What happens when the irresistible force meets the immovable object? One of the more convincing solutions has been proposed by Gary V. Smith of Aston University. He explained it as so: “The initial step to answering the superficially paradoxical question of “What would happen if an unstoppable force met an immovable object?” is establishing what is meant by ’immovable’. In order for something to move‚ its position must be measured relative to something else that is not moving. The universe
Premium Particle physics Atom Universe
Business Objects XI Implementing Active Directory Single Sign-On with Business Objects XI Overview The purpose of this document is to demonstrate the steps to follow to configure Business Objects XI for use with Active Directory SSO. Authored by Ashish Gupta‚ Business Objects Customer Support Contents INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 2 CONFIGURE ACTIVE DIRECTORY ON WINDOWS 2003 SERVER AS PRIMARY DOMAIN CONTROLLER..
Premium Active Directory Windows 2000
An attracting force that acts between any 2 objects. 2. What is the difference between mass and weight? Weight is the measure of the gravitational attraction of an object‚ while mass is the amount of matter in an object‚ the measure of an object’s resistance to motion. 3. How does mass affect the motion of an object? The greater the mass‚ the harder it is to speed up or slow down an object. 4. What finding(s) did Galileo uncover regarding falling objects? He conducted an experiment from the leaning
Premium Classical mechanics Mass General relativity
Pattern Recognition 41 (2008) 432 – 444 www.elsevier.com/locate/pr A real-time object detecting and tracking system for outdoor night surveillance Kaiqi Huang a ‚ ∗ ‚ Liangsheng Wang a ‚ Tieniu Tan a ‚ Steve Maybank b a National Laboratory of Pattern Recognition‚ Institute of Automation‚ Chinese Academy of Sciences‚ Beijing 100080‚ China b School of Computer Science and Information Systems‚ Birkbeck College‚ Malet Street‚ London WC1E 7HX‚ UK Received 27 April 2006; received in revised
Premium Computer vision Image processing Pixel
Object-Oriented Design In the object-oriented design for the CD and DVD medial collection system we need to identify the information about the media we are making a system. In the CD and DVD media system we need the name or normally called title of the CD/DVD‚ its track length‚ genre information and the ratings of the CD/DVD. Other than this some general information also needed to make system working efficiently. Item CD DVD In this media collection we needs an Item class which keeps
Premium
Image Processing Rajasekar S‚ Mohammed Nizar S ECE Department‚ Third Year RMK Engineering College raja.peak@gmail.com smohamednizar@gmail.com +919789356115 +919840515626 Abstract— This document talks about the use of image processing as one of the most crucial element of developing Futuristic Technologies in various fields. I. What is Image processing? Image processing is a method to convert an image into digital form and perform some operations on it‚ in order to get an enhanced
Premium Image processing Digital photography
"Strange Objects" by Gary Crew gives the reader the ability to think about many aspects of the novel in an abstract way. If read with an open mind‚ the reader can uncover many secrets of the novel‚ as well as some of the themes which the author would like you to discover. The plot‚ characterization‚ setting and conflict help to show the theme of ’history repeating itself ’. This is portrayed in the novel through what happened to Jan Pelgrom in the past‚ repeating itself with Steven Messenger in
Free Character Fiction Time
Differences in ability of facial and object image recognition and its suggestibility by image rotation Abstract The ability of face and object image recognition and it s suggestibility by image rotation was examined on first year Psychology students of University of London (N=59). “Subject” participants from assigned pairs were presented with a series of images including faces and objects where 50% of the images were inverted. “Subject” participants had
Premium Statistical significance Face
Marina returned to making solo works as well as with artistic collaborators. In this period‚ she worked increasingly with video and she began making a number of sculptural works‚ Transitory Objects for Human and Non-Human Use‚ which comprise objects meant to incite audience interaction and participation. During the 1990s as a respectable performance artist Marina Abramovic taught at the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Paris‚ the Hochschule der Kunste in Berlin‚ as well as Hochschule fur Bildende Kunste
Premium Art Sociology Arts
Nickerson & Adams (1979): Long-term Memory for a Common Object Question The broad research question that is being asked in this experiment is‚ “How accurately and completely do people recognize common objects?” The specific research question that is being asked in Experiment I is‚ “How accurately can the subject reproduce a penny without aided recall?” The specific research question that is being asked in Experiment II is‚ “How accurately can the subject locate the features on the penny when
Free Object Stanford prison experiment Research