dl

Jordanian Dinar(JOD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Jordanian Dinar = 25.1319 Moldovan Leu




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Lebanese Pound(LBP)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Lebanese Pound = 0.0118 Moldovan Leu




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Bahraini Dinar(BHD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Bahraini Dinar = 47.1502 Moldovan Leu




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Chilean Peso(CLP)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Chilean Peso = 0.0216 Moldovan Leu




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Maldivian Rufiyaa(MVR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Maldivian Rufiyaa = 1.1501 Moldovan Leu




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Malaysian Ringgit(MYR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Malaysian Ringgit = 4.1142 Moldovan Leu




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The Covid-19 Riddle: Why Does the Virus Wallop Some Places and Spare Others?

Experts are trying to figure out why the coronavirus is so capricious. The answers could determine how to best protect ourselves and how long we have to.




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Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro(NIO)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro = 0.5183 Moldovan Leu



  • Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro

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Netherlands Antillean Guilder(ANG)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Netherlands Antillean Guilder = 9.9327 Moldovan Leu



  • Netherlands Antillean Guilder

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Estonian Kroon(EEK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Estonian Kroon = 1.2502 Moldovan Leu




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Danish Krone(DKK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Danish Krone = 2.5914 Moldovan Leu




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Fiji Dollar(FJD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Fiji Dollar = 7.9143 Moldovan Leu




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New Zealand Dollar(NZD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 New Zealand Dollar = 10.9448 Moldovan Leu



  • New Zealand Dollar

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Croatian Kuna(HRK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Croatian Kuna = 2.5699 Moldovan Leu




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Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 5.246 Moldovan Leu



  • Peruvian Nuevo Sol

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Dominican Peso(DOP)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Dominican Peso = 0.324 Moldovan Leu




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Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 5.198 Moldovan Leu



  • Papua New Guinean Kina

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Brunei Dollar(BND)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Brunei Dollar = 12.6171 Moldovan Leu




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Here Is Why the Indian Voter Is Saddled With Bad Economics

This is the 15th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

It’s election season, and promises are raining down on voters like rose petals on naïve newlyweds. Earlier this week, the Congress party announced a minimum income guarantee for the poor. This Friday, the Modi government released a budget full of sops. As the days go by, the promises will get bolder, and you might feel important that so much attention is being given to you. Well, the joke is on you.

Every election, HL Mencken once said, is “an advance auction sale of stolen goods.” A bunch of competing mafias fight to rule over you for the next five years. You decide who wins, on the basis of who can bribe you better with your own money. This is an absurd situation, which I tried to express in a limerick I wrote for this page a couple of years ago:

POLITICS: A neta who loves currency notes/ Told me what his line of work denotes./ ‘It is kind of funny./ We steal people’s money/And use some of it to buy their votes.’

We’re the dupes here, and we pay far more to keep this circus going than this circus costs. It would be okay if the parties, once they came to power, provided good governance. But voters have given up on that, and now only want patronage and handouts. That leads to one of the biggest problems in Indian politics: We are stuck in an equilibrium where all good politics is bad economics, and vice versa.

For example, the minimum guarantee for the poor is good politics, because the optics are great. It’s basically Garibi Hatao: that slogan made Indira Gandhi a political juggernaut in the 1970s, at the same time that she unleashed a series of economic policies that kept millions of people in garibi for decades longer than they should have been.

This time, the Congress has released no details, and keeping it vague makes sense because I find it hard to see how it can make economic sense. Depending on how they define ‘poor’, how much income they offer and what the cost is, the plan will either be ineffective or unworkable.

The Modi government’s interim budget announced a handout for poor farmers that seemed rather pointless. Given our agricultural distress, offering a poor farmer 500 bucks a month seems almost like mockery.

Such condescending handouts solve nothing. The poor want jobs and opportunities. Those come with growth, which requires structural reforms. Structural reforms don’t sound sexy as election promises. Handouts do.

A classic example is farm loan waivers. We have reached a stage in our politics where every party has to promise them to assuage farmers, who are a strong vote bank everywhere. You can’t blame farmers for wanting them – they are a necessary anaesthetic. But no government has yet made a serious attempt at tackling the root causes of our agricultural crisis.

Why is it that Good Politics in India is always Bad Economics? Let me put forth some possible reasons. One, voters tend to think in zero-sum ways, as if the pie is fixed, and the only way to bring people out of poverty is to redistribute. The truth is that trade is a positive-sum game, and nations can only be lifted out of poverty when the whole pie grows. But this is unintuitive.

Two, Indian politics revolves around identity and patronage. The spoils of power are limited – that is indeed a zero-sum game – so you’re likely to vote for whoever can look after the interests of your in-group rather than care about the economy as a whole.

Three, voters tend to stay uninformed for good reasons, because of what Public Choice economists call Rational Ignorance. A single vote is unlikely to make a difference in an election, so why put in the effort to understand the nuances of economics and governance? Just ask, what is in it for me, and go with whatever seems to be the best answer.

Four, Politicians have a short-term horizon, geared towards winning the next election. A good policy that may take years to play out is unattractive. A policy that will win them votes in the short term is preferable.

Sadly, no Indian party has shown a willingness to aim for the long term. The Congress has produced new Gandhis, but not new ideas. And while the BJP did make some solid promises in 2014, they did not walk that talk, and have proved to be, as Arun Shourie once called them, UPA + Cow. Even the Congress is adopting the cow, in fact, so maybe the BJP will add Temple to that mix?

Benjamin Franklin once said, “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch.” This election season, my friends, the people of India are on the menu. You have been deveined and deboned, marinated with rhetoric, seasoned with narrative – now enter the oven and vote.



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




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How to customize default_hdl_checks/rules in CCD conformal constraint designer

Dear all,

I am using Conformal Constraint Designer (Version 17.1) to analyse a SystemVerilog based design.

While performing default HDL checks it finds  some violations (issues) in RTL and complains (warnings, etc) about RTL checks and others.

My questions:

Is there any directive which I can add to RTL (system Verilog) so that particular line of code or signal is ignored or not checked for HDL or RTL checks.

I can set ignore rules in rule manager (gui) but it does not seems effective if code line number changes or new signals are introduced.

What is the best way to customize default_hdl_rules ?

I will be grateful for your guidance.

Thanks for your time.




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SystemVerilog package used inside VHDL-2008 design?

Hi,

Is it possible to use a SystemVerilog package which is compiled into a library and then use it in a VHDL-2008 design file? Is such mixed-language flow supported?

I'm considering the latest versions of Incisive / Xcelium available today (Oct 2019).

Thank you,

Michal




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GENUS can't handle parameterized ports?

The following is valid SystemVerilog:

module mmio
#(parameter PORTS=2,
parameter ADDR_WIDTH=30)
(input logic[ADDR_WIDTH-1:0] addr[PORTS],
output logic ben[PORTS], // Bus enable
output logic men[PORTS]); // Memory enable

always_comb begin
for(int i = 0; i < PORTS; i++) begin
ben[i] = addr[i] >= 'h20080004 && addr[i] < 'h200c0000;
men[i] = ~ben[i];
end
end

endmodule : mmio

And if you instantiate it:


mmio #(1, 30) MMIO(.addr('{scalar_addr}),
.ben('{ben}),
.men('{men}));

Genus returns an error: "Could not synthesize non-constant range values. [CDFG-231] [elaborate]" Is this just not possible in Genus or could it be caused by something else?




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Willamette HDL and Cadence Develop the Industry's First PSS Training Course for Perspec System Verifier

Cadence continues to be a leader in SoC verification and has expanded our industry investment in Accellera portable stimulus language standardization. Some customers have expressed reservations that portable stimulus requires the effort of learn...(read more)




dl

Here Is Why the Indian Voter Is Saddled With Bad Economics

This is the 15th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

It’s election season, and promises are raining down on voters like rose petals on naïve newlyweds. Earlier this week, the Congress party announced a minimum income guarantee for the poor. This Friday, the Modi government released a budget full of sops. As the days go by, the promises will get bolder, and you might feel important that so much attention is being given to you. Well, the joke is on you.

Every election, HL Mencken once said, is “an advance auction sale of stolen goods.” A bunch of competing mafias fight to rule over you for the next five years. You decide who wins, on the basis of who can bribe you better with your own money. This is an absurd situation, which I tried to express in a limerick I wrote for this page a couple of years ago:

POLITICS: A neta who loves currency notes/ Told me what his line of work denotes./ ‘It is kind of funny./ We steal people’s money/And use some of it to buy their votes.’

We’re the dupes here, and we pay far more to keep this circus going than this circus costs. It would be okay if the parties, once they came to power, provided good governance. But voters have given up on that, and now only want patronage and handouts. That leads to one of the biggest problems in Indian politics: We are stuck in an equilibrium where all good politics is bad economics, and vice versa.

For example, the minimum guarantee for the poor is good politics, because the optics are great. It’s basically Garibi Hatao: that slogan made Indira Gandhi a political juggernaut in the 1970s, at the same time that she unleashed a series of economic policies that kept millions of people in garibi for decades longer than they should have been.

This time, the Congress has released no details, and keeping it vague makes sense because I find it hard to see how it can make economic sense. Depending on how they define ‘poor’, how much income they offer and what the cost is, the plan will either be ineffective or unworkable.

The Modi government’s interim budget announced a handout for poor farmers that seemed rather pointless. Given our agricultural distress, offering a poor farmer 500 bucks a month seems almost like mockery.

Such condescending handouts solve nothing. The poor want jobs and opportunities. Those come with growth, which requires structural reforms. Structural reforms don’t sound sexy as election promises. Handouts do.

A classic example is farm loan waivers. We have reached a stage in our politics where every party has to promise them to assuage farmers, who are a strong vote bank everywhere. You can’t blame farmers for wanting them – they are a necessary anaesthetic. But no government has yet made a serious attempt at tackling the root causes of our agricultural crisis.

Why is it that Good Politics in India is always Bad Economics? Let me put forth some possible reasons. One, voters tend to think in zero-sum ways, as if the pie is fixed, and the only way to bring people out of poverty is to redistribute. The truth is that trade is a positive-sum game, and nations can only be lifted out of poverty when the whole pie grows. But this is unintuitive.

Two, Indian politics revolves around identity and patronage. The spoils of power are limited – that is indeed a zero-sum game – so you’re likely to vote for whoever can look after the interests of your in-group rather than care about the economy as a whole.

Three, voters tend to stay uninformed for good reasons, because of what Public Choice economists call Rational Ignorance. A single vote is unlikely to make a difference in an election, so why put in the effort to understand the nuances of economics and governance? Just ask, what is in it for me, and go with whatever seems to be the best answer.

Four, Politicians have a short-term horizon, geared towards winning the next election. A good policy that may take years to play out is unattractive. A policy that will win them votes in the short term is preferable.

Sadly, no Indian party has shown a willingness to aim for the long term. The Congress has produced new Gandhis, but not new ideas. And while the BJP did make some solid promises in 2014, they did not walk that talk, and have proved to be, as Arun Shourie once called them, UPA + Cow. Even the Congress is adopting the cow, in fact, so maybe the BJP will add Temple to that mix?

Benjamin Franklin once said, “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch.” This election season, my friends, the people of India are on the menu. You have been deveined and deboned, marinated with rhetoric, seasoned with narrative – now enter the oven and vote.

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




dl

VHDL-AMS std and ieee libraries not found/empty

I'm trying to set up a VHDL-AMS simulation, so I made a new cell, selected the vhdlamstext type, and copied some example from the web. But when I hit the save and compile button, I first got the following NOLSTD error:

https://www.edaboard.com/showthread.php?27832-Simulating-a-VHDL-design-in-ldv5-1

So I added said file to my cds.lib and tried again. But now I'm getting this:

ncvhdl_p: *F,DLUNNE: Can't find STANDARD at /cadappl/ictools/cadence_ic/6.1.7.721/tools/inca/files/STD.

If I go over to the Library Browser, it indeed shows that the library is completely empty. Properties show it has the following files attached.

In the file system I've also found a STD.src folder. Is there a way to recompile the library properly? Supposedly this folder includes precompiled versions, but looks like not really.




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જીવના જોખમે કામ કરતાં ડિલિવરી એજન્ટોને Amazon, BigBasket, Grofers અને MedLife ની સલામ

Amazon, BigBasket, Grofers અને MedLife, લોકડાઉન દરમિયાન જીવના જોખમે ડિલિવરી કરતા બહાદૂુરોને બિરદાવે છે.




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Amazon, BigBasket, Grofers এবং MedLife, COVID-19-এর লকডাউনের মধ্যে কর্মরত ডেলিভারি এজেন্টদের নির্ভীকতার প্রশংসা জানাচ্ছে




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News18 Urdu: Latest News Mandla

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




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LEADTOOLS Active-X DLL Hijacking

LEADTOOLS Active-X control suffers from multiple DLL side loading vulnerabilities.




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Microsoft Windows 10 scrrun.dll Active-X Creation / Deletion Issues

scrrun.dll on Microsoft Windows 10 suffers from file creation, folder creation, and folder deletion vulnerabilities.









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iOS / macOS AWDL Heap Corruption / Bounds Checking

A remote iOS / macOS heap corruption issue exists due to insufficient bounds checking in AWDL.




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UPLoad 7.0 Insecure Cookie Handling

UPLoad version 7.0 suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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Newbie CMS Insecure Cookie Handling

Newbie CMS suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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CuteNews 1.4.6 Insecure Cookie Handling

CuteNews version 1.4.6 suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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Islamic Voice Insecure Cookie Handling

Islamic Voice suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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velBox 1.2 Insecure Cookie Handling

velBox version 1.2 suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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My Book Insecure Cookie Handling

My Book suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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xWeblog 2.2 Insecure Cookie Handling

xWeblog version 2.2 suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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WikiWebHelp 0.3.3 Insecure Cookie Handling

WikiWebHelp version 0.3.3 suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




dl

Babil CMS Insecure Cookie Handling

Babil CMS suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability.




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PHPDirector 0.30 Insecure Cookie Handling

PHPDirector version 0.30 suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability that allows for privilege escalation.




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ResourceSpace 6.4.5976 XSS / SQL Injection / Insecure Cookie Handling

ResourceSpace suffers from cross site scripting, html injection, insecure cookie handling, and remote SQL injection vulnerabilities. Versions 6.4.5976 and below are affected.




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Microsoft Teams Instant Messenger DLL Hijacking

Microsoft Teams Instant Messenger application on Windows 7 SP1 fully patched is vulnerable to remote DLL hijacking.




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Smart TVs Riddled With DUMB Security Holes




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Linux 5.3 Insecure Root Path Handling

Linux versions 5.3 and above appear to have an issue where io_uring suffers from insecure handling of the root directory for path lookups.