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Silk is losing lustre in its prime land Bengal and Assam

According to Central Silk Board statistics, West Bengal and Assam contribute around 6.5 thousand Metric Ton (MT)silk to India's total annual output of over 35,000MT. Over 80% of that is consumed in domestic market. As estimated, over 15 lakh workers are involved in ground level silk activities in these two states.




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Systems, procedures and voting rules in context: a primer for voting rule selection / Adiel Teixeira de Almeida, Danielle Costa Morais, Hannu Nurmi

Online Resource




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Predictive intelligence in medicine: second International Workshop, PRIME 2019, held in Conjunction with MICCAI 2019, Shenzhen, China, October 13, 2019, Proceedings / Islem Rekik, Ehsan Adeli, Sang Hyun Park (eds.)

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Solved problems in thermodynamics and statistical physics / by Gregor Skačej, Primož Ziherl

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Microchip AVR microcontroller primer: programming and interfacing / Steven F. Barrett, Daniel J. Pack

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Renewable energy: a primer for the twenty-first century / Bruce Usher

Barker Library - TJ808.U84 2019




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[ASAP] Cryogenic Single-Molecule Spectroscopy of the Primary Electron Acceptor in the Photosynthetic Reaction Center

The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c00891




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Primer and other duets for one piano/four hands / William Bolcom

STACK SCORE Mu pts B637.5 piamu4h




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Español para hablantes de herencia: curso de Español como lengue de herencia, primer y segundo semestre / Margarita Casas

Dewey Library - PC4112.C37 2019




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Questioning theoretical primitives in linguistic inquiry: papers in honor of Ricardo Otheguy / edited by Naomi L. Shin, Daniel Erker

Hayden Library - P121.Q475 2018




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Addressing diversity and social inclusion through group comparisons: A primer on measurement invariance testing

Chem. Educ. Res. Pract., 2020, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/D0RP00025F, Paper
Guizella A. Rocabado, Regis Komperda, Jennifer E. Lewis, Jack Barbera
As the field of chemistry education moves toward greater social inclusion, social justice, and increased participation by underrepresented minorities, standards for investigating the differential impacts and outcomes of learning environments...
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Zero degrees: geographies of the Prime Meridian / Charles W.J. Withers

Hayden Library - QB224.W58 2017




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Radiative neutron capture: primordial nucleosynthesis of the universe / Sergey Borisovich Dubovichenko

Hayden Library - QB464.4.D83 2019




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A primer for forgetting: getting past the past / Lewis Hyde

Hayden Library - BF378.F7 H93 2019




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Iustinianus Primus Law Review [electronic journal].




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Sharon Kay - Adler's Information Packed Primer

Sharon Kay – Adler’s Information Packed Primer




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Transport processes primer / Constantine Pozrikidis

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Report / The Senate, Select Committee on Lending to Primary Production Customers

Australia. Parliament. Senate. Select Committee on Lending to Primary Production Customers




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Asymmetric synthesis of primary amines catalyzed by thermotolerant fungal reductive aminases

Chem. Sci., 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0SC02253E, Edge Article
Open Access
Juan Mangas-Sanchez, Mahima Sharma, Sebastian C. Cosgrove, Jeremy I. Ramsden, James R. Marshall, Thomas W. Thorpe, Ryan B. Palmer, Gideon Grogan, Nicholas J. Turner
Fungal reductive aminases as effective biocatalysts for the preparation of chiral primary amines.
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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General and selective synthesis of primary amines using Ni-based homogeneous catalysts

Chem. Sci., 2020, 11,4332-4339
DOI: 10.1039/D0SC01084G, Edge Article
Open Access
  This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Kathiravan Murugesan, Zhihong Wei, Vishwas G. Chandrashekhar, Haijun Jiao, Matthias Beller, Rajenahally V. Jagadeesh
A Ni-triphos based homogeneous catalyst enabled the synthesis of all kinds of primary amines by reductive amination of carbonyl compounds with ammonia and hydrogenation of nitroarenes.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Thinking through new literacies for primary and early years / Jayne Metcalfe [and three others] ; edited by Dr Eileen Honan

Metcalfe, Jayne, author




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Teaching thinking skills in the primary years : a whole school approach / by Michael Pohl

Pohl, Michael




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Teaching the arts : early childhood and primary education / David Roy, William Baker, Amy Hamilton

Roy, David M. S., author




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Primary English for trainee teachers / [edited by] David Waugh, Wendy Jolliffe and Kate Allott




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The early years of schooling. Defining and clarifying intentional teaching, guided play and child-directed play and learning / Western Australian Primary Principals' Association




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The early years of schooling. Early years writing assessment (K - Year 2) / Western Australian Primary Principals' Association




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Teaching primary science constructively / edited by Keith Skamp, Christine Preston




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Technologies education for the primary years / Peter Albion, Coral Campbell and Wendy Jobling

Albion, Peter, author




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Student workbook Mathematics explained for primary teachers / Derek Haylock

Haylock, Derek, author




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Mathematics explained for primary teachers / Derek Haylock with Ralph Manning

Haylock, Derek




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Como pasar la primera auditoria [electronic resource] : las claves para entender y planificar eficientemente la primera auditoria / Marta Grano ; prologo Jose Miguel Albisu

Grano, Marta, author




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DD, All India Radio prime bulletins to report weather of cities in PoK

The weather segment of the news bulletins on DD and AIR included the update on cities of Mirpur, Muzaffarabad and Gilgit in PoK




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Dischronology and dialogic in the Bible's primary narrative / David A. Bergen

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Primate hearing and communication / Rolf M. Quam, Marissa A. Ramsier, Richard R. Fay, Arthur N. Popper, editors

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Neural data science: a primer with MATLAB® and Python"! / Erik Lee Nylen, Pascal Wallisch

Hayden Library - QP357.5.N95 2017




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Cellular biophysics and modeling: a primer on the computational biology of excitable cells / Greg Conradi Smith

Hayden Library - QP363.S595 2019




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Leaders and Leadership in Serbian Primary Schools [electronic resource]: Perspectives Across Two Worlds

Rakovi, Jelena




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Frühe Hilfen [electronic resource] : die Bedeutung primärpräventiver Unterstützungsangebote für Schwangere, Mütter und Familien durch Kooperation von Sozialarbeit und Gesundheitswesen / Gerda Schwarz

Schwarz, Gerda




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Judith Beveridge wins 2019 Prime Minister’s Literary Award




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Blind spots: how unhealthy corridors harm communities and how to fix them / primary author, Heather Zaccaro

Rotch Library - HE308.Z33 2019




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A primer on process mining: practical skills with Python and Graphviz / Diogo R. Ferreira

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The Changing Landscape of Primary Care: Effects of the ACA and Other Efforts Over the Past Decade

This Health Affairs article describes primary care delivery system reform models that were developed and tested over the past decade by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation—which was created by the Affordable Care Act—and reflect on key lessons and remaining challenges.




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After a Decade, Mathematica Examines Affordable Care Act’s Impact on Primary Care

In the March issue of Health Affairs, which is devoted to examining the effects and legacy of the ACA, Mathematica’s experts discuss “The Changing Landscape of Primary Care: Effects of the ACA and Other Efforts over the Past Decade.”




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COVID-19 Data Primer from Mathematica

Mathematica continues to partner with our clients and groups like the National Association of Health Data Organizations (NAHDO) to respond to the evolving COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in the area of data analytics.




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A COVID-19 Primer: Analyzing Health Care Claims, Administrative Data, and Public Use Files

This primer is designed to help researchers, data scientists, and others who analyze health care claims or administrative data (herein referred to as “claims”) quickly join the effort to better understand, track, and contain COVID-19.




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Białowieża Primeval Forest: nature and culture in the Nineteenth Century / Tomasz Samojilik, Anastasia Fedotova, Piotr Daszkiewicz, Ian D. Rotherham

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Primary elections in the United States / Shigeo Hirano, Columbia University ; James M. Snyder, Jr., Harvard University

Dewey Library - JK2071.H57 2019




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The rules and politics of American primaries: a state-by-state guide to Republican and Democratic primaries and caucuses / Andrew E. Busch, Editor

Dewey Library - JK2071.R85 2019




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Reality check: In Bihar, every 4th primary, middle teacher failed Class V-level test

43,000 contractual teachers took 'competency'' exam, over 10,000 failed.




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JSJ 337: Microstates.js – Composable State Primitives for JavaScript with Charles Lowell & Taras Mankovski

Panel:

  • Aimee Knight
  • Charles Max Wood
  • Joe Eames
  • AJ O’Neil
  • Chris Ferdinandi 

Special Guests: Charles Lowell (New Mexico) & Taras Mankovski (Toronto)

In this episode, the panel talks with two special guests Charles and Taras. Charles Lowell is a principle engineer at Frontside, and he loves to code. Taras works with Charles and joined Frontside, because of Charles’ love for coding. There are great personalities at Frontside, which are quite diverse. Check out this episode to hear about microstates, microstates with react, Redux, and much more!

Show Topics:

1:20 – Chuck: Let’s talk about microstates – what is that?

1:32 – Guest: My mind is focused on the how and not the what. I will zoom my mind out and let’s talk about the purposes of microstates. It means a few things. 1.) It’s going to work no matter what framework you are using. 2.) You shouldn’t have to be constantly reinventing the wheel. React Roundup – I talked about it there at this conference. 

Finally, it really needs to feel JavaScript. We didn’t want you to feel like you weren’t using JavaScript. It uses computer properties off of those models. It doesn’t feel like there is anything special that you are doing. There are just a few simple rules. You can’t mutate the state in place. If you work with JavaScript you can use it very easily. Is that a high-level view?

7:13 – Panel: There are a lot of pieces. If I spoke on a few specific things I would say that it enables programming with state machines.

7:42 – Panel: We wanted it to fell like JavaScript – that’s what I heard.

7:49 – Aimee: I heard that, too.

7:59 – Guest.

8:15 – Aimee: Redux feels like JavaScript to me.

8:25 – Guest: It’s actually – a tool – that it feels natural so it’s not contrived. It’s all JavaScript.

8:49 – Panel.

9:28 – Guest: Idiomatic Ember for example. Idiomatic in the sense that it gives you object for you to work with, which are simple objects.

10:12 – Guest: You have your reducers and your...we could do those things but ultimately it’s powerful – and not action names – we use method names; the name of the method.

11:20 – Panel: I was digging through docs, and it feels like NORMAL JavaScript. It doesn’t seem like it’s tied to a certain framework or library platform?

11:45 – Guest: Yes, we felt a lot of time designing the interfaces the API and the implementation. We wanted it to feel natural but a tool that people reach for.

(Guest continues to talk about WHY they created microstates.)

Guest: We wanted to scale very well what you need when your needs to change.

13:39 – Chuck: I have a lot of friends who get into React and then they put in Redux then they realize they have to do a lot of work – and that makes sense to do less is more.

14:17 – Guest: To define these microstates and build them up incrementally...building smaller microstates out of larger ones.

Guest continued: Will we be able to people can distribute React components a sweet array of components ready for me to use – would I be able to do the same for a small piece of state? We call them state machines, but ultimately we have some state that is driving it. Would we be able to distribute and share?

16:15 – Panel: I understand that this is tiny – but why wouldn’t I just use the native features in specific the immutability component to it?

16:42 – Guest: I’m glad you asked that question. We wanted to answer the question...

Guest: With microstates you can have strict control and it gives you the benefit of doing sophisticated things very easily.

18:33 – Guest: You mentioned immutability that’s good that you did. It’s important to capture – and capturing the naturalness of JavaScript. It’s easy to build complex structures – and there is an appeal to that. We are building these graphs and these building up these trees. You brought up immutability – why through it away b/c it’s the essence of being a developer. If you have 3-4-5 levels of nesting you have to de-structure – get to the piece of data – change it – and in your state transition 80% of your code is navigating to the change and only 20% to actually make the change. You don’t have to make that tradeoff.

21:25 – Aimee: The one thing I like about the immutability b/c of the way you test it.

21:45 – Guest: There a few things you can test. 

23:01 – Aimee: You did a good job of explaining it.

23:15 – Guest: It makes the things usually hard  easy! With immutability you can loose control, and if that happens you can get so confused. You don’t have a way to have a way to navigate to clarity. That’s what this does is make it less confusing. It gives you order and structure. It gives you a very clear path to do things you need to do. If there is a property on your object, and if there is a way to change it...

25:29 – Guest: The only constant is change no matter what framework you are working on.

24:46 – Chuck: We are talking about the benefits and philosophy. What if I have an app – and I realize I need state management – how do I put microstates into my app? It’s using Angular or React – how do I get my data into microstates?

26:35 – Guest: I can tell you what the integration looks like for any framework. You take a type and you passed that type and some value to the create function so what you get is a microstate.

(The Guest continues diving into his answer.)

28:18 – Guest: That story is very similar to Redux, basically an event emitter. The state changes on the store.

Maybe this is a good time to talk about the stability benefits and the lazy benefits because microstates is both of those things.

Stability – if I invoke a transition and the result is unchanged – same microstate – it doesn’t emit an event. It recognizes it internally. It will recognize that it’s the same item. Using that in Ember or Redux you’d have to be doing thousands of actions and doing all that computation, but stability at that level.

Also, stability in the sense of a tree. If I change one object then that changes it won’t change an element that it doesn’t need to change.

31:33 – Advertisement: Sentry.io

32:29 – Guest: I want to go back to your question, Chuck. Did we answer it?

32:40 – Chuck: Kind of.

32:50 – Guest.

32:59 – Guest: In Angular for example you can essentially turn a microstate...

33:51 – Guest: You could implement a connect, too. Because the primitive is small – there is no limit.

34:18 – Chuck summarizes their answers into his own words.

34:42 – Guest: If you were using a vanilla React component – this dot – I will bind this. You bind all of these features and then you pass them into your template. You can take it as a property...those are those handlers. They will perform the transition, update and what needs to be updated will happen.

35:55 – Chuck: Data and transitions are 2 separate things but you melded them together to feel like 1 thing. This way it keeps clean and fast.

36:16 – Guest: Every framework helps you in each way.

Microstates let’s you do a few things: the quality of your data all in one place and you can share.

38:12 – Guest: He made and integrated Microstates with Redux tools.

38:28 – Guest talks about paths, microstates to trees.

39:22 – Chuck.

39:25 – Panel: When I think about state machines I have been half listening / half going through the docs. When I think of state machines I think about discreet operations like a literal machine. Like a robot of many steps it can step through. We have been talking about frontend frameworks like React - is this applicable to the more traditional systems like mechanical control or is it geared towards Vue layered applications?

40:23 – Guest: Absolutely. We have BIG TEST and it has a Vue component.

41:15 – Guest: when you create a microstate from a type you are creating an object that you can work with.

42:11 – Guest: Joe, I know you have experience with Angular I would love to get your insight.

42:33 – Joe: I feel like I have less experience with RX.js. A lot of what we are talking about and I am a traditionalist, and I would like you to introduce you guys to this topic. From my perspective, where would someone start if they haven’t been doing Flux pattern and I hear this podcast. I think this is a great solution – where do I get started? The official documents? Or is it the right solution to that person?

43:50 – Guest: Draw out the state machine that you want to represent in your Vue. These are the states that this can be in and this is the data that is required to get from one thing to the other. It’s a rope process. The arrow corresponds to the method, and...

44:49 – Panel: It reminds me back in the day of rational rows.

44:56 – Guest: My first job we were using rational rows.

45:22 – Panelist: Think through the state transitions – interesting that you are saying that. What about that I am in the middle – do you stop and think through it or no?

46:06 – Guest: I think it’s a Trojan horse in some ways. I think what’s interesting you start to realize how you implement your state transitions.

48:00 – (Guest continues.)

48:45 – Panel: That’s interesting. Do you have that in the docs to that process of stopping and thinking through your state transitions and putting into the microstate?

49:05 – Guest: I talked about this back in 2016. I outlined that process. When this project was in the Ember community.

49:16 – Guest: The next step for us is to make this information accessible. We’ve been shedding a few topics and saying this is how to use microstates in your project. We need to write up those guides to help them benefit in their applications.

50:00 – Chuck: What’s the future look like?

50:03 – Guest: We are working on performance profiling.

Essentially you can hook up microstates to a fire hose.

The next thing is settling on a pattern for modeling side effects inside microstates. Microstates are STATE and it’s immutable.

52:12 – Guest: Getting documentation. We have good README but we need traditional docs, too.

52:20 – Chuck: Anything else?

52:28 – Guest: If you need help email us and gives us a shot-out.

53:03 – Chuck: Let’s do some picks!

53:05 – Advertisement for Charles Max Wood’s course!

Links:

Sponsors:

Picks:

Aimee

Taras

Charles Lowell

Chris

Joe

AJ

Charles

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