Chemical Society
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c03152




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Report kidney cases: Telangana govt to hospitals

Wary about a sharp spike in kidney patients testing positive for the novel coronavirus, the state government has asked the private hospitals to keep the health officials in the loop on those undergoing dialysis.




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Food chemicals codex: by authority of the United States Pharmacopeial Convention / prepared by the Council of Experts

Online Resource




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Recycling of polyethylene terephthalate bottles / edited by Sabu Thomas, Ajay Rane, Krishnan Kanny, Anitha V.K., Martin George Thomas

Online Resource




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Reports on the processing of exotic fruits by Felipe Richter Reis

Online Resource




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Reading Ephesians : exploring social entrepreneurship in the text / Minna Shkul

Shkul, Minna, author




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Borohydride catalyzed redistribution reaction of hydrosilane and chlorosilane: a potential system for facile preparation of hydrochlorosilanes

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17404-17407
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA03536J, Paper
Open Access
Yi Chen, Liqing Ai, Yongming Li, Caihong Xu
A borohydride catalyzed Si–H/Si–Cl redistribution system was established to prepare hydrochlorosilanes facilely and efficiently.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Cobalt–carbon/silica nanocomposites prepared by pyrolysis of a cobalt 2,2'-bipyridine terephthalate complex for remediation of cationic dyes

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17660-17672
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02752A, Paper
Open Access
Nusaybah Alotaibi, Hassan H. Hammud, Ranjith Kumar Karnati, Syed Ghazanfar Hussain, Javed Mazher, Thirumurugan Prakasam
A cobalt–carbon@silica nanocomposite was synthesized from a cobalt 2,2'-bipyridine terephthalate complex and its adsorption behavior towards crystal violet dye was tested using batch and column techniques.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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A facile method for preparing Yb3+-doped perovskite nanocrystals with ultra-stable near-infrared light emission

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17635-17641
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA01897J, Paper
Open Access
Chunqian Zhang, Aidi Zhang, Taoran Liu, Lin Zhou, Jun Zheng, Yuhua Zuo, Yongqi He, Juhao Li
A facile method for fabricating CsPbBr3:Yb3+@SiO2 NCs which guarantees high PLQY and excellent stability at the same time.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Correction: Influence of co-cultures of Streptococcus thermophilus and probiotic lactobacilli on quality and antioxidant capacity parameters of lactose-free fermented dairy beverages containing Syzygium cumini (L.) Skeels pulp

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,16905-16905
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA90046J, Correction
Open Access
  This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Sabrina Laís Alves Garcia, Gabriel Monteiro da Silva, Juliana Maria Svendsen Medeiros, Anna Paula Rocha de Queiroga, Blenda Brito de Queiroz, Daniely Rayane Bezerra de Farias, Joyceana Oliveira Correia, Eliane Rolim Florentino, Flávia Carolina Alonso Buriti
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Preparation of phosphorus-doped porous carbon for high performance supercapacitors by one-step carbonization

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17768-17776
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02398A, Paper
Open Access
  This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Guanfeng Lin, Qiong Wang, Xuan Yang, Zhenghan Cai, Yongzhi Xiong, Biao Huang
P-doped porous carbon can be prepared by one-step carbonization using biomass sawdust impregnated with a small amount of phosphoric acid.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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CSS image replacement. One more time.

An accessible image replacement method using pseudo-elements and generated-content. This method works with images and/or CSS off, with semi-transparent images, doesn’t hide text from screen-readers or search engines, and provides fallback for IE 6 and IE 7.

Known support: Firefox 1.5+, Safari 3+, Chrome 3+, Opera 9+, IE 8+

What’s wrong with current methods?

The two most widely used image replacement techniques are the Gilder/Levin Method and the Phark Method. Both have different flaws.

The Gilder/Levin Method requires the addition of presentational HTML (an empty span) and doesn’t work with transparent images as the default text shows through. The Phark Method uses a negative text-indent to hide the text and so it is not visible when CSS is on and images are off.

Resurrecting the NIR method

Using pseudo-elements and generated-content as an image replacement technique isn’t a new idea. It was proposed and demonstrated by Paul Nash back in 2006. This is the Nash Image Replacement method.

<h1 class="nir">[content]</h1>
.nir {
   height: 100px; /* height of replacement image */
   padding: 0;
   margin: 0;
   overflow: hidden;
}

.nir:before {
   content: url(image.gif);
   display: block;
}

The height value is equal to that of the replacement image. Setting overflow:hidden ensures that the original content is not visible on screen when the image is loaded. The replacement image is inserted as generated content in the :before pseudo-element which is set to behave like a block element in order to push the element’s original content down.

What about IE 6 and IE 7?

Neither browser supports :before; if you need to support them you’ll have to rely on the Phark method. This can be done using conditional comments or safe IE6/7 hacks to serve alternative styles to legacy versions of IE .

<!--[if lte IE 7]>
<style>
.nir {
   height: 100px;
   padding: 0;
   margin: 0;
   overflow: hidden;
   text-indent: -9000px;
   background: url(image.gif) no-repeat 0 0;
}
</style>
<![endif]-->

Using the NIR method allows you to keep your HTML semantic and deliver improved accessibility to users of modern browsers. The Phark Method can then be served to IE 6 and IE 7.

Improving the NIR method

The first problem with NIR is that if images are disabled all browsers leave whitespace above the element’s content. Opera 10.5 even displays the text string “image”! If the height of the element is small enough this whitespace causes the element’s content to overflow and be partially or completely hidden when images are disabled.

Another consideration is what happens if an image doesn’t exist or fails to load. Safari and Chrome will display a “missing image” icon that cannot be removed. Once again, this can cause the element’s content to overflow and become partially or completely hidden to users.

A more robust version of the NIR method is the following modification:

.nir {
   height: 100px; /* height of replacement image */
   width: 400px; /* width of replacement image */
   padding: 0;
   margin: 0;
   overflow: hidden;
}

.nir:before {
   content: url(image.gif);
   display: inline-block;
   font-size: 0;
   line-height: 0;
}

Setting font-size and line-height to 0 avoids the whitespace problems in all browsers. Setting the element’s width equal to that of the replacement image and getting the pseudo-element to act as an inline-block helps minimise the problems in webkit browsers should an image fail to load.

Ideally browsers would avoid displaying anything in a pseudo-element when its generated-content image fails to load. If that were the case, the original NIR method would be all that is needed.

What about using sprites?

One of the most common uses of image replacement is for navigation. This often involves using a large sprite with :hover and :active states as a background image. It turns out that using sprites is not a problem for modern browsers. When using the modified-NIR method the sprite is included as a generated-content image that is positioned using negative margins.

This is an example that rebuilds the right-hand category navigation from Web Designer Wall using a sprite and the modified-NIR method.

<ul id="nav">
  <li id="nav-item-1"><a href="#non">Tutorials</a></li>
  <li id="nav-item-2"><a href="#non">Trends</a></li>
  <li id="nav-item-3"><a href="#non">General</a></li>
</ul>
/* modified-NIR */

#nav a {
  display: block;
  width: 225px;
  height: 46px;
  overflow: hidden;
}

#nav a:before {
   content:url(sprite.png);
   display:-moz-inline-box; /* for Firefox 1.5 & 2 */
   display:inline-block;
   font-size:0;
   line-height:0;
}

/* repositioning the sprite */

#nav-item-1 a:hover:before,
#nav-item-1 a:focus:before,
#nav-item-1 a:active:before {margin:-46px 0 0;}

#nav-item-2 a:before        {margin:-92px 0 0;}
#nav-item-2 a:hover:before,
#nav-item-2 a:focus:before,
#nav-item-2 a:active:before {margin:-138px 0 0;}

#nav-item-3 a:before        {margin:-184px 0 0;}
#nav-item-3 a:hover:before,
#nav-item-3 a:focus:before,
#nav-item-3 a:active:before {margin:-230px 0 0;}

/* :hover hack for IE8 if no a:hover styles declared */
#nav a:hover {cursor:pointer;}

For some reason IE8 refuses to reposition the image when the mouse is over the link unless a style is declared for a:hover. In most cases you will have declared a:hover styles for the basic links on your webpage, and this is enough. But it is worth being aware of this IE8 behaviour.

The addition of display:-moz-inline-box; is required to reposition the sprite in versions of Firefox prior to Firefox 3.0. They are very rare browsers but I’ve included it in case that level of legacy support is needed.

If you want image replacement in IE 6 and IE 7 the following additional styles can be served to those browsers using conditional comments.

/* Phark IR method */

#nav a {
   text-indent: -9000px;
   background: url(sprite.png) no-repeat;
}

/* repositioning the sprite */

#nav-item-1 a:hover,
#nav-item-1 a:active { background-position: 0 -46px; }

#nav-item-2 a        { background-position: 0 -92px; }
#nav-item-2 a:hover,
#nav-item-2 a:hover  { background-position: 0 -138px; }

#nav-item-3 a        { background-position: 0 -184px; }
#nav-item-3 a:hover,
#nav-item-3 a:active { background-position: 0 -230px; }

/* hack for IE6 */
#nav a:hover { margin: 0; }

The changes are fairly simple. But IE 6 applies the margins declared for a:hover:before to a:hover and so they need to be reset in the styles served to IE 6.

See the modified-NIR (using sprites) demo.




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Another CSS image replacement technique

A new image replacement technique was recently added to the HTML5 Boilerplate project. This post explains how it works and how it compares to alternative image replacement techniques.

[15 December 2012] This technique is no longer used in HTML5 Boilerplate. It’s been replaced by another, more reliable approach.

Here’s the CSS behind the recent update to the image replacement helper class in HTML5 Boilerplate. It has also made its way into the Compass framework.

.ir {
  font: 0/0 a;
  text-shadow: none;
  color: transparent;
}

What does each declaration do?

  • font:0/0 a – a shorthand property that zeros out the font size and line-height. The a value acts as a very short font-family (an idea taken from the BEM implementation of this method). The CSS validator complains that using 0/0 in the shorthand font property is not valid, but every browser accepts it and this appears to be an error in the validator. Using font:0px/0 a passes validation but it displayed as font:0/0 a in the code that the validator flags as valid.
  • text-shadow:none – makes sure that any inherited text shadow is removed for the text. This prevents the chance of any text shadow colors showing over the background.
  • color:transparent – needed for browsers than don’t completely crush the text to the point of being invisible. Safari 4 (extremely rare) is an example of such a browser. There may also be mobile browsers than require this declaration. IE6/7/8 don’t recognise this value for color, but fortunately IE7/8 don’t show any trace of the text. IE6 shows a faint trace.

In the HTML5 Boilerplate image replacement helper, we’ve also removed any border and background-color that may be on the element. This makes it easier to use the helper class on elements like button or with links that may included background or border properties as part of a design decision.

Benefits over text-indent methods

The new technique avoids various problems with any text-indent method, including the one proposed by Scott Kellum to avoid iPad 1 performance problems related to large negative text indents.

  • Works in IE6/7 on inline-block elements. Techniques based on text indentation are basically “broken”, as shown by this test case: http://jsfiddle.net/necolas/QZvYa/show/
  • Doesn’t result in any offscreen box being created. The text-indent methods result in a box being drawn (sometimes offscreen) for any text that have been negatively or positively indented. It can sometimes cause performance problems but the font-based method sidesteps those concerns.
  • No need to specify a text-alignment and hide the overflow since the text is crushed to take up no space.
  • No need to hide br or make all fallback HTML display:inline to get around the constraints of using a text indentation. This method is not affected by those problems.
  • Fewer styles are needed as a result of these improvements.

Drawbacks

No image replacement hack is perfect.

  • Leaves a very small trace of the text in IE6.
  • This approach means that you cannot use em units for margins on elements that make use of this image replacement code. This is because the font size is set to 0.
  • Windows-Eyes has a bug that prevents the reading of text hidden using this method. There are no problems with all other screenreaders that have been tested. Thanks to @jkiss for providing these detailed results and to @wilto for confirming this technique works for JAWS 12 in IE 6/7/8 and Firefox 4/5/6.
  • Like so many IR methods, it doesn’t work when CSS is loaded but images are not.
  • Text may not be hidden if a visitor is using a user style sheet which has explicitly set important font-size declarations for the element type on which you have applied the IR class.

It’s worth noting that the NIR image replacement technique avoids these drawbacks, but lacks support in IE6/7.

Closing comments

I’ve been using this technique without significant problems for nearly a year, ever since Jonathan Neal and I used it in a clearfix experiment. The BEM framework also makes use of it for their icon components. The core idea was even proposed back in 2003 but the browser quirks of the day may have prevented wider use.

If you come across any problems with this technique, please report them at the HTML5 Boilerplate GitHub issue tracker and include a test case when appropriate.

Translations




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Custom CSS preprocessing

Did you know that you can build your own CSS preprocessor with Node.js libraries? They can be used alongside established preprocessors like Sass, and are useful for defining tasks beyond preprocessing.

Libraries like Rework and PostCSS let you create and assemble an arbitrary collection of plugins that can inspect or manipulate CSS.

At the time of writing, Twitter uses Rework to perform various tasks against our CSS source code for twitter.com.

Creating a CSS preprocessor with Rework

At its core, Rework is a module that accepts a string of CSS, produces a CSS abstract syntax tree (AST), and provides an API for manipulating that AST. Plugins are functions that have access to the AST and a Rework instance. Rework lets you chain together different plugins and generate a string of new CSS when you’re done.

The source string is passed into the rework function and each plugin is applied with .use(fn). The plugins transform the data in the AST, and .toString() generates the new string of CSS.

Below is an example of a custom preprocessor script using Rework and Autoprefixer. It’s a simplified version of the transformation step we use for twitter.com’s CSS.

var autoprefixer = require('autoprefixer');
var calc = require('rework-calc');
var rework = require('rework');
var vars = require('rework-vars')();

var css = fs.readFileSync('./css/main.css', 'utf-8');

css = rework(css)
  .use(vars)
  .use(calc)
  .toString();

css = autoprefixer().process(css);

fs.writeFileSync('./build/bundle.css', css)

The script runs rework-vars, rework-calc, and then passes the CSS to Autoprefixer (which uses PostCSS internally) to handle the addition of any necessary vendor prefixes.

rework-vars provides a limited subset of the features described in the W3C-style CSS custom property spec. It’s not a polyfill!

Variables can be declared as custom CSS properties on the :root element, prefixed with --. Variables are referenced with the var() function, taking the name of a variable as the first argument and an optional fallback as the second.

For example, this source:

:root {
  --width-button: 200px;
}

.button {
  width: var(--width-button);
}

yields:

.button {
  width: 200px;
}

There are many different Rework plugins that you can use to create a custom preprocessor. A more complete list is available on npm. In order to limit the chances of long-term divergence between our source code and native CSS, I’ve chosen to stick fairly closely to features that are aligned with future additions to native CSS.

Creating your own Rework plugin

Rework plugins are functions that inspect or mutate the AST they are provided. Below is a plugin that rewrites the value of any font-family property to sans-serif.

module.exports = function plugin(ast, reworkInstance) {
  ast.rules.forEach(function (rule) {
    if (rule.type != 'rule') return;

    rule.declarations.forEach(function (declaration, index) {
      if (declaration.property == 'font-family') {
        declaration.value = 'sans-serif';
      }
    });
  });
};

Rework uses css-parse to create the AST. Unfortunately, both projects are currently lacking comprehensive documentation of the AST, but it’s not difficult to piece it together yourself.

Beyond preprocessing

Since Rework and PostCSS expose an AST and provide a plugin API, they can be used for other CSS tasks, not just preprocessing.

At Twitter, our CSS build pipeline allows you to perform custom tasks at 2 stages of the process: on individual files and on generated bundles. We use Rework at both stages.

Individual files are tested with rework-suit-conformance to ensure that the SUIT-style CSS for a component is properly scoped.

/** @define MyComponent */

:root {
  --property-MyComponent: value;
}

.MyComponent {}

Bundles are preprocessed as previously described, and also tested with rework-ie-limits to ensure that the number of selectors doesn’t exceed IE 8/9’s limit of 4095 selectors per style sheet.

Other tasks you can perform include generating RTL style sheets (e.g., css-flip) and extracting detailed information about the perceived health of your CSS (e.g., the number of different colours used, duplicate selectors, etc.).

Hopefully this has given you a small glimpse into some of the benefits and flexibility of using these tools to work with CSS.




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Coronavirus | Nine deaths, 130 cases reported in Bengal

This has been the highest spike in the number of cases in the State in a single day, taking the number of cases to 1,678




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The tech entrepreneur's survival guide [electronic resource] : how to bootstrap your startup, lead through tough times, and cash in for success / Bernd Schoner

Schoner, Bernd




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Technology entrepreneurship [electronic resource] : taking innovation to the marketplace / Thomas N. Duening, Ph.D, El Pomar Chair of Business and Entrepreneurship, Director, Center for Entrepreneurship, College of Business, University of Colorado at Colo

Duening, Thomas N




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Troubleshooting Sharepoint [electronic resource] : the complete guide to tools, best practices, powershell one-liners, and scripts / Stacy Simpkins

Simpkins, Stacy, author




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Truth, growth, repeat [electronic resource] : (a business manual for generation why) / by Mike Edmonds with Ronnie Duncan

Edmonds, Mike, author




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Visuals matter! [electronic resource] : designing and using effective visual representations to support project and portfolio decisions / Joana Geraldi, Mario Arlt

Geraldi, Joana G., 1979- author










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JAMA Cardiology : Utility of 90-Day vs 30-Day Mortality Quality Metrics for Aortic Valve Replacement Outcomes

Interview with Tsuyoshi Kaneko, MD, and Sameer A Hirji, MD, authors of Utility of 90-Day Mortality vs 30-Day Mortality as a Quality Metric for Transcatheter and Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement Outcomes, and Michael J. Mack, MD, author of Ninety-Day Outcome Assessment After Transcatheter and Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement—Is the Juice Worth the Squeeze?






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Asian Paints extends loss into 8th day on report RIL mulls stake sale

The company controlled by Mukesh Ambani, is in discussions with banks for a potential sale of its 4.9 per cent stake in Asian Paints through a series of block trades, reports suggest.




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Bobby Jindal slams Republican presidential opponent



  • DO NOT USE Indians Abroad
  • World

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Indian-origin entrepreneur Payal Kadakia in Fortune’s list of powerful women



  • DO NOT USE Indians Abroad
  • World

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Ex-Disney workers replaced by H1-B visa holders file complaint



  • DO NOT USE Indians Abroad
  • World

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Personal Taxprep Overview

Personal Taxprep Overview

This webinar provides an overview of the Personal Taxprep interface and explains the basic operations of the program, working with taxpayer, spouse and dependant returns, navigating the tax return and entering data.

While this webinar is designed primarily for new users, it may also be helpful to users that would like a refresher on the operation of the program.

This webinar is approximately 1.5 hours in length.

Available Sessions for this Seminar:

ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1409, February 02, 2015
ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1409, March 03, 2015




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CCH Practice Management: Administrator & Reporting

Objectives

The Administrator course content focuses on features in the Administration, Accounts Receivable, Reports and Report Writer modules. By learning how to work properly within these modules, you can better manage the program on a day-to-day basis. This course includes hands-on computer training.

 

Topics

 

·         Create new clients and prospects

·         Create custom fields

·         Maintain up to date client contact information

·         Lock releasing of time

·         Edit and update released time

·         Use Batch Time Entry

·         Correct WIP and update invoices

·         Select a Lock Reconciliation Date and WIP Approval date

·         Determine Security Settings for employees

·         Set up Alerts for assigned employees

·         Complete Year End Procedures

·         Use the Administrative Utilities

·         Enter A/R transactions

·         Apply Later Distributions (prepayments) to invoices

·         Update, Correct and Search A/R

·         Print A/R Statements and Dunning Letters

·         Calculate and update finance charges

·         Generate firm reports

·         Create and process report Queues

 

Attendees

Staff responsible for managing day-to-day operations in Practice Management, including clients, contacts, security, time, billing, A/R and generating reports.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Available Sessions for this Seminar:

ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1245, January 14, 2015




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Corporate Taxprep Overview

This webinar provides an overview of the Corporate Taxprep interface and explains the basic operations of the program, navigating the tax return and entering data.

While this webinar is designed primarily for new users, it may also be helpful to users that would like a refresher on the operation of the program.

Available Sessions for this Seminar:

ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1563, January 13, 2015
ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1563, March 23, 2015
ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1563, May 11, 2015




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Practice Management: Administrator & Reporting - Private

Available Sessions for this Seminar:

ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1392, January 13, 2015




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'Neura, Mandur bandhs in need of urgent repairs'

A few serious breaches to the bandh network of the khazan extending from Carambolim and Mandur to Neura and Agasaim pose grave danger to villages in the area due to possibility of massive flooding.




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The histology of fishes / editors, Frank Kirschbaum (Faculty of Life Sciences, Unit of Biology and Ecology of Fishes, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany), Krzysztof Formicki (Department of Hydrobiology, Ichthyology and Biotechnology of Reproduction, Wes




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Studying primates : how to design, conduct and report primatological research / Joanna M. Setchell

Setchell, Joanna M., 1973- author




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Reply to the ‘Comment on “Investigation on the structure and thermoelectric properties of CuxTe binary compounds”’ by A. H. Barajas-Aguilar, A. M. Garay-Tapia, and S. J. Jiménez-Sandoval, Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, DOI: 10.1039/C9DT03607E

Dalton Trans., 2020, 49,5738-5740
DOI: 10.1039/D0DT00412J, Comment
Shriparna Mukherjee, Raju Chetty, P. V. Prakash Madduri, Ajaya K. Nayak, Krzysztof Wojciechowski, Tanmoy Ghosh, Kamanio Chattopadhyay, Satyam Suwas, Ramesh Chandra Mallik
In a communication to Dalton Transaction and in a paper in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, Aarón H. Barajas-Aguilar et al. have raised comments on our paper published earlier in Dalton Transactions.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Enhancing the energy barrier by replacing the counterions in two holmium(III)-pentagonal bipyramidal single-ion magnets

Dalton Trans., 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0DT00905A, Paper
Lei-Lei Li, Hong-Dan Su, Shuang Liu, Wen-Zhen Wang
Upon changing the employed halide ions as counterions, Ueff increases from 290 K to 320 K in two HoIII-SIMs with pentagonal-bipyramidal structures.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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A Review: Recent Advances in Preparations and Applications of Heteroatom-Doped Carbon Quantum Dots

Dalton Trans., 2020, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/D0DT01004A, Perspective
Xiaoli Kou, Shicui Jiang, Soo-Jin Park, Long-Yue Meng
Carbon quantum dots (CQDs) are widely used in optoelectronic catalysis, biological imaging, and ion probes owing to their low toxicity, stable photoluminescence, and ease of chemical modification. However, the low...
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Rights and reproductions: the handbook for cultural institutions / edited by Anne M. Young

Rotch Library - KF3060.1.R54 2019




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Tallinn manual 2.0 on the international law applicable to cyber operations / prepared by the International Groups of Experts at the invitation of the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence ; general editor, Michael N. Schmitt ; managing edit

Dewey Library - KZ6718.T35 2017