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The Himalaya and surrounding regions are amongst the world's most
linguistically diverse places. Of an estimated 600 languages spoken
here at Asia's heart, few are researched in depth and many
virtually undocumented. Historical developments and relationships
between the region's languages also remain poorly understood. This
book brings together new work on under-researched Himalayan
languages with investigations into the complexities of the area's
linguistic history, offering original data and perspectives on the
synchrony and diachrony of the Greater Himalayan Region. The volume
arises from papers given and topics discussed at the 16th Himalayan
Languages Symposium in London in 2010. Most papers focus on
Tibeto-Burman languages. These include topics relating to
individual - mostly small and endangered - languages, such as
Tilung, Shumcho, Rengmitca, Yongning Na and Tshangla; comparative
research on the Tibetic, East Bodish and Tamangic language groups;
and several papers whose scope covers the whole language family.
The remaining paper deals with the origins of Burushaski, whose
genetic affiliation remains uncertain. This book will be of special
interest to scholars of Tibeto-Burman, and historical as well as
general linguists.
Worldwide computer crimes cost organizations and governments
billions of dollars each year. In response, organizations use a
plethora of heterogeneous security devices and software such as
firewalls, Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS), and Security
Information and Event Management (SIEM) to monitor networks in
conjunction with Computer Security Incident Response Teams (CSIRT)
that are responsible for ensuring availability, integrity, and
confidentiality of network services. Situational Awareness in
Computer Network Defense: Principles, Methods and Applications
provides academia and organizations insights into practical and
applied solutions, frameworks, technologies, and implementations
for situational awareness in computer networks. This book presents
situational awareness solutions in Computer Network Defense (CND)
currently being researched or deployed. The key objective is to
fill a gap that exists in the way CND and security are being
approached by formalizing the use of situational awareness in
computer network security and defense.
The work described in this PhD thesis is a study of a real
implementation of a track-finder system which could provide
reconstructed high transverse momentum tracks to the first-level
trigger of the High Luminosity LHC upgrade of the CMS experiment.
This is vital for the future success of CMS, since otherwise it
will be impossible to achieve the trigger selectivity needed to
contain the very high event rates. The unique and extremely
challenging requirement of the system is to utilise the enormous
volume of tracker data within a few microseconds to arrive at a
trigger decision. The track-finder demonstrator described proved
unequivocally, using existing hardware, that a real-time
track-finder could be built using present-generation FPGA-based
technology which would meet the latency and performance
requirements of the future tracker. This means that more advanced
hardware customised for the new CMS tracker should be even more
capable, and will deliver very significant gains for the future
physics returns from the LHC.
Safe from the battlefields of Europe and Asia, the United States
led the post - World War II global economic recovery through
international assistance and foreign direct investment. With an
ardent decolonization agenda and a postwar legitimacy, the United
States attempted to construct a world characterized by cooperation.
When American optimism clashed with Soviet expansionism, the United
States started on a path to global hegemony. In US Foreign Policy
and Defense Strategy, the authors analyze the strategic
underpinnings of hegemony, assess the national security
establishment that sustains dominance, consider the impact on
civil-military relations, and explore the intertwining
relationships between foreign policy, defense strategy, and
commercial activities. Eschewing conventional analyses, the volume
not only identifies drivers and continuities in foreign policy, but
it also examines how the legacy of the last sixty-five years will
influence future national security policy that will be
characterized by US leadership in an increasingly competitive
world. From civil-military relations to finance, and from competing
visions of how America should make war to its philosophy of
securing peace through reconstruction and reconciliation, US
Foreign Policy and Defense Strategy offers unique insights into the
links between military and commercial power as it charts the rise
of a historical rarity: the incidental superpower. This accessibly
written book is suitable for students and general readers as well
as scholars.
Safe from the battlefields of Europe and Asia, the United States
led the post - World War II global economic recovery through
international assistance and foreign direct investment. With an
ardent decolonization agenda and a postwar legitimacy, the United
States attempted to construct a world characterized by cooperation.
When American optimism clashed with Soviet expansionism, the United
States started on a path to global hegemony. In US Foreign Policy
and Defense Strategy, the authors analyze the strategic
underpinnings of hegemony, assess the national security
establishment that sustains dominance, consider the impact on
civil-military relations, and explore the intertwining
relationships between foreign policy, defense strategy, and
commercial activities. Eschewing conventional analyses, the volume
not only identifies drivers and continuities in foreign policy, but
it also examines how the legacy of the last sixty-five years will
influence future national security policy that will be
characterized by US leadership in an increasingly competitive
world. From civil-military relations to finance, and from competing
visions of how America should make war to its philosophy of
securing peace through reconstruction and reconciliation, US
Foreign Policy and Defense Strategy offers unique insights into the
links between military and commercial power as it charts the rise
of a historical rarity: the incidental superpower. This accessibly
written book is suitable for students and general readers as well
as scholars.
HIV/AIDS is a global health crisis of unprecedented proportions.
Afflicting millions worldwide, its social, political, economic, and
ethical dimensions have rendered explicit the vast inequalities of
our "negatively globalized planet". Since the late 1990s, a major
feature of the crisis has been the dispute over intellectual
property protection and medicines access. In this book, Thomas Owen
examines the mediatization of this dispute. Weaving together
contemporary media theory and interdisciplinary research with
computer-assisted news analysis and interviews with journalists and
civil society campaigners, the book illuminates the intersecting
constitutive relationships between global crises, global
governance, and global media. In a context of changing media
technologies, logics, and practices, this book observes where the
mediatized conflict surrounding global medicines access has at
times consolidated elite political economic power, and at other
times provided civil society campaigners their greatest
opportunities for global social change. With an interdisciplinary
approach, this book is suitable for courses on global media
communication and global journalism, as well as advanced
undergraduate and postgraduate courses in public health
communication, political communication, social movement studies,
and international relations.
Thomas Owens explores some of the exultant visions inspired by
Wordsworth's and Coleridge's close scrutiny of the night sky, the
natural world, and the domains of science. He examines a set of
scientific patterns drawn from natural, geometric, celestial, and
astronomical sources which Wordsworth and Coleridge used to express
their ideas about poetry, religion, literary criticism, and
philosophy, and establishes the central importance of analogy in
their creative thinking. Analogies prompted the poets' imaginings
in geometry and cartography, in nature (representations of the
moon) and natural history (studies of spider-webs, streams, and
dew), in calculus and conical refraction, and in the discovery of
infra-red and ultraviolet light. Although this is primarily a study
of the patterns which inspired their writing, the findings overturn
the prevalent critical consensus that Wordsworth and Coleridge did
not have the access, interest, or capacity to understand the latest
developments in nineteenth-century astronomy and mathematics, which
they did in fact possess. Wordsworth, Coleridge, and 'the language
of the heavens' reinstates many relationships which the poets had
with scientists and their sources. Most significantly, the book
illustrates that these sources are not simply another context or
historical lens through which to engage with Wordsworth's and
Coleridge's work but are instead a controlling device of the
symbolic imagination. Exploring the structures behind Wordsworth's
and Coleridge's poems and metaphysics stakes out a return to the
evidence of the Romantic imagination, not for its own sake, but in
order to reveal that their analogical configuration of the world
provided them with a scaffold for thinking, an intellectual orrery
which ordered artistic consciousness and which they never
abandoned.
The work described in this PhD thesis is a study of a real
implementation of a track-finder system which could provide
reconstructed high transverse momentum tracks to the first-level
trigger of the High Luminosity LHC upgrade of the CMS experiment.
This is vital for the future success of CMS, since otherwise it
will be impossible to achieve the trigger selectivity needed to
contain the very high event rates. The unique and extremely
challenging requirement of the system is to utilise the enormous
volume of tracker data within a few microseconds to arrive at a
trigger decision. The track-finder demonstrator described proved
unequivocally, using existing hardware, that a real-time
track-finder could be built using present-generation FPGA-based
technology which would meet the latency and performance
requirements of the future tracker. This means that more advanced
hardware customised for the new CMS tracker should be even more
capable, and will deliver very significant gains for the future
physics returns from the LHC.
Created in the jazz clubs of New York City, and initially treated by most musicians and audiences as radical, chaotic, and bewildering: bebop has become, Thomas Owen writes, `the lingua franca of jazz, serving as the principal musical language of thousands of jazz musicians.' In Bebop, Owens conducts us on an insightful, loving tour through the music, players, and recordings that changed American culture. Combining vivid portraits of bebop's gigantic personalities - among them Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles Davis - with deft musical analysis, he offers an instrument-by-instrument look at the key players and their innovations.
Betty Thomas Owens grew up near Dahlonega, Georgia. Born in 1937,
her childhood was quite different than those of today's youth. In
Simpler Times, Betty recounts how farm folks lived in the rural
foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Enjoy this quaint
reminiscence about a time when people worked hard, didn't complain,
and enjoyed a simpler life.
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