done Shraddha does something she has NEVER DONE BEFORE By www.rediff.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Mar 2020 17:02:02 +0530 'I have to pinch myself to believe that 10 years have just gone by.' Full Article
done Proceedings of the Symposium on Biomathematics (SYMOMATH) 2018: conference date, 31 August-2 September 2018: location, Depok, Indonesia / editors, Hengki Tasman, Bevina Desjwiandra Handari and Hiromi Seno By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 9 Jun 2019 07:10:36 EDT Online Resource Full Article
done Talking Pictures | The Blue Lava of Indonesia By www.wired.com Published On :: Thu, 28 Jan 2016 12:00:00 +0000 Photographer and filmmaker Reuben Wu narrates a selection of his images documenting the amazing blue 'lava" that flows across the sulfurous landscape of Kawah Ijen Crater on Java, Indonesia. Full Article
done Talking from 9 to 5 : how women's and men's conversational styles affect who gets heard, who gets credit, and what gets done at work / Deborah Tannen By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Tannen, Deborah Full Article
done Volcanoes and earthquakes: a guide to our unquiet earth / Chiara Maria Petrone, Roberto Scandone, Alex Whittaker By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 08:26:55 EST Dewey Library - QE521.2.P48 2019 Full Article
done The Most Rewarding Research I’ve Ever Done… By www.mathematica.org Published On :: Thu, 23 Jan 2020 18:57:00 Z In 2013, I led a team of researchers who traveled to Minnesota, Kansas, and Missouri for a series of in-depth interviews with fathers for the Parents and Children Together (PACT) evaluation. Full Article
done Evaluation for class 10, 12 board exams to be done at home by teachers By timesofindia.indiatimes.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 18:06:04 IST The evaluation for class 10, 12 board exams will be done by teachers at their homes and 3,000 schools have been identified as exam centres to deliver the answer sheets to them, Union HRD minister Ramesh Pokhriyal 'Nishank' said on Saturday. He said 1.5 crore answer sheets of already conducted class 10, 12 exams will be delivered to teachers. Full Article
done [ASAP] Rh(I)-Catalyzed C6-Selective Decarbonylative Alkylation of 2-Pyridones with Alkyl Carboxylic Acids and Anhydrides By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Organic LettersDOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01277 Full Article
done Rest: why you get more done when you work less / Alex Soojung-Kim Pang By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 6 Oct 2019 06:45:03 EDT Browsery QP301.P336 2018 Full Article
done Jobs To Be Done By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T14:30:00+00:00 In this chapter, you’ll learn about these plays: How to create a jobs-driven roadmapUsing job stories to solve specific design problemsHow to architect the structure of a solutionTesting assumptions directed by JTBD A software company I once worked for held what were called “hackweeks” once a quarter. This was a time for developers to work on “whatever they wanted,” as it was framed. Give engineers time to play around with technology, and they’re bound to find the next innovation, or so the theory went. Hackweek was a big deal for us. Dozens of people organized it, and every developer in the company stopped work to contribute to the effort. It was costly, but we were committed to hackweek. After all, new software offerings come from new development, right? Here’s how it went: small teams formed to cobble together starter projects representing the use of some new technology. At the end of the week, a panel judged the dozens of concepts that emerged, and the winning “solutions” were rewarded. But in our case, hackweek was like shooting a shotgun in the wrong direction while blindfolded and hoping to hit the target. The result was inevitably a collection of concepts looking for a problem to solve. It was innovation theater at its best. To be fair, not all hackathons are bad. Some organizations coordinate hackathons with strategic imperatives or with customer needs. And sure, it’s also good to flex creative muscles and practice collaboration across teams. But given their cost and imprecision, hackathons are often largely ineffective in producing usable concepts. The problem is not a lack of ideas—companies are usually swimming in them. Like ours, many organizations have a Darwinistic outlook on innovation: generate more and more ideas, and the best will surely rise to the top. Said another way, when looking for a needle in a haystack, the best approach is rarely to add more hay. The problem is knowing which ideas to pursue. The goal of innovation activities shouldn’t be to collect as many ideas as possible, but instead to get to the right ideas—the ones that matter most to the people you serve. But more than that, the real challenge is in overcoming the natural forces in organizations that keep good ideas down. Chief among these is uncertainty, a leading deterrent to innovation. New ideas are a gamble for risk-averse managers, even if well-expressed in a high-fidelity prototype. JTBD provides a way to increase your chances of success by first identifying the right problem to solve. Then JTBD gives you decision-making criteria for moving forward: bet on solutions that address unmet needs to create profitable differentiation. Focus first on getting the main job done for the individual and fulfilling their needs in relation to the job. From this perspective, hackathons and other idea-generating efforts can be framed by JTBD as both inputs and outputs in terms of how concepts are evaluated. After understanding the job landscape and defining the value you’re going after, you can continue using JTBD thinking to align teams around the design of your solution. Create a roadmap based on your JTBD landscape to set a common direction. Then use job stories to get everyone on the same page and tie local design efforts to the big picture and to architect the solution structure. JTBD can also guide the experiments you conduct to test your team’s assumptions. Create a Development Roadmap At its highest level, a roadmap is a sequence of development events—the relative chronological order in which features and capabilities will be built. Roadmaps serve as a central point of reference for teams to align their efforts. They show the path forward without defining individual tasks. In the age of Agile and Lean efforts, roadmaps have gotten a bad reputation. People are quick to point out—and rightfully so—that long-term plans inevitably fail: priorities change, unforeseen challenges arise, and timelines slip. The solution, they might argue, is to have no long-term plans and to work on short initiatives with the flexibility to change as needed. But while providing decision-making power to local development teams makes sense, overall alignment is still needed. An alternative way of viewing roadmaps is to see them not as a definitive project plan, but as a vision of how you’ll create an offering that customers will value. Roadmaps are not unchanging predictions of future activity, but a way to provide transparency for the sequence of steps your team will take to design solutions. The information in a roadmap helps the entire organization get aligned, not just developers. It’s a strategic communication tool reflecting intention and direction. More importantly, road mapping isn’t just about the artifact: it’s about getting a common understanding of where you’re headed. In this sense, the roadmap occupies the space between the vision and detailed project planning. JTBD can help create roadmaps that focus on the value that the organization intends to create and deliver for customers. The trick is to get the right problem to solve. Use the insights from your JTBD investigation to formulate roadmaps that are grounded in real customer need. Mapping the Road Ahead For a concrete approach to road mapping, I recommend the book Product Roadmaps Relaunched by C. Todd Lombardo, Bruce McCarthy, Evan Ryan, and Michael Conners.[1] In it, the authors clearly articulate the steps to creating meaningful product roadmaps. JTBD plays a key role in aligning to customer needs, as the authors write: “We recommend starting with the chunks of value you intend to deliver that will build up over time to accomplish your visions. Often this is a set of high-level customer needs, problems, or jobs to be done.” Their approach breaks down the four key elements of a good product roadmap: Product vision: The vision outlines how your customers will benefit from your offering. How will the job performer benefit from the solution? What will getting the job done look like after the solution is in place?Business objectives: A roadmap must be aligned with the organization’s strategy and objectives. The goals of the business are important for measuring progress.Timefames: Rather than committing to specific dates, good roadmaps sequence work and set broad timelines for completion.Themes: These are the key problems that customers face when completing a job, or clusters of needs that align to the overall solution to be created. JTBD helps frame the themes of your roadmap in particular. Figure 5.1 shows an example from their book of a basic roadmap overview for a fictional company, The Wombatter Hose, illustrating these main components. Note the disclaimer, as well, indicating that the roadmap is subject to change. Figure 5.1: An example of the main components of a roadmap from the book Product Roadmaps Relaunched.2 Putting it all together, the process for creating a JTBD-driven roadmap can be broken down into four phases. Step 1: Define the solution direction. Define the various elements of your overall product strategy to get agreement on how you’ll be using them. In addition to your solution vision, also define the following together with the team: Mission: What are your business intentions? The mission is about what your organization wants to ultimately achieve.Values: What are your beliefs and ideals? What is the philosophy of your organization and solution? Values define the philosophy of the team and what it believes.Business objectives: What are the specific goals your offerings will accomplish for the organization? Frame these in terms of outcomes, not outputs. Step 2: Determine customer needs to pursue. Next, decide on the customer needs to pursue. Here, the authors of Product Roadmaps Relaunched stress the importance of grounding the roadmap in actual customer need. JTBD is central to this step. They write: “Identifying customer needs is the most important aspect of your roadmapping process. Roadmaps should be about expressing those customer needs. Therefore, most items on your roadmap will derive from a job the customer needs to accomplish or a problem the customer must solve.” As outlined in Chapter 2, “Core Concepts of JTBD,” needs are hierarchical—from high-level aspirations to main jobs and sub-jobs to micro-jobs. Figure out the top-level jobs to explore and then drill down into the specific themes to target. The “value themes,” as they are called, might come right from the job map. Locate the areas of highest underserved needs and use those stages as the categories of your roadmap themes. Or you can cluster needs to form themes that don’t necessarily follow the chronology of the job map. The important point is to ground the division of the roadmap in real-world observations of the customer’s job to be done and align the timeline to it. Step 3: Set a timeline. Next, create a sequence of value themes that your team will work toward. Timelines can be absolute, relative, or a mix of both. Absolute timelines with specific dates carry the risk of changing, which, in turn, can cause confusion or missed expectations. Relative timelines give more flexibility but still provide insight into what’s coming and why. There are various terms to use, but the timeline is often broken into three phases for near-term, mid-term, and long-term. Examples include “now, later, future” or “going, next, later” or something similar. Find what works best for you. Step 4: Align development effort to the roadmap. Finally, conceptualize specific solutions to design and create. Use job stories to tie the overall project intent to customer needs, outlined in the next section. Then conceptualize solutions around getting the entire job done or the parts of it determined to be most strategically relevant to your business. After a roadmap is created, you may then need detailed project plans to track progress. A simple Kanban board can serve that purpose in many cases. Or, for more complex software development efforts, tracking software may be needed. In Agile efforts, epic planning and then sprint planning come after you have an overall roadmap. Tying the overall plan to customer needs gives the design and development teams the feeling that they are building something that matters to customers. Staying focused on customer needs helps avoid building things your customers don’t want. The nature of a job stays the same, even as features may shift. Grounding the roadmap in JTBD ensures that both its longevity and ability to absorb will change. Learn More About This Play Lombardo, C. Todd, Bruce McCarthy, Evan Ryan, and Michael Conners.[3] Product Roadmaps Relaunched. Sebastopol, CA:O’Reilly, 2018. This book distills a wealth of practical information into a compact guide on roadmapping. The authors go to great lengths to provide numerous examples and stories from real-world cases. They use a realistic, modern approach for creating a roadmap that is driven, in part, by JTBD. Align Teams to Job Stories Agile development enables teams and organizations to work in a flexible way. The approach started in software development, but has spread to other domains, including government and the military. The principles of Agile development can apply to just about any field. A key part of Agile is to break down efforts into individual units of work. User stories are short descriptions of features and functionality written from the perspective of the end user. Teams can focus on only a small part of the whole and make progress in a controlled way. User stories are commonly written in a three-part format. The first element indicates a user’s role in the system. The second points to a capability that enables the person to get a task done. The last part often describes a benefit or reason for using the capability. Although specific styles can vary, a typical user story resembles something like the following: As a <role> I can <capability>, so that <benefit> Examples of use stories in this format include: As a system admin, I can specify files or folders to back up based on file size, date created, and date modified.As a user, I can indicate folders not to back up so that my drive isn't filled up with things I don't need to be saved.As a user, I want to update the name of a document so that I can categorize it. For any given system, there may be hundreds of user stories. Some can be quite granular, such as describing a single button and why a user would click it. Stories are then organized into a backlog or repository of functionality to be built. Teams break off logical groups of user stories in sprints or two- to four-week cycles of work. Job Stories Although user stories are good for breaking down work, they typically fail to connect the solution being built with user needs. They lack an indication of why someone would behave in a certain way and what they need to get a job done. In fact, often user stories are derived from the capability being built, not from observing actual behavior. Job stories are an alternative to user stories. They follow the tradition of breaking down efforts into smaller pieces, but through the JTBD lens. The technique was first pioneered by the product development team at Intercom, a leading marketing communications solution. They wanted to avoid leading designers with a preconceived solution, as well as tying development to the company vision and strategy. Paul Adams, an Intercom product manager, wrote about job stories for the first time, saying: “We frame every design problem in a Job, focusing on the triggering event or situation, the motivation and goal, and the intended outcome.”[4] As a result, their job story format also has three parts. But instead of focusing on a generic role, like a “user” or an “admin,” job stories begin with a highlight on the situation and context, not the individual: When [situation], I want to [motivation], so I can [expected outcome]. Examples of job stories include: When an important new customer signs up, I want to be notified so that I can start a conversation with that person.When I visit someone’s profile page, I want to see how many posts they have in each topic so that I have an understanding of where they have the most knowledge.When I have used the application multiple times, I get nudged to contribute so that I am encouraged to participate. JTBD author and leader Alan Klement has done the most work refining the job story format.[5] He believes that adding more information about the circumstances shows causality better. Focusing on the context shifts attention from a persona to the situation. Klement advises that you avoid writing vague situations, but instead be as specific as possible. For instance, consider these three possible situations for the first element of job stories: When I’m hungry…When I’m lost…When I want to check my email… Instead, Klement recommends describing the circumstances in rich detail: When I’m hungry, running late to get somewhere, not sure when I’m going to eat again, and worried that I’ll soon be tired and irritable from hunger…When I’m lost in a city that I’ve never been to, don’t know the local language, and am worried that I’ll be wasting my time in places I don’t want to be in…When I want to check my email, but don’t want anyone around me to know I’m checking my email because they’ll think I’m being rude… Each of these example situations provides more context for designing an appropriate solution. Working with Job Stories Job stories are modular, giving designers and developers the flexibility to solve problems in alternative ways. Job stories are grounded in real-world insight, and they are more powerful than user stories in guiding solutions. But creating job stories is more free-form than other JTBD techniques. Still, there are patterns that you can follow. Using the elements from Chapter 2, I suggest the following structure for job stories: When I [circumstance + job stage/step], I want to [micro-job], so I can [need]. Examples: When I am one of the top posters while updating my social media feeds daily, I want it to show on my profile so that I can increase recognition as an expert on the subject.When I run out of materials needed while completing an art project, I want to find alternative materials so that I can maximize the number of uses of my current supplies.When preparing for my commute and running late, I want to know the current weather along my journey so that I can minimize the chance of arriving wet. Consider the last example. The first element combines information about the circumstances (running late) of getting the main job done (commute to work) within a stage of the process (prepare for commute). The second element points to an even smaller step or micro-job (check forecast). It should be formulated without reference to specific technology, but should be specific enough for designers and developers to create a specific capability. Finally, the last element can be taken right from your list of needs. In this case, the job performer (commuter) wants to avoid showing up to the office wet (minimize the chance of arriving at work wet). You can leverage the elements your JTBD landscape already uncovered in research directly in the formulation of the job story statements. In researching this book, I’ve come across various alternative approaches to formulating job stories. Andrea Hill, a prominent advocate of JTBD on social media, suggests a slightly different approach. She sees the middle element pointing directly to a feature or solution of some kind, thus explicitly crossing from the problem space into the solution space. Her basic format is as follows: When I [circumstance], I want to [solution capability], so I can [need]. A job story for the previous example of commuting to work might then look like this: When I’m preparing to commute to work, I want to have weather forecast notifications pushed to my phone, so I can minimize the chance of arriving wet. Steph Troeph, research and JTBD instructor in the UK, approaches job stories in yet another way. She thinks of them with this formula: When I [circumstance], I want to [job], so that [benefit a solution offers]. Regardless of your interpretation, the key is to find a consistent structure and stick with it. The form you end up with needs to be appropriate to your team and your situation. Jobs Stories in Action Ultimately, job stories tie a local design and development effort to a broader JTBD framework. Because the format of job stories includes contextual details, they are portable. In other words, a job story should make sense without having to know the larger JTBD landscape or job map. As a result, job stories have a more “plug-and-play” versatility that is often required for Agile designs and development teams. For instance, Agile planners can manage a backlog of job stories much in the same way that they would manage user stories. If a given sprint gets slowed down or changes direction, stories not addressed can be carried over to the next sprint. Having a smaller, self-contained description of the smaller job to be done has advantages during the design and development phases. But to be clear: I have found that job stories typically do not replace user stories for development completely. Instead, job stories guide and frame the conceptualization of a solution rather than track implementation. They serve best as a design tool to create or determine concept direction and design. Developers and engineers will likely still need user stories to measure the burndown rate and overall progress. Your job map provides an overall orientation to your JTBD landscape and allows you to zero in on a specific area for design and development. A roadmap gives you a high-level sequence of development with the rationale for planning activities. Job stories are more specific and guide the local design and development of features and capabilities. Follow these steps to create job stories based on your JTBD research: Step 1: Understand job stages and circumstances. Base the relevant jobs and circumstances on previous interviews and observations. For each area of development in your solution, consider the steps in the main job. Then drill down and list the smaller and smaller steps as micro-jobs, using the rules of formulating JTBD. Also identify the circumstances that apply to that part of the main job in particular. Depending on the depth of your prior research and how well you and your team understand the job, you may not need to do more research to create and validate job stories. It’s never a bad idea to speak with people again and drill down on specific problems and objectives they have. During additional interviews, ask “how?” until you get more granular in understanding of subgoals and objectives. Step 2: Formulate job stories. As a team, write job stories that are specific to your design and development effort. Decide on a consistent format for the job stories and stick to it. Strive to come up with unique, mutually exclusive stories that target specific jobs and circumstances. Avoid redundancy. For instance, in the previous example, you probably don’t need separate stories for commuting by train versus commuting by car. Develop the job stories that matter the most and focus on a limited set. You may end up with anywhere from three to eight job stories per project or sprint. Step 3: Solve for the job stories. Make job stories visible and transparent to the entire team to solve for the job stories. For instance, post a relevant list of job stories in a brainstorming session for everyone to see. Or list job stories at the beginning of a design critique so that the team has context for making comments. Use JTBD to guide design and development decisions. It’s also possible to then use the job stories to review the appropriateness of your solutions. First, the design team can use the job stories relevant to a project as heuristics. They should constantly ask if their designs are meeting the user’s goals set out in the job stories. Then you can test solutions with users against the job stories. Show users your solutions (e.g., as a mock-up or prototype) and ask them how well each addresses the job stories. This can be done in an interview-style fashion or with a survey. The job stories ultimately become a measure for success of the designs before anything is built. Job stories let you take a step back and look at the context of the job while designing a product or service. In this respect, job stories fill an important gap between the observations of customers and solution development, connecting insights into customer needs to individual features and development efforts. Related Approaches: Needs Statements Design thinking is a broad framework for creative problem solving. It is rooted in human-centered methods that seek to develop deep empathy for people and then to devise solutions that meet their needs. In design thinking, it is important to define the problem to solve before generating options for solutions. One technique to encapsulate insights from research is to generate need statements, greatly resembling job stories in form. But these statements differ from “needs,” as defined in Chapter 2, in that need statements in design thinking are not specifically limited to the outcomes of a getting a main job done, and they can be aspirational in nature. Need statements in design thinking also tend to be much more focused on a persona or an individual rather than the circumstances. For instance, writing for the Norman Nielsen Group, Sarah Gibbons refers to need statements representing a point-of-view for the user of a system:[6] “A user need statement is an actionable problem statement used to summarize who a particular user is, the user’s need, and why the need is important to that user.” Like job stories, need statements have three components: a user, a need, and a goal. The user corresponds to a goal-based persona based on research (as outlined in Chapter 4, “Defining Value”). A need is expressed independent of a feature or technology. The goal is the result of meeting the need. Gibbons provides an example: Alieda, a multitasking, tech-savvy mother of two, needs to quickly and confidently compare options without leaving her comfort zone in order to spend more time doing the things that really matter. Note that the insight at the end of this statement, “doing the things that really matter,” is very broad and hard to measure. Job stories, on the other hand, favor a more specific context and outcome. For instance, rewriting the above example through the lens of job stories might yield something like the following: When I’m multitasking and in a rush, I need a familiar way to quickly and confidently compare options so that I can minimize the time spent on finding a solution. Like need statements in design thinking, job stories also avoid the mention of features or technology. Yet, they are much more specific to a given job and its context. While both a need statement from design thinking and a job story can feed into the creative generation of solutions, job stories will provide more direct guidance without prescribing a solution. But the definition of a need in design thinking can vary greatly. For instance, IBM’s Enterprise Design Thinking approach also includes guidelines for generating statements.[7] Not surprisingly, there are three parts: a user, a need, and a benefit. Here’s an example from the IBM site: A developer needs a way to make sense of minimal design so that they can prototype faster. This example is much more specific than Gibbon’s approach, yet still avoids mentioning a specific solution. There are no aspirational elements, such as “pursuing lifelong dreams,” sometimes found elsewhere in design thinking. IBM’s approach to need statements is closer to the job story approach, but is also light on describing the circumstances of use. In some sense, the differences between job stories—even with the variations in format—and need statements points to a key distinction between JTBD and design thinking. The former focuses much more on the circumstances than the person’s state of mind or psychology. Where design thinking seeks to gain empathy for the individual as a starting point, JTBD seeks to understand the circumstances of accomplishing an objective before factoring in emotional and personal aspects. Learn More About This Play Klement, Alan. “Replacing the User Story with the Job Story.” JTBD.info (2013); “5 Tips for Writing a Job Story,” JTBD.info (2013); “Designing Features Using Job Stories,” Inside Intercom (2015). Klement has done the most extensive work to develop the job story technique. These three articles outline the basis for creating them. The technique has evolved slightly, but Klement points clearly to how he’s updated his approach. Klement and others have posted widely about their use for development efforts, but start with these resources. van de Keuken, Maxim. “Using Job Stories and Jobs-to-be-Done in Software Requirements Engineering.” Thesis, Utrecht University, 2017. This thesis project offers a detailed investigation of how job stories are applied to date. After illustrating the history of job stories, Van de Keuken presents the results of his original research variations in application of job stories as seen in practice. This work contributes greatly to making job stories a more formal part of software requirements engineering. Full Article
done Geospatial challenges in the 21st Century Kostis Koutsopoulos, Rafael de Miguel González, Karl Donert, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 17 Feb 2019 13:12:16 EST Online Resource Full Article
done Digitising early childhood / edited by Lelia Green, Donell Holloway, Kylie Stevenson and Kelly Jaunzems By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
done Innovative Science and Technology in Mechanical Engineering for Industry 4.0: Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Mechanical Engineering (ICOME2019): 28-29 August 2019, Yogyakarta, Indonesia / editors, Vivien [S.] Djanali, Fahmi Mubarok and By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 06:24:06 EST Online Resource Full Article
done Class and conflict in the Fishers' community in Indonesia Rilus A. Kinseng By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 16 Feb 2020 07:11:38 EST Online Resource Full Article
done Paper & Paperboard Industry Profile: Indonesia [electronic journal]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Marketline Full Article
done Mobile Apps Industry Profile: Indonesia [electronic journal]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Marketline Full Article
done Media Keperawatan Indonesia [electronic journal]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Universitas Muhammadiyah Semarang Full Article
done Indonesian Journal of Science and Mathematics Education [electronic journal]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Full Article
done The Indonesian Journal of Public Health [electronic journal]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Universitas Airlangga Full Article
done Energy Consumption Industry Profile: Indonesia [electronic journal]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Marketline Full Article
done Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Applied Chemistry 2019: 23-24 October 2019, Tangerang, Indonesia / editors, Osi Arutanti, Ahmad Randy and Muhammad Arifuddin Fitriady By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 08:26:55 EST Online Resource Full Article
done 3rd Biomedical Engineering's recent progress in biomaterials, drugs development, and medical devices: proceedings of the International Symposium of Biomedical Engineering (ISBE) 2018: conference date, 6-8 August 2018: location, Jakarta, Indonesia / ed By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 9 Jun 2019 06:15:08 EDT Online Resource Full Article
done The 4th Biomedical Engineering's Recent Progress in Biomaterials, Drugs Development, Health, and Medical Devices: Proceedings of the International Symposium of Biomedical Engineering (ISBE) 2019: 22-24 July 2019, Padang, Indonesia / editors, Kenny Lis By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 06:24:06 EST Online Resource Full Article
done [ASAP] Ternary Phase Diagrams for Systems Formed by Terephthalic Acid, <italic toggle="yes">p</italic>-Toluic Acid, and 4-Carboxybenzaldehyde in <italic toggle="yes">N</italic>-Methyl-2-Pyrrolidone By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Journal of Chemical & Engineering DataDOI: 10.1021/acs.jced.0c00154 Full Article
done The abandoned generation : democracy beyond the culture of fear / Henry A. Giroux By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Giroux, Henry A Full Article
done Indonesian journal of sustainability accounting and management (Online) By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
done [ASAP] Donepezil Inhibits Acetylcholinesterase via Multiple Binding Modes at Room Temperature By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Mar 2020 05:00:00 GMT Journal of Chemical Information and ModelingDOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.9b01073 Full Article
done Getting green done. Chinese By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Schendler, Auden Full Article
done EU agrees first part of coronavirus economic rescue, but job not done yet By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 04:13:22 +0530 Finance ministers of the 19-nation region signed off on the details of cheap, long-term credit lines that will be made available by the European Stability Mechanism Full Article International
done The army and the Indonesian genocide [electronic resource] : mechanics of mass murder / Jess Melvin By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Melvin, Jess, author Full Article
done MCC Indonesia Nutrition Project Impact Evaluation Final Report By www.mathematica.org Published On :: Mon, 09 Mar 2020 15:11:00 Z This report presents findings from a 5-year randomized control trial of a $120 million maternal and child health project in Indonesia funded by the Millennium Challenge Corporation. The project sought to improve stunting, along with a host of other pre-, postnatal, and early childhood health outcomes. Full Article
done Tropical wetlands: proceedings of the International Workshop on Tropical Wetlands - Innovation in Mapping and Management, October 19-20, 2018, Banjarmasin, Indonesia / edited by Yiyi Sulaeman, Laura Poggio, Budiman Minasny, Dedi Nursyamsi By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 07:45:28 EDT Online Resource Full Article
done European socialism: a concise history with documents / William Smaldone By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 08:09:28 EDT Dewey Library - HX236.5.S6293 2020 Full Article
done 129 JSJ BaaS with Ryan Done By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 08 Oct 2014 09:00:00 -0400 The panelists talk backends as a service with Ryan Done. Full Article
done 202 JSJ DoneJS + CanJS with Justin Meyer By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 09 Mar 2016 09:00:00 -0500 Check out and get your tickets for React Remote Conf! May 11th-13th, 2016. 02:30 - Justin Meyer Introduction Twitter GitHub Bitovi JavaScriptMVC 03:02 - DoneJS and CanJS @DoneJS @CanJS 05:44 - Versus Meteor 07:41 - Versus React Set Algebra 12:06 - Getting Started with DoneJS donejs.com/place-my-order.html 18:04 - Can <=> Done MVVM (Model–View–Viewmodel) Observables Pagination Preventing Loop Issues 25:39 - MVC => MVVM 28:24 - Flux vs MVVM 32:20 - Use Cases 39:19 - App Size StealJS Picks Beautiful Eyes Album by Taylor Swift (AJ) When Amazon Dies (AJ) PROTODOME (AJ) City Libraries (AJ) The Crucible of Doubt: Reflections On the Quest for Faith (AJ) Learn X in Y Minutes (Aimee) Which cat is your JavaScript framework? (Aimee) @johnpapa Tweet (Joe) SumoMe (Chuck) Drip (Chuck) 7 Wonders (Chuck) Shadow Hunters (Chuck) Calamity (The Reckoners) by Brandon Sanderson (Chuck) Staked (The Iron Druid Chronicles) by Kevin Hearne (Chuck) BB-8™ by Sphero (Justin) Hyperion Cantos Series (Justin) UtahJS (Justin) Full Article
done [ASAP] Iterative Catalysis in the Biosynthesis of Mitochondrial Complex II Inhibitors Harzianopyridone and Atpenin B By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 04:00:00 GMT Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c03438 Full Article
done The 11th Regional Conference on Chemical Engineering (RCChE 2018): conference date, 7-8 November 2018: location, Yogyakarta, Indonesia / editors, Teguh Ariyanto, Rochmadi, Imam Prasetyo and Nur Rofiqoh Eviana Putri By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 4 Aug 2019 06:48:40 EDT Online Resource Full Article
done Process hazard analysis handbook: you are holding a book for project managers, process designers, operators, engineers and decision makers in the oil and gas industry to make better decisions and get things done. This is a ... / written by Starr Tze By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 27 Oct 2019 06:20:31 EDT Online Resource Full Article
done Tablighi Jamaat: 10 Indonesian nationals granted bail By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 02:31:55 +0530 Mumbai civil and sessions court gives anticipatory bail to two others who are in quarantine Full Article Other States
done Stop complainers and energy drainers [electronic resource] : how to negotiate work drama to get more done / Linda Byars Swindling By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Swindling, Linda Byars, 1965- Full Article
done Which way forward? [electronic resource] : people, forests, and policymaking in Indonesia / edited by Carol J. Pierce Colfer and Ida Aju Pradnja Resosudarmo By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
done Sugar exports rise on weak rupee, strong demand from Indonesia, Iran By www.business-standard.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 02:32:00 +0530 Sugar mills have already dispatched 3.7 million tonnes out of around 4.1 million tonnes of contracts signed for exports in the 2019/20 marketing year ending on September 30 Full Article
done Pakistan PM Imran Khan contacts Indonesian President over Kashmir issue By Published On :: Monday, August 12, 2019, 20:21 +0530 Khan informed President Widodo that the state of Jammu and Kashmir remained under a complete clampdown and that there was a serious risk of innocent Kashmiris getting killed in large numbers as a result of enhanced repression by Indian security forces. Full Article
done The epidemiology of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 in chickens in poultry from West Timor, Indonesia By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Malo Bulu, Petrus, author Full Article
done An exploration of teachers’ beliefs on the integration of culture in teaching English as a foreign language in junior high schools in Minahasa/Indonesia / Embly Leilani Mumu By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Mumu, Embly Leilani, author Full Article
done Sovereignty and the sea : how Indonesia became an archipelagic state / John G. Butcher and R.E. Elson By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Butcher, John G., author Full Article
done Land & development in Indonesia : searching for the people's sovereignty / edited by John F. MacCarthy, Kathryn Robinson By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Indonesia Update Conference (33nd : 2015 : Australian National University), Full Article
done The political campaign industry and the emergence of social media in post-authoritarian Indonesian electoral politics / Muninggar Sri Saraswati By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Saraswati, Muninggar Sri, author Full Article
done Dilemmas of populist transactionalism : what are the prospects now for popular politics in Indonesia? / Luky Djani and Olle Törnquist, with Osmar Tanjung and Surya Tjandra By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Djani, Luky Djuniardi, author Full Article
done Reclaiming the state : mengatasi problem demokrasi di Indonesia pasca-Soeharto / penyunting: Amalinda Savirani, Olle Törnquist By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article