att

Jyoti Basu Birth Centenary: Somnath Chatterjee set to share stage with Sitaram Yechury



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

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Ranaghat: Another church vandalised in an attempt to robbery



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

att

Amit Shah attacks Mamata govt for failing to live up to people’s expectations



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

att

West Bengal Congress chief booked for attempt to murder



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

att

WB: Media associations condemn attack during Municipal elections



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

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ALTA 1998 Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum : May 25-27, 1998, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Perth, Australia / ALTA Metallurgical Services, Melbourne, Australia

Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum (4th : 1998 : Perth, W.A.)




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ALTA 1997 Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum : May 19-20, 1997, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia

Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum (1997 : Perth, W.A.)




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Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum : May 13-14, 1996, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services

Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum (1996 : Perth, W.A.)




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Nickel/Cobalt SX/EW Seminar : May 16, 1996, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services




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012 JSJ Design Patterns in JavaScript with Addy Osmani

The panelists talk about design patterns in JavaScript with Addy Osmani




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083 JSJ FRP and RxJS with Matthew Podwysocki

In this episode, the panelists talk to Matthew Podwysocki about Functional Reactive Programming and RxJS.




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145 JSJ Meteor.js with Matt DeBergalis

The panelists talk to Matt DeBergalis about Meteor.js.




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148 JSJ i.cx and EveryBit.js with Matt Asher and Dann Toliver

02:24 - Dann Toliver Introduction

02:35 - Matt Asher Introduction

02:51 - EveryBit.js and I.CX

03:43 - Architecture

06:54 - Sustainability and The Pieces of the System

21:56 - Decentralization

25:20 - Audience: Why Should I Care?

27:38 - Getting Started: Nuts and Bolts

  • Frontend Agnostic
  • Storage and Performance
  • Users and Data Management
    • Payload Properties
    • Metadata
    • Graph Database
      • Adding New Relationships
      • Adding Heuristics
      • Resource Allocator Component
        • Local Storage
        • RAM

34:55 - Scaling and Server Cost

36:23 - Cloud Storage and Management (Security & Trust)

47:22 - Implementing Cryptographic Primitives

55:13 - The Firefox Sync Tool Project

Picks

[Twitch.tv] Kylelandrypiano (Jamison)
"Visualizing Persistent Data Structures" by Dann Toliver (Jamison)
Probability and Statistics Blog (Jamison)
Seeed Studio (Tim)
Adafruit Industries (Tim)
SparkFun Electronics (Tim)
American Sniper by Chris Kyle, Scott McEwen, and Jim DeFelice (Chuck)
Introducing Relay and GraphQL (Dann)
The Clojurescript Ecosystem (Dann)
Read-Eval-Print-λove (Dann)
React Native (Matt)




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182 JSJ RxJS with Matthew Podwysocki

02:19 - Matthew Podwysocki Introduction

04:01 - RxJS

10:18 - Practical Experience of Use

  • Observables

17:28 - observable-spec

21:43 - Observables and Promises

25:06 - Using RxJS in Common Frameworks

27:53 - Are there places where observables might not be better than callbacks/Promises?

29:16 - Why would someone use RxJS on the backend in place of Node streams?

32:28 - Are Promises dying?

36:13 - Observable Gotchas

  • Hot vs Cold Observables

40:29 - Influence

47:47 - Will observables in ES2016 replace RxJS?

Picks

A cartoon guide to Flux (Aimee)
Promisees (Aimee)
The Dear Hunter - Act IV Rebirth in Reprise (Jamison)
Jessie Char: Expert On Nothing @ NSConf7 (Jamison)
XHR Breakpoints (Dave)
Glove and Boots (Dave)
Computer Programming (Joe)
Evan Czaplicki’s Thesis for Elm (Joe)
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho (Chuck)
thaliproject (Matthew)
BBC Micro Bit (Matthew)
Minutemen (Matthew)




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234 JSJ JAMStack with Brian Douglas and Matt Christensen

1:00 Intro to guests Brian Douglas and Matt Christensen

2:20 Definition of JAMStack

8:12 JAMStack and confusion over nomenclature

12:56 JAMStack and security, reliability and performance

17:05 Example of traffic spike for company Sphero

18:26 Meaning of hyperdynamic

20:35 Future and limits of JAMStack technology

26:01 Controlling data and APIs versus using third parties

28:10 Netlify.com and JAMStack

31:16 APIs, JavaScript framework and libraries recommended to start building on JAMStack

35:13 Resources and examples of JAMStack: netlify.comNetlify blogJAMStack radioJAMStack SF Meetup

QUOTES:

“I think in the next couple of years we’re going to see the limits being pushed a lot for what you can do with this.” - Matt

“Today we’re starting to see really interesting, really large projects getting built with this approach.” - Matt

“If you can farm 100% of your backend off to third parties, I feel like that really limits a lot of the interesting things you can do as a developer.” - Brian

PICKS:

Early History of Smalltalk (Jamison)

React Rally 2016 videos (Jamison)

FiveStack.computer (Jamison)

Falsehoods programmers believe about time (Aimee)

Nodevember conference (Aimee)

48 Days Podcast (Charles)

Fall of Hades by Richard Paul Evans (Charles)

Jon Benjamin Jazz (Brian)

RailsConf 2016 (Brian)

React Native (Brian)

Book of Ye Podcast (Brian)

Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson (Matt)

Sequoia Capital website

Sphero website

Isomorphic rendering on the Jam Stack by Phil Hawksworth

SPONSORS:

Front End Masters

Hired.com




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235 JSJ JavaScript Devops and Tools with Donovan Brown and Jordan Matthiesen

00:50 Intro to guests Donovan Brown and Jordan Matthiesen

1:14 Javascript and Devops

3:49 Node JS and integrating with extensions

11:16 Learning Javascript coming from another language

15:21 Visual Studio Team Services at Microsoft, integration and unit testing

25:10 Visual Studio Code and mobile development

  • Apache Cordova open source project

31:45 TypeScript and tooling

33:03 Unit test tools and methods

38:39 ARM devices and integration

QUOTES:

“It’s not impossible, it’s just a different set of challenges.” - Donovan Brown

“Devops is the union of people, process and products to enable continuous delivery of value to your end users” - Donovan Brown

“Apps start to feel more native. They can actually get form.” - Jordan Matthiesen

PICKS:

Veridian Dynamics (AJ)

Jabberwocky Video (AJ)

Hard Rock Cafe - Atlanta (Charles)

CES (Charles)

3D printers (Donovan)

High-Yield Vegetable Gardening (Jordan)

taco.visualstudio.com

Jordan on Twitter @jmatthiesen

Visualstudio.com

Donovanbrown.com

Donovan on Twitter @donovanbrown

SPONSORS:

Front End Masters

Hired.com




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MJS #029 Matt Creager

MJS 029: Matt Creager

On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned!

[01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager

Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show.

[01:35] – How did you get into programming?

Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally.

His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14.

The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash.

Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team.

When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community.

[13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript

Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript.

[15:30] – Hackathon

On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up.

Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s.

[18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community

When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase.

And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project.

[20:50] – What are you working on now?

Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app.

Picks

Matt Creager

Charles Max Wood




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JSJ 282: Trails.js with Scott Wyatt

Panel:

Joe Amies

Aimee Knight

Charles Max Wood

Cory House

Special Guests: 

Scott Wyatt

In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers talk with Scott Wyatt. Scott is the Co-founder, CTO, UEX at Cali StyleTechnologies, and is a Node developer and graphic designer.  Scott is on JavaScript Jabber to talk about Trails.js. and its simplistic build, but many useful functions.

Scott mentions that Trails.js was created by Travis Webb. Scott gives us an introduction to the Trails.js framework, as the Jabbers take apart and dive deep into the build, functions, and uses.  Scott goes into what trail packs are, and the similar or related projects. Scott talks about the ease of using trails to build with, and not ending up in frustration.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Trails.js is Node Framework and lightweight or Blueprint
  • Similar to Redux?
  • Is it MVC like Rails
  • You don’t need to understand it, it is all under the hood.
  • Tuple Space
  • Is this sole for server-side rendering?
  • Closest projects - Sails
  • Avoid problems like React.
  • Not dealing with corporations
  • Why would you want to use trails instead of other projects like Sails, rails, etc.
  • How do you get started - trailjs.io
  • Quickest way to learn Trails is to build a Trail Pack
  • Don’t be afraid to kill you darlings
  • Testing
  • It Trails production ready?
  • It is a particular type of app where Trails shines?

Links

trailsjs.io

Travis Webb

Picks

Amy

Joe

Charles

Cory

Scott




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JSJ BONUS: Cloud Services and Manifold with Matthew Creager and Peter Cho

Panel:

Amiee Knight

Charles Max Wood

Joe Eames

Special Guests: 

Matthew Creager and Peter Cho

In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with Matthew Ceager and Peter Cho. Matthew and Peter are part of the team at Manifold. Manifold is a marketplace for developer services. Matthew takes care of growth and relations, and Peter oversee products at Manifold.

The panel discusses with Peter and Matthew what Manifold does and the benefits of a Cloud Service. Matthew gives perspective on how developers can get their cloud product on the market compared to open source.  Further discussion goes into how this will help the developer to get their products or services turned into a business quicker and save time  Also learn about when it is the ideal time to move to cloud services vs. running a server yourself.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Different kinds of definition of Cloud Services
  • Anything you would rely on as a third party service
  • What is the cloud service ecosystem - Services that connect to an application
  • Independent market place -  because it is difficult to turn a product into a business
  • Where are people using cloud services or running their own server
  • Spinning up a version of it is easier.
  • Time verses doing it yourself?
  • Experts running the services
  • Focusing on your product instead of managing the server and such
  • Where does the data live and who has access to that?
  • Lock In’s?
  • Tourist - Credentials management
  • How do I get this setup? Command Line or register online
  • And much more!

Links:

Manifold

https://github.com/mattcreager

@manifoldco

@etcpeter

@matt_creager

blog.manifold.com

Picks:

Amiee

  • Ryan McDermott

Charles

Joe

Matt

Peter




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MJS 048: JC Hiatt

Panel: Charles Max Wood

Guest: JC Hiatt

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with JC Hiatt. JC is a 25-year-old software consultant from Jackson, Mississippi. He first got into programming in the 7th grade when he had the desire to create a website. He has since done a lot of work with WordPress, helped to found DevLifts, and much more. Now, he is doing a lot of little things to help make an impact on the programming world, including running multiple podcasts and creating tutorials for new programmers.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

Links: 

Picks

JC

Charles




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JSJ 314: Visual Studio Code and the VS Code Azure Extension with Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver LIVE at Microsoft Build

Panel:

  • Charles Max Wood

Special Guests: Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver

In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber/Adventures In Angular, panelists discuss Visual Studio Code and the VS Code Azure Extension with Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver at Microsoft Build. Amanda is the director of program management at Microsoft working on Visual Studio and VS Code. Matt works on a mix between the Azure and the VS Code team, where he leads the effort to build the Azure extensions in VS code, trying to bring JavaScript developers to Azure through great experiences in VS Code. They talk about what’s new in VS Code, how the Azure extension works, what log points are, and much more!

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Amanda intro
  • Matt intro
  • What’s new in VS Code?
  • VS Code core
  • VS Live Share
  • Shared Terminal
  • Now have Linux support
  • Live Share is now public to the world for free
  • What would you use Shared Terminal for?
  • Are there other things coming up in VS Code?
  • Constantly responding to requests from the community
  • Live Share works for any language
  • How does the Azure extension work?
  • Azure App Service
  • Storage extension
  • Azure Cosmos DB
  • What are log points?
  • All a part of a larger plan to create a better experience for JS developers
  • Visual debuggers
  • Is it the same plugin to support everything on Azure?
  • Want to target specific services that node developers will take advantage of
  • And much, much more!

Links:

Picks:

Charles

Matt

Amanda




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JSJ 316: Visual Studio Code with Rachel MacFarlane and Matt Bierner LIVE at Microsoft Build

Panel:

  • Charles Max Wood

Special Guests: Rachel MacFarlane and Matt Bierner

In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss Visual Studio Code with Rachel MacFarlane and Matt Bierner, who are both developers on Visual Studio Code. They talk about what the workflow at Visual Studio Code looks like, what people can look forward to coming out soon,  and how people can follow along the VS Code improvements on GitHub and Twitter. They also touch on their favorite extensions, like the Docker extension and the Azure extension and their favorite VS Code features.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Rachel and Matt intro
  • Month to month workflow of Visual Studio Code
  • VS Code JavaScript, TypeScript, and Mark Down support
  • Working on GitHub and within the community
  • Check out new features incrementally with insiders
  • Community driven work
  • What is coming out in Visual Studio Code?
  • GitHub helps to determine what they work on
  • Working on Grid View
  • Improved settings UI
  • Highlighting unused variables in your code
  • Improvements with JS Docs
  • Dart
  • Visual Studio Extension API
  • How do people follow along with the VS Code improvements?
  • Follow along on GitHub and Twitter
  • Download VS Code Insiders
  • Have a general road map of what the plan is for the year
  • Technical debt week
  • What do you wish people knew about VS Code?
  • Favorite extensions
  • Docker extension and Azure extension
  • And much, much more!

Links:

Sponsors

Picks:

Charles

Rachel

Matt




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MJS 074: Scott Wyatt

Panel: Charles Max Wood

 

Guest: Scott Wyatt

 

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Scott Wyatt. Scott is a VC partner and is the CTO at Cali Style Technologies, works with startups, and was the CTO of the Dollar Beard Club. He first got into programming because his dad was a computer programmer and he really got hooked from a young age writing games and playing on the computer. They talk about the benefit of not living in the hustle and bustle of California and the Silicon Valley, how he got into JavaScript, what was it about JavaScript that hooked him, and more!

 

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • JavaScript Jabber Episode 282
  • Scott intro
  • Works remotely from Indiana
  • The pros to not living in Silicon Valley
  • How did you first get into programming?
  • Father was a computer programmer
  • Strong arts background
  • Started coding really young
  • How did you get into JavaScript?
  • Started out with ActionScript
  • JavaScript to jQuery
  • The cool part of having a diverse background as a programmer
  • What was it that got you into JavaScript?
  • Back-end JavaScript
  • Node.js
  • JavaScript is very versatile
  • How did you get into doing something like Trails.js?
  • Sails.js
  • Fabrix and TypeScript 
  • What have you done in JS that you are most proud of?
  • Partitioned apps
  • Contributing to freedom of information
  • What are you working on now?
  • And much, much more!

 

Links: 

 

Sponsors: 

 

Picks

Charles 

 

Scott




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JSJ 430: Learning JavaScript in 2020 with Matt Crook

JavaScript Remote Conf 2020

May 13th to 15th - register now!

Matt Crook joins the conversation to talk with the JavaScript Jabber panel to talk about his experience going through Nashville Software School. The panel discusses and asks questions about getting into programming, working through the bootcamp, and what prospects are for bootcamp graduates.

Panel

  • AJ O’Neal
  • Aimee Knight
  • Charles Max Wood
  • Steve Edwards
  • Dan Shappir

Guest

  • Matt Crook

Sponsors

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

 

Picks

AJ O’Neal:

Aimee Knight:

Charles Max Wood:

Steve Edwards:

Dan Shappir:

Matt Crook:

Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber




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The Yoruba diaspora in the Atlantic world [electronic resource] / edited by Toyin Falola and Matt D. Childs




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Youth programs as builders of social capital [electronic resource] / Matthew Calvert, Mary Emery, Sharon Kinsey, issue editors




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Blood Pressure Patterns in Young Adulthood and Cardiovascular Disease and Mortality in Middle Age

This cohort study assesses whether long-term variability and rate of change of blood pressure from young adulthood to midlife are associated with cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality by middle age.




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As P Chidambaram and Yashwant Sinha duke it out, at least it's on issues that matter

As polls come closer arrows are flying thicker, faster, sharper. Some are of time-honoured design, others quite modern. Included in the first category is flaming a party leader as communal or dissing her for being in the Italians’ pocket.




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[ASAP] Universal Gelation of Metal Oxide Nanocrystals via Depletion Attractions

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01311




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

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




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[ASAP] In Liquid Infrared Scattering Scanning Near-Field Optical Microscopy for Chemical and Biological Nanoimaging

Nano Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01291




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Marine geochemistry : ocean circulation, carbon cycle and climate change / Matthieu Roy-Barman and Catherine Jeandel

Roy-Barman, Matthieu, author




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The nature state : rethinking the history of conservation / edited by Wilko Graf von Hardenberg, Matthew Kelly, Claudia Leal and Emily Wakild




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Hydrology and best practices for managing water resources in arid and semi-arid lands / Christopher Misati Ondiekiand, Kenyatta Universiity, Johnson U. Kitheka, South Eastern Kenya University, Kenya




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Microplastic contamination in aquatic environments : an emerging matter of environmental urgency / edited bu Eddy Y. Zeng




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Freshwater ecology : concepts and environmental applications of limnology / Walter K. Dodds, Matt R. Whiles

Dodds, Walter K. (Walter Kennedy), 1958- author




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Principles of nanotechnology : molecular-based study of condensed matter in small systems / G. Ali Mansoori

Mansoori, G. A. (G. Ali)




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What is nanotechnology and why does it matter? : from science to ethics / Fritz Allhoff, Patrick Lin, and Daniel Moore

Allhoff, Fritz




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Antietam and the Battles of 1862

Speaker: 
James M. McPherson
Stephen W. Sears
Harold Holzer (moderator)
Thu, 05/12/2011 - 18:30
Thu, May 12th, 2011 | 7:30 pm

Price: 
$20
Members price: 
$10
Buy Tickets URL: 
http://tix.smarttix.com/Modules/Sales/SalesMainTabsPage.aspx?ControlState=1&DateSelected=&DiscountCode=&SalesEventId=874&DC=
Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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Why Brandeis Matters

Speaker: 
Jeffrey Rosen
Frederick M. Lawrence (Moderator)
Mon, 03/21/2011 - 18:30
Mon, March 21st, 2011 | 7:30 pm

Price: 
$20
Members price: 
$10
Relating Tags: 
Buy Tickets URL: 
http://tix.smarttix.com/Modules/Sales/SalesMainTabsPage.aspx?ControlState=1&DateSelected=&DiscountCode=&SalesEventId=862&DC=
Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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Acts : a commentary / by Richard I. Pervo ; edited by Harold W. Attridge

Pervo, Richard I., author




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Matthew's new David at the end of exile : a socio-rhetorical study of Scriptural quotations / by Nicholas G. Piotrowski

Piotrowski, Nicholas G., author




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A companion to the New Testament. Paul and the Pauline letters / Matthew L. Skinner

Skinner, Matthew L., 1968- author




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Jude on the attack : a comparative analysis of the epistle of Jude, Jewish judgement oracles, and Greco-Roman invective / Alexandra Robinson

Robinson, Alexandra, author




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Reading dreams : an audience-critical approach to the dreams in the Gospel of Matthew / Derek S. Dodson

Dodson, Derek S., author,




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Gospel of pseudo-Matthew. English




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Matthew, disciple and scribe : the first Gospel and its portrait of Jesus / Patrick Schreiner

Schreiner, Patrick, author




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Paul and the rhetoric of reversal in 1 Corinthians : the impact of Paul's gospel on his macro-rhetoric / Matthew R. Malcolm

Malcolm, Matthew R., 1975- author




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Festschrift Pieter Verster / guest editor, Dr. G. van der Watt




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3D flower-like molybdenum disulfide modified graphite felt as a positive material for vanadium redox flow batteries

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17235-17246
DOI: 10.1039/D0RA02541K, Paper
Open Access
  This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Lei Wang, Shuangyu Li, Dan Li, Qinhao Xiao, Wenheng Jing
The open flower-like structure facilitates vanadium ion transport. The capacity and efficiency of a battery using MoS2/GF are dramatically increased.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry