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GUIDE TO NETWORK SECURITY is a wide-ranging new text that provides
a detailed review of the network security field, including
essential terminology, the history of the discipline, and practical
techniques to manage implementation of network security solutions.
It begins with an overview of information, network, and web
security, emphasizing the role of data communications and
encryption. The authors then explore network perimeter defense
technologies and methods, including access controls, firewalls,
VPNs, and intrusion detection systems, as well as applied
cryptography in public key infrastructure, wireless security, and
web commerce. The final section covers additional topics relevant
for information security practitioners, such as assessing network
security, professional careers in the field, and contingency
planning. Perfect for both aspiring and active IT professionals,
GUIDE TO NETWORK SECURITY is an ideal resource for readers who want
to help organizations protect critical information assets and
secure their systems and networks, both by recognizing current
threats and vulnerabilities, and by designing and developing the
secure systems of the future.
For almost 400 years families have been using The Westminster
Shorter Catechism as a guide to understanding the basics of the
Christian faith. This new, illustrated edition breathes fresh life
into these timeless questions and answers, helping a new generation
to learn the primary truths drawn from the Bible and laid out by
our fathers in the faith. Ira Miniof's striking images will help
families engage with and meditate on the meaning of each entry. A
valuable addition to any family's library. Also includes a short
glossary of practices and concepts used, and an index of Scripture
proofs. The entries are separated into sections for ease of
reference: Our Faith (Questions 1-38) Life's Purpose Holy Scripture
What We Should Believe About God God's Plan Creation God's
Providence Sin Covenant of Grace Our Savior Three Offices of the
Savior Savior's Humiliation Savior's Exaltation Effective Calling
Benefits in this Life Benefits at Death Benefits at the
Resurrection God's Law (Questions 39-87) The Moral Law Introduction
to the Ten Commandments The First Commandment The Second
Commandment The Third Commandment The Fourth Commandment The Fifth
Commandment The Sixth Commandment The Seventh Commandment The
Eighth Commandment The Ninth Commandment The Tenth Commandment
Transgressions and Punishment How Can We Be Saved? The Means of
Grace (Questions 88-99) The Means of Grace The Word of God The
Sacraments Baptism The Lord's Supper Prayer The Lord's Prayer Our
Father In Heaven Hallowed Be Your Name Your Kingdom Come Your Will
be Done, On Earth As It Is In Heaven Give Us This Day Our Daily
Bread And Forgive Us Our Debts, As We Also Have Forgiven Our
Debtors And Lead Us Not Into Temptation, But Deliver Us From Evil
For Yours Is The Kingdom, And The Power, And The Glory, Forever.
Amen
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Grant Green (Paperback)
Sharon Andrews Green
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R402
R371
Discovery Miles 3 710
Save R31 (8%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Though serious jazz fans certainly recognize the brilliance of
guitarist Grant Green, his overall contributions to the genre were
sorely underrated during his own lifetime. Best known as a coveted
Blue Note Records session leader and sideman - he played on nine
Blue Note albums in 1961 alone - Green helped raise the art of jazz
guitar playing to new heights. Like his contemporary Wes
Montgomery, Green's driving, aggressive tone was simultaneously
fluid and eloquent. He moved freely from style to style, embracing
bop, gospel, blues, Latin, country, soul, and funk. In the late
'60s, Green forayed into pop jazz but was overshadowed on the
charts by more commercial players such as George Benson, who sang
as well as played. Throughout most of his brief life, Green battled
racial and religious barriers, as well as two failed marriages and
a drug habit. This book follows him from his St. Louis gospel and
blues roots to his heyday at New York's Blue Note Records; through
a subsequent period of musical flux; on the club circuit in
Detroit; and into eventual disillusionment, declining health, and
death in 1979 at age 43. While later Grant Green songs such as
"Down Here on the Ground" from the 1970 album Alive! have been
sampled by performers ranging from Madonna to A Tribe Called Quest,
the more classic 1963 album Idle Moments ranked Number 9 on Rolling
Stone's Alternative Music chart in 1994 - more than 30 years after
it was recorded. Such versatility and timelessness makes the short
life and career of this jazz guitar genius all the more
fascinating.
This annual summary of educational policies and practices worldwide
includes discussion of multi-skills and flexibility, school-work
links, qualifications, and education for skills versus education
for status.
Gourmand World Cookbook Award Winner 'Baking connects good people
and lets them understand each other no matter what language they
speak.' - ANNA MAKIEVSKA Inspired by the resilient spirit of Anna
Makievska and The Bakehouse, Kyiv, who have continued to bake day
and night throughout the conflict, Knead Peace is a unique
collection of beautiful bakes in support of Ukraine. Donated by
esteemed bakeries from across the globe, they include sweet and
savoury breads, indulgent cakes and cookies, and delicious pies and
tarts. INCLUDING... Anna Makievska of The Bakehouse, Kyiv Max
Blachman-Gentile of Tartine Bakery Richard Bertinet Sarit Packer
& Itamar Srulovich of Honey & Co. Vanessa Kimbell of The
Sourdough School Alix Andre of Arome Bakery Helen Goh Kitty Tait of
The Orange Bakery Yotam Ottolenghi Ixta Belfrage Knead Peace,
founded by Andrew Green, was born from the idea that baking is a
community that has the power to make a difference. Octopus Books, a
division of Hachette UK, will pay GBP2.50 from the sale of each
print copy of Knead Peace sold in the UK to the Ukraine
Humanitarian Appeal of the Disasters Emergency Committee Registered
Charity No. 1062638.
This book offers a pivotal re-evaluation of English teaching one
century on from The Newbolt Report of 1921, responding to this
seminal work and exploring its impact on issues and contemporary
aims of English teaching today. Bringing together a range of
experts in English higher education, the book provides a
twenty-first century inflection on the enduring issues highlighted
by Newbolt’s original report. It examines topics including the
demands of assessment, the narrowing of the literary curriculum,
the impact of education reform, targets related to social mobility,
class and widening participation, as well as broader questions
about the function of literature and the arts in education.
Chapters also consider issues surrounding the promotion of
community cohesion, diversity and how technological advances might
reshape literary education. This unique re-evaluation of the
achievements and findings of the Newbolt Commission will be
essential reading for those researching English education and the
history of education.
This timely book addresses the interaction between policies
addressing climate change and the rules of the WTO. The authors
expertly examine the law and economics behind the application of
trade rules in the area of climate, including the implications of
WTO rules for domestic climate measures, the unilateral use of
trade measures to attempt to force other countries to take climate
action, and the role of trade measures in multilateral climate
agreements. The book argues that while there is a possibility of
conflict between international trade rules and progress on climate
change, it need not be the case. Thus the major focus is on the
ways in which trade measures can aid in addressing climate change.
Teaching English Literature 16 - 19 is an essential new resource
that is suitable for use both as an introductory guide for those
new to teaching literature and also as an aid to reflection and
renewal for more experienced teachers. Using the central philosophy
that students will learn best when actively engaged in discussion
and encouraged to apply what they have learnt independently, this
highly practical new text contains: discussion of the principles
behind the teaching of literature at this level; guidelines on
course planning, pedagogy, content and subject knowledge; advice on
teaching literature taking into account a range of broader
contexts, such as literary criticism, literary theory, performance,
publishing, creative writing and journalism; examples of practical
activities, worksheets and suggestions for texts; guides to
available resources. Aimed at English teachers, teacher trainees,
teacher trainers and advisors, this resource is packed full of new
and workable ideas for teaching all English literature courses.
This book offers a pivotal re-evaluation of English teaching one
century on from The Newbolt Report of 1921, responding to this
seminal work and exploring its impact on issues and contemporary
aims of English teaching today. Bringing together a range of
experts in English higher education, the book provides a
twenty-first century inflection on the enduring issues highlighted
by Newbolt's original report. It examines topics including the
demands of assessment, the narrowing of the literary curriculum,
the impact of education reform, targets related to social mobility,
class and widening participation, as well as broader questions
about the function of literature and the arts in education.
Chapters also consider issues surrounding the promotion of
community cohesion, diversity and how technological advances might
reshape literary education. This unique re-evaluation of the
achievements and findings of the Newbolt Commission will be
essential reading for those researching English education and the
history of education.
The second edition of Clean Electricity from Photovoltaics, first
published in 2001, provides an updated account of the underlying
science, technology and market prospects for photovoltaics. All
areas have advanced considerably in the decade since the first
edition was published, which include: multi-crystalline silicon
cell efficiencies having made impressive advances, thin-film CdTe
cells having established a decisive market presence, and organic
photovoltaics holding out the prospect of economical large-scale
power production.
Begun within months of the war's outbreak, and not completed for a
further 33 years, the writing of the Official Histories of World
War I was a venture of unprecedented scale and complexity. Who,
then, was responsible for producing such an enterprise? Did it aim
to inform or did it have darker political motivations? Did the
authors, who alone had access to records that were to remain
classified for decades to come, seek to lay the facts and lessons
of the war truthfully before the public? A number of critics have
claimed that, on the contrary, the Official Histories were highly
partial accounts written to protect reputations and cover up the
true scale of British military incompetence. Andrew Green directly
challenges these views, examining the progress by which official
history was written, the motives and influences of its paymasters,
and the literary integrity of its historians. The book focuses on
four offical volumes covering arguably the most contentious battles
of the war: Gallipoli, the Somme, Third Ypres (Passchendaele) and
March 1918. What emerges from this is both a story of these great
campaigns and an insight into the political intrigues and
conflicting constraints that influenced the official writing of the
Great War.
Teaching English Literature 16 - 19 is an essential new resource
that is suitable for use both as an introductory guide for those
new to teaching literature and also as an aid to reflection and
renewal for more experienced teachers. Using the central philosophy
that students will learn best when actively engaged in discussion
and encouraged to apply what they have learnt independently, this
highly practical new text contains: discussion of the principles
behind the teaching of literature at this level; guidelines on
course planning, pedagogy, content and subject knowledge; advice on
teaching literature taking into account a range of broader
contexts, such as literary criticism, literary theory, performance,
publishing, creative writing and journalism; examples of practical
activities, worksheets and suggestions for texts; guides to
available resources. Aimed at English teachers, teacher trainees,
teacher trainers and advisors, this resource is packed full of new
and workable ideas for teaching all English literature courses.
GUIDE TO NETWORK SECURITY, International Edition is a wide-ranging
new text that provides a detailed review of the network security
field, including essential terminology, the history of the
discipline, and practical techniques to manage implementation of
network security solutions. It begins with an overview of
information, network, and web security, emphasizing the role of
data communications and encryption. The authors then explore
network perimeter defense technologies and methods, including
access controls, firewalls, VPNs, and intrusion detection systems,
as well as applied cryptography in public key infrastructure,
wireless security, and web commerce. The final section covers
additional topics relevant for information security practitioners,
such as assessing network security, professional careers in the
field, and contingency planning. Perfect for both aspiring and
active IT professionals, GUIDE TO NETWORK SECURITY, International
Edition is an ideal resource for readers who want to help
organizations protect critical information assets and secure their
systems and networks, both by recognizing current threats and
vulnerabilities, and by designing and developing the secure systems
of the future.
As the first full-length study of twentieth-century American legal
academics wrestling with the problem of free will versus
determinism in the context of criminal responsibility, this book
deals with one of the most fundamental problems in criminal law.
Thomas Andrew Green chronicles legal academic ideas from the
Progressive Era critiques of free will-based (and generally
retributive) theories of criminal responsibility to the midcentury
acceptance of the idea of free will as necessary to a criminal law
conceived of in practical moral-legal terms that need not accord
with scientific fact to the late-in-century insistence on the
compatibility of scientific determinism with moral and legal
responsibility and with a modern version of the retributivism that
the Progressives had attacked. Foregrounding scholars' language and
ideas, Green invites readers to participate in reconstructing an
aspect of the past that is central to attempts to work out bases
for moral judgment, legal blame, and criminal punishment.
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