ice Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum : May 13-14, 1996, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Nickel/Cobalt Pressure Leaching & Hydrometallurgy Forum (1996 : Perth, W.A.) Full Article
ice ALTA 1997 uranium ore to yellowcake seminar : February 20, 1997, Carlton Crest Hotel, Melbourne Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Nickel/Cobalt SX/EW Seminar : May 16, 1996, Hyatt Hotel, Perth, Western Australia / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Copper SX/EW basic principles, & detailed plant design : short course / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Copper SX/EW basic principles & detailed plant design : short course / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Tailings management : Leading Practice Sustainable Development Program for the mining industry / [Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources] By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Proceedings of the 32nd annual Hydrometallurgical Meeting and International Conference on the Practice and Theory of Chloride/Metal Interaction: October 19-23, 2002 / edited by E. Peek and G. Van Weert By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Hydrometallurgical Meeting (32nd : 2002 : Montreal, Quebec) Full Article
ice Handbook of flotation reagents : chemistry, theory and practice / Srdjan M. Bulatovic By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Bulatovic, Srdjan M Full Article
ice Hydrometallurgy : theory and practice / edited by W.C. Cooper and D.B. Dreisinger By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Hydrometallurgy : research, development and plant practice : proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Hydrometallurgy / sponsored by the Extractive and Process Metallurgy Program Committee of the Metallurgical Society of AIME and the Mineral Proc By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: International Symposium on Hydrometallurgy (3rd : 1983 : Atlanta, Ga.) Full Article
ice Physical metallurgy : principles and practice / V. Raghavan (Formerly Professor, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi) By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Raghavan, V., author Full Article
ice Two police constables suspended By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:11:01 +0530 Police Commissioner Ch. Dwaraka Tirumala Rao on Friday suspended two Armed Reserve (AR) police constables, P. Kiran Kumar and V. Naresh, for allegedly Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ice Door delivery of quality rice in A.P. from September 1 By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:18:01 +0530 The government has geared up to roll out the delivery of quality rice at the door steps of beneficiaries from September 1. It already launched a pilo Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ice Police bid a tearful adieu to their 'Raja' By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:20:50 +0530 The tracker dog had won several medals, says SP Full Article Andhra Pradesh
ice 021 JSJ Weapons of Choice By devchat.tv Published On :: Mon, 30 Jul 2012 10:00:00 -0400 The panelists discuss their weapons of choice. Full Article
ice 208 JSJ MS Office with Jeremy Thake By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 20 Apr 2016 09:00:00 -0400 This episode was recorded live from The Microsoft Build Conference 2016. In this episode we chatted with Jeremy Thake of Microsoft about MS Office. You can follow him on Twitter, see what he’s done over on GitHub, or visit his blog. Resources: Office Dev Center Picks Billions (Jeremy) Full Article
ice JSJ 268 Building Microsoft Office Extensions with JavaScript with Tristan Davis and Sean Laberee By Published On :: Tue, 04 Jul 2017 06:00:00 -0400 JSJ 268 Building Microsoft Office Extensions with Javascript with Tristan Davis and Sean Laberee This episode is live at the Microsoft Build 2017 with Charles Max Wood and AJ O’Neal. We have Tristan Davis and Sean Laberee from the Office Team at Microsoft. Tune in and learn more about what’s new with Microsoft Office Extensions! [00:01:25] – Introduction to Tristan Davis and Sean Laberee Tristan Davis and Sean Laberee are Program Managers on the Microsoft Office team, focused on Extensibility. Questions for Tristan and Sean [00:01:45] – Extending Office functionality with Javascript Office isn’t just an application on Windows that runs on your PC. It is running on iPhone, iPad, Android tablet, and apps on the browser with Office Online. The team needs a new platform, add-ins, which allow you to build apps that run across all places. It’s HTML and Javascript. HTML for all the UI and a series of Javascript module calls for the document properties. Sometimes we call it OfficeJS. [00:03:20] – This works on any version of Office? It works on Office on Windows, Mac, Online and iPad. [00:03:55] – HTML and CSS suck on mobile? There are things that you’re going to want to do when you know you’re running on a mobile device. If you look at an add-in running on Outlook for iPhone, the developer does a lot of things to make that feel like part of the iPhone UI. Tristan believes that you could build a great add-in for Office using HTML and JavaScript. [00:05:20] – Are these apps written with JavaScript or you have a Native with WebView? Office itself is Native. All of it is Native code but the platform is very much web. The main piece of it is pointing at the URL. Just go load that URL. And then, you can also call functions in your JavaScript. [00:06:35] – Why would you do this? How does it work? The add-in platform is a way to help developers turn Word, Excel and PowerPoint into the apps that actually solve user’s business problems. The team will give you the tools with HTML and JavaScript to go and pop into the Word UI and the API’s that let you go manipulate the paragraph and texts inside of Word. Or in Excel, you might want to create custom formulas or visualizations. The team also let people use D3 to generate their own Excel charts. And developers want to extend Office because it’s where a lot of business workers spend their days 0 in Outlook, Teams, Word, Excel. [00:10:00] – How did this get delivered to them? There are 2 ways to get this delivered. One, there’s an Office Store. Second, if you go into Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, there’s a store button and you can see tons of integrations with partners. For enterprises, IT can deploy add-ins to the users’ desktops without having stress about deploying MSI’s and other software deployments that the web completely rids off. The add-ins make a whole lot of pain the past completely go away. [00:11:00] – Everybody in the company can use a particular plug-in by distributing it with Office? That’s right. You can go to Office 365 add-in experience. Here’s the add-in and you can to specific people or everyone who’s part of a group. For the developer’s perspective, if you have the add-in deployed to your client, you could actually push updates to the web service and your users get the updates instantly. It’s a lot faster turn-around model. [00:14:20] – What about conversations or bot integrations? There’s the idea of connectors at Teams. You can subscribe to this web book and it’ll publish JSON. When the JSON is received, a new conversation inside of Teams or Outlook will be created. For example, every time someone posts on Stack Overflow with one of the tags that team cares about, it posts on Outlook. It’s a great way to bring all the stuff. Rather than have 20 different apps that are shooting 20 different sets of notifications, it’s just all conversations in email, making do all the standard email things. And in the connector case, it’s a push model. The user could choose what notifications they want. You’d also learn things like bots. You can have bots in Teams and Skype. The users can interact with them with their natural language. [00:18:40] – How about authentication? As long as you’re signed into Office, you can call JavaScript API to give you an identity token for the sign in user and it will hand you a JWT back. That’s coming from Azure Active Directory or from whatever customer directory service. That’s standard. If you want to do more, you can take that identity token and you can exchange that for a token that can call Microsoft graph. This app wants to get access to phone, are you okay with that? Assuming the user says yes, the user gets a token that can go and grab whatever data he wants from the back-end. [00:20:00] – Where does it store the token? That’s up to the developer to decide how they want to handle that but there are facilities that make sure you can pop up a dialog box and you can go to the LO-flow. You could theoretically cache it in the browser or a cookie. Or whatever people think is more appropriate for the scenario. [00:20:55] – What does the API actually look like from JavaScript? If you’re familiar with Excel UI, you can look at Excel API. It’s workbook.worksheets.getItem() and you can pass the name of the worksheet. It can also pass the index of the worksheet. [00:22:30] – What’s the process of getting setup? There’s a variety of options. You can download Office, write XML manifest, and take a sample, and then, side loads it into Office. You can also do that through web apps. There’s no install required because you can go work against Office Online. In the Insert menu, there’s a way to configure your add-ins. There’s upload a manifest there and you can just upload the XML. That’s going to work against whatever web server you have set up. So it’s either on your local machine or up in the cloud. It’s as much as like regular web development. Just bring your own tools. [00:24:15] – How do you protect me as a plug-in developer? There’s an access add-in that will ask your permission to access, say, a document. Assume, they say yes, pipes are opened and they can just go talk to those things. But the team also tries to sandbox it by iframes. It’s not one page that has everybody’s plug-ins intermingle that people can pole at other people’s stuff. [00:27:20] – How do you support backward compatibility? There are cases where we change the behavior of the API. Every API is gated by requirement set. So if a developer needs access to a requirement set, he gets an aggregate instead of API’s that he can work with but it isn’t fixed forever. But it’s not at that point yet where we end up to remove things completely. In Office JS, we’ve talked about API’s as one JavaScript library but really, it’s a bootstrap that brings in a bunch of other pieces that you need. [00:30:00] – How does that work on mobile? Do they have to approve download for all components? You can download components by using the browser that the operating system gives. It’s another one of the virtues of being based on the web. Every platform that has a web browser can have JavaScript execution run-time. It allows for the way that their app guidelines are written. [00:33:15] – How about testing? It’s a place where there’s still have work to do. There’s a bunch of open-source projects that partners have started to do that. What they’ve done is they’ve built a testing library. Whatever the mock is, it's just a thing on Github. It is open-source friendly. So the team could be able to contribute to it. “Here’s an interesting test case for this API. I want to make sure that it behaves like this. [00:35:50] – Could you write it with any version for JavaScript e.g. TypeScript? A Huge chunk of the team is big TypeScript fans. They’ve done a lot of work to make sure that TypeScript experience is excellence. Type is basically a collection of typing files for TypeScript. There’s a runtime process that parses your TypeScript, gives you feedback on your code, and checks for errors. You can also run it in the background. There’s an add-in called Script Lab. Script Lab is literally, you hit the code button and you get a web IDE right there. You can go start typing JavaScript code, play with API’s, and uses TypeScript by default. It’ll just actually load your code in the browser, executes, and you can start watching. [00:39:25] – Are there any limitations on which JavaScript libraries you can pull in? There a no limitations in place right now. There are partners that use Angular. There are partners that are big React fans. If you’re a web dev, you can bring whatever preferences around frameworks, around tools, around TypeScript versus JavaScript. [00:45:20] – What’s the craziest thing you’ve seen done with this API? Battleship was pretty cool. There’s also Star Wars entering credits theme for PowerPoint. [00:46:40] – If a developer is building a plug-in and get paid for it, does Microsoft take credit for that? There are 2 ways that folks can do it. You can do paid add-ins to the store. Either you do the standard perpetual 99 cents or you can do subscriptions, where it’s $2.99/month. Tristan encourages that model because integrations are just a piece of some larger piece of software. But Microsoft is not in the business of trying to get you to pay me a little bit of 10 cents a dollar. It’s really in the business of making sure that you can integrate with Office as quickly as possibly can. When the users go to the store, they can use the same Microsoft account that you use to buy Xbox games or movies in the Xbox, Windows apps in the Windows store. [00:52:00] – The App Model If folks are interested in the app model, they should go to dev.office.com to learn more about it because that’s where all the documentation is. Check out our Github. Right there in the open, there’s the spec. Literally, the engineers who are coding the product are reading the same marked-down files in the same repo that you, as a developer, can come and look at. And you can comment. You can add issues like you could have a dialogue with that PM. Under the OfficeDev, you’ll find a tunnel repository that contains samples. Our docs are there. Picks AJ O'Neal Lithium Charles Max Wood Miracle Morning by Hal Erod Clean Code by Uncle Bob Martin Ketogenic diet Tristan Davis Amazon Echo Microbiome Sean Laberee Running Garmin watch Full Article
ice JSJ 274: Amazon Voice Services and Echo Skills with Terrance Smith By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 15 Aug 2017 06:00:00 -0400 JSJ 274 Amazon Voice Services and Echo Skills with Terrance Smith On today’s episode of JavaScript Jabber, we have panelists Joe Eames, Aimee Knight, Charles Max Wood, and we have special guest Terrance Smith. He’s here today to talk about the Amazon Alexa platform. So tune in and learn more about Amazon Voice Services! [01:00] – Introduction to Terrance Smith Terrance is from Hacker Ferrer Software. They hack love into software. [01:30] – Amazon Voice Service What I’m working on is called My CareTaker named probably pending change. What it will do and what it is doing will be to help you be there as a caretaker’s aid for the person in your life. If you have to take care an older parent, My CareTaker will be there in your place if you have to work that day. It will be your liaison to that person. Your mom and dad can talk to My CareTaker and My CareTaker could signal you via SMS or email message or tweet, anything on your usage dashboard, and you would be able to respond. It’s there when you’re not. [04:35] – Capabilities Getting started with it, there are different layers. The first layer is the Skills Kit for generally getting into the Amazon IoT. It has a limited subset of the functionality. You can give commands. The device parses them, sends them to Amazon’s endpoint, Amazon sends a call back to your API endpoint, and you can do whatever you want. That is the first level. You can make it do things like turn on your light switch, start your car, change your thermostat, or make an API call to some website somewhere to do anything. [05:50] – Skills Kit Skills Kit is different with AVS. Skills Kit, you can install it on any device. You’re spinning up a web service and register it on Amazon’s website. As long as you have an endpoint, you can register, say, the Amazon Web Services Lambda. Start that up and do something. The Skills Kit is literally the web endpoint response. Amazon Voice Services is a bit more in-depth. [07:00] – Steps for programming With the Skills Kit, you register what would be your utterance, your skill name, and you would give it a couple of sets of phrases to accept. Say, you have a skill that can start a car, your skill is “Car Starter.” “Alexa tell Car Starter to start the car.” At which point, your web service will be notified that that is the utterance. It literally has a case statement. You can have any number of individual conditional branches outside of that. The limitation for the Skills Kit is you have to have the “tell” or “ask” and the name of the skill to do whatever. It’s also going to be publicly accessible. For the most part, it’s literally a web service. [10:55] – Boilerplates for AWS Lambda Boilerplates can be used if you want to develop for production. If you publish a skill, you get free AVS instance time. You can host your skill for free for some amount of time. There are GUI tools to make it easier but if you’re a developer, you’re probably going to do the spin up a web service and deal it that way. [11:45] – Do you have to have an Amazon Echo? At one point, you have to have the Echo but now there is this called Echoism, which allows you to run it in your browser. In addition to that, you can potentially install it on a device like a Raspberry Pi and run Amazon Voice Services. The actual engine is on your PC, Mac, or Linux box. You have different options. [12:35] – Machine learning There are certain things that Amazon Alexa understand now that it did last year or time before that like understanding utterances and phrases better. A lot of the machine learning is definitely under the covers. The other portion of it Alexa Voice Service, which is a whole engine that you have untethered access to other portions like how to handle responses. That’s where you can build a custom device and take it apart. So the API that we’re working with here is just using JSON and HTTP. [16:40] – Amazon Echo Show You have that full real-time back and forth communication ability but there is no video streaming or video processing ability yet. You can utilize the engine in such a way that Amazon Voice Services can work with your existing tool language. If you have a Raspberry Pi and you have a camera to it, you can potentially work within that. But again, the official API’s and docs for that are not available yet. [27:20] – Challenges There’s an appliance in this house that listens to everything I say. There’s that natural inclination to not trust it, especially with the older generations. Giving past that is getting people to use the device. Some of the programming sides of it are getting the communication to work, doing something that Alexa isn’t pre-programmed to do. There isn’t a lot of documentation out there, just a couple of examples. The original examples are written in Java and trying to convert it to Node or JavaScript would be some of the technical challenges. In addition, getting it installed and setup takes at least an hour at the beginning. There’s also a learning curve involved. [29:35] – Is your product layered in an Echo or is your product a separate device? Terrance’s product is a completely separate device. One of the functionality of his program is medicine reminders. It can only respond to whatever the API calls from Amazon tells you to respond to but it can’t do anything like send something back. It can do an immediate audio response with a picture or turn on and off a light switch. But it can’t send a message back in like two hours from now. You do want your Alexa device to have (verbally) a list of notifications like on your phone. TLDR, Terrance can go a little further with just the Skills Kit. [32:00] – Could you set it up through a web server? Yes. There are examples out there. There’s Alexa in the browser. You can open up a browser and communicate with that. There are examples of it being installed like an app. You can deploy it to your existing iPhone app or Android app and have it interact that way. Or you can have it interact independently on a completely different device like a Raspberry Pi. But not a lot of folks are using it that way. [33:10] – Monetization Amazon isn’t changing anything in terms of monetization. They make discovery a lot easier though. If you knew the name of the app, you could just say, “Alexa, [tell the name of the app].” It will do a lazy load of the actual skill and it will add it to your available skill’s list. However, there is something called the Alexa Fund, which is kind of a startup fund that they have, which you can apply for. If you’re doing something interesting, there is a number of things you have to do. Ideally, you can get funding for whatever your product is. It is an available avenue for you. [36:25] – More information, documentation, walkthroughs The number one place to go to as far as getting started is the Amazon websites. They have the Conexant 4-Mic Far-Field Dev Kit. It has 4 mics and it has already a lot of what you need. You have to boot it up and/or SSH into it or plug it up and code it. They have a couple of these kits for $300 to $400. It’s one of the safe and simpler options. There are also directions for the AVS sites which is under Alexa Voice Services, where you can go to the Github from there. There will give you directions using the Raspberry Pi. If not that, there’s also the Slack chatroom. It is alexaslack.com. Travis Teague is the guy in charge in there. Picks Joe Eames Cosmic Engineers by Clifford D. Simak Aimee Knight Conference: React Rally Pancakes Charles Max Wood Conference: Angular Dev Summit Conference: React Dev Summit JavaScript Jabber Slack Terrance Smith Language: Elm Youtube channel: The School of Life Game: Night in the Woods Hacker Ferret Software Hackerferret.com Full Article
ice JSJ BONUS: Cloud Services and Manifold with Matthew Creager and Peter Cho By devchat.tv Published On :: Wed, 18 Oct 2017 06:00:00 -0400 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 GitLab AdminLTE Joe What You Can’t Say Matt Star Trek Puppeteer Peter Player Unknown Battle Ground Sourdough by Robin Sloan Full Article
ice JSJ 290: Open Source Software with Dirk Hohndel - VMWare Chief Open Source Officer By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 05 Dec 2017 06:00:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Aimee Knight Corey House Joe Eames Special Guests: In this episode, JavaScript Jabber speaks with Dirk Hohndel about Open Source Software. Dirk is the Chief Open Source Officer at VMWare and has been working with open source for over 20 years. Dirk duties as the Chief Open Source Officer is to engage with the open source community and help promote the development between the community, companies, and customers. Dirk provides historical facts about open sources to current processes. The discussion covers vision and technological advances with languages, security, and worries of using open source software, view/consumption and burnout on maintaining a project. This is a great episode to learn about more different avenues of Open Source. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: What does the Chief Open Source Officer do? What is really different and has stayed the same in open source? Technological advances Good engineering and looking ahead or forward 100 million lines of code running a car… This is in everything.. Production environments Security Bugs in the software and the security issues Scaling and paying attention Where should we be worried about open source Notation and data sets Write maintainable software How does VMWare think about open source? View and Consumption of open source The burnout of open source projects - how to resolve this abandonment To much work to maintain open source - not a money issue Scaling the team workload not the money Contribution and giving back Companies who do and don’t welcome open source What to do to make a project open source? Adopting an API And much more! Links: @_drikhh VMWare Drikhh - everywhere! https://github.com/dirkhh Picks: Aimee De Contact Dodow Dirk Track This Critical Thinking Charles Nicholas Zakas - Books Corey Fun Fun Function Show Joe Dice Forge Concept of empathy Full Article
ice JSJ 296: Changes in React and the license with Azat Mardan By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 16 Jan 2018 11:47:00 -0500 Panel: Charles Max Wood Cory House Joe Eames Aimee Knight Special Guests: Azat Mardan In this episode, JavaScript Jabber panelist speak with Azat Mardan. Azat is a return guest, previously on JSJ Episode 230. Azat is an author of 14 books on Node JS, JavaScript, and React JS. Azat works at Capital One on the technology team. Azat is the founder and creator of Node University. Azat is on the show to talk about changes in React and licensing. Some of the topics cover Facebook, licensing with React, using the wrong version of React, patent wars, and much more in-depth information on current events in React. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Facebook - Licensing with React Using the Wrong version of React in some companies BSD licensing Patent wars Facebook developing React Difference in Preact and Inferno Rewriting applications What did Capital One do about the changes? React 16 Pure React Was the BSD patents - Med and Sm Companies Patents explained React Developers at Facebook Fiber - New Core Architecture And much more! Links: http://azat.co https://node.university https://devchat.tv/js-jabber/230-jsj-node-at-capital-one-with-azat-mardan Picks: Cory Axel Rauschmayer post Prettier Charles Indiegogo for Dev Chat forum.devchat.tv Aimee Dev Tees Hacker News - Question on Stack Exchange and Estimates Joe Heroku El Camino Christmas Azat PMP Azat - Short Lecture Full Article
ice Yet more everyday science mysteries [electronic resource] : stories for inquiry-based science teaching / Richard Konicek-Moran ; botanical illustrations by Kathleen Konicek-Moran By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Konicek-Moran, Richard Full Article
ice Young adult poetry [electronic resource] : a survey and theme guide / Rachel Schwedt and Janice DeLong ; foreword by Mel Glenn By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Schwedt, Rachel E., 1944- Full Article
ice Young adults deserve the best [electronic resource] : YALSA's competencies in action / Sarah Flowers for the Young Adult Library Services Association By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Flowers, Sarah, 1952- Full Article
ice Young people living with cancer [electronic resource] : implications for policy and practice / Anne Grinyer By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Grinyer, Anne, 1950- Full Article
ice Younger people with dementia [electronic resource] : planning, practice, and development / edited by Sylvia Cox and John Keady ; foreword by Mary Marshall By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Your boss is not your mother [electronic resource] : eight steps to eliminating office drama and creating positive relationships at work / Debra Mandel By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Mandel, Debra Full Article
ice Youth justice and child protection [electronic resource] / edited by Malcolm Hill, Andrew Lockyer and Fred Stone By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Zecca [electronic resource] : the mint of Venice in the Middle Ages / Alan M. Stahl By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Stahl, Alan M., 1947- Full Article
ice Outcomes of Left Ventricular Assist Devices by Bridge to Transplant or Destination Therapy Intent By jamanetwork.com Published On :: Wed, 01 Apr 2020 00:00:00 GMT This prespecified secondary analysis of the MOMENTUM 3 randomized clinical trial aims to determine whether clinical outcomes of patients with 2 different left ventricular assist devices differed based on preoperative categories of bridge to transplant/bridge to candidacy vs destination therapy. Full Article
ice Incorporating the Patient Voice Into Shared Decision-Making for the Treatment of Aortic Stenosis By jamanetwork.com Published On :: Wed, 01 Apr 2020 00:00:00 GMT Increased attention has focused on shared decision-making (SDM) and use of decision aids for treatment decisions in cardiology. In this issue of JAMA Cardiology, Coylewright et al report the results of a rigorously performed pilot study on the use of a decision aid to facilitate SDM for patients with symptomatic severe aortic stenosis (AS) at high or prohibitive risk for surgery considered for transcatheter aortic valve replacement vs medical therapy. Comparisons were made between encounters before clinicians were trained to use a decision aid and the first and fifth encounters after a decision aid was used. The patient-clinician interactions were audio recorded and later coded by independent reviewers using a validated measure to assess SDM. This mixed-methods study found that SDM significantly improved in a stepwise manner from the initial usual care encounter (before use of a decision aid) to the first and then fifth encounters after implementation of the decision aid. Along with this improvement in SDM, patients (n = 35) demonstrated increased knowledge about their treatment choices and reported increased satisfaction in their care with no increase in decisional conflict. In contrast, clinicians (n = 6) reported that they believed they already engaged in SDM prior to use of the decision aid and, after multiple uses of the decision aid, believed patients did not understand or benefit from this tool. The disconnect between clinician and patient perspectives was sobering and has implications for the adoption of decision aids or other tools to facilitate SDM in the clinical setting. Notable limitations of the study, which are acknowledged by the authors, include (1) small sample size (of clinicians and patients); (2) the decision aid is most useful for the relatively smaller number of patients at high or prohibitive risk for surgery for whom transcatheter aortic valve replacement and medical therapy may both be reasonable options; and (3) the lack of diversity in the clinicians (all male), which reflects the current demographics of interventional cardiology and cardiac surgery. Full Article
ice Alice M. Rivlin papers, 1960-2007 [Revised Finding Aid] By hdl.loc.gov Published On :: Wed, 18 March 2020 01:29:26 PM EDT Economist, government official, and director of the Congressional Budget Office. Correspondence, memoranda, reports, speeches and other writings, congressional testimony, printed materials, newspaper clippings, and photographs pertaining to Rivlin's career as an economist and government official. Full Article Finding Aid Manuscript Division Library of Congress Washington D.C.
ice While avoiding overt discrimination, parties stoke voters’ prejudices subliminally By timesofindia.indiatimes.com Published On :: Wed, 02 Apr 2014 00:06:56 IST The disappearance of inflammatory communal slogans from political speeches suggests development is the agenda for 2014. Full Article
ice [ASAP] Spin Transport in Ferromagnet-InSb Nanowire Quantum Devices By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 04:00:00 GMT Nano LettersDOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b05331 Full Article
ice Marine ecosystems : human impacts on biodiversity, functioning and services / edited by Tasman P. Crowe, University College Dublin, Ireland, Christopher L.J. Frid, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Marine ecosystem-based management in practice : different pathways, common lessons / Julia M. Wondolleck and Steven L. Yaffee By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Wondolleck, Julia Marie, author Full Article
ice Environmental governance reconsidered : challenges, choices, and opportunities / edited by Robert F. Durant, Daniel J. Fiorino, and Rosemary O'Leary By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Floodplains : processes and management for ecosystem services / Jeffrey J. Opperman, Peter B. Moyle, Eric W. Larsen, Joan L. Florsheim, and Amber D. Manfree By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Opperman, Jeffrey J., 1971- author Full Article
ice Marine and coastal resource management : principles and practice / edited by David R. Green and Jeffrey L. Payne By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ice Environmental security in the anthropocene : assessing theory and practice / Judith Nora Hardt By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Hardt, Judith Nora, author Full Article
ice Marine pollution contingency planning : state practice in Asia-Pacific states / edited by Anastasia Telesetsky, Warwick Gullett, Seokwoo Lee By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
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ice Two use fake number plate, police sticker; held By timesofindia.indiatimes.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:29:22 IST Rachakonda police booked two persons for travelling in a vehicle with fake number plate and Police sticker. They are using the vehicle to travel through the toll gates and police check posts during the lockdown. Full Article