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International Yoga Day-15 Amazing Facts

International Day of Yoga- 15 Amazing Facts About Yoga You Probably Never Knew




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Golden Frames 2016 International Short Film Festival

Golden Frames 2016 - International Short Film Festival, Mumbai, India




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US Senators gave PM Modi standing Ovation

US Senators lined up to meet PM Modi and gave him standing Ovation. Video- Speech to US Congress




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Wellness is directly proportionate to your health insurance

How your wellness is directly proportionate to your health insurance premium?




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Light Snow and Breezy and 34 F at Buffalo, Greater Buffalo International Airport, NY

Winds are from the West at 20.7 gusting to 29.9 MPH (18 gusting to 26 KT). The pressure is 1014.8 mb and the humidity is 67%. The wind chill is 22. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:54 am EDT.




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Partly Cloudy and Breezy and 45 F at New York, Kennedy International Airport, NY


Winds are from the West at 23.0 gusting to 31.1 MPH (20 gusting to 27 KT). The pressure is 1011.3 mb and the humidity is 39%. The wind chill is 36. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:51 am EDT.




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Light Snow and 33 F at Watertown, Watertown International Airport, NY


Winds are from the West at 16.1 gusting to 20.7 MPH (14 gusting to 18 KT). The pressure is 1011.2 mb and the humidity is 75%. The wind chill is 22. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:56 am EDT.




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Overcast and Breezy and 33 F at Monticello, Sullivan County International Airport, NY


Winds are from the West at 23.0 gusting to 28.8 MPH (20 gusting to 25 KT). The pressure is 1010.8 mb and the humidity is 49%. The wind chill is 21. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:56 am EDT.




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Light Snow and Breezy and 36 F at Syracuse, Syracuse Hancock International Airport, NY

Winds are from the West at 24.2 gusting to 34.5 MPH (21 gusting to 30 KT). The pressure is 1012.0 mb and the humidity is 50%. The wind chill is 24. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:54 am EDT.




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Light Snow and Breezy and 33 F at Niagara Falls, Niagara Falls International Airport, NY

Winds are from the West at 23.0 gusting to 31.1 MPH (20 gusting to 27 KT). The pressure is 1015.7 mb and the humidity is 70%. The wind chill is 21. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:53 am EDT.




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Mostly Cloudy and Breezy and 41 F at Albany International Airport, NY


Winds are Northwest at 23.0 MPH (20 KT). The pressure is 1008.1 mb and the humidity is 35%. The wind chill is 31. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:51 am EDT.




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Zoetis Crowns National Sheep Shearing Champion in Ireland

What was once the inspiration of a few enthusiastic young farmers many years ago has grown into a global competition.




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Zoom Safe? How To Use Safely, Zoom Meetings, Hosting, Top Free Zoom Alternatives

Is Zoom safe or not? Latest Zoom updates here. Is Zoom safe to download? What are the best Zoom alternatives free? Here’s everything you need to know about Zoom and whether you should continue using Zoom or try a new video conferencing platform instead. We have answered all your queries here and compiled a full […]

The post Zoom Safe? How To Use Safely, Zoom Meetings, Hosting, Top Free Zoom Alternatives first appeared on Trak.in . Trak.in Mobile Apps: Android | iOS.




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Mostly Cloudy and 36 F at Massena, Massena International-Richards Field, NY


Winds are from the West at 11.5 gusting to 19.6 MPH (10 gusting to 17 KT). The pressure is 1008.2 mb and the humidity is 52%. The wind chill is 28. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:53 am EDT.




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A Few Clouds and 37 F at Plattsburgh International Airport , NY


Winds are from the West at 11.5 gusting to 19.6 MPH (10 gusting to 17 KT). The pressure is 1005.5 mb and the humidity is 50%. The wind chill is 29. Last Updated on May 9 2020, 11:53 am EDT.




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Creighton lands top international hoops prospect

Top international basketball prospect Rati Andronikashvili has committed to Creighton, he told ESPN on Thursday.




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[Football] Indian Football Equals Youth, Strength, and Determination

(LAWRENCE KS) As the sun set Saturday over Memorial Field, the Indians and Bacone College kicked off game four of Haskell Football's season. Athletes and fans were pulling for a win against our rival Warriors. The Indians came out hard and fought endlessly through the night, but in the end, it would be experience that would win the game.




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[Men's Cross Country] Nationals Sendoff for Men's and Women's Cross Country

Please join us at Wednesday, November 14, 8:30 am in Navarre Hall Regents room as we send our men's and qualifying women's cross country teams as they head to the National Championship in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.




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NHL, NHLPA cancel international games in 2020

The NHL has postponed its international games in 2020, the league and players' union announced in a joint statement on Friday.




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[Haskell Indians] Haskell Basketball Dominates Haskell Classic




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[Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Freshman Talisa Budder Qualifies for Track Nationals

In November 2011, Talisa Budder from Kenwood, OK qualified for the 2011 NAIA Women's Cross Country National Championships.  Upon her return to the Haskell campus she began training for the track program.   




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[Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Budder and Zunie Head to Hoosier State for NAIA National ...

The pair of Haskell runners will be competing in the marathon on Saturday morning




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[Cross Country] Haskell Runs National Championships Meet with 335 Other Runners




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[Men's Outdoor Track & Field] Zunie Returns to Nationals

Thomas Zunie, a junior from Zuni, New Mexico qualified today for the 2012 NAIA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships to be held the last week of May on the campus of Indiana Wesleyan University.   




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[Men's Outdoor Track & Field] Zunie Finishes 22nd at Nationals, while Budder Bows Out Due ...

 

               Haskell Agate - 85th Kansas Relays 
NAIA Outdoor Nationals

Marion, Ind. (Sat. May 26, 2012)

Men's Marathon-22nd Thomas Zunie (2:46.19)
Women's Marathon-DNF Talisa Budder (DNF)
Final ResultsMen's / Women's
 




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We Must Reclaim Nationalism From the BJP

This is the 18th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

The man who gave us our national anthem, Rabindranath Tagore, once wrote that nationalism was “a great menace.” He went on to say, “It is the particular thing which for years has been at the bottom of India’s troubles.”

Not just India’s, but the world’s: In his book The Open Society and its Enemies, published in 1945 as Adolf Hitler was defeated, Karl Popper ripped into nationalism, with all its “appeals to our tribal instincts, to passion and to prejudice, and to our nostalgic desire to be relieved from the strain of individual responsibility which it attempts to replace by a collective or group responsibility.”

Nationalism is resurgent today, stomping across the globe hand-in-hand with populism. In India, too, it is tearing us apart. But must nationalism always be a bad thing? A provocative new book by the Israeli thinker Yael Tamir argues otherwise.

In her book Why Nationalism, Tamir makes the following arguments. One, nation-states are here to stay. Two, the state needs the nation to be viable. Three, people need nationalism for the sense of community and belonging it gives them. Four, therefore, we need to build a better nationalism, which brings people together instead of driving them apart.

The first point needs no elaboration. We are a globalised world, but we are also trapped by geography and circumstance. “Only 3.3 percent of the world’s population,” Tamir points out, “lives outside their country of birth.” Nutopia, the borderless state dreamed up by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, is not happening anytime soon.

If the only thing that citizens of a state have in common is geographical circumstance, it is not enough. If the state is a necessary construct, a nation is its necessary justification. “Political institutions crave to form long-term political bonding,” writes Tamir, “and for that matter they must create a community that is neither momentary nor meaningless.” Nationalism, she says, “endows the state with intimate feelings linking the past, the present, and the future.”

More pertinently, Tamir argues, people need nationalism. I am a humanist with a belief in individual rights, but Tamir says that this is not enough. “The term ‘human’ is a far too thin mode of delineation,” she writes. “Individuals need to rely on ‘thick identities’ to make their lives meaningful.” This involves a shared past, a common culture and distinctive values.

Tamir also points out that there is a “strong correlation between social class and political preferences.” The privileged elites can afford to be globalists, but those less well off are inevitably drawn to other narratives that enrich their lives. “Rather than seeing nationalism as the last refuge of the scoundrel,” writes Tamir, “we should start thinking of nationalism as the last hope of the needy.”

Tamir’s book bases its arguments on the West, but the argument holds in India as well. In a country with so much poverty, is it any wonder that nationalism is on the rise? The cosmopolitan, globe-trotting elites don’t have daily realities to escape, but how are those less fortunate to find meaning in their lives?

I have one question, though. Why is our nationalism so exclusionary when our nation is so inclusive?

In the nationalism that our ruling party promotes, there are some communities who belong here, and others who don’t. (And even among those who ‘belong’, they exploit divisions.) In their us-vs-them vision of the world, some religions are foreign, some values are foreign, even some culinary traditions are foreign – and therefore frowned upon. But the India I know and love is just the opposite of that.

We embrace influences from all over. Our language, our food, our clothes, our music, our cinema have absorbed so many diverse influences that to pretend they come from a single legit source is absurd. (Even the elegant churidar-kurtas our prime minister wears have an Islamic origin.) As an example, take the recent film Gully Boy: its style of music, the clothes its protagonists wear, even the attitudes in the film would have seemed alien to us a few decades ago. And yet, could there be a truer portrait of young India?

This inclusiveness, this joyous khichdi that we are, is what makes our nation a model for the rest of the world. No nation embraces all other nations as ours does. My India celebrates differences, and I do as well. I wear my kurta with jeans, I listen to ghazals, I eat dhansak and kababs, and I dream in the Indian language called English. This is my nationalism.

Those who try to divide us, therefore, are the true anti-nationals. We must reclaim nationalism from them.



© 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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See Cadence RF Technologies at IEEE International Microwave Symposium 2014

RF Enthusiasts, Come connect with Cadence RF experts and discover the latest advances in Cadence RF technologies, including Spectre RF at the IEEE International Microwave Symposium (IMS) 2014. This year, IMS will be held in Tampa, Florida. Cadence...(read more)




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Parasitic node coordinates

Howdy,

            In the netlist generated after parasitic extraction, nodes have been added at fracture points to add parasitic devices. For example, in the image below, I'm referring to the nodes IN#1 and IN#2. Is there a way to determine their co-ordinates relative to the layout co-ordinate system? I could not find them in the Skill command reference and when I query the parasitic elements in the extracted view, it gives the graphical pin locations of the elements rather than the physical.

Thanks

Audi




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We Must Reclaim Nationalism From the BJP

This is the 18th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

The man who gave us our national anthem, Rabindranath Tagore, once wrote that nationalism was “a great menace.” He went on to say, “It is the particular thing which for years has been at the bottom of India’s troubles.”

Not just India’s, but the world’s: In his book The Open Society and its Enemies, published in 1945 as Adolf Hitler was defeated, Karl Popper ripped into nationalism, with all its “appeals to our tribal instincts, to passion and to prejudice, and to our nostalgic desire to be relieved from the strain of individual responsibility which it attempts to replace by a collective or group responsibility.”

Nationalism is resurgent today, stomping across the globe hand-in-hand with populism. In India, too, it is tearing us apart. But must nationalism always be a bad thing? A provocative new book by the Israeli thinker Yael Tamir argues otherwise.

In her book Why Nationalism, Tamir makes the following arguments. One, nation-states are here to stay. Two, the state needs the nation to be viable. Three, people need nationalism for the sense of community and belonging it gives them. Four, therefore, we need to build a better nationalism, which brings people together instead of driving them apart.

The first point needs no elaboration. We are a globalised world, but we are also trapped by geography and circumstance. “Only 3.3 percent of the world’s population,” Tamir points out, “lives outside their country of birth.” Nutopia, the borderless state dreamed up by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, is not happening anytime soon.

If the only thing that citizens of a state have in common is geographical circumstance, it is not enough. If the state is a necessary construct, a nation is its necessary justification. “Political institutions crave to form long-term political bonding,” writes Tamir, “and for that matter they must create a community that is neither momentary nor meaningless.” Nationalism, she says, “endows the state with intimate feelings linking the past, the present, and the future.”

More pertinently, Tamir argues, people need nationalism. I am a humanist with a belief in individual rights, but Tamir says that this is not enough. “The term ‘human’ is a far too thin mode of delineation,” she writes. “Individuals need to rely on ‘thick identities’ to make their lives meaningful.” This involves a shared past, a common culture and distinctive values.

Tamir also points out that there is a “strong correlation between social class and political preferences.” The privileged elites can afford to be globalists, but those less well off are inevitably drawn to other narratives that enrich their lives. “Rather than seeing nationalism as the last refuge of the scoundrel,” writes Tamir, “we should start thinking of nationalism as the last hope of the needy.”

Tamir’s book bases its arguments on the West, but the argument holds in India as well. In a country with so much poverty, is it any wonder that nationalism is on the rise? The cosmopolitan, globe-trotting elites don’t have daily realities to escape, but how are those less fortunate to find meaning in their lives?

I have one question, though. Why is our nationalism so exclusionary when our nation is so inclusive?

In the nationalism that our ruling party promotes, there are some communities who belong here, and others who don’t. (And even among those who ‘belong’, they exploit divisions.) In their us-vs-them vision of the world, some religions are foreign, some values are foreign, even some culinary traditions are foreign – and therefore frowned upon. But the India I know and love is just the opposite of that.

We embrace influences from all over. Our language, our food, our clothes, our music, our cinema have absorbed so many diverse influences that to pretend they come from a single legit source is absurd. (Even the elegant churidar-kurtas our prime minister wears have an Islamic origin.) As an example, take the recent film Gully Boy: its style of music, the clothes its protagonists wear, even the attitudes in the film would have seemed alien to us a few decades ago. And yet, could there be a truer portrait of young India?

This inclusiveness, this joyous khichdi that we are, is what makes our nation a model for the rest of the world. No nation embraces all other nations as ours does. My India celebrates differences, and I do as well. I wear my kurta with jeans, I listen to ghazals, I eat dhansak and kababs, and I dream in the Indian language called English. This is my nationalism.

Those who try to divide us, therefore, are the true anti-nationals. We must reclaim nationalism from them.

The India Uncut Blog © 2010 Amit Varma. All rights reserved.
Follow me on Twitter.




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IC Packagers: Time-Saving Alternatives to Show Element

In the Allegro back-end layout products like Allegro Package Designer Plus, it would be reasonable to assume that the most often used command is none other than “show element” (shortcut key F4). This command, runnable at nearly any t...(read more)



  • Allegro Package Designer
  • Allegro PCB Editor

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Multiple parts for single reference designator

Variants seem to be defined as present or not present.

Is there a variant that can assign different parts to the same reference designator? i.e.  R17 can be either 0 ohm 0805 jumper or 12k ohms 0805 resistor.

The simplest way I can think of is to use two parts with the same footprint and overlay them.

Is there a more functional way of doing this?  So that the variant would put the correct part in the BOM and the parts would of course have the same identical footprint.




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National International News in Bengali by News18 Bengali




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News18 Urdu: Latest News Ramanathapuram

visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Ramanathapuram on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more.






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Linux Devs Exterminate Security Bugs From Kernel









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OpenSSL signature_algorithms_cert Denial Of Service

Proof of concept denial of service exploit for the recent OpenSSL signature_algorithms_cert vulnerability.










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Senate Cracks Down On Net Gambling




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Mandos Encrypted File System Unattended Reboot Utility 1.8.10

The Mandos system allows computers to have encrypted root file systems and at the same time be capable of remote or unattended reboots. The computers run a small client program in the initial RAM disk environment which will communicate with a server over a network. All network communication is encrypted using TLS. The clients are identified by the server using an OpenPGP key that is unique to each client. The server sends the clients an encrypted password. The encrypted password is decrypted by the clients using the same OpenPGP key, and the password is then used to unlock the root file system.