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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Reaching Net Zero: What It Takes to Solve the Global Climate Crisis
addresses the imminent need to fully understand the causes,
effects, and evidence of global warming; due to the large amount of
climate disinformation and complexity of much of the available
valid science, this book addresses the science of global warming in
a concise, readable manner while providing an in-depth reference
for readers who want more details or to study the sources of
information. This book also investigates potential practical next
steps of interest to concerned scientists, engineers, and citizens,
with an aim to further discuss and achieve the eventual
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 'Net Zero' goals.
Solving the problem of reaching net zero requires educating others
to support the changes that must occur and to provide the possible
solutions required. This is a necessary read for academics in
climate and environmental science, and specialists such as those in
earth science or environmental studies, covering the science,
technology, economics, politics, international, and other issues
involved in doing something about global warming. It is also
important for those interested in global warming and anyone
involved in decision-making processes and legislation that deal
with reduction in carbon footprints.
Energy Management Principles: Applications, Benefits, Savings,
Second Edition is a comprehensive guide to the fundamental
principles and systematic processes of maintaining and improving
energy efficiency and reducing waste. Fully revised and updated
with analysis of world energy utilization, incentives and utility
rates, and new content highlighting how energy efficiency can be
achieved through 1 of 16 outlined principles and programs, the book
presents cost effective analysis, case studies, global examples,
and guidance on building and site auditing. This fully revised
edition provides a theoretical basis for conservation, as well as
the avenues for its application, and by doing so, outlines the
potential for cost reductions through an analysis of
inefficiencies.
2015 BMA Medical Book Awards Highly Commended in Oncology Category!
The Molecular Basis of Cancer arms you with the latest knowledge
and cutting-edge advances in the battle against cancer. This
thoroughly revised, comprehensive oncology reference explores the
scientific basis for our current understanding of malignant
transformation and the pathogenesis and treatment of this disease.
A team of leading experts thoroughly explains the molecular
biologic principles that underlie the diagnostic tests and
therapeutic interventions now being used in clinical trials and
practice. Detailed descriptions of topics from molecular
abnormalities in common cancers to new approaches for cancer
therapy equip you to understand and apply the complexities of
ongoing research in everyday clinical application. Effectively
determine the course of malignancy and design appropriate treatment
protocols by understanding the scientific underpinnings of cancer.
Visually grasp and retain difficult concepts easily thanks to a
user-friendly format with abundant full-color figures. Find
critical information quickly with chapters following a logical
sequence that moves from pathogenesis to therapy. Stay current with
the latest discoveries in molecular and genomic research. Sweeping
revisions throughout include eight brand-new chapters on: Tumor
Suppressor Genes; Inflammation and Cancer; Cancer Systems Biology:
The Future; Biomarkers Assessing Risk of Cancer; Understanding and
Using Information About Cancer Genomes; The Technology of Analyzing
Nucleic Acids in Cancer; Molecular Abnormalities in Kidney Cancer;
and Molecular Pathology. Access the entire text and illustrations
online, fully searchable, at Expert Consult.
Only Jody Knows is based on a true story about a girl who
disappeared after a series of events in her life in 1900. It is
told by a young boy who lived through her disappearance and
participated in events to find her. Travel with him as you start at
the Sheridan Wyoming County Fair in the late 1930s and flashback
thirty years earlier when he lived the adventure. A gold locket,
burning torches, bloodhounds, and much, much more are part of this
story about Jody. Read it, and enjoy it.
This book is for patients and family members who find themselves in
the often confusing confines of a hospital environment. With a
clear and concise approach, this book tackles the major elements of
a hospital visit, while helping to relieve uncertainty, reduce
stress, and free patients to focus their energies on getting
better.
A byproduct of the Science Fiction Research Association conference
held in Lawrence, Kansas, in 2008, the essays in this volume
address the intersections among the reading, writing, and teaching
of science fiction. Part One studies the teaching of SF, placing
analytical and pedagogical research next to each other to reveal
how SF can be both an object of study as well as a teaching tool
for other disciplines. Part Two examines SF as a genre of mediation
between the sciences and the humanities, using close readings and
analyses of the literary-scientific nexus. Part Three examines SF
in the media, using specific television programs, graphic novels,
and films as examples of how SF successfully transcends the medium
of transmission. Finally, Part Four features close readings of SF
texts by women, including Joanna Russ, Ursula K. Le Guin, and
Octavia Butler.
Half the world's population lives in rural places, but education
scholars and policy makers worldwide give little attention to rural
of education. Indeed, most national systems, including in the
developed world, treat their educational systems as institutions
to"modernize" the global economy. The authors in this volume have
different concerns. They are rural education scholars from
Australia, Canada, the United States, and Kyrgyzstan, and here
their focus is the dynamics of social class: in particular rural
schools but also in rural schooling as a local manifestation of a
national (and the global) system. For the most part, the volume
comprises relevant empirical reports, but none neglects theory, and
some privilege theory and interpretation. First and last chapters
introduce the texts and synthesize their joint and separate
meanings. What are the implications of place for social class? How
do class dynamics manifest differently in more and less racially
homogeneous rural communities? How does place affect class and how
might class affect place? How doesschooling in rural communities
reproduce or interrupt social-class mobility across generations?
The chapters engage such questions more completely than other
volumes in rural education, not as afinal word or interm summary,
but as an opening to an important lineof inquiry thus far largely
neglected in rural education scholarship.
Half the world's population lives in rural places, but education
scholars and policy makers worldwide give little attention to rural
of education. Indeed, most national systems, including in the
developed world, treat their educational systems as institutions
to"modernize" the global economy. The authors in this volume have
different concerns. They are rural education scholars from
Australia, Canada, the United States, and Kyrgyzstan, and here
their focus is the dynamics of social class: in particular rural
schools but also in rural schooling as a local manifestation of a
national (and the global) system. For the most part, the volume
comprises relevant empirical reports, but none neglects theory, and
some privilege theory and interpretation. First and last chapters
introduce the texts and synthesize their joint and separate
meanings. What are the implications of place for social class? How
do class dynamics manifest differently in more and less racially
homogeneous rural communities? How does place affect class and how
might class affect place? How doesschooling in rural communities
reproduce or interrupt social-class mobility across generations?
The chapters engage such questions more completely than other
volumes in rural education, not as afinal word or interm summary,
but as an opening to an important lineof inquiry thus far largely
neglected in rural education scholarship.
When, why, and how early humans began to eat meat are three of the most fundamental unresolved questions in the study of human origins. Before 2.5 million years ago the presence and importance of meat in the hominid diet is unkown. After stone tools appear in the fossil record it seems clear that meat was eaten in increasing quantities, but whether it was obtained through hunting or scavenging remains a topic of intense debate. This book takes a novel and strongly interdisciplinary approach to the role of meat in the early hominid diet, inviting well-known researchers who study the human fossil record, modern hunter-gatherers, and nonhuman primates to contribute chapters to a volume that integrates these three perspectives. Stanford's research has been on the ecology of hunting by wild chimpanzees. Bunn is an archaeologist who has worked on both the fossil record and modern foraging people. This will be a reconsideration of the role of hunting, scavening, and the uses of meat in light of recent data and modern evolutionary theory. There is currently no other book, nor has there ever been, that occupies the niche this book will create for itself.
It is traditional in the literature on Pierre Bayle to make some
refer- ene e to iVlontaigne as one of the masters of skepticism in
whose tracks he follows, albeit hardly so eloselyas Charron had.
Time and again critics feel the need to mention Montaigne and Bayle
in the same context, sometimes to contrast their brands of
Pyrrhonism, more often to explain similarities in their ideas and
methods, which have frequent- ly been regarded as important steps
in the gradual evolution of un- Christian, even anti-Christian,
thought. Their names were already associated during Bayle's life,
for example, in the mediocre work by Dom Alexis Gaudin, La
Distinction et la Nature du Bien et du MaI, Traite ou l'on combat
l'erreur des Manicheens, les sentimens de Jvfontaigne & de
Charron, & ceux de J. Vfonsieur Bayle. In the nineteen th
century, the author of the Dictionnaire historique et critique wa~
generally elassified as a skeptic; and his name was inevi tably
linked with the essayist's. In his Port-Royal, Sainte-Beuve
pictured Bayle as one of the avowed skeptics in Montaigne's funeral
cortege and spoke of both men as "d'autant pIus fourbes qu'ils ne
le sont pas toujours. " His later works show that he revised his
opinion on each somewhat,l but in this he was unusual for his
century.
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Network-Based Parallel Computing. Communication, Architecture, and Applications - Second International Workshop, CANPC'98, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, January 31 - February 1, 1998, Proceedings (Paperback, 1998 ed.)
Dhabaleswar K Panda, Craig B. Stunkel
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R1,595
Discovery Miles 15 950
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the strictly refereed proceedings of the
Second International Workshop on Communication and Architectural
Support for Network-Based Parallel Computing, CANPC'98, held in Las
Vegas, Nevada, USA, in January/February 1998.
The 18 revised full papers presented were selected from 38
submissions on the basis of four to five reviews per paper. The
volume comprises a representative compilation of state-of-the-art
solutions for network-based parallel computing. Several new
interconnection technologies, new software schemes and standards
are studied and developed to provide low-latency and high-bandwidth
interconnections for network-based parallel computing.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the First
International Workshop on Communication and Architectural Support
for Network-Based Parallel Computing, CANPC'97, held in San
Antonio, Texas, USA, in February 1997.
The 19 revised full papers presented were carefully selected from a
total of 36 submissions. Among the topics addressed are
processor/network interfaces, communication protocols,
high-performance network technology, operating systems and
architectural issues, and load balancing techniques. All in all,
the papers competently describe the state-of-the-art for
network-based computing systems.
In 1580 Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592) presented a literary
project to the public the type of wich had never before been
introduced- a collection of Essays with himself as subject. Never
before had a writer attempted a literary self-portrait, and in so
doing Montaigne named and defined a new literary form, the essay.
Brush's critical study of Essays examines the complex process of
writing a self-portrait and showing the ways in which it is an
entirely differnt enterprise from writing an autobiography. The
author discusses how Montaigne revealed his "mind in motion," and
the most remarkable feature of that mind, skepticism. He treats
Montaigne's development of a conversational voice and explicates
how Montaigne's intense self-examination became an evolutionary
process which had consequences in his life and literature. The work
concludes with a discussion of how Montaigne's self-assigned task
of introspection included the formulation of a view of humanity and
its ethics. Brush's work fills a gap in scholarship by critically
examining the essential loci of the Essays, namely, the creation of
a literary self-portrait. The book makes its points convincingly
because of Brush's intimacy and command of the essays. Montaigne's
works are cited in English translation, and the subject is
presented in terms accessible to the non-specialist.
Symposium Z, 'Oxide Semiconductors', and Symposium F, 'Oxide Thin
Films for Renewable Energy Applications', were held November 25-30
at the 2012 MRS Fall Meeting in Boston, Massachusetts. Oxide
materials are attracting considerable attention both as
semiconductors for a wide range of potential device applications
but also in energy research spanning from photo- and
electro-catalysis, to electrolytes and electrodes used in batteries
or fuel cells. This symposium proceedings volume collects recent
reports from the meeting aimed at providing a fundamental
understanding of bulk oxide materials as well as thin films and
nano-structures. The topics covered in this volume are quite broad
and include such areas as growth and doping, defects and
characterisation, and device applications.
This volume includes a collection of papers presented in Symposium
TT, Laser-Material Interactions at Micro/Nanoscales, at the Spring
2011 Materials Research Society Meeting held April 2011 in San
Francisco, California. Laser-material interactions are of
fundamental importance in a wide range of materials-related
research and areas of technology, including green energy,
photonics, electronics, environmental studies, biomedical imaging,
medical treatment, and optical spectroscopy. This symposium
provided an interdisciplinary forum for scientists and engineers
from different fields to discuss the physical, chemical, thermal,
and mechanical phenomena that occur during laser-material
interactions at micro and nano scales. Research addressing new
materials, processes, structures, and surfaces synthesized by these
methods for emerging fields was discussed. The symposium was well
attended and received a large number of abstract submissions in the
areas of ultrafast laser processing, laser ablation and deposition,
process controls, nanomaterials, surface modification, laser
materials interactions, polymerization, lithography, and novel
approaches in laser processing.
Counting the Days is the story of six prisoners of war imprisoned
by both sides during the conflict the Japanese called the Pacific
War. As in all wars, the prisoners were civilians as well as
military personnel. Two of the prisoners were captured on the
second day of the war and spent the entire war in prison camps:
Garth Dunn, a young Marine captured on Guam who faced a death rate
in a Japanese prison 10 times that in battle; and Ensign Kazuo
Sakamaki, who suffered the ignominy of being Japanese POW number 1.
Simon and Lydia Peters were European expatriates living in the
Philippines; the Japanese confiscated their house and belongings,
imprisoned them, and eventually released them to a harrowing jungle
existence caught between Philippine guerilla raids and Japanese
counterattacks. Mitsuye Takahashi was a U.S. citizen of Japanese
descent living in Malibu, California, who was imprisoned by the
United States for the duration of the war, disrupting her life and
separating her from all she owned. Masashi Itoh was a Japanese
soldier who remained hidden in the jungles of Guam, held captive by
his own conscience and beliefs until 1960, 15 years after the end
of the war. This is the story of their struggles to stay alive, the
small daily triumphs that kept them going--and for some, their
almost miraculous survival.
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