R. Akkiraju‚ J. Farrell‚ J.Miller‚ M. Nagarajan‚ M. Schmidt‚ A. Sheth‚ K. Verma‚ "Web Service Semantics - WSDL-S‚" A joint UGA-IBM Technical Note‚ version 1.0‚ April 18‚ 2005. http://lsdis.cs.uga.edu/projects/METEOR-S/WSDL-S Web Service Semantics - WSDL-S Technical Note Version 1.0 April‚ 2005 Authors (alphabetically): Rama Akkiraju‚ IBM Research Joel Farrell‚ IBM Software Group John Miller‚ LSDIS Lab‚ University of Georgia Meenakshi Nagarajan‚ LSDIS Lab‚ University of Georgia Marc-Thomas
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A Web of Brands In Naomi Klein’s A Web of Brands ‚ published in Fences and Windows 2002‚ the author shows “that the economic divide is widening and cultural choices are narrowing” (P.24). She does this by telling about how she started this book in a warehouse in Toronto where she lived. She talks about how in the 30 and 40’s immigrants where running around and how they are still around the same place now. She then continues to tell us about the 12 story warehouse and how they are all stuck there
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The WWW‚ HTTP‚ Browsers‚ and the Web Standards What is WWW? - It stands for the World Wide Web‚ which is most often called the web. - The web is a network of computers all over the world. - All the computers that are connected to the web uses a protocol called HTTP to communicate with each other. What is HTTP? - It stands for the Hypertext Transfer Protocol. - It is a networking protocol for distributed‚ collaborative‚ and hypermedia information systems. - It is
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Server Clusters : Architecture Overview For Windows Server 2003 Microsoft Corporation Published: March 2003 Abstract Server clusters are one of two Microsoft( Windows( clustering technologies available for the Microsoft Windows Server family of products. Windows Server 2003 clusters provide failover support for back-end applications and services that require high availability and data integrity. These back-end applications include enterprise applications such as database‚ file server
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on the Web References 1. E-Business: Gary Schneider‚ 10th Edition Chapter 5 UOL CO 3323 L4 - Marketing on the Web 1 Learning Objectives In this chapter‚ you will learn: • How firms use product-based and customer-based marketing strategies • About communicating with different market segments • To identify customer relationship characteristics • About the customer relationship life cycle • How companies advertise on the Web UOL CO 3323 L4 - Marketing on the Web 2
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S E T T I N G T H E S TA G E Planning a Web Development Project Presented by: Kelly Goto kelly@gotomedia.com kgoto@aol.com (415) 957-7701 session url www.gotomedia.com/atlanta00/stage Cool cover illustration by Eunice Moyle SESSION OUTLINE 1.0 The Project: Introduction 2.0 Before You Start: The Client 3.0 The Proposal: The Development Process 4.0 Estimating: Time and Resources 4.1 4.2 The Budget: Estimating by Hours The Budget: Estimating by Task 5.0 Creative
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Lymphatics web quest Suggested site- www.cdc.gov‚ feel free to use other reliable sites as well. 1. What animal can transmit Cryptococcus? Pigeons 2. Can dogs and cats get Cryptococcus? Yes 3. What is the infectious agent for Bubonic Plague? Bacterium Yersinia Pestis 4. By how much was the world population reduced during the Plague pandemic? Estimate of 450 million 5. What year (within the past 100 years) did the world experience a flu pandemic? 1918 6. What are 3 symptoms of chikungunya
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Identification of Temporal Information in Tourism Web Pages Stéphanie Weiser*‚ Philippe Laublet**‚ Jean-Luc Minel* * MoDyCo‚ UMR 7114‚ CNRS 200 avenue de la République‚ 92001 Nanterre ** LaLIC‚ Université Paris-Sorbonne Maison de la recherche‚ 28 rue Serpente 75006 Paris E-mail: steph.weiser@gmail.com‚ Philippe.Laublet@paris-sorbonne.fr‚ jminel@u-paris10.fr Abstract This paper presents our work on the detection of temporal information in web pages. The pages examined within the scope of this
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Africa and the Web in 1450-1800: The Atlantic Slave Trade While some places were intricately involved with the Old World Web‚ other places were not as actively involved. Africa was a continent that did not take much part in the web before the 1500s. With a few exceptions of the coastal areas and East Africa which previously expanded the web a little due to interaction via the Indian Ocean; internal Africa still remained unaffected by long distance trades. McNeill points out that “a dangerous disease
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The social web is growing at a phenomenal rate. It is an open global distributed data sharing network that links people‚ organizations‚ and concepts. The social web is defiantly reshaping the way that we live and interact with each other. There are several examples of the social web; however‚ Facebook‚ MySpace‚ Twitter‚ E-Harmony and Blog.com sites are some of the most frequented sites out there today. Created in 2004‚ by 2007 Facebook was reported to have more than 21 million registered members
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