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Leimert Park (Hardcover)
Cynthia E Exum, Maty Guiza-Leimert; Foreword by Walter H Leimert
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R801
R682
Discovery Miles 6 820
Save R119 (15%)
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The past few years have seen a major change in computing systems,
as growing data volumes and stalling processor speeds require more
and more applications to scale out to clusters. Today, a myriad
data sources, from the Internet to business operations to
scientific instruments, produce large and valuable data streams.
However, the processing capabilities of single machines have not
kept up with the size of data. As a result, organizations
increasingly need to scale out their computations over clusters. At
the same time, the speed and sophistication required of data
processing have grown. In addition to simple queries, complex
algorithms like machine learning and graph analysis are becoming
common. And in addition to batch processing, streaming analysis of
real-time data is required to let organizations take timely action.
Future computing platforms will need to not only scale out
traditional workloads, but support these new applications too. This
book, a revised version of the 2014 ACM Dissertation Award winning
dissertation, proposes an architecture for cluster computing
systems that can tackle emerging data processing workloads at
scale. Whereas early cluster computing systems, like MapReduce,
handled batch processing, our architecture also enables streaming
and interactive queries, while keeping MapReduce's scalability and
fault tolerance. And whereas most deployed systems only support
simple one-pass computations (e.g., SQL queries), ours also extends
to the multi-pass algorithms required for complex analytics like
machine learning. Finally, unlike the specialized systems proposed
for some of these workloads, our architecture allows these
computations to be combined, enabling rich new applications that
intermix, for example, streaming and batch processing. We achieve
these results through a simple extension to MapReduce that adds
primitives for data sharing, called Resilient Distributed Datasets
(RDDs). We show that this is enough to capture a wide range of
workloads. We implement RDDs in the open source Spark system, which
we evaluate using synthetic and real workloads. Spark matches or
exceeds the performance of specialized systems in many domains,
while offering stronger fault tolerance properties and allowing
these workloads to be combined. Finally, we examine the generality
of RDDs from both a theoretical modeling perspective and a systems
perspective. This version of the dissertation makes corrections
throughout the text and adds a new section on the evolution of
Apache Spark in industry since 2014. In addition, editing,
formatting, and links for the references have been added.
Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion reflects the
diversity of dramatic writing exploring the past and present of
Romania, and takes stock thirty years after the collapse of
communism. In addition to plays originally written in Romanian, the
collection includes work by German, Hungarian and Roma authors born
and/or working in Romania, and brings together plays written during
the communist period and its aftermath. The plays included in the
collection, edited and translated by Jozefina Komporaly and fully
published for the first time in English, demonstrate broad variety
in terms of form and content - ranging from family dramas to
allegories, and absurdist experiments to modular texts rooted in
open dramaturgy - and are the work of both individual playwrights
and the results of collective creation. These works share a
preoccupation with critically reflecting urgent concerns rooted in
Romanian realities, and are notable dramaturgical experiments that
push the boundaries of the genre. In addition, these plays also
seek novel ways to examine universal experiences of the human
condition, such as love, loss, abuse, betrayal, grief, violence,
manipulation and despair. This unique anthology celebrates the
renewed vitality and variety of writing for the stage after 1990,
and endeavours to place Romanian theatre in a forward-looking
transnational context. Lowlands ('Niederungen') by Herta Muller,
adapted for the stage by Mihaela Panainte (German) This stage
adaptation is based on a volume of short stories by Herta Muller
written in German in 1982 and focuses on the perspective of a child
narrator, by way of a series of episodes that centre on mundane
aspects of daily life in a remote village against the backdrop of
the oppressive atmosphere of mid-twentieth century Romania. The
Spectator Sentenced to Death ('Spectatorul condamnat la moarte') by
Matei Visniec (Romanian) This play is a bitter parody of the
Stalinist justice system, which totally disregards the fundamental
question whether the accused is actually guilty or not. The
Passport ('Kalucsni') by Gyoergy Dragoman (Hungarian) This play is
set pre-1989 in a typical small town in the Transylvanian province
of Romania, in which the lives of the various social classes, and
the fate of the persecuted and that of those who persecute are
closely intertwined. The Man Who Had His Inner Evil Removed ('Omul
din care a fost extras raul') by Matei Visniec (Romanian) This
topical play is a sharp reflection on the voluntary servitude in
which we place ourselves, often unawares, in conditions of our
contemporary consumer culture, and a fierce critique of
increasingly dominant tendencies to abandon moral criteria in
political life. Stories of the Body (Artemisia, Eva, Lina, Teresa)
('A test toertenetei') by Andras Visky (Hungarian) The cycle
Stories of the Body comprises four plays based on real life stories
as experienced by remarkable women (including Mother Teresa and
Italian Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi), and are
connected to various cities including Budapest, Cluj/Kolozsvar,
Kolkata and Rome, from the 17th to the 21st century. Sexodrom by
Giuvlipen Theatre Company (Mihaela Dragan, Antonella Lerca Duda,
Nicoleta Ghita, Zita Moldovan, Bety Pisica, Oana Rusu, Raj
Alexandru Udrea), based on a concept by Bogdan Georgescu.(Roma)
This is a work of collective creation by members of the Roma
Theatre company Giuvlipen, aiming to bring to public attention
taboo subjects, to enhance the visibility of Roma performers and to
experiment with new forms of theatre-making in a Romanian context.
Digital and social media companies such as Apple, Google, and
Facebook grip the globe with market, civic, and political strength
akin to large, sovereign states. Yet, these corporations are
private entities. How should states and communities protect the
individual rights of their citizens - or their national and local
interests - while keeping pace with globalized digital companies?
This scholarly compendium examines regulatory solutions which
encourage content diversity and protect fundamental rights. The
volume compares European and US regulatory approaches, including
closer focus on topics such as privacy, copyright, and freedom of
expression. Further, we propose pedagogical models for educating
students on possible regulatory regimes of the future. Our final
chapter invites readers to consider social and digital media
regulation for both this generation and the ones to come.
Chapter(s) "Introduction: New Paradigms of Media Regulation in a
Transatlantic Perspective", "From News Diversity to News Quality:
New Media Regulation Theoretical Issues" and "The Stakes and
Threats of the Convergence Between Media and Telecommunication
Industries" are available open access under a Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
At a time of persistent national strife on a worldwide scale, this book addresses the inadequately covered subject of the reciprocal relationships between nationalism, nation and state-building, and economic change. The exploration of the economic element in the building of nations and states cannot be confined to Europe; therefore, the diverse yet interlinked case studies in this volume cover all continents.
Primarily intended for biotechnology graduates, this handbook
provides an overview of the requirements, opportunities and
drawbacks of Biotech Entrepreneurship, while also presenting
valuable training materials tailored to the industrial and market
reality in the European Biotech Business. Potential investors and
business consultants will find essential information on the
benefits and potential risks involved in supporting biotech
businesses. Further, the book addresses a broad range of
Biotechnology fields, e.g. food biotech, industrial biotech,
bioinformatics, animal and human health. Readers will learn the
essentials of creating innovations, founding a biotech start-up,
business management strategies, and European funding sources. In
addition, the book discusses topics such as intellectual property
management and innovation transfer. The book offers a comparative
analysis of different countries' perspectives and reviews the
status quo in Western and Eastern European regions, also in
comparison with other leading biotech countries such as the USA and
Canada. A long list of potentially profitable biotech start-up
ideas and a collection of success stories involving European
companies are also included. The book is based on the Erasmus+
Strategic Partnership project "Supporting biotechnology students
oriented towards an entrepreneurial path" (www.supbioent.usamv.ro),
which involved the collaboration of Life Sciences and Economics
departments at higher education institutions throughout Western and
Eastern Europe.
Geo-spatial identity and early Modern European drama come together
in this study of how cultural or political attachments are actively
mediated through space. Matei-Chesnoiu traces the modulated
representations of rivers, seas, mountains, and islands in
sixteenth-century plays by Shakespeare, Jasper Fisher, Thomas May,
and others.
Knowledge and expertise, especially of the kind that can shape
public opinion, have been traditionally the domain of individuals
holding degrees awarded by higher learning institutions or
occupying formal positions in notable organizations. Expertise is
validated by reputations established in an institutionalized
marketplace of ideas with a limited number of "available seats" and
a stringent process of selection and retention of names, ideas,
topics and facts of interest. However, the social media revolution,
which has enabled over two billion Internet users not only to
consume, but also to produce information and knowledge, has created
a secondary and very active informal marketplace of ideas and
knowledge. Anchored by platforms like Wikipedia, YouTube, Facebook
and Twitter, this informal marketplace has low barriers to entry
and has become a gigantic and potentially questionable, knowledge
resource for the public at large. Roles, Trust and Reputation in
Social Media Knowledge Markets will discuss some of the emerging
trends in defining, measuring and operationalizing reputation as a
new and essential component of the knowledge that is generated and
consumed online. The book will propose a future research agenda
related to these issues. The ultimate goal of research agenda being
to shape the next generation of theoretical and analytic strategies
needed for understanding how knowledge markets are influenced by
social interactions and reputations built around functional roles.
The authors, including leading scholars and young innovators, will
share with the readers some of the main lessons they have learned
from their own work in these areas and will discuss the issues,
topics and sub-areas that they find under-studied or that promise
the greatest intellectual payoff in the future. The discussion will
be placed in the context of social network analysis and "big data"
research. Roles, Trust and Reputation in Social Media Knowledge
Markets exposes issues that have not been satisfactorily dealt with
in the current literature, as the research agenda in reputation and
authorship is still emerging. In a broader sense, the volume aims
to change the way in which knowledge generation in social media
spaces is understood and utilized. The tools, theories and
methodologies proposed by the contributors offer concrete avenues
for developing the next generation of research strategies and
applications that will help: tomorrow's information consumers make
smarter choices, developers to create new tools and researchers to
launch new research programs.
Mineral processing technologies have been used for decades to
protect the environment and many examples of such applications are
given here. The book covers four major subject areas: fundamentals;
environmental pollution and its prevention; separation processes;
and innovative techniques. Audience: Scientists, engineers and
technologists conducting both applied and basic research into the
different environmental aspects of mineral processing.
This both accessible and exhaustive book will help to improve
modeling of attention and to inspire innovations in industry. It
introduces the study of attention and focuses on attention
modeling, addressing such themes as saliency models, signal
detection and different types of signals, as well as real-life
applications. The book is truly multi-disciplinary, collating work
from psychology, neuroscience, engineering and computer science,
amongst other disciplines. What is attention? We all pay attention
every single moment of our lives. Attention is how the brain
selects and prioritizes information. The study of attention has
become incredibly complex and divided: this timely volume assists
the reader by drawing together work on the computational aspects of
attention from across the disciplines. Those working in the field
as engineers will benefit from this book's introduction to the
psychological and biological approaches to attention, and
neuroscientists can learn about engineering work on attention. The
work features practical reviews and chapters that are quick and
easy to read, as well as chapters which present deeper, more
complex knowledge. Everyone whose work relates to human perception,
to image, audio and video processing will find something of value
in this book, from students to researchers and those in industry.
This book explores community dynamics within social media. Using
Wikipedia as an example, the volume explores communities that rely
upon commons-based peer production. Fundamental theoretical
principles spanning such domains as organizational configurations,
leadership roles, and social evolutionary theory are developed. In
the context of Wikipedia, these theories explain how a functional
elite of highly productive editors has emerged and why they are
responsible for a majority of the content. It explains how the
elite shapes the project and how this group tends to become stable
and increasingly influential over time. Wikipedia has developed a
new and resilient social hierarchy, an adhocracy, which combines
features of traditional and new, online, social organizations. The
book presents a set of practical approaches for using these
theories in real-world practice. This work fundamentally changes
the way we think about social media leadership and evolution,
emphasizing the crucial contributions of leadership, of elite
social roles, and of group global structure to the overall success
and stability of large social media projects. Written in an
accessible and direct style, the book will be of interest to
academics as well as professionals with an interest in social media
and commons-based peer production processes.
Focusing on how citizens of early modern England tried to locate
themselves and their nation through geography and travel writing,
Monica Matei-Chesnoiu explores theatrical representations of
Western European space and ethnography. Geographic discourses share
many features with drama in that they appeal to the readers' and
audience's curiosity and imagination. Playwrights use information
derived from geography treatises as vehicles to allegorize
contemporary English issues in a dialogical mode. While geography
and travel texts provide an objective synthesis in describing
Western European nations, dramatic interaction destabilizes any
preconceived notions and submits contrastive views on imagined
global European communities. This book explores representations of
France, Spain, Germany, the Low Countries, and Denmark in a wide
range of geography texts and offers fresh readings of Shakespeare,
Jonson, Marlowe, Middleton, Dekker, Massinger, Marston, and others.
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Metasploit, 2nd Edition
David Kennedy, Mati Aharoni, Devon Kearns, Jim O'Gorman, Daniel G. Graham
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R1,227
R1,029
Discovery Miles 10 290
Save R198 (16%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The second edition of the international bestseller Metasploit is
written by some of the world’s best hackers and is the only
introduction you’ll ever need to the legendary Framework. Fully
revised to include all new chapters on attacking cloud
applications, industrial control systems, and recent
vulnerabilities, you’ll learn Metasploit’s module system,
conventions, and interfaces as you launch simulated attacks. The
Metasploit Framework makes discovering, exploiting, and sharing
systemic vulnerabilities quick and painless. But, this popular
pentesting tool can be hard to grasp for first-time users. Written
by some of the world’s top hackers and security experts,
Metasploit fills the gap by teaching you how to best harness the
Framework and interact with its vibrant community of Metasploit
open-source contributors. This indispensable guide's updated
second edition introduces modules and commands recently added to
the Metasploit Framework, along with new chapters on the Cloud
Lookup (and Bypass) module and attacking IoT or SCADA (industrial)
systems using the Mobius client module. You’ll learn:
Modern pentesting techniques, including network reconnaissance and
enumeration The Metasploit Framework's conventions, interfaces, and
module system Client-side attacks Wireless exploits Targeted
social-engineering attacks In a digital ecosystem increasingly
driven by cloud-based and industrial attacks, the modern hacking
techniques covered in Metasploit, 2nd Edition are essential for
today's penetration testers.
This book springs from a multidisciplinary, multi-organizational,
and multi-sector conversation about the privacy and ethical
implications of research in human affairs using big data. The need
to cultivate and enlist the public's trust in the abilities of
particular scientists and scientific institutions constitutes one
of this book's major themes. The advent of the Internet, the mass
digitization of research information, and social media brought
about, among many other things, the ability to harvest - sometimes
implicitly - a wealth of human genomic, biological, behavioral,
economic, political, and social data for the purposes of scientific
research as well as commerce, government affairs, and social
interaction. What type of ethical dilemmas did such changes
generate? How should scientists collect, manipulate, and
disseminate this information? The effects of this revolution and
its ethical implications are wide-ranging. This book includes the
opinions of myriad investigators, practitioners, and stakeholders
in big data on human beings who also routinely reflect on the
privacy and ethical issues of this phenomenon. Dedicated to the
practice of ethical reasoning and reflection in action, the book
offers a range of observations, lessons learned, reasoning tools,
and suggestions for institutional practice to promote responsible
big data research on human affairs. It caters to a broad audience
of educators, researchers, and practitioners. Educators can use the
volume in courses related to big data handling and processing.
Researchers can use it for designing new methods of collecting,
processing, and disseminating big data, whether in raw form or as
analysis results. Lastly, practitioners can use it to steer future
tools or procedures for handling big data. As this topic represents
an area of great interest that still remains largely undeveloped,
this book is sure to attract significant interest by filling an
obvious gap in currently available literature.
The aim of the Expositions is to present new and important
developments in pure and applied mathematics. Well established in
the community over more than two decades, the series offers a large
library of mathematical works, including several important
classics. The volumes supply thorough and detailed expositions of
the methods and ideas essential to the topics in question. In
addition, they convey their relationships to other parts of
mathematics. The series is addressed to advanced readers interested
in a thorough study of the subject. Editorial Board Lev Birbrair,
Universidade Federal do Ceara, Fortaleza, BrasilWalter D. Neumann,
Columbia University, New York, USAMarkus J. Pflaum, University of
Colorado, Boulder, USADierk Schleicher, Jacobs University, Bremen,
GermanyKatrin Wendland, University of Freiburg, Germany Honorary
Editor Victor P. Maslov, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow,
Russia Titles in planning include Yuri A. Bahturin, Identical
Relations in Lie Algebras (2019)Yakov G. Berkovich, Lev G. Kazarin,
and Emmanuel M. Zhmud', Characters of Finite Groups, Volume 2
(2019)Jorge Herbert Soares de Lira, Variational Problems for
Hypersurfaces in Riemannian Manifolds (2019)Volker Mayer, Mariusz
Urbanski, and Anna Zdunik, Random and Conformal Dynamical Systems
(2021)Ioannis Diamantis, Bostjan Gabrovsek, Sofia Lambropoulou, and
Maciej Mroczkowski, Knot Theory of Lens Spaces (2021)
The present book is the outcome of an Advanced Study Institute
meeting, which was held in Kallithea, Chalkidiki, in Northern
Greece, from 12-25 May 1991 and attended by 69 delegates from 18
countries. The Institute brought together scientists, engineers and
technologists currently involved in basic and applied research on
the different aspects of flotation. The Institute covered subjects
in four major areas of flotation: a) fundamentals; b) chemical
technology aspects; c) mineral processing; and d) water and
wastewater treatment. Apart from the papers reproduced in this
volume, several short oral communications were also presented.
Participants also had the opportunity to visit the Hellenic
Chemical Products & Fertilizers Co. Ltd. mixed sulphides plant,
in Chalkidiki. Conference participants, whose interest and research
projects are in this broad field of science and engineering,
provided a well-informed discussion of the problems encountered, as
well as possible directions of future technological developments.
It is hoped that this book is not only a good record of the
presentations made (formal and informal), analyzing the
state-of-the-art in flotation, but will also be helpful for
students, scientists and technologists working in the fields of
separation processes and in particular mineral processing and
wastewater engineering. All the invited speakers and the
participants made this summer school possible, worthwhile and
enjoyable. The sponsorship by the NATO Scientific Affairs Division
is gratefully ack nowledged. The Editors would like to thank the
members of the Organizing Committee, Dr. B.A."
After more than twenty years of democracy in South Africa, the
history of the liberation struggle is losing relevance in the
national consciousness as the country grapples with the pressing
challenges of poverty, inequality and unemployment. Nevertheless,
the liberation struggle spawned many heroes and heroines, some
whose contributions have been captured in autobiographies,
biographies, book chapters, books and journal articles. There are
many more heroes and heroines that are mere footnotes in the vast
historiography of the liberation struggle - whose recollections and
reflections are recorded in the words of the authors and their
names acknowledged as sources in footnotes. The names of a larger
number are not mentioned and do not feature even as footnotes in
any publication on the history of the struggle. The book The other
side of freedom: Stories of hope and loss in South African
Liberation Struggle 1950-1994 presents a compilation of 26 profiles
of a diverse selection of activists and leaders in the liberation
struggle, framed between an introduction, a brief chronological
account of the liberation struggle between 1950 and 1994, and a
conclusive analysis of the autobiographical accounts as well as
their legacy. The chapters present a better and fuller portrait of
several unsung heroes and heroines of the South African liberation
struggle by penetrating beyond the deeds, ideals, sacrifices, glory
and greatness to examine individual human beings who are still
living, and their recollections of others who have passed on.
Is the concept of open society still relevant in the 21st century?
Do the current social, moral, and political realities call for a
drastic revision of this concept? Here fifteen essays address
real-world contemporary challenges to open society from a variety
of perspectives. What unites the individual authors and chapters is
an interest in open society's continuing usefulness and relevance
to address current problems. And what distinguishes them is a rich
variety of geographical and cultural backgrounds, and a wide range
of academic disciplines and traditions. While focusing on probing
the contemporary relevance of the concept, several chapters
approach it historically. The book features a comprehensive
introduction to the history and current 'uses' of the theory of
open society. The authors link the concept to contemporary themes
including education, Artificial Intelligence, cognitive science,
African cosmology, colonialism, and feminism. The diversity of
viewpoints in the analysis reflects a commitment to plurality that
is at the heart of this book and of the idea of open society
itself.
The book proposes a systematic approach to big data collection,
documentation and development of analytic procedures that foster
collaboration on a large scale. This approach, designated as "data
factoring" emphasizes the need to think of each individual dataset
developed by an individual project as part of a broader data
ecosystem, easily accessible and exploitable by parties not
directly involved with data collection and documentation.
Furthermore, data factoring uses and encourages pre-analytic
operations that add value to big data sets, especially recombining
and repurposing. The book proposes a research-development agenda
that can undergird an ideal data factory approach. Several
programmatic chapters discuss specialized issues involved in data
factoring (documentation, meta-data specification, building
flexible, yet comprehensive data ontologies, usability issues
involved in collaborative tools, etc.). The book also presents case
studies for data factoring and processing that can lead to building
better scientific collaboration and data sharing strategies and
tools. Finally, the book presents the teaching utility of data
factoring and the ethical and privacy concerns related to it.
Chapter 9 of this book is available open access under a CC BY 4.0
license at link.springer.com
The Handbook of Latin American and Caribbean Intelligence Cultures
explores the contemporary efforts of Latin American and Caribbean
nations to develop an intelligence culture. Specifically, it
analyzes these countries' efforts to democratize their intelligence
agencies (i.e. to develop intelligence services that are both
transparent and effective) to convert the former military regimes'
repressive security apparatuses into democratic intelligence
communities-a rather paradoxical task, considering that democracy
calls for political neutrality, transparency, and accountability,
while effective intelligence services must operate in secrecy.
Indeed, even the most successful democracies face this conundrum of
democracy and intelligence; Latin America and the Caribbean region
is not alone in facing this challenge. The legacy of the repressive
military regimes or brutal civil wars-which have inspired in the
public a general disdain toward intelligence services due to the
grave human rights abuses-coupled with politicians' persistent lack
of interest or expertise in intelligence matters complicate the
region's quest for a proper balance between the competing demands
of democracy and intelligence. This volume details the attempts of
the region's countries to overcome these obstacles and pursue
democratic intelligence institution building-transforming the legal
basis for intelligence; establishing democratic control and
oversight mechanisms; and fostering intelligence openness,
transparency, and outreach.
This book provides a strong multidisciplinary examination of the
links between migration, remittances and sustainable development in
Africa. It makes evidence-based policy recommendations on migration
to help achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. The key themes
examined are migration and remittances, and their relations with
the following issues: economic transformation, education and
knowledge, corruption and conflict. Cross-cutting issues such as
gender equality and youth are weaved throughout the chapters, and a
rich range of country contexts are presented. The volume also
discusses challenges in managing migration flows. It will be of
interest to advanced students, academics and policy makers in
development economics and sustainable development.
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Paperback
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R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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