principles

[ASAP] Compensation between Surface Energy and hcp/fcc Phase Energy of Late Transition Metals from First-Principles Calculations

The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c02142




principles

Biothermodynamics: principles and applications / Mustafa Ozilgen, Esra Sorgüven, both of Yeditepe University, Istanbul, Turkey

Online Resource




principles

Nanomagnetic actuation in biomedicine: basic principles and applications / edited by Jon Dobson and Carlos Rinaldi

Online Resource




principles

Wilson and Walker's principles and techniques of biochemistry and molecular biology / edited by Andreas Hofmann, Griffith University, Queensland, Samuel Clokie, Birmingham Women's Hospital

Hayden Library - QP519.7.P75 2018




principles

Bionanotechnology: principles and applications / Anil Kumar Anal

Hayden Library - TP248.25.N35 A53 2018




principles

Principles of biophotonics. Gabriel Popescu

Online Resource




principles

Membrane separation principles and applications: from material selection to mechanisms and industrial uses / edited by Ahmad Fauzi Ismail, Mukhlis A. Rahman, Mohd Hafiz Dzarfan Othman, Takeshi Matsuura

Online Resource




principles

Principles of medical imaging for engineers: from signals to images / Michael Chappell

Online Resource




principles

Principles of radiometric dating / Kunchithapadam Gopalan

Hayden Library - QC798.D3 C66 2017




principles

Principles of agricultural economics / Andrew Barkley and Paul W. Barkley

Barkley, Andrew P., 1962- author




principles

Forecasting : principles and practice / Rob J. Hyndman and George Athanasopoulos

Hyndman, Rob J., author




principles

Making learning whole : how seven principles of teaching can transform education / David N. Perkins

Perkins, David N




principles

Implementing change : patterns, principles, and potholes / Gene E Hall, President, Concerns Based Systems, Inc., Professor Emeritus, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Shirley M. Hord, Scholar Laureate, Learning Forward ; forewords by Bruce Joyce, Barrie Be

Hall, Gene E., 1941- author




principles

Multimedia security using chaotic maps: principles and methodologies / Khalid M. Hosny, editor

Online Resource




principles

Wiley GAAP 2019 [electronic resource]: Interpretation and Application of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

Flood, Joanne M




principles

Hospital reimbursement [electronic resource] : concepts and principles / Kyle Herbert

Herbert, Kyle




principles

Wiley GAAP for Governments 2019 [electronic resource]: Interpretation and Application of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles for State and Local Governments

Ruppel, Warren




principles

Wiley GAAP 2013 [electronic resource] : interpretation and application of generally accepted accounting principles / Joanne M. Flood

Flood, Joanne M., author




principles

Wiley GAAP 2016 [electronic resource] : interpretation and application of generally accepted accounting principles / Joanne M. Flood

Flood, Joanne M., author




principles

Wiley GAAP 2018 [electronic resource] : interpretation and application of generally accepted accounting principles / Joanne M. Flood

Flood, Joanne M., author




principles

Wiley not-for-profit GAAP 2014 [electronic resource] : interpretation and application of generally accepted accounting principles for not-for-profit organizations / Richard F. Larkin, Marie DiTommaso

Larkin, Richard F., author




principles

Wiley not-for-profit GAAP 2017 [electronic resource] : interpretation and application of generally accepted accounting principles for not-for-profit organizations / Richard F. Larkin, Marie DiTommaso

Larkin, Richard F., author




principles

The art of community [electronic resource] : seven principles for belonging / Charles H. Vogl

Vogl, Charles H., author




principles

Principles of electronic materials and devices / S.O. Kasap (University of Saskatchewan, Canada)

Kasap, S. O. (Safa O.), author




principles

Data mining and data warehousing : principles and practical techniques / Parteek Bhatia

Bhatia, Parteek, author




principles

Modern principles, practices, and algorithms for cloud security / [edited by] Brij B. Gupta




principles

Principles of reinforced concrete design / Mete A. Sozen, Toshikatsu Ichinose, Santiago Pujol

Online Resource




principles

Offshore risk assessment.: Principles, modelling and applications of QRA studies / Jan-Erik Vinnem, Willy Røed

Online Resource




principles

Offshore Risk Assessment.: Principles, Modelling and Applications of QRA Studies / Jan-Erik Vinnem, Willy Røed

Online Resource




principles

Principles of mineralogy / William H. Blackburn, William H. Dennen

Blackburn, William H




principles

Solvent extraction : principles and applications to process metallurgy

Ritcey, G. M




principles

Copper SX/EW basic principles, & detailed plant design : short course / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services




principles

Copper SX/EW basic principles & detailed plant design : short course / organised by ALTA Metallurgical Services




principles

Hydrometallurgy : principles and applications / Tomáš Havlik

Havlík, T. (Tomáš)




principles

Principles of extractive metallurgy / Terkel Rosenqvist

Rosenqvist, Terkel




principles

Physical metallurgy : principles and practice / V. Raghavan (Formerly Professor, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi)

Raghavan, V., author




principles

Marine OMICS : principles and applications / edited by Se-Kwon Kim




principles

Marine and coastal resource management : principles and practice / edited by David R. Green and Jeffrey L. Payne




principles

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

Mansoori, G. A. (G. Ali)




principles

Biotechnology operations: principles and practices / John M. Centanni, Michael J. Roy

Hayden Library - TP248.2.R69 2017




principles

Surfactant science: principles & practice / Steven Abbott

Hayden Library - TP994.A23 2017




principles

Ultraviolet light in food technology: principles and applications / Tatiana Koutchma

Online Resource




principles

First-principles calculations of electronic structure and optical and elastic properties of the novel ABX3-type LaWN3 perovskite structure

RSC Adv., 2020, 10,17317-17326
DOI: 10.1039/C9RA10735E, Paper
Open Access
Xing Liu, Jia Fu, Guangming Chen
Using first-principles calculation, the stable R3c LaWN3 as a new ABX3-type advanced perovskite structure is designed in the plan of the material genome initiative (MGI), which helps to widen the nowadays nitride perovskite material's application.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




principles

UX Fundamentals for Non-UX Professionals [electronic resource] : User Experience Principles for Managers, Writers, Designers, and Developers / by Edward Stull

Stull, Edward. author




principles

Principles and priorities

I think about design principles a lot. I’m such a nerd for design principles, I even have a collection. I’m not saying all of the design principles in the collection are good—far from it! I collect them without judgement.

As for what makes a good design principle, I’ve written about that before. One aspect that everyone seems to agree on is that a design principle shouldn’t be an obvious truism. Take this as an example:

Make it usable.

Who’s going to disagree with that? It’s so agreeable that it’s practically worthless as a design principle. But now take this statement:

Usability is more important than profitability.

Ooh, now we’re talking! That’s controversial. That’s bound to surface some disagreement, which is a good thing. It’s now passing the reversability test—it’s not hard to imagine an endeavour driven by the opposite:

Profitability is more important than usability.

In either formulation, what makes these statements better than the bland toothless agreeable statements—“Usability is good!”, “Profitability is good!”—is that they introduce the element of prioritisation.

I like design principles that can be formulated as:

X, even over Y.

It’s not saying that Y is unimportant, just that X is more important:

Usability, even over profitability.

Or:

Profitability, even over usability.

Design principles formulated this way help to crystalise priorities. Chris has written about the importance of establishing—and revisiting—priorities on any project:

Prioritisation isn’t and shouldn’t be a one-off exercise. The changing needs of your customers, the business environment and new opportunities from technology mean prioritisation is best done as a regular activity.

I’ve said it many times, but one on my favourite design principles comes from the HTML design principles. The priority of consitituencies (it’s got “priorities” right there in the name!):

In case of conflict, consider users over authors over implementors over specifiers over theoretical purity.

Or put another way:

  • Users, even over authors.
  • Authors, even over implementors.
  • Implementors, even over specifiers.
  • Specifiers, even over theoretical purity.

When it comes to evaluating technology for the web, I think there are a number of factors at play.

First and foremost, there’s the end user. If a technology choice harms the end user, avoid it. I’m thinking here of the kind of performance tax that a user has to pay when developers choose to use megabytes of JavaScript.

Mind you, some technologies have no direct effect on the end user. When it comes to build tools, version control, toolchains …all the stuff that sits on your computer and never directly interacts with users. In that situation, the wants and needs of developers can absolutely take priority.

But as a general principle, I think this works:

User experience, even over developer experience.

Sadly, I think the current state of “modern” web development reverses that principle. Developer efficiency is prized above all else. Like I said, that would be absolutely fine if we’re talking about technologies that only developers are exposed to, but as soon as we’re talking about shipping those technologies over the network to end users, it’s negligent to continue to prioritise the developer experience.

I feel like personal websites are an exception here. What you do on your own website is completely up to you. But once you’re taking a paycheck to make websites that will be used by other people, it’s incumbent on you to realise that it’s not about you.

I’ve been talking about developers here, but this is something that applies just as much to designers. But I feel like designers go through that priority shift fairly early in their career. At the outset, they’re eager to make their mark and prove themselves. As they grow and realise that it’s not about them, they understand that the most appropriate solution for the user is what matters, even if that’s a “boring” tried-and-tested pattern that isn’t going to wow any fellow designers.

I’d like to think that developers would follow a similar progression, and I’m sure that some do. But I’ve seen many senior developers who have grown more enamoured with technologies instead of honing in on the most appropriate technology for end users. Maybe that’s because in many organisations, developers are positioned further away from the end users (whereas designers are ideally being confronted with their creations being used by actual people). If a lead developer is focused on the productivity, efficiency, and happiness of the dev team, it’s no wonder that their priorities end up overtaking the user experience.

I realise I’m talking in very binary terms here: developer experience versus user experience. I know it’s not always that simple. Other priorities also come into play, like business needs. Sometimes business needs are in direct conflict with user needs. If an online business makes its money through invasive tracking and surveillance, then there’s no point in having a design principle that claims to prioritise user needs above all else. That would be a hollow claim, and the design principle would become worthless.

Because that’s the point with design principles. They’re there to be used. They’re not a nice fluffy exercise in feeling good about your work. The priority of constituencies begins, “in case of conflict” and that’s exactly when a design principle matters—when it’s tested.

Suppose someone with a lot of clout in your organisation makes a decision, but that decision conflicts with your organisations’s design principles. Instead of having an opinion-based argument about who’s right or wrong, the previously agreed-upon design principles allow you to take ego out of the equation.

Prioritisation isn’t easy, and it gets harder the more factors come into play: user needs, business needs, technical constraints. But it’s worth investing the time to get agreement on the priority of your constituencies. And then formulate that agreement into design principles.




principles

Integrated principles of zoology / Cleveland P. Hickman, Jr., Washington and Lee University, Susan L. Keen, University of California-Davis, David J. Eisenhour, Morehead State University, Allan Larson, Washington University, Helen I' Anson, Washington

Hickman, Cleveland P., Jr., author




principles

Prediction of ternary fluorooxoborates with coplanar triangular units [BOxF3−x]x− from first-principles

Dalton Trans., 2020, 49,5424-5428
DOI: 10.1039/D0DT00160K, Communication
Zhonglei Wei, Wenyao Zhang, Hao Zeng, Hao Li, Zhihua Yang, Shilie Pan
From first-principles prediction, we got all the basic structural units of fluorooxoborates, namely, tetrahedral elements [BOxF4−x] (x = 1,2,3) like [BO4] and triangular elements [BOxF3−x] (x = 1,2) like [BO3].
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




principles

Law and development: balancing principles and values / Piotr Szwedo, Richard Peltz-Steele, Dai Tamada, editors

Online Resource




principles

Governing infrastructure regulators in fragile environments: principles and implementation manual.

Online Resource




principles

Mediation : principles process practice / Laurence Boulle, Teh Hwee Hwee

Boulle, Laurence, 1949-