|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
FTTX Networks: Technology Implementation and Operation provides an
in-depth treatment of the technology and implementation of FTTX
networks, discusses the environment that gave rise to FTTX,
provides a survey of the available FTTX technologies, and gives
users the state-of-the-art knowledge needed for successful
deployment of FTTX. The book includes hands-on project planning
engineering design and operations checklists, as well as
recommended best practices for configuring FTTH systems and the
data networks preceding them for IPTV, voice, and data, with case
studies of actual FTTH systems and a methodology for predicting the
performance of real systems. This book is a must-read for all
network engineers, technical businesspeople, and technical
specialists engaged in building FTTX networks, from technology
selection, to fielding the network in production, to
implementation.
In the twentieth century, Americans thought of the United States as
a land of opportunity and equality. To what extent and for whom
this was true was, of course, a matter of debate, however
especially during the Cold War, many Americans clung to the
patriotic conviction that America was the land of the free. At the
same time, another national ideal emerged that was far less
contentious, that arguably came to subsume the ideals of freedom,
opportunity, and equality, and that eventually embodied an unspoken
consensus about what constitutes the good society in a postmodern
setting. This was the ideal of choice, broadly understood as the
proposition that the good society provides individuals with the
power to shape the contours of their lives in ways that suit their
personal interests, idiosyncrasies, and tastes. By the closing
decades of the century, Americans were widely agreed that theirs
was-or at least should be-the land of choice. In A Destiny of
Choice?, David Blanke and David Steigerwald bring together
important scholarship on the tension between two leading
interpretations of modern American consumer culture. That modern
consumerism reflects the social, cultural, economic, and political
changes that accompanied the country's transition from a local,
producer economy dominated by limited choices and restricted credit
to a national consumer marketplace based on the individual
selection of mass-produced, mass-advertised, and mass-distributed
goods. This debate is central to the economic difficulties seen in
the United States today.
In the twentieth century, Americans thought of the United States as
a land of opportunity and equality. To what extent and for whom
this was true was, of course, a matter of debate, however
especially during the Cold War, many Americans clung to the
patriotic conviction that America was the land of the free. At the
same time, another national ideal emerged that was far less
contentious, that arguably came to subsume the ideals of freedom,
opportunity, and equality, and that eventually embodied an unspoken
consensus about what constitutes the good society in a postmodern
setting. This was the ideal of choice, broadly understood as the
proposition that the good society provides individuals with the
power to shape the contours of their lives in ways that suit their
personal interests, idiosyncrasies, and tastes. By the closing
decades of the century, Americans were widely agreed that theirs
was-or at least should be-the land of choice. In A Destiny of
Choice?, David Blanke and David Steigerwald bring together
important scholarship on the tension between two leading
interpretations of modern American consumer culture. That modern
consumerism reflects the social, cultural, economic, and political
changes that accompanied the country's transition from a local,
producer economy dominated by limited choices and restricted credit
to a national consumer marketplace based on the individual
selection of mass-produced, mass-advertised, and mass-distributed
goods. This debate is central to the economic difficulties seen in
the United States today.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|