Leidsid 33 sarnast õppematerjali, mis on seotud failiga "Project Plan". Need materjalid aitavad sul teemat sügavamalt mõista.
space, grade, feet, below, devel, development, north, available, light, construct, northern, pointe, above, construction, require, square, center, consideration, trees, study, underground, grant, further, here, bella, requirements, building, structure, such, solar, total, although, levels, limit, garden, provide, project, effort, extent, basis, judgment• Shop-drawing review is sped up; • Steel design takes place in a more concurrent fashion; • 3D illustrations help to explain erection sequencing; • Building models provide rigging information for erection crews. The results of this thesis illustrate the benefit that 3D and BIM offer for complex steel construction projects and demonstrate an overall trend in the construction industry. The primary purpose of 3D and BIM is to be able to build the structure in virtual space before actual construction starts, so that the majority of the potential challenges can be successfully identified and addressed during the preconstruction phase. Resümee Käesoleva magistritöö põhiosa on kirjutatud Ameerika Ühendriikides Washingtoni Ülikoolis ajavahemikus september 2009 – september 2010. Ameerikas alustati mudelprojekteerimise (Building Information Modelling – BIM)
..............................7 2.1.2. Growth and cost trends................................................................................8 2.1.3. Theoretical potential.....................................................................................9 2.1.4. Benefits of wind energy................................................................................10 2.2. Solar Energy........................................................................................................11 2.2.1 Development, deployment and economics................................................12 2.3. Hydroenergy.......................................................................................................13 2.4. Geothermal Energy............................................................................................14 2.5. Biomass Energy....................................................................................................16 3. Conclusion..................................................
He walked to school, read books instead of watching TV, played the trumpet instead of Guitar Hero, and turned off the lights anytime he left a room. Then one evening, there was a power outage. The lights went out, the TV turned off, and everything became very quiet. Jules became very upset, and quite scared. She couldn't do anything that she wanted to do. She didn't think she could survive. Meanwhile, Les didn't seem to mind at all. He was able to light a few candles and he could still read his books, practice his trumpet, and hang out and play cards with his family. The two friends then realized that there was a big difference in their lifestyles and the amount of energy they used. So Jules decided she should figure out how much energy Les used and then compare her energy consumption to how much she really needed. To do this, they figured out how much energy Jules was using for entertainment, light, heating and
a means of both assessment and instruction. The first section discusses what AES is, how it works, and who the major purveyors of the technology are. The second section describes outgrowths of the technology as it applies to on-going projects in measurement and education. In 1973, the late Ellis Page and colleagues at the University of Connecticut programmed the first successful automated essay scoring engine, "Project Essay Grade (PEG)" (1973). The technology was foretold some six years earlier in a landmark Phi Delta Kappan article entitled, "The Imminence of Grading Essays by Computer" (Page, 1966). At the time the article was provocative and a bit outrageous, though in hindsight, it can only be deemed prophetic. As a former high school English teacher , Page was convinced that students would benefit greatly by having access to technology that would provide quick feedback on their writing
...................................................................9 3.5. Outsourced Services .........................................................................................................9 3.6. Structure............................................................................................................................9 3.7. Management Process ......................................................................................................10 4. Development Program............................................................................................................10 4.1. Expenses .........................................................................................................................10 4.2. Outstanding Tasks and Projects ......................................................................................10 4.3. SWOT Analysis of the IT Department .......................................................
näitama ; eksponaat, asitõend) heliotropism. At sunrise, the faces of most sunflowers are turned towards the east. Over the course(kurss, suund, kulg, kursus, käik, väljak, müürilade) of the day, they move to track(jälitama) the sun from east to west, while at night they return to an eastward(ida suunaline, ida poole) orientation. This motion(liikumine, esildis) is performed by motor cells in the pulvinus, a flexible segment(segment, lõik ; segmenteerima, tükeldama) of the stem just below the bud. As the bud stage ends, the stem(tüvi) stiffens(kangestuma, jäigastuma) and the blooming stage is reached. Sunflowers in the blooming stage are not heliotropic anymore. The stem has frozen, typically in an eastward orientation. The stem and leaves lose their green color. The wild sunflower typically does not turn toward the sun; its flowering heads may face many directions when mature. However, the leaves typically exhibit some heliotropism. Cultivation and uses
3. What is LC: the concept, its principles and tools? 4. What is BIM: the concept, the process and its functionalities? 5. Can LC and BIM be integrated and what are the results? 6. What is IPD? 7. Are LC and BIM applicable to the Estonian construction industry? 1.2 Research methodology At the highest level, the present research can be divided into the following two functions: literature review and empirical study. Literature review. This is based on available publications, articles and white papers from the International Group for Lean Construction, etc. (see also Bibliography). Empirical study. This is based on the following three sources: first, the Crusell Bridge 1case study (included in the appendices), which provided examples; second, research whose objective was to determine the current state of the Estonian construction industry (see also chapter 2); and finally,
1.2. Overview of Belarusian economy ....................................................................... 52 2.2. Customs Union of Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan.................................................. 55 2.3. The Business Environment ........................................................................................ 58 2.4. Banking system.......................................................................................................... 59 2.5. Development of Private Sector .................................................................................. 61 2.5.1. Starting a business in Belarus ............................................................................ 63 2.6. Foreign Investment treatment .................................................................................... 66 2.7. Corporate forms ......................................................................................................... 71
When this gas is trapped, however, it can be made useful, instead of just being a nuisance. Trapped biogas can be used to power stoves for cooking and heating, in addition to other applications. By trapping the gases, people can prevent methane from reaching the atmosphere, thereby reducing degradation caused by methane gas. The ability to turn waste products into something which can be utilized is also rather convenient, especially in developing countries, where available resources may be limited. Furthermore, by turning biomass into biogas, people can address issues like sewage treatment, ensuring that raw sewage is not released into the natural environment. Producing process Biogas is normally produced by using the excreta of animals as the source material. In most of the countries where biogas is produced, the excreta of the cattle and other farm animals are used. In India gobar or cow dung is used for the purpose of making biogas
to members (students and staff) only of the author's/s' institute, it is not permitted to post this PDF on the open internet. For any other use of this material prior written permission should be obtained from the publishers or through the Copyright Clearance Center (for USA: www.copyright.com). Please contact [email protected] or consult our website: www.benjamins.com Tables of Contents, abstracts and guidelines are available at www.benjamins.com Subtitle reading speed A new tool for its estimation José Luis Martí Ferriol Universitat Jaume I 1.Introduction Subtitling, together with dubbing, is the audiovisual translation mode most widely used worldwide. The number of publications devoted to assess which one of both is better when viewing audiovisual material is large, and have been thoroughly summarized for example by Chaume (2004). The conclusion, however, is that this
What is the UML? • UML stands for Unified Modeling Language • The UML combines the best of the best from – Data Modeling concepts (Entity Relationship Diagrams) – Business Modeling (work flow) – Object Modeling – Component Modeling • The UML is the standard language for visualizing, specifying, constructing, and documenting the artifacts of a software-intensive system • It can be used with all processes, throughout the development life cycle, and across different implementation technologies UML 2.0-is avisual modeling lang.,describes the specification and design of a soft intensive system via visual models UML2.0 history: fragmentation (the method wars), unification (booch, rumbaugh, Jacobson), standardization (UML1.1) ,industrialization. =>1.3.01.4.1.5 2.0 AN Architectural representation: logical ,implementation, process, deployment views
Are they best taught individually, or learned wholly as byproducts of studying mathematics, geography, history, etc? It is obvious that such skills are more valuable than any single subject which might be used as the vehicle to develop them. Inequality. Some students, subjected to identical classwork, learn rapidly and progress, while others fail. How can we predict success or failure, and compensate the at-risk children? Few practical options may be available to teachers. It is inevitable in universal public schooling that the extreme students, either dull or bright, will be hurt by our emphasis on the average. It is horrible to admit, but our society cannot assume that all members are capable of being well educated. We have unequal physical, mental and environmental status, and the poorer fringe will always exist. Those of us lucky enough to have a conscience, mature enough to see how things really are, must do what we can to help the less fortunate
Tallinn is known for its picturesque seaside silhouette, surrounded by multitude of beaches, but Kalarand was the only beach within the city and closest place to the seafront next to the Old Town. Over the years Kalamaja district has become a popular cultural district of Tallinn where people enjoy their free time. Kalarand has played a big role in it. Both Kalarand and Kalasadam (Fish market) have been a car-free city space for over twenty years, where people can go to spend their free time and enjoy the views of the sea. Kalarand has become a popular bathing spot among local people. It provides an oasis far away from the hum of cars and from the tourist crowd, granted the seldom adventurous tourist lost enough to find it have learned to appreciate its charm. It is a meeting place where you can interact with people, go for a swim in sandy shore and have picnics
Many computer applications, especially asynchronous computer-mediated communication such as email and electronic bulletin boards, promote interactive learning. With the booming growth of technology, blogs have become another learning platform for language teaching. Accordingly, these in turn have provided both teachers and learners with an alternative avenue, unlike the traditional face-to-face meetings or discussions, to foster their personal knowledge development through meaningful negotiation and communication. The web-based technology supports collaborative learning that enriches learning performance, both for individual knowledge construction and group knowledge sharing. I became interested in the field since I realised that nowadays in order to be an effective teacher one must know the `key' to the new generation of learners falling, to a category of `digital natives'
The PlayStation 3 (slated to appear at the end of 2004) may use a 3GHz processor, 512Mb RAM, a 120Gb hard disk, and render 2 billion polygons per second. The Xbox 2 (due at the end of 2006) may employ a Pentium 4, a clock speed of 1GHz, 1Gb RAM, a 160Gb hard disk, and render 2-3 billion polygons per second. 1.3. High and Low Profile Games Marner distinguishes between high profile and low profile games [Marner 2002]. A high profile game is endowed with massive development costs (perhaps US$5 million or more), a generous advertising budget, a large development staff, and a very visible presence for game retailers and magazines. To recoup the enormous upfront expenses, high profile games tend to utilise cutting-edge graphics (which require high hardware performance), and tie-ins with other media such as movies or books. A low profile game is aimed at a smaller market, and may be limited to a single platform, or user community
Over the centuries, mutation produced a wide array of colours based on 2 different pigments. Eumelanin gives the blacks, browns and blues while phaeomelanin gives the reds, fawns and creams. A few other genes give further variations on those colours such silvers, colourpoints and solids/selfs. Mutations continue to occur and unexpected colours also turn up due to inbreeding where recessive genes, hidden for generations, start showing up. AMBER AND LIGHT AMBER During the 1990s, some purebred Norwegian Forest Cats in Sweden produced chocolate/lilac and cinnamon/fawn offspring. However, those colours are not found in the purebred Norwegian Forest Cat gene pool. Had the gene pool become polluted by someone, perhaps generations ago, breeding their Norwegian Forest Cat to another breed? Was it a spontaneous mutation? Crossing of those cats with known chocolate and cinnamon colour cats of other breeds ruled out chocolate/lilac and cinnamon/fawn genes
acid), incorporated into other cellular molecules, or oxidized to carbon dioxide and exhaled. Formaldehyde vapors are readily absorbed from the respiratory tract. Due to rapid metabolism to formate, little, if any, intact formaldehyde can be found in the blood of humans or animals exposed to formaldehyde. Formaldehyde is also readily absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and meets with the same metabolic fate as formaldehyde after inhalation exposure. The studies available in the open literature suggest that very little formaldehyde is absorbed via the dermal route. In all cases, absorption appears to be limited to cell layers immediately adjacent to the point of contact. Entry of formaldehyde into the blood (i.e., systemic absorption) occurs to a very limited extent, if at all. ENVIRONMENTAL FATE In reviewing the fate of formaldehyde in the environment, it should be noted that the environmental
The only drawback was getting the mattress for free off of craigslist. Next time I’d pay a little money for one that was less dirty.” This problem is not an engineering design problem, but the way in which it is documented is identical. Proper documentation includes three parts: problem definition, design description, and evaluation. All three are required to communicate your solution. The figure below shows the basic organization of any design report and should be the model for any report that you write. The following sections provide more detail about the content for each part. Page 2 of 9 Problem Definition In this part you describe the problem you set out to solve. You provide sufficient detail so someone can both understand why the problem is significant and how it has been solved in the past. Your problem is
CONTENTS Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Where are the rules for professional marine navigation written down? . . . . . . . . . . .6 What are the IMO requirements for the carriage of nautical charts? . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 What is a nautical chart? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 What kinds of chart and chart data are available? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 What are official charts? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 What is an official ENC? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 How do I recognise an official ENC? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Where can I get official ENCs? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
/.../ enterprise, the synthesists have been interested in giving a critique of science as one Seven sets of approaches will be discussed here. cultural artifact among many others, with peculiar advantages and disadvantages for other cultural artifacts and for human development. Were the analysts have sought to 1. Activities vs. Results. In the first place, one may approach our subject understand the object of their admiration, the synthesists have sought to put that object assuming that it is science as a human activity or set of activities that should be the to work for a wide variety of interests of human beings. In a sense, then, the synthesists focus of one's attention
performing-arts companies. It is also one of the most popular visitor attractions in Australia, with more than seven million people visiting the site each year, 300,000 of whom take a guided tour. Desing Design and construction were closely intertwined. Utzon's radical approach to the construction of the building fostered an exceptional collaborative and innovative environment. The design solution and construction of the shell structure took eight years to complete and the development of the special ceramic tiles for the shells took over three years. The project was not helped by the changes to the brief. Construction of the shells was one of the most difficult engineering tasks ever to be attempted. The revolutionary concept demanded equally revolutionary engineering and building techniques. From 1957 to 1963, the design team went through at least twelve iterations of the form of the shells trying to find an economically acceptable form (including schemes with parabolas,
potential, then investors can lose all or most of their investment. High tech is often viewed as high risk, but offering the opportunity for high profits. Like Big Science, high technology is an international phenomenon, spanning continents, epitomized by the worldwide communication of the Internet. Thus a multinational corporation might work on a project 24 hours a day, with teams waking and working with the advance of the sun across the globe; such projects might be in software development or in the development of an integrated circuit. The help desks of a multinational corporation might thus employ, successively, teams in Kenya, Brazil, the Philippines, or India, with the only requirement fluency in the mother tongue, be it Spanish, Portuguese or English. OECD has two different approaches: sector and product (industry) approaches. High-tech sectors The sector approach classifies industries according their technology intensity, product approach according to finished products.
interested researchers are aware of the future scenario that lies ahead for the future. 7 1. A CATEGORIZATION OF METHODS FOR AUTOMATIC FABRIC PILLING ASSESSMENT USING MACHINE VISION In the last decades automated visual inspection (AVI) of fabrics for quality control faced an increasing trend in the textile industry due to the considerable development of technologies related to vision systems. Several approaches have been proposed in scientific literature [3-6] employing image processing-based methods and statistical parameters (such as mean, variance and median) for defect detection on fabrics. Pilling measurement using machine vision systems makes no exception: a number of methodologies have been proposed in order to explore automatic or semi-automatic pills detection and classification
CHAPTER I 1.1. A Brief History of the English Language Speaking of the history of the expansion of the English language in the world, it won't be needless to mention the general historical outfit of the language itself. English is a member of the Indo-European family of languages. This broad family includes most of the European languages spoken today. Usually the history of the English language development is divided into this periods: 1) Old English (450-1100 AD) The invading Germanic tribes spoke similar languages, which in Britain developed into what we now call Old English. Old English did not sound or look like English today. Native English speakers now would have great difficulty understanding Old English. Nevertheless, about half of the most commonly used words in Modern English have Old English roots. The words be, strong and water, for example, derive from Old English. Old
Therefore coordination between the various players in the chain is key in its effective management. Cooper and Ellram [1993] compare supply chain management to a well-balanced and well-practiced relay team. Such a team is more competitive when each player knows how to be positioned for the hand-off. The relationships are the strongest between players who directly pass the baton (stick), but the entire team needs to make a coordinated effort to win the race. Below is an example of a very simple supply chain for a single product, where raw material is procured from vendors, transformed into finished goods in a single step, and then transported to distribution centers, and ultimately, customers. Realistic supply chains have multiple end products with shared components, facilities and capacities. The flow of materials is not always along an arborescent network, various modes of transportation may be
Produces colored maps of brain activity. Can record ongoing activity. fMRI provides 3D pictures of the brain structures, using magnetic fields and radio waves. It shows actual brain activity and has a higher resolution that PET scans. Experiments with animals are still used a lot because this enables psychologists to study specific biological correlates of behavior using invasive techniques (removing or scarring brain tissue). Prior to the development of modern technology, one of the most common ways to study the brain was case study. Often case studies provide researchers with a situation that they could never ethically reproduce in a laboratory. One of the most famous case studies of how brain damage can affect behavior is the study of Phineas Gage by Dr John Harlow. Gage was in a serious accident, where a metal pole pierced his skull and brain. Luckily he survived, losing vision in his left eye. He had no difficulty with
Wiltshire, about 2.0 miles (3.2 km) west of Amesbury and 8 miles (13 km) north of Salisbury. One of the most famous sites in the world, Stonehenge is composed of earthworks surrounding a circular setting of large standing stones. It is at the centre of the most dense complex of Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments in England, including several hundred burial mound.
confusion as it challenges the image of the incompetent child which is overwhelmingly prevalent in the Western society. The purpose of this dissertation is to critically explore this hotly debated tension between these two conflicting salient features that have often prevented the recognition of children as active citizens, entitled to respect and participation. With a particular interest in Wales, the following research project analyses the development of children`s active participation both in the Welsh Government and the County and Council of Swansea as they both have regarded the UNCRC on the basis of all its activity. Finally, the Cadle Primary School in Swansea has been used as a case study to investigate the potential change in attitudes in children after the school placed the UNCRC at the heart of its ethos and curriculum across all areas of the school. The primary goal is to critically analyse the
It was signed in 1994 and entered into force on 1 December 1997. The agreement regulates the political and economic relations between the EU and Russia and is the legal basis for the EU's bilateral trade and investment relations with Russia. At the St. Petersburg Summit in May 2003, the EU and Russia agreed to reinforce their co- operation by creating, in the long term, four common spaces in the framework of the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement of 1997: a common economic space; a common space of freedom, security and justice; a space of co-operation in the field of external security; and a space of research, education, and cultural exchange. The Moscow Summit in May 2005 adopted a single package of Road Maps for the creation of the four Common Spaces. These expand on the ongoing cooperation as described above, set out further specific objectives, and determine the actions necessary to make the common spaces a reality
information about Lai Street, as they need to pass the guide practice exam in form eleven. The report is divided into chapters so that each chapter deals with one of the important houses in Lai Street. In the beginning there are also two introductory chapters about Lai Street in general and the origin of the name "Lai". 3 Lai Street in general Lai Street is 520 m long and begins at a small green patch below the Toompea slope, where a graceful bronze statue of a Roe Deer by Jaan Koort (1883-1935), one of the best-known Estonian sculptors, has been standing for several decades. Lai Street stretches from Nunne Street to Pikk Street. Parallel with Pikk Street, Lai Street, too, ends at the Great Coast Gate (first mentioned 1359). Lai Street is very wide considering that it was laid out in the Middle Ages. This is because it sprang up on both sides of former city wall.
Translations into Romanian of such contemporary books have not been undertaken so far. One of the reasons for their omission from current translation policies could be that, by reading narratives the setting of which is their home space, readers would be deprived of one of the very raisons d'e^ tre of the genre, i.e. the curiosity-arousing travel to exotic places, the thrilling encounters with the locals, etc. Downloaded by [KU Leuven University Library] at 06:11 02 June 2015
The name commemorates the Battle of Trafalgar (1805), a British naval victory of the Napoleonic Wars. The original name was to have been "King William the Fourth's Square", but George Ledwell Taylor suggested the name "Trafalgar Square". The northern area of the square had been the site of the King's Mews since the time of Edward I, while the southern end was the original Charing Cross, where the Strand from the City met Whitehall, coming north from Westminster. As the midpoint between these twin cities, Charing Cross is to this day considered the heart of London, from which all distances are measured. In the 1820s the Prince Regent engaged the landscape architect John Nash to redevelop the area. Nash cleared the square as part of his Charing Cross Improvement Scheme. The present architecture of the square is due to Sir Charles Barry and was completed in 1845.
will make the tour more enjoyable for you. The city was founded in 1837. Its strategic location on Lake Michigan quickly made it the center of commerce for the Midwest section of the country. It is currently the third largest metropolitan area In the United States. The city's site is generally level, built mostly on glacial plain. The narrow Chicago River extends one mile inland from Lake Michigan, where it splits, dividing the city into North, West, and South sides. Chicago's weather is subject to rapid changes, but generally the climate is cold and windy in the winter, and hot and humid in the summer. Woman: What gave Chicago an advantage over other Midwest cities? YOU WILL SEE: (A) Its level site. (B) Its location on Lake Michigan. (C) Its large population. (D) Its location along the Chicago River. According to the minitalk, would be the correct choice. Remember that you will not have a written