|
Showing 1 - 25 of
36 matches in All Departments
|
Euro-Par 2007 Workshops: Parallel Processing - HPPC 2007, UNICORE Summit 2007, and VHPC 2007, Rennes, France, August 28-31, 2007, Revised Selected Papers (Paperback, 2008 ed.)
Luc Bouge, Martti Forsell, Jesper Larsson Traff, Achim Streit, Wolfgang Ziegler, …
|
R1,597
Discovery Miles 15 970
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Parallelanddistributedprocessing,
althoughwithinthefocusofcomputerscience researchforalongtime,
isgainingmoreandmoreimportanceinawidespectrum of applications.
These proceedings aim to demonstrate the use of parallel and
distributed processing concepts in di?erent application ?elds, and
attempt to spark interest in novel research directions to advance
the embracing model of high-performance computing research in
general. The objective of these workshops is to speci?cally address
researchers c- ing from university, industry and governmental
research organizations and application-oriented companies, in order
to close the gap between purely s- enti?c research and the
applicability of the research ideas to real-life problems. Euro-Par
is an annual series of international conferences dedicated to the
promotionandadvancementofallaspectsofparallelanddistributedcomputing.
The 2007 event was the 13th issue of the conference. Euro-Par has
for a long time been eager to attract colocated events sharing the
same goal of promoting the development of parallel and distributed
computing, both as an industrial technique and an academic
discipline, extending the frontier of both the state of the art and
the state of the practice. Since 2006, Euro-Par o?ers
researchersthe chance to colocate advanced technical workshops
back-to-back with the main conference. This is for a mutual bene?t:
the workshops can take advantage of all technical and social
facilities which are set up for the conference, so that the
organizational tasks are kept to a minimal level; the conference
can rely on
workshopstoexperimentwithspeci?careasofresearchwhicharenotyetmature
enough, or too speci?c, to lead to an o?cial, full-?edged topic at
the conferenc
Equally revered and reviled, the radical John Horne Tooke
(1736-1812) enjoyed a well-deserved reputation as a political
firebrand. Having attended Eton and St John's College, Cambridge,
he explored careers in the church and law before finally gaining
recognition as a vehement advocate of political reform. This
acclaimed two-volume biography by Alexander Stephens (1757-1821)
was published in 1813, incorporating personal correspondence and
presenting its subject as 'a firm friend to the laws and liberties
of his native country'. Volume 1 covers the period 1736-77 and
leads the reader from Horne's birth, education and ordination
through to his early defence of John Wilkes and the foundation of
the Society of Gentleman Supporters of the Bill of Rights. During
this period, Horne published The Petition of an Englishman (1765)
as well as stinging letters in the Oxford Magazine. This volume
concludes with an account of Horne's infamous trial and
imprisonment for libel.
Equally revered and reviled, the radical John Horne Tooke
(1736-1812) enjoyed a well-deserved reputation as a political
firebrand. Having attended Eton and St John's College, Cambridge,
he explored careers in the church and law before finally gaining
recognition as a vehement advocate of political reform. This
acclaimed two-volume biography by Alexander Stephens (1757-1821)
was published in 1813, incorporating personal correspondence and
presenting its subject as 'a firm friend to the laws and liberties
of his native country'. Volume 2 covers the period 1777-1812 and
leads the reader through Horne's two periods of imprisonment, two
parliamentary election campaigns, the rise of the Society for
Constitutional Information and the publication of his final
pamphlet, A Warning to the Electors of Westminster (1807). This
volume concludes with an account of his final years of ill health,
his death and his political legacy.
This volume brings together the major statements by the leading contemporary scholars of cultural analysis on the relation between culture and society. Part One surveys the range of current analytical debate over culture, focusing on the relationship of culture to social structure and power. While individual contributions differ in defining the nature of culture and its relation to society, they are in agreement in assessing the relative autonomy of culture and the centrality of symbolic analysis. Part Two turns to substantive debates, including those over the role of religion, secular ideology, and mass culture and brings to light disputes about the meaning of modernity. The book testifies to the remarkable development in the past two decades of a cultural paradigm for social and political analysis.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ Public Characters, Volume 8 Alexander Stephens R. Phillips,
1806 Biography; Great Britain
More than two decades after its original publication, Thomas G.
Alexander's Mormonism in Transition still engages audiences with
its insightful study of the pivotal, early years of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Serving as a vital read for both
students and scholars of American religious and social history,
Alexander's book explains and charts the Church's transformation
over this 40-year period of both religious and American history.
For those familiar with the LDS Church in modern times, it is
impossible to study Mormonism in Transition without pondering the
enormous amount of changes the Church has been through since 1890.
For those new to the study of Mormonism, this book will give them a
clear understanding the challenges the Church went through to go
from a persecuted and scorned society to the rapidly growing,
respected community it is today. From the Second Edition Foreword
by Stephen J. Stein: "Thomas Alexander confronts the reality of
change and does not try to disguise it or hide it in the shadow of
earlier traditions. Rather, he acknowledges that Mormonism in 1930
was radically different from what it was in 1890 or at the time of
its origins. He catalogues change without apology. In fact,
Alexander celebrates change as the basis for the continuing success
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints enjoys."
|
You may like...
War
Bob Woodward
Hardcover
R851
R660
Discovery Miles 6 600
Extremisms In Africa
Alain Tschudin, Stephen Buchanan-Clarke, …
Paperback
(1)
R320
R295
Discovery Miles 2 950
|