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Prentice Hall

Index Prentice Hall

Prentice Hall is a major educational publisher owned by Pearson plc. [1]

1147 relations: "Hello, World!" program, A Gathering of Days, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Abdul Aziz Said, Abraham J. Twerski, Abstract algebra, Academic study of new religious movements, Actor model and process calculi, Actor model and process calculi history, Adaptation, Adaptive collaborative control, Adder (electronics), Additive synthesis, Aegospotami, African-American culture, Agile application, Al Dempsey, Alan Feinstein, Alan Pipes, Alan Turing, Alba Longa, Albert Lea, Minnesota, Albert Theodore Powers, Alexandroff extension, Alfred A. Marcus, Algebraic number, Alice and Bob, Alicyn Packard, Alkene, Alkoxide, Allegro (software), Allen Ginsberg, Allen Holub, Almost Lost, Alois Hába, Aluminium chloride, Amber (processor core), American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial, Anadi Sankar Gupta, Analytic polyhedron, Ananke (moon), Andrea Alù, Andreas Feininger, Andrew Billingsley, Andrew Scull, Andrew Truxal, Angular momentum operator, Anil K. Jain (computer scientist, born 1948), Anil K. Jain (electrical engineer, born 1946), Ann Dunnigan, ..., Anna Lubiw, Anne Anastasi, Antebellum architecture, Antoine-Jean Gros, Appendix (anatomy), Appleton-Century-Crofts, Aptandraceae, Aquifex, Arcade game, Archaeoglobaceae, Argument from analogy, Argument map, Ari Luotonen, Arithmetic function, Arlene Dahl, ARM architecture, Aromatization, Arthur C. Brooks, Arthur Rubinfeld, Artificial intelligence, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach, Ashbel Green (editor), Assembly of Vizille, Attack tree, Audrey Grant, Auger electron spectroscopy, Augmented sixth chord, Avner Friedman, Águila Blanca (heist), Baba Vanga, Backstepping, Balance theory, Band gap, BASIC, Basic Palaeontology, Bayezid II, Beam (structure), Beer style, Beer–Lambert law, Bell's theorem, Bernard J. Geis, Bernard O'Donoghue, Bibliography of Donald Trump, Bibliography of Jehovah's Witnesses, Big Brother (software), Big Painting No. 6, Bill Root (bridge), Billy Higgins (vaudeville), Bisimulation, Bitwise operations in C, Black Hawk (nightclub), Black–Scholes equation, Black–Scholes model, Blessing ceremony of the Unification Church, Block floating-point, Blondie (radio), BlueJ, Bob Gaudio, Bone Wars, Bonnie and Clyde (film), Book rental service, Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year, Boolean data type, Boricua Popular Army, Boundaryless organization, Brave Companions: Portraits in History, Brendan Kehoe, Brian Baird, Brian Kernighan, Brian M. Fagan, Brown algae, Bruce Perens' Open Source Series, Buddy Morrow, Bulb, Bus contention, Business process reengineering, C (programming language), C file input/output, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, Call option, Call volume (telecommunications), Calvillo River, Camera degli Sposi, Carbonyl group, Carl Malamud, Carlo Ghezzi, Carlotta Monti, Carme (moon), Carol Tavris, Carroll Morgan (computer scientist), Carroll Vincent Newsom, Cartan's theorems A and B, Cat, Catalectic, Cecil B. DeMille, Center for Wireless Information Network Studies, Centimetre–gram–second system of units, Change detection, Charles E. Lindblom, Charles Edward Kerr, Charles H. Traub, Charles Roberts (officer), Charles Stark Draper, Chartres Cathedral, Chester Hartman, Chimney breast, CHON, Chris West, Christ and St. Thomas (Verrocchio), Christos Papadimitriou, Church of Sant Vicenç, CIELAB color space, Circular flow of income, Civilization, Claim club, Claude E. Welch Jr., Claude V. Palisca, Cleopatra (crater), Cleve Moler, Cliff Jones (computer scientist), Clock synchronization, Closed set, Cognitive Abilities Test, Cognitive test, Cold-stimulus headache, Colossal Cave Adventure, Comb space, Command-line interface, Commission on National Goals, Communicating sequential processes, Commutator, Compactification (mathematics), Comparison of topologies, Compiler, Composite number, Compton scattering, Concatenated error correction code, Concentrated solar still, Concurrency control, Connie Francis, Conrad Gessner, Conrad Hilton, Constant (mathematics), Continued fraction, Contractible space, Convergent matrix, Convergent Technologies Operating System, Conversations with an Executioner, Cooperalls, Core product, Core Python Programming, Cornelius Lanczos, Corrosion, Countably compact space, Cousin problems, Cover (topology), Cox–Ingersoll–Ross model, Craig Barrett (chief executive), Craig Fleisher, Creditor, Criminal Justice: A Brief Introduction, Critical point (mathematics), Critical value, Cult, Currency war, Cybercrime, Cyclic group, Daddy Was a Number Runner, Dan Vogel, Dandi Daley Mackall, Daniel Gajski, Daniel Kahneman, Daniel Weinreb, Danny DeVito, Data collection, Data hierarchy, Data mining, Data structure, Dave Hill (golfer), David "Race" Bannon, David Bohm, David C. Cole, David J. Griffiths, David Szatmary, Day of the Tiles, De rerum natura, Dead code elimination, Dean Gratton, Death, Death by China, Death mask, Debra Elmegreen, Debug (command), Decision cycle, Decline and Fall of the American Programmer, Defensively equipped merchant ship, Delayed binding, Demagnetizing field, Denotational semantics of the Actor model, Depeche Mode, Device file, Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane, Dines Bjørner, Dini derivative, Diphosphorus tetroxide, Direct product of groups, Direct shear test, Disparate impact, Divisor function, Dixon Waterfowl Refuge, DNASTAR, Dominance drawing, Don Cassel, Donald Howard Menzel, Donald R. Peterson, Doomsday cult, Doomsday Cult: A Study of Conversion, Proselytization, and Maintenance of Faith, Dorothy Gish, Dorothy Lamour, DP cell, Dreaming of You (Selena song), Drinker paradox, Drummer Hoff, DTrace, Dynamic Bayesian network, E-governance, EAGLE (program), Earl Lemley Core, Early history of video games, Easley Blackwood Sr., Education in the United States, Einstein tensor, Elara (moon), Electrical resistivity and conductivity, Electromagnetic induction, Electromagnetism, Electron, Electron affinity, Electron degeneracy pressure, Electronic business, Electronic music, Eliot Deutsch, Elite theory, Email hacking, Emma Lou Thornbrough, Emotion, Emotivism, Empathy, Ennis Rees, Eric Salzman, Erik Lindgren, Erlang (programming language), Ernest L. Hettich, Error detection and correction, Escape sequences in C, Espresso heuristic logic minimizer, Essential gene, Esther Salaman (writer), Euler's totient function, European exploration of Africa, Event (probability theory), Exact statistics, Exec (Amiga), Execution model, Exercise (mathematics), Existentialism, Experimental uncertainty analysis, Explore Evolution, Explosion welding, Exponent (consulting firm), Exponential smoothing, Export, Ezra Solomon, F. Lee Bailey, F. Richard Stephenson, Falaise Pocket, Fantasiestücke, Op. 12, Fantastic Universe, Fast Fourier transform, FAT filesystem and Linux, FDR (software), Feedback arc set, Felipe Larraín Bascuñán, Felix Z. Longoria Jr., Fergus Cashin, Fermat's little theorem, Fermentation, Ferroglobus, Ferroplasma, Fiber, Field (mathematics), File descriptor, File system, Financial economics, Find first set, Finite difference methods for option pricing, Finite mathematics, Finite potential well, Fire on the Mountain (game), Floating-point arithmetic, Floppy disk, Fortran, Fotos y Recuerdos, François Darlan, François-Marie Bissot, Sieur de Vincennes, Frances McCue, Francis B. Hildebrand, Franco Modigliani, Frank Bowe, Frank J. Fabozzi, Frank Lovece, Fred Schwarz, Fred T. Mackenzie, Frederick Crews, Frederick Ferré, Free-air gravity anomaly, Fulbert Youlou, Functional programming, Fundamental group, Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles and Fundamental Duties of India, Fundamental theorem of arithmetic, Fuzzy logic, G. William Domhoff, Gail Gibbons, Galileo Galilei, Ganesh Vaidyanathan, Garage rock, Gary Clayton Anderson, Gaskell Romney, Gauss's law for magnetism, Gauss–Kronrod quadrature formula, Gaussian elimination, Gaussian quadrature, Gay Hendricks, Gender roles in Mesoamerica, Generalised circle, Generalized eigenvector, Genetic drift, Geolocation software, Geomatics, Geometric transformation, George Barnes (musician), George Forsythe, George P. Shultz, George W. Romney, Gerard J. Holzmann, Germ (mathematics), Gildo Seisdedos Domínguez, Ginkgo, Gloger's rule, Gloria Winters, Go Ask Alice, Goal, Golden age of arcade video games, Gone with the Wind (film), Google Web Toolkit, Grapevine (gossip), Graph drawing, GRASP (object-oriented design), Gray code, Great Migration (African American), Great Moon Hoax, Greatest common divisor, Greeks (finance), Gregory Bateson, Group (mathematics), Group velocity, GTK+, Gullibility, Guy Bullock, Guy Consolmagno, Guy L. Steele Jr., Hacker culture, Hal McIntyre, Hamming weight, Hamurabi (video game), Hank Duncan, Hans G. Furth, Harold A. Lafount, Harold Horton Sheldon, Harold of Orange, Harold Pinter bibliography, Harold's Club, Harry R. Lewis, Harvey Brooks (composer), Heavy metals, Henry Hamilton (governor), Her Secret Is Patience, Herbert V. Prochnow, Heron's formula, Herschel Evans, High Fantasy, High Risk (TV series), Himalia (moon), Hinduism and LGBT topics, Histology of the vocal folds, History of IBM mainframe operating systems, History of printing, History of science and technology in Africa, History of Texas, History of the floppy disk, History of the transistor, Ho–Lee model, Hok Yau Club, Hollow matrix, Holocene, Holomorphic function, Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity, Homosexuality: Disease or Way of Life?, Honda Super Cub, Honey (Moby song), House Party (radio and TV show), How to Solve It, How to Solve it by Computer, Howard Levi, Hugues Panassié, Hull–White model, Human brain, Human evolution, Huping Ling, Hydrogen atom, I Could Fall in Love, I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold, IBM Laboratory Vienna, ICEfaces, ICTCM Award, Ida Altman, Ideal observer theory, IEEE 802.11 (legacy mode), Impeachment investigations of United States federal judges, Imperial Chinese Tributary System, Import, Incidence (geometry), Incidence structure, Independence (probability theory), Index of urban sociology articles, India, Inkscape, Input offset voltage, Inspector Ghote, Instruction pipelining, Intellectual giftedness, Intelligence quotient, Interactive Systems Corporation, International Conference on Technology in Collegiate Mathematics, Interval arithmetic, Invariant mass, Inverse function, Invertebrate paleontology, IOzone, IQ classification, IRC flood, Ircle, Irma Becerra Fernandez, Irradiance, Irving Howe, Isotope fractionation, Isotopes of hydrogen, Issues in Science and Religion, Istituto Statale Italiano Leonardo Da Vinci, Iterative refinement, Ivan T. Sanderson, J. Allen Boone, J. C. McKinley, J. C. Snead, J. Laurie Snell, James A.F. Stoner, James E. Gunn (writer), James Fadiman, James H. Wilkinson, James Kasting, James MacGregor Burns, James Marshall Campbell, James Rumbaugh, James Warhola, Jane Blalock v. Ladies Professional Golf Association, Jane Eyre (1910 film), Jane Roberts, Japan and weapons of mass destruction, Java annotation, Java Data Objects, Java Native Interface, Java Platform, Micro Edition, JavaFX, JavaFX Script, Jayson Lusk, Jazz education, Jürgen Stroop, Jean Blondel, Jean E. Sammet, Jean-Claude Usunier, Jean-Pierre Danthine, Jeff Caponigro, Jeff Conaway, Jeffrey A. Krames, Jeffrey Sachs, Jennifer Roberts (art historian), Jericho, Jessica Care Moore, Jessie Street, Jim Davies (computer scientist), Jim Horning, Jim Woodcock, Joan Blades, Joe Bash, Joe Baugher, Johann Sebastian Bach, John Askin Jr., John C. Edmunds, John C. Reynolds, John Dewey, John Evangelist Walsh, John F. Kennedy High School (Denver, Colorado), John Joseph Martin, John O'Neill (video game designer), John Peterman, John R. Stallings, John R. Talbott, John Tschohl, John Von Ohlen, Jonathan Bowen, Jonny Quest (TV series), Jordan normal form, Joseph Granville, Joseph LaPalombara, Joseph LoPiccolo (psychology), Joseph P. Ebacher, JOSS, Judiciary of France, Julia Faye, Julia Heiman, K-topology, Kalman filter, Kaoru Ishikawa, Karl Barth, Karl Dawson Wood, Karl Drobnic, Karl H. Pribram, Karlsplatz Stadtbahn Station, Karnaugh map, Kazimierz Moczarski, Keith Clark, Ken Schwaber, Kendrick Frazier, Kenneth R. Miller, Kernel panic, Kitchen Table International, Kitware, Knight's tour, Kurt H. Debus, Kyma (sound design language), Kyra Petrovskaya Wayne, L. E. Sissman, L. S. Stavrianos, Lambert's cosine law, Laser, Lattice stool, Lawrence Welk, Layered graph drawing, Learning through play, Least common multiple, Lee Caplin, Lee J. Ames, Lennie Niehaus, Lenore Romney, Leo Carrillo on stage and screen, Letter-spacing, Liberalization, Lie bracket of vector fields, Lies My Teacher Told Me, Light industry, Limit point compact, Limit state design, Limnology, Linear density, Linus's Law, Lisa Bradley, List of American Muslims, List of astronomical observatories, List of books in computational geometry, List of Boston University people, List of English-language book publishing companies, List of fake memoirs and journals, List of group-0 ISBN publisher codes, List of important publications in theoretical computer science, List of Pakistani Americans, List of refrigerants, List of regions of the United States, List of school shootings in the United States, List of soft rock artists and songs, List of state and union territory capitals in India, List of style guide abbreviations, List of the highest-grossing media franchises, List of thermal conductivities, List of University of Michigan alumni, Little Crow, Local homeomorphism, Locally simply connected space, Logic in computer science, Longest path problem, Loop invariant, Los Angeles crime family, Louise Hawes, Louise Meriwether, LR parser, Lucy (chimpanzee), Lucy Kellaway, Lyapunov redesign, Lyn Christie, Lynda Benglis, Lynne Mapp Drexler, Lysithea (moon), M15 Halftrack, MACD, Macroeconomics, Magnet, Magnetic field, Magnetic moment, Magnus von Braun, Manchester code, Manfredo do Carmo, Manufacturing, Marc Nohr, Margaret Walker, Marie de' Medici cycle, Marilyn Singer, Mark Brill, Mark E. Petersen, Mark Surman, Marketing management, Marshall S. Cornwell, Martha O'Driscoll, Martin H. Greenberg, Mary Ann Horton, Mary Cunningham Agee, Mary Ellen Snodgrass, Mass balance, Massachusetts, Matched filter, Mathai Joseph, Matrix (mathematics), Matrix splitting, Matthew Henson, Matthew Pittinsky, Maximum entropy spectral estimation, Maxwell Maltz, Maxwell's equations, Mechanism (philosophy), Mechanophilia, Mehdi Jazayeri, Mel Byars, Mental Research Institute, Meredith Publishing Company, Mesa, Mesosphere (mantle), Metal-mesh optical filter, Method chaining, Michael E. Wysession, Michael Hinchey, Michael James (quilt artist), Michael Spivey, Mickey Cohen, Microbial enhanced oil recovery, Mike Beedle, Miles Park Romney, Minimum weight, MINIX, MINIX 3, MINIX file system, Minnette Gersh Lenier, Miranda IM, Mitchel H. Mark, Modern Operating Systems, Modular arithmetic, Molecular property, Molecule, Molefi Kete Asante, Moral relativism, Motivation, Mountain Moving Coffeehouse, Moving frame, Mr. Mugs, Muhammad Ali Mazidi, Multiplexer, Multiplicity (chemistry), Murasaki Shikibu Diary Emaki, Music of New York City, Musical analysis, My Blue Heaven (song), MyRichUncle, N-sphere, Nathan Lyons, National Book Store, Native American Preparatory School, Natural hazard, Neal E. Miller, Neapolitan chord, Nebula Award for Best Short Story, NetBeans, NetRexx, Network covalent bonding, Network layer, New Economic Policy, New religious movement, New York City English, New York Friars Club, New York Institute of Finance, Newton–Cartan theory, Nirvana fallacy, Nivation, Noise music, Nokia, Non-return-to-zero, Nondualism, NOP, Normal space, Norman Abramson, Norman Matloff, North Raleigh Christian Academy, Northeastern United States, Nursing pin, Nuruddin Farah, O'Reilly Media, Object-oriented programming, Object-role modeling, Observatory, Occam's razor, Oceanography, Oh, Jeff...I Love You, Too...But..., Olive Deering, On-balance volume, One-piece swimsuit, Opacifier, Open and closed maps, Operating system, Operating Systems: Design and Implementation, Operation Red Hat, Ordinary differential equation, Organic field-effect transistor, Organisation's goals, Organisational ideology, Orson Welles bibliography, OSGi, Otto Titzling, Outcome (probability), Outline of political science, Outposts: Journeys to the Surviving Relics of the British Empire, Pac-Man, Panos Prevedouros, Paradise Garden (Georgia), Parallel axis theorem, Parametric model, Paramount Pictures, Parity (physics), Patch test (finite elements), Patricia Lake, Paul Cootner, Paul E. Beaudoin, Paul G. Hewitt, Paul Rimstead, Paul Ziff, Paula Martinac, PDP-11, PDP-11 architecture, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Peachpit, Pearson Education, Pegasus Mail, Pelvic spur, Penguin Group, Periodic continued fraction, Peripheral cycle, Perry Meisel, Perspective (graphical), Peter Bergmann, Peter Coad, Peter Drucker, Peter Halloran, Peter Landin, Peter Lucas (computer scientist), Phase diagram, Phil Silvers, Philosophy of artificial intelligence, Phoenix, Arizona, Photon, Photosynthesis, Piezoelectric accelerometer, Pigasus Award, Pizzaland, Pluriharmonic function, Pointwise convergence, Polarity (mutual inductance), Political science, Polly Bergen, Polyinstantiation, Port of Singapore, Portamento, Porter Hanks, Prayer, Precondition, Prentice (disambiguation), Prentice Hall International Series in Computer Science, Print culture, Printing, Prisoner's dilemma, Process calculus, Project DIANE, Proof mass, Propagator, Psychological evaluation, Public Relations Journal, Push (novel), Put–call parity, PyQt, Q-learning, Qt (software), Quality control, Quine–McCluskey algorithm, Radiometric dating, Ralph Burns, Ramsey interferometry, Raphael Patai, Rayleigh flow, Raymond E. Foster, Raymond Harry Brown, Real analysis, Real line, Receiver operating characteristic, Red Rock Job Corps Center, Reduced residue system, Reginald Aldworth Daly, Regis Brodie, Regular space, Reinhold Niebuhr, Relative humidity, Religious conversion, Religious experience, Rendleman–Bartter model, Repartimiento, Republic of Entre Ríos, Reverdie, Rexx, Rhea Perlman, Richard Alba, Richard Burton, Richard Greene (journalist), Richard Mabey, Richard Theodore Greener, Ridley–Watkins–Hilsum theory, Rikki Ducornet, Rise and Resurrection of the American Programmer, Rise time, Robert C. Martin, Robert Cogan, Robert E. Ornstein, Robert Gauldin, Robert H. McBride, Robert Ian Tricker, Robert Kegan, Robert L. Shook, Robert Lee Constable, Robert Maxwell, Robert Morris (artist), Robert Quine, Robert Randall (photographer), Robert S. Wood, Robin Miller (technology journalist), Robust decision-making, Robyn Dawes, Roger Elwood, Roman Verostko, Romney family, Ron Larson, Ronold W. P. King, Rosemary Ellen Guiley, Roy Harte, Runge–Kutta methods, Rutherford backscattering spectrometry, Safari Books Online, Sammy Luftspring, Sample space, Sanjiva Weerawarana, Sard's theorem, Satellite television, Schell Leather Company, Scientific temper, Scott Cutlip, Secret Six (Chicago), Sectoral balances, Sed, Sedimentary rock, SEE-I, Selective Repeat ARQ, Separation of powers in Singapore, Sequentially compact space, Serial art, Server (computing), Service normalization pattern, Seven Basic Tools of Quality, Sheridan Titman, Shielding gas, Shift-invariant system, Shine On, Harvest Moon, Shmuel Joseph Schweig, Sigmund Suskind, Signal processing, Signaling (telecommunications), Significand, Simon & Schuster, Simple precedence grammar, Simulation preorder, Singing, Single responsibility principle, Sitting Bull, Slavery in Africa, Sliding mode control, Slough (hydrology), Social Foundations of Thought and Action, Social psychology, Social stigma, Software design pattern, Software framework, Soil, Sol Berkowitz, South Shore Furniture, Space Invaders, Space telescope, Spacistor, SPARC, Spharophon, Spiro Mounds, Split labor market theory, Spoofing attack, Spool heel, Springtail, St-planar graph, St. John the Baptist (Ghiberti), Stable isotope ratio, State observer, Statistical inference, Statistical signal processing, Stephen Brobst, Stephen Crane, Stephen P. Boyd, Stephen Schiff, Steve Turre, Steve Turre discography, Stiff diagram, Stiff equation, Strategic leadership, Strict-feedback form, Structural material, Stuart Madnick, Subtle body, Superconductivity, Surface bargaining, Susan Nycum, Symbolic anthropology, Symmetric difference, Syntropy (software), System identification, Systematic code, Tail drop, Tamamushi Shrine, Tansy, Tcl, Technical support, Technostructure, Temple Israel (Memphis, Tennessee), Territorial nationalism, Terry Halpin, Tetrode transistor, The Alan Parsons Project, The Amityville Horror, The Aunt and the Sluggard, The C Programming Language, The Canonization, The Civil War series, The Deliberate Stranger, The Economics of John Maynard Keynes, The Pact (2002 book), The Room (play), The Ten Commandments (1956 film), The Unix Programming Environment, Theatre of Pompey, Thermal oxidation, Thinking in Java, This Book Needs No Title, Thomas C. Parramore, Thomas D. Clark, Thomas Erl, Those Were the Days (song), Throughput, Tibetan Plateau, Ticketmaster Corp. v. Tickets.com, Inc., Tim Bell (computer scientist), Timeline of binary prefixes, Timeline of computing 1950–79, Timeline of New York City, Tk (software), To Autumn, Tokenism, Tom Liston, Tom Mix, Tony Hoare, Total quality management, Translation lookaside buffer, Trinomial tree, Triplet state, TU (Time Unit), Tube lemma, Turán's theorem, TurboGears, Turing (programming language), Tutte polynomial, Twixt Twelve and Twenty, Type safety, Typography, U.S. state, Ubuntu (operating system), Ufology, Ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy of stereoisomers, Umran Inan, Unbounded nondeterminism, Unidentified flying object, Unification Church, Unification Church of the United States, Uniform limit theorem, United Kingdom Election Results, United States Census Bureau, Universal prescriptivism, Universally unique identifier, UNIX Network Programming, Unum (number format), Up the Down Staircase, Upland South, Upward planar drawing, Urbanization in Africa, Vagina, Vagina and vulva in art, Variable (mathematics), Variable structure control, Variable structure system, Variational method (quantum mechanics), Vasicek model, Vector space, Vernon L. Grose, Victor Mollo, Victoria Mixon, Vienna Development Method, Vincennes Trace, Vincennes, Indiana, Wabash River, Walden, Walden Two, Wallie Herzer, Wally Hickel, Walter Woon, Wave packet, WBBM-TV, Web analytics, West Coast Computer Faire, When Technology Fails, Wild arc, Will Hudson (songwriter), William Alston, William Ennis Thomson, William O. Douglas, Williamson ether synthesis, Willy Ley, Win Mortimer, Wirtinger derivatives, Women artists, Women in Maya society, WxWidgets, XPIDL, Yellow journalism, Yugoslav Partisans, Zeeman effect, Zero of a function, Zeugma and syllepsis, ZFS, Zooropa (song), Zum Riesen, Zunk, 1603 in music, 1606 in music, 1617 in music, 1652 in music, 1655 in music, 1657 in music, 1677 in music, 1683 in music, 1685 in music, 1702 in music, 1714 in music, 2008–09 Keynesian resurgence. Expand index (1097 more) »

"Hello, World!" program

A "Hello, World!" program is a computer program that outputs or displays "Hello, World!" to a user.

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A Gathering of Days

A Gathering of Days; A New England Girl's Journal, 1830-32 (1979) is a historical novel by Joan Blos that won the 1980 National Book Award for Children's Books (hardcover).

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A Midsummer Night's Dream

A Midsummer Night's Dream is a comedy written by William Shakespeare in 1595/96.

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Abdul Aziz Said

Abdul Aziz Said is a Syrian-born writer and senior-ranking professor of international relations in the School of International Service at American University where he has taught since 1957.

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Abraham J. Twerski

Abraham Joshua Twerski (אֲבְרָהָם יְהוֹשֻׁע טווערסקי; born) is an American Hasidic rabbi, a scion of the Chernobil Hasidic dynasty, and a psychiatrist specializing in substance abuse.

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Abstract algebra

In algebra, which is a broad division of mathematics, abstract algebra (occasionally called modern algebra) is the study of algebraic structures.

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Academic study of new religious movements

The academic study of new religious movements is known as new religions studies' (NRS).

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Actor model and process calculi

In computer science, the Actor model and process calculi are two closely related approaches to the modelling of concurrent digital computation.

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Actor model and process calculi history

The Actor model and process calculi share an interesting history and co-evolution.

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Adaptation

In biology, adaptation has three related meanings.

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Adaptive collaborative control

Adaptive collaborative control is the decision-making approach used in hybrid models consisting of finite-state machines with functional models as subcomponents to simulate behavior of systems formed through the partnerships of multiple agents for the execution of tasks and the development of work products.

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Adder (electronics)

An adder is a digital circuit that performs addition of numbers.

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Additive synthesis

Additive synthesis is a sound synthesis technique that creates timbre by adding sine waves together.

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Aegospotami

Aegospotami (Αἰγὸς Ποταμοί) or AegospotamosMish, Frederick C., Editor in Chief.

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African-American culture

African-American culture, also known as Black-American culture, refers to the contributions of African Americans to the culture of the United States, either as part of or distinct from mainstream American culture.

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Agile application

An Agile Application is the result of Service Oriented Architecture and Agile Development paradigms.

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Al Dempsey

Al Dempsey is an American author of historical fiction.

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Alan Feinstein

Alan Shawn Feinstein (born 1931) is an American philanthropist and former mail-order and Internet promoter.

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Alan Pipes

Alan Pipes (born 19 March 1947 in Bury, Lancashire, England) is a British writer on art, product design and graphic design.

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Alan Turing

Alan Mathison Turing (23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954) was an English computer scientist, mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst, philosopher, and theoretical biologist.

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Alba Longa

Alba Longa (occasionally written Albalonga in Italian sources) was an ancient city of Latium in central Italy, southeast of Rome, in the Alban Hills.

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Albert Lea, Minnesota

Albert Lea is a city in Freeborn County, in the southeastern part of the State of Minnesota.

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Albert Theodore Powers

Albert Theodore (“Ted”) Powers, (born February 11, 1953) is a senior lawyer, business executive, and investor based in Hong Kong.

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Alexandroff extension

In the mathematical field of topology, the Alexandroff extension is a way to extend a noncompact topological space by adjoining a single point in such a way that the resulting space is compact.

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Alfred A. Marcus

Alfred Allen Marcus (born 1950) is an American author and the Edson Spencer Professor of Strategy and Technology Leadership at the Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota and the Technological Leadership Institute.

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Algebraic number

An algebraic number is any complex number (including real numbers) that is a root of a non-zero polynomial (that is, a value which causes the polynomial to equal 0) in one variable with rational coefficients (or equivalently – by clearing denominators – with integer coefficients).

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Alice and Bob

Alice and Bob are fictional characters commonly used as placeholder names in cryptology, as well as science and engineering literature.

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Alicyn Packard

Alicyn Diane Packard (born September 27, 1979) is an American voice actress, writer and singer nominated for a 2014 Voice Arts Award.

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Alkene

In organic chemistry, an alkene is an unsaturated hydrocarbon that contains at least one carbon–carbon double bond.

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Alkoxide

An alkoxide is the conjugate base of an alcohol and therefore consists of an organic group bonded to a negatively charged oxygen atom.

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Allegro (software)

Allegro is a software library for video game development.

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Allen Ginsberg

Irwin Allen Ginsberg (June 3, 1926 – April 5, 1997) was an American poet, philosopher, writer, and activist.

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Allen Holub

Allen Holub is a computer scientist, author, educator, and consultant.

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Almost Lost

Almost Lost: The True Story of an Anonymous Teenager's Life is a young adult novel by Beatrice Sparks, cited as non-fiction by her, but with no viable sources to suggest that the story, the characters, or the narrator are in any way factual.

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Alois Hába

Alois Hába (21 June 1893 – 18 November 1973) was a Czech composer, music theorist and teacher.

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Aluminium chloride

Aluminium chloride (AlCl3) is the main compound of aluminium and chlorine.

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Amber (processor core)

The Amber processor core is an ARM architecture-compatible 32-bit reduced instruction set computing (RISC) processor.

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American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial

The American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial is a national memorial in Washington, D.C., which honors veterans of the armed forces of the United States who were permanently disabled during the course of their national service.

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Anadi Sankar Gupta

Anadi Sankar Gupta (1 November 1932, Barisal – 14 June 2012, Kolkata) was an Indian mathematician.

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Analytic polyhedron

In mathematics, especially several complex variables, an analytic polyhedron is a subset of the complex space of the form where is a bounded connected open subset of and f_j are holomorphic on.

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Ananke (moon)

Ananke (Ανάγκη) is a retrograde irregular moon of Jupiter.

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Andrea Alù

Andrea Alù (born in Rome, Italy, September 27, 1978) is the Temple Foundation Endowed professor at the University of Texas who is a significant contributor to the field of novel or advanced materials research.

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Andreas Feininger

Andreas Bernhard Lyonel Feininger (December 27, 1906 – February 18, 1999) was an American photographer and a writer on photographic technique.

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Andrew Billingsley

Andrew Billingsley, Ph.D. is a sociologist, author, lecturer, college professor, and served as the 8th President of Morgan State University from 1975 to 1984.

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Andrew Scull

Andrew T. Scull (born 1947) is a British-born sociologist whose research is centered on the social history of medicine and particularly psychiatry.

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Andrew Truxal

Andrew Gehr Truxal (February 2, 1900 – February 3, 1971) was the third president of Hood College and the first president of Anne Arundel Community College.

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Angular momentum operator

In quantum mechanics, the angular momentum operator is one of several related operators analogous to classical angular momentum.

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Anil K. Jain (computer scientist, born 1948)

Anil K. Jain (born 1948) is an Indian-American computer scientist and University Distinguished Professor in the Department of Computer Science & Engineering at Michigan State University, known for his contributions in the fields of pattern recognition, computer vision and biometric recognition.

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Anil K. Jain (electrical engineer, born 1946)

Anil K. Jain (January 21, 1946 – November 14, 1988).

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Ann Dunnigan

Ann Dunnigan was an American actress and teacher who later became a translator of 19th-century Russian literature.

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Anna Lubiw

Anna Lubiw is a computer scientist known for her work in computational geometry and graph theory.

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Anne Anastasi

Anne Anastasi (December 19, 1908 – May 4, 2001) was an American psychologist best known for her pioneering development of psychometrics.

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Antebellum architecture

Antebellum architecture (meaning "prewar", from the Latin ante, "before", and bellum, "war") is the neoclassical architectural style characteristic of the 19th-century Southern United States, especially the Deep South, from after the birth of the United States with the American Revolution, to the start of the American Civil War.

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Antoine-Jean Gros

Antoine-Jean Gros (16 March 177125 June 1835), titled as Baron Gros in 1824, was a French painter.

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Appendix (anatomy)

The appendix (or vermiform appendix; also cecal appendix; vermix; or vermiform process) is a blind-ended tube connected to the cecum, from which it develops in the embryo.

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Appleton-Century-Crofts

Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc. was a division of the Meredith Publishing Company.

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Aptandraceae

The Aptandraceae is a family of flowering plants in the sandalwood order.

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Aquifex

Aquifex is a genus of bacteria, one of the few in the phylum Aquificae.

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Arcade game

An arcade game or coin-op is a coin-operated entertainment machine typically installed in public businesses such as restaurants, bars and amusement arcades.

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Archaeoglobaceae

Archaeoglobaceae are a family of the Archaeoglobales.

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Argument from analogy

Argument from analogy is a special type of inductive argument, whereby perceived similarities are used as a basis to infer some further similarity that has yet to be observed.

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Argument map

In informal logic and philosophy, an argument map or argument diagram is a visual representation of the structure of an argument.

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Ari Luotonen

Ari Luotonen is a Finnish software developer and author.

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Arithmetic function

In number theory, an arithmetic, arithmetical, or number-theoretic function is for most authors any function f(n) whose domain is the positive integers and whose range is a subset of the complex numbers.

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Arlene Dahl

Arlene Carol Dahl (born August 11, 1925) is an American actress and former Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract star, who achieved notability during the 1950s.

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ARM architecture

ARM, previously Advanced RISC Machine, originally Acorn RISC Machine, is a family of reduced instruction set computing (RISC) architectures for computer processors, configured for various environments.

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Aromatization

Aromatization is a chemical reaction in which an aromatic system is formed.

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Arthur C. Brooks

Arthur C. Brooks (born May 21, 1964) is an American social scientist, musician, and columnist for The New York Times.

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Arthur Rubinfeld

Arthur Rubinfeld former Chief Creative Officer and President, Global Innovation and Starbucks Reserve for Starbucks Coffee and Founder of Airvision.

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Artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI, also machine intelligence, MI) is intelligence demonstrated by machines, in contrast to the natural intelligence (NI) displayed by humans and other animals.

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Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach

Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach (AIMA) is a university textbook on artificial intelligence, written by Stuart J. Russell and Peter Norvig.

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Ashbel Green (editor)

Ashbel Green (1928–2013) was a senior editor and vice president at Alfred A. Knopf.

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Assembly of Vizille

The Assembly of Vizille or Estates General of Dauphiné was the result of a meeting of various representatives in Grenoble.

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Attack tree

Attack trees are conceptual diagrams showing how an asset, or target, might be attacked.

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Audrey Grant

Audrey Lindop Grant (born 16 December 1940) is a Canadian professional educator and a contract bridge teacher and writer known for her simple and humorous approach to the game.

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Auger electron spectroscopy

Hanford scientist uses an Auger electron spectrometer to determine the elemental composition of surfaces. Auger electron spectroscopy (AES; pronounced in French) is a common analytical technique used specifically in the study of surfaces and, more generally, in the area of materials science.

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Augmented sixth chord

In music theory, an augmented sixth chord contains the interval of an augmented sixth, usually above its bass tone.

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Avner Friedman

Avner Friedman (אבנר פרידמן; born November 19, 1932) is Distinguished Professor of Mathematics and Physical Sciences at Ohio State University.

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Águila Blanca (heist)

Águila Blanca (named after José Maldonado Román and meaning "White Eagle" in English) was the name given by Los Macheteros (a guerrilla group seeking Puerto Rican independence from the United States) to its robbery of a Wells Fargo depot on September 12, 1983, a day coinciding with the birth date of Puerto Rican Nationalist Dr.

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Baba Vanga

Grandmother Vanga (баба Ванга) (31 January 1911 – 11 August 1996), born Vangeliya Pandeva Dimitrova (Вангелия Пандева Димитрова), known after her marriage as Vangelia Gushterova (Вангелия Гущерова), was a blind Bulgarian mystic, clairvoyant, and herbalist, who spent most of her life in the Rupite area in the Kozhuh mountains in Bulgaria.

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Backstepping

In control theory, backstepping is a technique developed circa 1990 by Petar V. Kokotovic and others for designing stabilizing controls for a special class of nonlinear dynamical systems.

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Balance theory

In the psychology of motivation, balance theory is a theory of attitude change, proposed by Fritz Heider.

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Band gap

In solid-state physics, a band gap, also called an energy gap or bandgap, is an energy range in a solid where no electron states can exist.

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BASIC

BASIC (an acronym for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) is a family of general-purpose, high-level programming languages whose design philosophy emphasizes ease of use.

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Basic Palaeontology

Basic Palaeontology is a basic textbook on the study of paleontology written by the palaeontologists Michael J. Benton and David A.T. Harper, and published by Prentice Hall in 1997.

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Bayezid II

Bayezid II (3 December 1447 – 26 May 1512) (Ottoman Turkish: بايزيد ثانى Bāyezīd-i s̱ānī, Turkish: II. Bayezid or II. Beyazıt) was the eldest son and successor of Mehmed II, ruling as Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1481 to 1512.

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Beam (structure)

A beam is a structural element that primarily resists loads applied laterally to the beam's axis.

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Beer style

Beer style is a term used to differentiate and categorize beers by factors such as colour, flavour, strength, ingredients, production method, recipe, history, or origin.

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Beer–Lambert law

The Beer–Lambert law, also known as Beer's law, the Lambert–Beer law, or the Beer–Lambert–Bouguer law relates the attenuation of light to the properties of the material through which the light is travelling.

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Bell's theorem

Bell's theorem is a "no-go theorem" that draws an important distinction between quantum mechanics and the world as described by classical mechanics.

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Bernard J. Geis

Bernard J. Geis (August 30, 1909 – January 8, 2001) was an American editor and publisher who founded the now-defunct Bernard Geis Associates, which published and promoted several best-sellers in the 1960s and 70s, including Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls and Helen Gurley Brown's Sex and the Single Girl.

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Bernard O'Donoghue

Bernard O'Donoghue FRSL (born 1945) is a contemporary Irish poet and academic.

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Bibliography of Donald Trump

This bibliography of Donald Trump is a list of written and published works, by and about Donald Trump, 45th President of the United States.

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Bibliography of Jehovah's Witnesses

This is a bibliography of works on the Jehovah's Witnesses.

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Big Brother (software)

Big Brother (alias BB) was a tool for systems and network monitoring, generally used by system administrators.

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Big Painting No. 6

Big Painting No.

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Bill Root (bridge)

William S. (Bill) Root (December 12, 1923 – March 18, 2002) was an American professional bridge player, teacher, and writer.

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Billy Higgins (vaudeville)

William Weldon "Billy" Higgins (June 9, 1888 – April 19, 1937) was an American vaudeville entertainer, comedian, singer and songwriter — critically acclaimed, and is historically chronicled, as one of the most popular stage comedians of the 1920s.

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Bisimulation

In theoretical computer science a bisimulation is a binary relation between state transition systems, associating systems that behave in the same way in the sense that one system simulates the other and vice versa.

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Bitwise operations in C

In the C programming language, operations can be performed on a bit level using bitwise operators.

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Black Hawk (nightclub)

The Black Hawk was a San Francisco nightclub that featured live jazz performances during its period of operation from 1949 to 1963.

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Black–Scholes equation

In mathematical finance, the Black–Scholes equation is a partial differential equation (PDE) governing the price evolution of a European call or European put under the Black–Scholes model.

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Black–Scholes model

The Black–Scholes or Black–Scholes–Merton model is a mathematical model for the dynamics of a financial market containing derivative investment instruments.

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Blessing ceremony of the Unification Church

The Holy Marriage Blessing Ceremony is a large-scale wedding or marriage rededication ceremony sponsored by the Unification Church.

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Block floating-point

Block Floating-Point (BFP) algorithms are a kind of algorithm used to emulate floating point while using a fixed point processor.

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Blondie (radio)

Blondie is a radio situation comedy adapted from the long-run Blondie comic strip by Chic Young.

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BlueJ

BlueJ is an integrated development environment (IDE) for the Java programming language, developed mainly for educational purposes, but also suitable for small-scale software development.

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Bob Gaudio

Robert John Gaudio (born November 17, 1942) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and record producer, and the keyboardist/backing vocalist for The Four Seasons.

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Bone Wars

The Bone Wars, also known as the Great Dinosaur Rush, was a period of intense and ruthlessly competitive fossil hunting and discovery during the Gilded Age of American history, marked by a heated rivalry between Edward Drinker Cope (of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia) and Othniel Charles Marsh (of the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale).

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Bonnie and Clyde (film)

Bonnie and Clyde is a 1967 American biographical crime film directed by Arthur Penn and starring Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway as the title characters Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker.

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Book rental service

Libraries have been lending books to the public for thousands of years.

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Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year

The Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year, originally known as the Diagram Group Prize for the Oddest Title at the Frankfurt Book Fair, commonly known as the Diagram Prize for short, is a humorous literary award that is given annually to a book with an unusual title.

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Boolean data type

In computer science, the Boolean data type is a data type that has one of two possible values (usually denoted true and false), intended to represent the two truth values of logic and Boolean algebra.

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Boricua Popular Army

The Ejército Popular Boricua ("Boricua Popular/People's Army"), also known as Los Macheteros ("The Machete Wielders"), is a clandestine organization based in Puerto Rico, with cells in the states and other nations.

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Boundaryless organization

A boundaryless organization is a contemporary approach in organization design.

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Brave Companions: Portraits in History

Brave Companions: Portraits in History is a 1991 book by the American historian David McCullough.

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Brendan Kehoe

Brendan Patrick Kehoe (3 December 1970 – 19 July 2011) was an Irish-born software developer and author.

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Brian Baird

Brian Norton Baird (born March 7, 1956) was the United States Representative for from 1999 to 2011 as a member of the Democratic Party.

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Brian Kernighan

Brian Wilson Kernighan (born January 1, 1942) is a Canadian computer scientist who worked at Bell Labs alongside Unix creators Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie and contributed to the development of Unix.

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Brian M. Fagan

Brian Murray Fagan (born 1 August 1936) is a prolific British author of popular archaeology books and a professor emeritus of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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Brown algae

The brown algae (singular: alga), comprising the class Phaeophyceae, are a large group of multicellular algae, including many seaweeds located in colder waters within the Northern Hemisphere.

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Bruce Perens' Open Source Series

The Bruce Perens' Open Source Series was a series of books edited by Bruce Perens as series editor and published by Prentice Hall PTR.

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Buddy Morrow

Buddy Morrow (born Muni Zudekoff, aka Moe Zudekoff; February 8, 1919, New Haven, Connecticut – September 27, 2010) was an American trombonist and bandleader.

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Bulb

In botany, a bulb is structurally a short stem with fleshy leaves or leaf bases that function as food storage organs during dormancy.

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Bus contention

Bus contention, in computer design, is an undesirable state of the bus in which more than one device on the bus attempts to place values on the bus at the same time.

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Business process reengineering

Business process re-engineering (BPR) is a business management strategy, originally pioneered in the early 1990s, focusing on the analysis and design of workflows and business processes within an organization.

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C (programming language)

C (as in the letter ''c'') is a general-purpose, imperative computer programming language, supporting structured programming, lexical variable scope and recursion, while a static type system prevents many unintended operations.

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C file input/output

The C programming language provides many standard library functions for file input and output.

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California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (CPP, Cal Poly Pomona, or Cal Poly"Cal Poly" may also refer to California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo; however, locals in southern California may also use the term to refer to the Pomona campus. See the name section of this article for more information.) is a public polytechnic university located in Pomona, California in the Los Angeles metropolitan area.

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Call option

A call option, often simply labeled a "call", is a financial contract between two parties, the buyer and the seller of this type of option.

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Call volume (telecommunications)

In telecommunications, call volume refers to the number of telephone calls made during a certain time period.

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Calvillo River

The Calvillo River is a river of Mexico.

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Camera degli Sposi

The Camera degli Sposi ("bridal chamber"), sometimes known as the Camera picta ("painted chamber"), is a room frescoed with illusionistic paintings by Andrea Mantegna in the Ducal Palace, Mantua, Italy.

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Carbonyl group

In organic chemistry, a carbonyl group is a functional group composed of a carbon atom double-bonded to an oxygen atom: C.

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Carl Malamud

Carl Malamud (born 1959) is an American technologist, author, and public domain advocate, known for his foundation Public.Resource.Org.

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Carlo Ghezzi

Carlo Ghezzi is a professor and Chair of Software Engineering at the Politecnico di Milano, Italy and an Adjunct Professor at the Università della Svizzera italiana (USI), Switzerland.

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Carlotta Monti

Carlotta Monti (January 20, 1907 – December 8, 1993) was an American film actress, who was W. C. Fields' companion in his last years.

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Carme (moon)

Carme (Κάρμη) is a retrograde irregular satellite of Jupiter.

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Carol Tavris

Carol Anne Tavris (born September 17, 1944) is an American social psychologist and feminist.

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Carroll Morgan (computer scientist)

Charles Carroll Morgan (born 1952) is an American computer scientist who moved to Australia in his early teens.

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Carroll Vincent Newsom

Carroll Vincent Newsom (1904–1990) was an American educator who served as the eleventh NYU President and President of Prentice Hall.

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Cartan's theorems A and B

In mathematics, Cartan's theorems A and B are two results proved by Henri Cartan around 1951, concerning a coherent sheaf on a Stein manifold.

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Cat

The domestic cat (Felis silvestris catus or Felis catus) is a small, typically furry, carnivorous mammal.

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Catalectic

A catalectic line is a metrically incomplete line of verse, lacking a syllable at the end or ending with an incomplete foot.

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Cecil B. DeMille

Cecil Blount DeMille (August 12, 1881 – January 21, 1959) was an American filmmaker.

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Center for Wireless Information Network Studies

Established in 1985,, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Massachusetts, is a compact wireless research laboratory with a successful history of research alliances with other industrial and academic groups.

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Centimetre–gram–second system of units

The centimetre–gram–second system of units (abbreviated CGS or cgs) is a variant of the metric system based on the centimetre as the unit of length, the gram as the unit of mass, and the second as the unit of time.

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Change detection

In statistical analysis, change detection or change point detection tries to identify times when the probability distribution of a stochastic process or time series changes.

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Charles E. Lindblom

Charles Edward Lindblom (March 21, 1917 – January 30, 2018) was an American academic who was Sterling Professor Emeritus of Political Science and Economics at Yale University.

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Charles Edward Kerr

Charlie Kerr (11 August 1890 Philadelphia – 7 October 1976 Coconut Grove, Miami, Florida) was an American jazz drummer who led a jazz orchestra bearing his name in Philadelphia beginning in the early 1920s.

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Charles H. Traub

Charles H. Traub (born April 6, 1945) is an American photographer and educator, known for his ironic real world witness color photography.

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Charles Roberts (officer)

Charles Roberts (c. 1772–4 May 1816) was a captain in the British Army during the War of 1812.

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Charles Stark Draper

Charles Stark "Doc" Draper (October 2, 1901 – July 25, 1987) was an American scientist and engineer, known as the "father of inertial navigation".

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Chartres Cathedral

Chartres Cathedral, also known as the Cathedral of Our Lady of Chartres (Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Chartres), is a Roman Catholic church of the Latin Church located in Chartres, France, about southwest of Paris.

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Chester Hartman

Chester W. Hartman is an American urban planner, author, and academic.

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Chimney breast

A chimney breast is a portion of a chimney which projects forward from a wall to accommodate a fireplace.

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CHON

CHON is a mnemonic acronym for the four most common elements in living organisms: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.

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Chris West

Chris West (born 1954) is a British writer.

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Christ and St. Thomas (Verrocchio)

Christ and St.

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Christos Papadimitriou

Christos Harilaos Papadimitriou (Greek: Χρήστος Χαρίλαος Παπαδημητρίου; born August 16, 1949) is a Greek theoretical computer scientist, and professor of Computer Science at Columbia University.

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Church of Sant Vicenç

The Church of Sant Vicenç of Cardona (Església de Sant Vicenç de Cardona) is a Lombard Romanesque church in Cardona, Catalonia, Spain.

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CIELAB color space

The CIELAB color space (also known as CIE L*a*b* or sometimes abbreviated as simply "Lab" color space) is a color space defined by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) in 1976.

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Circular flow of income

The circular flow of income or circular flow is a model of the economy in which the major exchanges are represented as flows of money, goods and services, etc.

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Civilization

A civilization or civilisation (see English spelling differences) is any complex society characterized by urban development, social stratification imposed by a cultural elite, symbolic systems of communication (for example, writing systems), and a perceived separation from and domination over the natural environment.

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Claim club

Claim clubs, also called actual settlers' associations or squatters' clubs, were a nineteenth-century phenomenon in the American West.

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Claude E. Welch Jr.

Claude E. Welch, Jr., State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo (UB) Professor of Political Science and SUNY Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science, was born on 12 June 1939 in Boston, Massachusetts, to Dr.

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Claude V. Palisca

Claude Victor Palisca (Nov 24, 1921, Fiume, Italy -– Jan 11, 2001) was an internationally recognized authority on early music, especially opera of the renaissance and baroque periods, and was Henry L. and Lucy G. Moses Professor Emeritus of Music at Yale University.

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Cleopatra (crater)

Cleopatra, initially called Cleopatra Patera, is an impact crater on Venus, in Maxwell Montes.

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Cleve Moler

Cleve Barry Moler is an American mathematician and computer programmer specializing in numerical analysis.

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Cliff Jones (computer scientist)

Clifford "Cliff" B. Jones (born 1 June 1944) is a British computer scientist, specializing in research into formal methods.

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Clock synchronization

Clock synchronization is a topic in computer science and engineering that aims to coordinate otherwise independent clocks.

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Closed set

In geometry, topology, and related branches of mathematics, a closed set is a set whose complement is an open set.

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Cognitive Abilities Test

The Cognitive Abilities Test (CogAT) is a group-administered K–12 assessment intended to estimate students' learned reasoning and problem solving abilities through a battery of verbal, quantitative, and nonverbal test items.

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Cognitive test

Cognitive tests are assessments of the cognitive capabilities of humans and other animals.

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Cold-stimulus headache

A cold-stimulus headache, also known as brain freeze, ice-cream headache, trigeminal headache or its given scientific name sphenopalatine ganglioneuralgia (meaning "pain of the sphenopalatine ganglion"), is a form of brief pain or headache commonly associated with consumption (particularly quick consumption) of cold beverages or foods such as ice cream and ice pops.

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Colossal Cave Adventure

Colossal Cave Adventure (also known as ADVENT, Colossal Cave, or Adventure) is a text adventure game, developed originally in 1976, by Will Crowther for the PDP-10 mainframe.

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Comb space

In mathematics, particularly topology, a comb space is a subspace of \R^2 that looks rather like a comb.

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Command-line interface

A command-line interface or command language interpreter (CLI), also known as command-line user interface, console user interface and character user interface (CUI), is a means of interacting with a computer program where the user (or client) issues commands to the program in the form of successive lines of text (command lines).

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Commission on National Goals

The U.S. President’s Commission on National Goals was organized in February 1960 as a non-official body whose purpose was to develop a broad outline of national objectives and programs for the next decade and longer.

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Communicating sequential processes

In computer science, communicating sequential processes (CSP) is a formal language for describing patterns of interaction in concurrent systems.

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Commutator

In mathematics, the commutator gives an indication of the extent to which a certain binary operation fails to be commutative.

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Compactification (mathematics)

In mathematics, in general topology, compactification is the process or result of making a topological space into a compact space.

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Comparison of topologies

In topology and related areas of mathematics, the set of all possible topologies on a given set forms a partially ordered set.

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Compiler

A compiler is computer software that transforms computer code written in one programming language (the source language) into another programming language (the target language).

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Composite number

A composite number is a positive integer that can be formed by multiplying together two smaller positive integers.

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Compton scattering

Compton scattering, discovered by Arthur Holly Compton, is the scattering of a photon by a charged particle, usually an electron.

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Concatenated error correction code

In coding theory, concatenated codes form a class of error-correcting codes that are derived by combining an inner code and an outer code.

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Concentrated solar still

A concentrated solar still is a system that uses the same quantity of solar heat input (same solar collection area) as a simple solar still but can produce a volume of freshwater that is many times greater.

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Concurrency control

In information technology and computer science, especially in the fields of computer programming, operating systems, multiprocessors, and databases, concurrency control ensures that correct results for concurrent operations are generated, while getting those results as quickly as possible.

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Connie Francis

Connie Francis (born Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero, December 12, 1937) is an American pop singer and top-charting female vocalist of the late 1950s and early 1960s.

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Conrad Gessner

Conrad Gessner (Conradus Gesnerus; Conrad Geßner or Cůnrat Geßner; 26 March 1516 – 13 December 1565) was a Swiss physician, naturalist, bibliographer, and philologist.

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Conrad Hilton

Conrad Nicholson Hilton (December 25, 1887 – January 3, 1979) was an American hotel tycoon and the founder of the Hilton Hotels chain.

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Constant (mathematics)

In mathematics, the adjective constant means non-varying.

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Continued fraction

In mathematics, a continued fraction is an expression obtained through an iterative process of representing a number as the sum of its integer part and the reciprocal of another number, then writing this other number as the sum of its integer part and another reciprocal, and so on.

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Contractible space

In mathematics, a topological space X is contractible if the identity map on X is null-homotopic, i.e. if it is homotopic to some constant map.

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Convergent matrix

In numerical linear algebra, a convergent matrix is a matrix that converges to the zero matrix under matrix exponentiation.

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Convergent Technologies Operating System

The Convergent Technologies Operating System, also known variously as CTOS, BTOS and STARSYS, was a modular, message-passing, multiprocess-based operating system.

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Conversations with an Executioner

Conversations with an Executioner (Rozmowy z katem) is a book by Kazimierz Moczarski, a Polish writer and journalist, officer of the Polish Home Army active in the anti-Nazi resistance during World War II.

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Cooperalls

Cooperalls were a brand of ice hockey equipment manufactured by Cooper Canada.

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Core product

A core product is a company product or service that is most directly related to its core competencies.

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Core Python Programming

Core Python Programming is a textbook on the Python programming language, written by Wesley J. Chun.

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Cornelius Lanczos

Cornelius (Cornel) Lanczos (Lánczos Kornél,, born as Kornél Lőwy, until 1906: Löwy (Lőwy) Kornél) was a Jewish Hungarian mathematician and physicist, who was born on February 2, 1893, and died on June 25, 1974.

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Corrosion

Corrosion is a natural process, which converts a refined metal to a more chemically-stable form, such as its oxide, hydroxide, or sulfide.

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Countably compact space

In mathematics a topological space is countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover.

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Cousin problems

In mathematics, the Cousin problems are two questions in several complex variables, concerning the existence of meromorphic functions that are specified in terms of local data.

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Cover (topology)

In mathematics, a cover of a set X is a collection of sets whose union contains X as a subset.

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Cox–Ingersoll–Ross model

In mathematical finance, the Cox–Ingersoll–Ross model (or CIR model) describes the evolution of interest rates.

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Craig Barrett (chief executive)

Craig R. Barrett (born August 29, 1939) is an American business executive who served as the chairman of the board of Intel Corporation until May 2009.

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Craig Fleisher

Craig S. Fleisher is a scholar, advisor and author who has written or edited several important books in the fields of public affairs, business insight and competitive intelligence and analysis.

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Creditor

A creditor is a party (for example, person, organization, company, or government) that has a claim on the services of a second party.

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Criminal Justice: A Brief Introduction

Criminal Justice: A Brief Introduction is a book written by Frank Schmalleger.

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Critical point (mathematics)

In mathematics, a critical point or stationary point of a differentiable function of a real or complex variable is any value in its domain where its derivative is 0.

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Critical value

Critical value may refer to.

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Cult

The term cult usually refers to a social group defined by its religious, spiritual, or philosophical beliefs, or its common interest in a particular personality, object or goal.

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Currency war

Currency war, also known as competitive devaluations, is a condition in international affairs where countries seek to gain a trade advantage over other countries by causing the exchange rate of their currency to fall in relation to other currencies.

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Cybercrime

Cybercrime, or computer oriented crime, is crime that involves a computer and a network.

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Cyclic group

In algebra, a cyclic group or monogenous group is a group that is generated by a single element.

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Daddy Was a Number Runner

Daddy Was a Number Runner is the first novel by Louise Meriwether.

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Dan Vogel

Daniel Arlon Vogel (born 1955) is an independent researcher, writer, and author on a number of works that include Joseph Smith: The Making of a Prophet. and is most known for his work on Early Mormon Documents.

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Dandi Daley Mackall

Dandi Daley Mackall is an American author with around 500 of her works published for adults and children.

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Daniel Gajski

Daniel Gajski is a Professor of the School of Information and Computer Science and the School of Engineering at University of California, Irvine, United States.

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Daniel Kahneman

Daniel Kahneman (דניאל כהנמן; born March 5, 1934) is an Israeli-American psychologist notable for his work on the psychology of judgment and decision-making, as well as behavioral economics, for which he was awarded the 2002 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (shared with Vernon L. Smith).

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Daniel Weinreb

Daniel L. Weinreb (January 6, 1959 – September 7, 2012) was an American computer scientist and programmer, with significant work in the Lisp environment.

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Danny DeVito

Daniel Michael DeVito Jr. (born November 17, 1944) is an American actor and filmmaker.

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Data collection

Data collection is the process of gathering and measuring information on targeted variables in an established systematic fashion, which then enables one to answer relevant questions and evaluate outcomes.

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Data hierarchy

Data hierarchy refers to the systematic organization of data, often in a hierarchical form.

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Data mining

Data mining is the process of discovering patterns in large data sets involving methods at the intersection of machine learning, statistics, and database systems.

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Data structure

In computer science, a data structure is a data organization and storage format that enables efficient access and modification.

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Dave Hill (golfer)

James David Hill (May 20, 1937 – September 27, 2011) was an American professional golfer.

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David "Race" Bannon

David Dilley Bannon (born David Wayne Dilley; April 22, 1963), nicknamed Race, is an American author and translator.

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David Bohm

David Joseph Bohm FRS (December 20, 1917 – October 27, 1992) was an American scientist who has been described as one of the most significant theoretical physicists of the 20th centuryF.

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David C. Cole

David C. Cole (born September 24, 1952) is an entrepreneur and philanthropist.

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David J. Griffiths

David Jeffrey Griffiths (born 1942) is a U.S. physicist and educator.

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David Szatmary

David P. Szatmary (born May 27, 1951) is an educator, author on various subjects, and an educational entrepreneur.

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Day of the Tiles

The Day of the Tiles (Journée des Tuiles) was an event that took place in the French town of Grenoble on 7 June in 1788.

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De rerum natura

De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things) is a first-century BC didactic poem by the Roman poet and philosopher Lucretius (c. 99 BC – c. 55 BC) with the goal of explaining Epicurean philosophy to a Roman audience.

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Dead code elimination

In compiler theory, dead code elimination (also known as DCE, dead code removal, dead code stripping, or dead code strip) is a compiler optimization to remove code which does not affect the program results.

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Dean Gratton

Dean Anthony Gratton (born 1968) is an author and columnist, specializing in wireless communications.

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Death

Death is the cessation of all biological functions that sustain a living organism.

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Death by China

Death by China: Confronting the Dragon – A Global Call to Action is a 2011 non-fiction book by economics professor Peter Navarro and Greg Autry that chronicles "from currency manipulation and abusive trade policies, to deadly consumer products," the alleged threats to America's economic dominance in the 21st century posed by China's Communist Party.

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Death mask

A death mask is an image, typically in wax or plaster cast made of a person's face following death, often by taking a cast or impression directly from the corpse.

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Debra Elmegreen

Debra Meloy Elmegreen (born November 23, 1952 in South Bend, Indiana) is an American astronomer.

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Debug (command)

debug is a command in DOS, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows (only in 32bitAccording to, inline assembly is not supported for x64.) which runs the program debug.exe (or DEBUG.COM in DOS version 4.x and older).

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Decision cycle

A decision cycle is a sequence of steps used by an entity on a repeated basis to reach and implement decisions and to learn from the results.

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Decline and Fall of the American Programmer

Decline and Fall of the American Programmer is a book written by Edward Yourdon in 1992.

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Defensively equipped merchant ship

Defensively equipped merchant ship (DEMS) was an Admiralty Trade Division program established in June 1939, to arm 5,500 British merchant ships with an adequate defence against enemy submarines and aircraft.

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Delayed binding

Delayed binding, also called TCP connection splicing, is the postponement of the connection between the client and the server in order to obtain sufficient information to make a routing decision.

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Demagnetizing field

The demagnetizing field, also called the stray field (outside the magnet), is the magnetic field (H-field) generated by the magnetization in a magnet.

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Denotational semantics of the Actor model

The denotational semantics of the Actor model is the subject of denotational domain theory for Actors.

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Depeche Mode

Depeche Mode are an English electronic band formed in Basildon, Essex in 1980.

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Device file

In Unix-like operating systems, a device file or special file is an interface to a device driver that appears in a file system as if it were an ordinary file.

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Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane

Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane (DDD) is an organochlorine insecticide that is slightly irritating to the skin.

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Dines Bjørner

Professor Dines Bjørner (born 4 October 1937 in Odense) is a Danish computer scientist.

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Dini derivative

In mathematics and, specifically, real analysis, the Dini derivatives (or Dini derivates) are a class of generalizations of the derivative.

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Diphosphorus tetroxide

Diphosphorus tetroxide, or phosphorus tetroxide is an inorganic compound of phosphorus and oxygen.

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Direct product of groups

In group theory, the direct product is an operation that takes two groups and and constructs a new group, usually denoted.

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Direct shear test

A direct shear test is a laboratory or field test used by geotechnical engineers to measure the shear strength properties of soil or rock material, or of discontinuities in soil or rock masses.

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Disparate impact

Disparate impact in United States labor law refers to practices in employment, housing, and other areas that adversely affect one group of people of a protected characteristic more than another, even though rules applied by employers or landlords are formally neutral.

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Divisor function

In mathematics, and specifically in number theory, a divisor function is an arithmetic function related to the divisors of an integer.

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Dixon Waterfowl Refuge

The Sue and Wes Dixon Waterfowl Refuge is a 3,100-acre riverine wetland in Putnam County, Illinois.

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DNASTAR

DNASTAR is a global bioinformatics software company incorporated in 1984 that is headquartered in Madison, Wisconsin.

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Dominance drawing

Dominance drawing is a style of graph drawing of directed acyclic graphs that makes the reachability relations between vertices visually apparent.

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Don Cassel

Don Cassel (born April 4, 1942) is the author/coauthor of 60 US/Canadian college textbooks and was a Humber College professor for 30 years, responsible for developing the college's first Computer Programming curriculum.

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Donald Howard Menzel

Donald Howard Menzel (April 11, 1901 – December 14, 1976) was one of the first theoretical astronomers and astrophysicists in the United States.

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Donald R. Peterson

Donald R. Peterson (September 10, 1923 – November 2, 2007) was professor emeritus of psychology at Rutgers University.

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Doomsday cult

Doomsday cult is an expression used to describe groups who believe in apocalypticism and millenarianism, and can refer both to groups that predict disaster, and to those that attempt to bring it about.

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Doomsday Cult: A Study of Conversion, Proselytization, and Maintenance of Faith

Doomsday Cult: A Study of Conversion, Proselytization, and Maintenance of Faith is a sociological book based on field study of a group of Unification Church members in California and Oregon.

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Dorothy Gish

Dorothy Elizabeth Gish (March 11, 1898 – June 4, 1968) was an American actress of the screen and stage, as well as a director and writer.

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Dorothy Lamour

Dorothy Lamour (born Mary Leta Dorothy Slaton; December 10, 1914 – September 22, 1996) was an American actress and singer.

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DP cell

A DP cell is a device that measures the differential pressure between two inputs.

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Dreaming of You (Selena song)

"Dreaming of You" is a song recorded by American Tejano singer Selena for her fifth studio album of the same name (1995).

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Drinker paradox

The drinker paradox (also known as the drinker's theorem, the drinker's principle, or the drinking principle) is a theorem of classical predicate logic which can be stated as "There is someone in the pub such that, if he is drinking, then everyone in the pub is drinking." It was popularised by the mathematical logician Raymond Smullyan, who called it the "drinking principle" in his 1978 book What Is the Name of this Book? The apparently paradoxical nature of the statement comes from the way it is usually stated in natural language.

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Drummer Hoff

Drummer Hoff is the title and main character of a children's book by Barbara and Ed Emberley.

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DTrace

DTrace is a comprehensive dynamic tracing framework created by Sun Microsystems for troubleshooting kernel and application problems on production systems in real time.

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Dynamic Bayesian network

A Dynamic Bayesian Network (DBN) is a Bayesian network which relates variables to each other over adjacent time steps.

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E-governance

Electronic governance or e-governance is the application of information and communication technology (ICT) for delivering government services, exchange of information, communication transactions, integration of various stand-alone systems and services between government-to-citizen (G2C), government-to-business (G2B), government-to-government (G2G), government-to-employees (G2E) as well as back office processes and interactions within the entire government framework.

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EAGLE (program)

EAGLE is a scriptable electronic design automation (EDA) application with schematic capture, printed circuit board (PCB) layout, auto-router and computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) features.

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Earl Lemley Core

Earl Lemley Core (1902–1984) was a botanist and botanical educator, researcher and author as well as a local West Virginia historian.

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Early history of video games

The history of video games spans a period of time between the invention of the first electronic games and today, covering a long period of invention and changes.

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Easley Blackwood Sr.

Easley Rutland Blackwood (June 25, 1903 – March 27, 1992) was an American contract bridge player and writer, best known for the Blackwood convention used in bridge bidding.

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Education in the United States

Education in the United States is provided by public, private and home schools.

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Einstein tensor

In differential geometry, the Einstein tensor (named after Albert Einstein; also known as the trace-reversed Ricci tensor) is used to express the curvature of a pseudo-Riemannian manifold.

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Elara (moon)

Elara (Ελάρα) is a prograde irregular satellite of Jupiter.

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Electrical resistivity and conductivity

Electrical resistivity (also known as resistivity, specific electrical resistance, or volume resistivity) is a fundamental property that quantifies how strongly a given material opposes the flow of electric current.

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Electromagnetic induction

Electromagnetic or magnetic induction is the production of an electromotive force (i.e., voltage) across an electrical conductor in a changing magnetic field.

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Electromagnetism

Electromagnetism is a branch of physics involving the study of the electromagnetic force, a type of physical interaction that occurs between electrically charged particles.

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Electron

The electron is a subatomic particle, symbol or, whose electric charge is negative one elementary charge.

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Electron affinity

In chemistry and atomic physics, the electron affinity (Eea) of an atom or molecule is defined as the amount of energy released or spent when an electron is added to a neutral atom or molecule in the gaseous state to form a negative ion.

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Electron degeneracy pressure

Electron degeneracy pressure is a particular manifestation of the more general phenomenon of quantum degeneracy pressure.

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Electronic business

Online Business or e-business is a term which can be used for any kind of business or commercial transaction that includes sharing information across the internet.

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Electronic music

Electronic music is music that employs electronic musical instruments, digital instruments and circuitry-based music technology.

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Eliot Deutsch

Eliot Deutsch (born January 8, 1931) is a philosopher, teacher, and writer.

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Elite theory

In political science and sociology, elite theory is a theory of the state that seeks to describe and explain power relationships in contemporary society.

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Email hacking

Email hacking is the unauthorized access to, or manipulation of, an email account or email correspondence.

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Emma Lou Thornbrough

Emma Lou Thornbrough (January 24, 1913 – December 19, 1994) was born in Indianapolis, Indiana.

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Emotion

Emotion is any conscious experience characterized by intense mental activity and a certain degree of pleasure or displeasure.

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Emotivism

Emotivism is a meta-ethical view that claims that ethical sentences do not express propositions but emotional attitudes.

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Empathy

Empathy is the capacity to understand or feel what another person is experiencing from within their frame of reference, i.e., the capacity to place oneself in another's position.

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Ennis Rees

Ennis Samuel Rees, Jr. (March 17, 1925 – March 24, 2009) was an American poet and professor.

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Eric Salzman

Eric Salzman (September 8, 1933 – November 12, 2017) was an American composer, scholar, author, impresario, music critic, and record producer.

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Erik Lindgren

Erik Lindgren (15 December 1954) is an American composer and keyboards player.

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Erlang (programming language)

Erlang is a general-purpose, concurrent, functional programming language, as well as a garbage-collected runtime system.

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Ernest L. Hettich

Ernest Leopold Hetthich (1897–1973) was an American scholar of classics.

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Error detection and correction

In information theory and coding theory with applications in computer science and telecommunication, error detection and correction or error control are techniques that enable reliable delivery of digital data over unreliable communication channels.

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Escape sequences in C

Escape sequences are used in the programming languages C and C++, and also in many more languages (with some variations) like Java and C#.

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Espresso heuristic logic minimizer

The Espresso logic minimizer is a computer program using heuristic and specific algorithms for efficiently reducing the complexity of digital electronic gate circuits.

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Essential gene

Essential genes are those genes of an organism that are thought to be critical for its survival.

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Esther Salaman (writer)

Esther Salaman (née Polianowski (6 January 1900 – 9 November 1995) was a Ukrainian-born British writer.

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Euler's totient function

In number theory, Euler's totient function counts the positive integers up to a given integer that are relatively prime to.

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European exploration of Africa

The geography of North Africa has been reasonably well known among Europeans since classical antiquity in Greco-Roman geography.

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Event (probability theory)

In probability theory, an event is a set of outcomes of an experiment (a subset of the sample space) to which a probability is assigned.

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Exact statistics

Exact statistics, such as that described in exact test, is a branch of statistics that was developed to provide more accurate results pertaining to statistical testing and interval estimation by eliminating procedures based on asymptotic and approximate statistical methods.

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Exec (Amiga)

Exec is the kernel of AmigaOS.

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Execution model

An execution model specifies how work takes place.

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Exercise (mathematics)

A mathematical exercise is a routine application of algebra or other mathematics to a stated challenge.

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Existentialism

Existentialism is a tradition of philosophical inquiry associated mainly with certain 19th and 20th-century European philosophers who, despite profound doctrinal differences,Oxford Companion to Philosophy, ed.

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Experimental uncertainty analysis

Experimental uncertainty analysis is a technique that analyses a derived quantity, based on the uncertainties in the experimentally measured quantities that are used in some form of mathematical relationship ("model") to calculate that derived quantity.

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Explore Evolution

Explore Evolution: The Arguments For and Against Neo-Darwinism is a controversial biology textbook written by a group of intelligent design supporters and published in 2007.

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Explosion welding

Explosion welding (EXW) is a solid state (solid-phase) process where welding is accomplished by accelerating one of the components at extremely high velocity through the use of chemical explosives.

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Exponent (consulting firm)

Exponent (formerly Failure Analysis Associates) is an American engineering and scientific consulting firm.

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Exponential smoothing

Exponential smoothing is a rule of thumb technique for smoothing time series data using the exponential window function.

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Export

The term export means sending of goods or services produced in one country to another country.

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Ezra Solomon

Ezra Solomon (March 20, 1920 – December 9, 2002) was an influential US economist and professor of economics at Stanford University.

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F. Lee Bailey

Francis Lee Bailey, Jr. (born June 10, 1933) is an American former criminal defense attorney.

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F. Richard Stephenson

Professor F. Richard Stephenson (born 1941) is an Emeritus Professor at the University of Durham, in the Physics department and the East Asian Studies department.

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Falaise Pocket

The Falaise Pocket or Battle of the Falaise Pocket (12 – 21 August 1944) was the decisive engagement of the Battle of Normandy in the Second World War.

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Fantasiestücke, Op. 12

Robert Schumann's Fantasiestücke, Op. 12, is a set of eight pieces for piano, written in 1837.

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Fantastic Universe

Fantastic Universe was a U.S. science fiction magazine which began publishing in the 1950s.

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Fast Fourier transform

A fast Fourier transform (FFT) is an algorithm that samples a signal over a period of time (or space) and divides it into its frequency components.

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FAT filesystem and Linux

Linux has several filesystem drivers for the File Allocation Table (FAT) filesystem format.

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FDR (software)

FDR (Failures-Divergences Refinement) and subsequently FDR2 are refinement checking software tools, designed to check formal models expressed in Communicating sequential processes (CSP).

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Feedback arc set

In graph theory, a directed graph may contain directed cycles, a one-way loop of edges.

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Felipe Larraín Bascuñán

Felipe Larraín Bascuñán is a Chilean economist, scholar an current Minister of Finance under President Sebastián Piñera.

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Felix Z. Longoria Jr.

Private Felix Z. Longoria (1920 – June 1945), was a Mexican-American soldier, who served in the United States Army, and died during World War II and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery after a dispute over his funerary arrangements.

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Fergus Cashin

Fergus Cashin (1924–2005) was a British journalist who wrote mostly theatrical reviews.

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Fermat's little theorem

Fermat's little theorem states that if is a prime number, then for any integer, the number is an integer multiple of.

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Fermentation

Fermentation is a metabolic process that consumes sugar in the absence of oxygen.

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Ferroglobus

Ferroglobus is a genus of the Archaeoglobaceae.

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Ferroplasma

In taxonomy, Ferroplasma is a genus of the Ferroplasmaceae.

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Fiber

Fiber or fibre (see spelling differences, from the Latin fibra) is a natural or synthetic substance that is significantly longer than it is wide.

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Field (mathematics)

In mathematics, a field is a set on which addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division are defined, and behave as when they are applied to rational and real numbers.

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File descriptor

In Unix and related computer operating systems, a file descriptor (FD, less frequently fildes) is an abstract indicator (handle) used to access a file or other input/output resource, such as a pipe or network socket.

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File system

In computing, a file system or filesystem controls how data is stored and retrieved.

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Financial economics

Financial economics is the branch of economics characterized by a "concentration on monetary activities", in which "money of one type or another is likely to appear on both sides of a trade".

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Find first set

In software, find first set (ffs) or find first one is a bit operation that, given an unsigned machine word, identifies the least significant index or position of the bit set to one in the word.

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Finite difference methods for option pricing

Finite difference methods for option pricing are numerical methods used in mathematical finance for the valuation of options.

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Finite mathematics

In mathematics education, Finite Mathematics is a syllabus in college and university mathematics that is independent of calculus.

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Finite potential well

The finite potential well (also known as the finite square well) is a concept from quantum mechanics.

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Fire on the Mountain (game)

Fire on the Mountain is a game played by children in Tanzania.

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Floating-point arithmetic

In computing, floating-point arithmetic is arithmetic using formulaic representation of real numbers as an approximation so as to support a trade-off between range and precision.

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Floppy disk

A floppy disk, also called a floppy, diskette, or just disk, is a type of disk storage composed of a disk of thin and flexible magnetic storage medium, sealed in a rectangular plastic enclosure lined with fabric that removes dust particles.

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Fortran

Fortran (formerly FORTRAN, derived from Formula Translation) is a general-purpose, compiled imperative programming language that is especially suited to numeric computation and scientific computing.

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Fotos y Recuerdos

"Fotos y Recuerdos" (Pictures and Memories) is a song recorded by American recording artist Selena for her fourth studio album, Amor Prohibido (1994).

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François Darlan

Jean Louis Xavier François Darlan (7 August 1881 – 24 December 1942) was a French Admiral and political figure.

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François-Marie Bissot, Sieur de Vincennes

François-Marie Bissot, Sieur de Vincennes (17 June 1700 – 25 March 1736) was a French explorer and soldier who established several forts in what is now the U.S. state of Indiana, including Fort Vincennes.

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Frances McCue

Frances McCue is an award-winning poet and arts administrator.

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Francis B. Hildebrand

Francis Begnaud Hildebrand (1915 – 29 November 2002) was an American mathematician.

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Franco Modigliani

Franco Modigliani (June 18, 1918 – September 25, 2003) was an Italian-American economist and the recipient of the 1985 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics.

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Frank Bowe

Frank G. Bowe (1947 – August 21, 2007) was the Dr.

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Frank J. Fabozzi

Frank J. Fabozzi is an American economist, educator, writer, and investor, currently Professor of Finance at EDHEC Business School and a Member of Presentation Edhec Risk Institute.

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Frank Lovece

Frank Lovece is an American journalist and author, and a comic book writer primarily for Marvel Comics, where he and artist Mike Okamoto created the miniseries Atomic Age.

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Fred Schwarz

Frederick Charles Schwarz, MD (15 January 1913 – 24 January 2009) was an Australian physician and political activist who founded the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade (CACC).

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Fred T. Mackenzie

Frederick T. Mackenzie (born March 17, 1934) is an American sedimentary and global biogeochemist.

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Frederick Crews

Frederick Campbell Crews (born 1933) is an American essayist and literary critic.

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Frederick Ferré

Frederick Pond Ferré (March 23, 1933 – March 22, 2013) was Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at The University of Georgia.

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Free-air gravity anomaly

In geophysics, the free-air gravity anomaly, often simply called the free-air anomaly, is the measured gravity anomaly after a free-air correction is applied to correct for the elevation at which a measurement is made.

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Fulbert Youlou

Abbé Fulbert Youlou (29 June,In African Powder Keg: Revolt and Dissent in Six Emergent Nations, author Ronald Matthews lists Youlou's date of birth as 9 June 1917. This date is also listed in Annuaire parlementaire des États d'Afrique noire, Députés et conseillers économiques des républiques d'expression française (1962).; 17 JuneIn Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and K. Anthony Appiah list Youlou's date of birth as 17 June 1917. or 19 July 1917The Encyclopedia of World Biography by Gale Research Company lists Youlou's date of birth as 19 July 1917. – 6 May 1972) was a laicized Brazzaville-Congolese Roman Catholic priest, nationalist leader and politician, who became the first President of Congo-Brazzaville on its independence.

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Functional programming

In computer science, functional programming is a programming paradigm—a style of building the structure and elements of computer programs—that treats computation as the evaluation of mathematical functions and avoids changing-state and mutable data.

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Fundamental group

In the mathematical field of algebraic topology, the fundamental group is a mathematical group associated to any given pointed topological space that provides a way to determine when two paths, starting and ending at a fixed base point, can be continuously deformed into each other.

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Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles and Fundamental Duties of India

The Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles of State Policy and Fundamental Duties are sections of the Constitution of India that prescribe the fundamental obligations of the states to its citizens and the duties and the rights of the citizens to the State.

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Fundamental theorem of arithmetic

In number theory, the fundamental theorem of arithmetic, also called the unique factorization theorem or the unique-prime-factorization theorem, states that every integer greater than 1 either is a prime number itself or can be represented as the product of prime numbers and that, moreover, this representation is unique, up to (except for) the order of the factors.

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Fuzzy logic

Fuzzy logic is a form of many-valued logic in which the truth values of variables may be any real number between 0 and 1.

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G. William Domhoff

George William ("Bill") Domhoff, Ph.D. (born August 6, 1936) is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus and Research Professor of Psychology and Sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and founding faculty member of UCSC's Cowell College.

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Gail Gibbons

Gail Gibbons (born 1944) is an American writer and illustrator of children's books.

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Galileo Galilei

Galileo Galilei (15 February 1564Drake (1978, p. 1). The date of Galileo's birth is given according to the Julian calendar, which was then in force throughout Christendom. In 1582 it was replaced in Italy and several other Catholic countries with the Gregorian calendar. Unless otherwise indicated, dates in this article are given according to the Gregorian calendar. – 8 January 1642) was an Italian polymath.

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Ganesh Vaidyanathan

Ganesh Vaidyanathan is the Professor of Decision Sciences department in the Judd Leighton School of Business and Economics, Indiana University South Bend.

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Garage rock

Garage rock (sometimes called 60s punk or garage punk) is a raw and energetic style of rock and roll that flourished in the mid-1960s, most notably in the United States and Canada, and has experienced various revivals in the last several decades.

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Gary Clayton Anderson

Gary Clayton Anderson (born April 2, 1948) is a professor of history at the University of Oklahoma at Norman, Oklahoma, known for his specialization in the American Indians of the Great Plains and the Southwest.

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Gaskell Romney

Gaskell Romney (September 22, 1871 – March 7, 1955) is regarded as a father of the Romneys, a U.S. political family.

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Gauss's law for magnetism

In physics, Gauss's law for magnetism is one of the four Maxwell's equations that underlie classical electrodynamics.

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Gauss–Kronrod quadrature formula

The Gauss–Kronrod quadrature formula is an adaptive method for numerical integration.

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Gaussian elimination

In linear algebra, Gaussian elimination (also known as row reduction) is an algorithm for solving systems of linear equations.

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Gaussian quadrature

In numerical analysis, a quadrature rule is an approximation of the definite integral of a function, usually stated as a weighted sum of function values at specified points within the domain of integration.

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Gay Hendricks

Gay Hendricks (born 1945 in Leesburg, Florida) is a psychologist, writer, and teacher in the field of personal growth, relationships, and body intelligence.

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Gender roles in Mesoamerica

Gender roles in Mesoamerica were complementary in nature, meaning that men and women had separate but equally important roles in society.

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Generalised circle

A generalized circle, also referred to as a "cline" or "circline", is a straight line or a circle.

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Generalized eigenvector

In linear algebra, a generalized eigenvector of an n × n matrix A is a vector which satisfies certain criteria which are more relaxed than those for an (ordinary) eigenvector.

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Genetic drift

Genetic drift (also known as allelic drift or the Sewall Wright effect) is the change in the frequency of an existing gene variant (allele) in a population due to random sampling of organisms.

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Geolocation software

In computing, geolocation software is software that is capable of deducing the geolocation of a device connected to the Internet.

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Geomatics

Geomatics (including geomatics engineering), also known as surveying engineering or geospatial science (including geospatial engineering and geospatial technology), is the discipline of gathering, storing, processing, and delivering geographic information or spatially referenced information.

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Geometric transformation

A geometric transformation is any bijection of a set having some geometric structure to itself or another such set.

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George Barnes (musician)

George Warren Barnes (July 17, 1921 – September 5, 1977) was an American swing jazz guitarist who played the first electric guitar in 1931.

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George Forsythe

George Elmer Forsythe (January 8, 1917 – April 9, 1972http://icme.stanford.edu/system/files/file-insertions/ForsytheG.pdf https://icme.stanford.edu/about/faculty-pioneers-0) was the founder and head of Stanford University's Computer Science Department.

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George P. Shultz

George Pratt Shultz (born December 13, 1920) is an American economist, elder statesman, and businessman.

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George W. Romney

George Wilcken Romney (July 8, 1907 – July 26, 1995) was an American businessman and Republican Party politician.

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Gerard J. Holzmann

Gerard J. Holzmann (born 1951) is a Dutch-born American computer scientist and researcher at Bell Labs and NASA, best known as the developer of the SPIN model checker.

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Germ (mathematics)

In mathematics, the notion of a germ of an object in/on a topological space is an equivalence class of that object and others of the same kind which captures their shared local properties.

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Gildo Seisdedos Domínguez

Gildo Seisdedos is a Spanish economist and lawyer who specializes in city marketing and smart cities.

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Ginkgo

Ginkgo is a genus of highly unusual non-flowering plants.

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Gloger's rule

Gloger's rule is an ecogeographical rule which states that within a species of endotherms, more heavily pigmented forms tend to be found in more humid environments, e.g. near the equator.

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Gloria Winters

Gloria Winters (November 28, 1931, in Los Angeles, CaliforniaGates, Anita. The New York Times, August 27, 2010; page D8.. – August 14, 2010, in Vista, San Diego County, California) was an actress most remembered for having portrayed the well-mannered niece, Penny King, in the 1950s – 1960s American television series Sky King.

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Go Ask Alice

Go Ask Alice is a 1971 fiction book about a teenage girl who develops a drug habit at age 15 and runs away from home on a journey of self-destructive escapism.

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Goal

A goal is an idea of the future or desired result that a person or a group of people envisions, plans and commits to achieve.

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Golden age of arcade video games

The golden age of arcade video games was the era when arcade video games entered pop culture and became a dominant cultural force.

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Gone with the Wind (film)

Gone with the Wind is a 1939 American epic historical romance film, adapted from Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel of the same name.

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Google Web Toolkit

Google Web Toolkit (GWT), or GWT Web Toolkit, is an open source set of tools that allows web developers to create and maintain complex JavaScript front-end applications in Java.

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Grapevine (gossip)

To hear something through the grapevine is to learn of something informally and unofficially by means of gossip or rumor.

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Graph drawing

Graph drawing is an area of mathematics and computer science combining methods from geometric graph theory and information visualization to derive two-dimensional depictions of graphs arising from applications such as social network analysis, cartography, linguistics, and bioinformatics.

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GRASP (object-oriented design)

General responsibility assignment software patterns (or principles), abbreviated GRASP, consist of guidelines for assigning responsibility to classes and objects in object-oriented design.

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Gray code

The reflected binary code (RBC), also known just as reflected binary (RB) or Gray code after Frank Gray, is an ordering of the binary numeral system such that two successive values differ in only one bit (binary digit).

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Great Migration (African American)

The Great Migration was the movement of 6 million African-Americans out of the rural Southern United States to the urban Northeast, Midwest, and West that occurred between 1916 and 1970.

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Great Moon Hoax

The "Great Moon Hoax" refers to a series of six articles that were published in The Sun, a New York newspaper, beginning on August 25, 1835, about the supposed discovery of life and even civilization on the Moon.

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Greatest common divisor

In mathematics, the greatest common divisor (gcd) of two or more integers, which are not all zero, is the largest positive integer that divides each of the integers.

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Greeks (finance)

In mathematical finance, the Greeks are the quantities representing the sensitivity of the price of derivatives such as options to a change in underlying parameters on which the value of an instrument or portfolio of financial instruments is dependent.

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Gregory Bateson

Gregory Bateson (9 May 1904 – 4 July 1980) was an English anthropologist, social scientist, linguist, visual anthropologist, semiotician, and cyberneticist whose work intersected that of many other fields.

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Group (mathematics)

In mathematics, a group is an algebraic structure consisting of a set of elements equipped with an operation that combines any two elements to form a third element and that satisfies four conditions called the group axioms, namely closure, associativity, identity and invertibility.

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Group velocity

The group velocity of a wave is the velocity with which the overall shape of the wave's amplitudes—known as the modulation or envelope of the wave—propagates through space.

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GTK+

GTK+ (formerly GIMP Toolkit) is a cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces.

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Gullibility

Gullibility is a failure of social intelligence in which a person is easily tricked or manipulated into an ill-advised course of action.

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Guy Bullock

Guy Henry Bullock (23 July 1887 – 1956) was a British diplomat who is best known for his participation in the 1921 British Mount Everest reconnaissance expedition.

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Guy Consolmagno

Brother Guy J. Consolmagno, SJ (born September 19, 1952), is an American research astronomer, Jesuit religious brother, and Director of the Vatican Observatory.

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Guy L. Steele Jr.

Guy Lewis Steele Jr. (born October 2, 1954) is an American computer scientist who has played an important role in designing and documenting several computer programming languages.

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Hacker culture

The hacker culture is a subculture of individuals who enjoy the intellectual challenge of creatively overcoming limitations of software systems to achieve novel and clever outcomes.

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Hal McIntyre

Hal McIntyre (born Harold William McIntyre; 29 November 1914, Cromwell, Connecticut – 5 May 1959 Los Angeles, California) was an American saxophonist, clarinetist, and bandleader.

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Hamming weight

The Hamming weight of a string is the number of symbols that are different from the zero-symbol of the alphabet used.

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Hamurabi (video game)

Hamurabi is a text-based strategy video game of land and resource management first developed by Doug Dyment in 1968.

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Hank Duncan

Hank Duncan (né Henry James Duncan; 26 October 1894 Bowling Green, Kentucky – 7 June 1968 Long Island, New York) was an American dixieland jazz pianist born in Bowling Green, Kentucky, probably better known for his work with Fess Williams, King Oliver, Tommy Ladnier, Charles "Fat Man" Turner, and many others.

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Hans G. Furth

Hans Gerhard Fürth or Hans G. Furth (December 2, 1920, Vienna – November 7, 1999, Takoma Park, Maryland), was a Professor emeritus in the Faculty of Psychology of the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., aged 78 at the time of his death.

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Harold A. Lafount

Harold Arundel Lafount (January 5, 1880 – October 21, 1952) was an American businessman who served on the Federal Radio Commission from 1927 to 1934.

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Harold Horton Sheldon

Harold Horton Sheldon (April 13, 1893 – December 23, 1964) was a Canadian-American physicist, scientist, inventor, teacher, editor and author.

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Harold of Orange

Harold of Orange is a short film/comedy directed by Richard Weise and Produced by Dianne Brennan, with a screenplay by Gerald Vizenor.

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Harold Pinter bibliography

Bibliography for Harold Pinter is a list of selected published primary works, productions, secondary sources, and other resources related to English playwright Harold Pinter (1930–2008), the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature, who was also a screenwriter, actor, director, poet, author, and political activist.

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Harold's Club

Harold's Club, also spelled Harolds Club, was a casino in Downtown Reno, Nevada that was established in 1935.

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Harry R. Lewis

Lewis has been honored for his "particularly distinguished contributions to undergraduate teaching"; his students have included future entrepreneurs Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, and numerous future faculty members at Harvard and other schools.

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Harvey Brooks (composer)

Harvey Oliver Brooks (17 February 1899, in Philadelphia – 17 June 1968, in Los Angeles) was an American pianist and composer.

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Heavy metals

Heavy metals are generally defined as metals with relatively high densities, atomic weights, or atomic numbers.

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Henry Hamilton (governor)

Henry Hamilton (c. 1734 – 29 September 1796) was an Anglo-Irish military officer and later government official of the British Empire.

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Her Secret Is Patience

Her Secret Is Patience is a public art sculpture commission designed by artist Janet Echelman for the city of Phoenix.

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Herbert V. Prochnow

Herbert Victor Prochnow (May 19, 1897 – September 29, 1998) was a U.S. banking executive, noted toastmaster, and author during the middle 20th century.

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Heron's formula

In geometry, Heron's formula (sometimes called Hero's formula), named after Hero of Alexandria, gives the area of a triangle by requiring no arbitrary choice of side as base or vertex as origin, contrary to other formulae for the area of a triangle, such as half the base times the height or half the norm of a cross product of two sides.

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Herschel Evans

Herschel "Tex" Evans (9 March 1909 – 9 February 1939) was an American tenor saxophonist who worked in the Count Basie Orchestra.

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High Fantasy

High Fantasy is a role-playing game published by Fantasy Productions in 1978.

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High Risk (TV series)

High Risk is an American reality television series hosted by Wayne Rogers that premiered on CBS on October 4, 1988.

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Himalia (moon)

Himalia is the largest irregular satellite of Jupiter.

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Hinduism and LGBT topics

Hindu views of homosexuality and, in general, LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) issues, are diverse and different Hindu groups have distinct views.

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Histology of the vocal folds

Histology is the study of the minute structure, composition, and function of tissues.

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History of IBM mainframe operating systems

The history of operating systems running on IBM mainframes is a notable chapter of history of mainframe operating systems, because of IBM's long-standing position as the world's largest hardware supplier of mainframe computers.

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History of printing

The history of printing goes back to the duplication of images by means of stamps in very early times.

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History of science and technology in Africa

Africa has the world's oldest record of human technological achievement: the oldest stone tools in the world have been found in eastern Africa, and later evidence for tool production by our hominin ancestors has been found across Sub-Saharan Africa.

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History of Texas

The recorded history of Texas begins with the arrival of the first Spanish conquistadors in the region of North America now known as Texas in 1519, who found the region populated by numerous Native American / Indian tribes.

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History of the floppy disk

A floppy disk is a disk storage medium composed of a disk of thin and flexible magnetic storage medium encased in a rectangular plastic carrier.

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History of the transistor

A transistor is a semiconductor device with at least three terminals for connection to an electric circuit.

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Ho–Lee model

In financial mathematics, the Ho–Lee model is a short rate model widely used in the pricing of bond options, swaptions and other interest rate derivatives, and in modeling future interest rates.

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Hok Yau Club

Hok Yau Club is an independent and non-profit non-governmental organisation (NGO) in Hong Kong.

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Hollow matrix

In mathematics, a hollow matrix may refer to one of several related classes of matrix.

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Holocene

The Holocene is the current geological epoch.

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Holomorphic function

In mathematics, a holomorphic function is a complex-valued function of one or more complex variables that is complex differentiable in a neighborhood of every point in its domain.

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Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity

The Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity (HSA-UWC), commonly called the Unification Church, was a spiritual organization founded in South Korea in 1954 by Sun Myung Moon to unify Christianity around a broad and inclusive vision of a messianic mission.

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Homosexuality: Disease or Way of Life?

Homosexuality: Disease or Way of Life? is a 1956 book by the psychoanalyst Edmund Bergler, in which the author argues that homosexuality is a curable illness.

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Honda Super Cub

The Honda Super Cub is a Honda underbone motorcycle with a four stroke single cylinder engine ranging in displacement from.

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Honey (Moby song)

"Honey" is a song by American electronica musician Moby.

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House Party (radio and TV show)

House PartyDunning, John.

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How to Solve It

How to Solve It (1945) is a small volume by mathematician George Pólya describing methods of problem solving.

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How to Solve it by Computer

How to Solve it by Computer is a computer science book by R. G. Dromey, first published by Prentice-Hall in 1982.

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Howard Levi

Howard Levi (November 9, 1916 in New York City – September 11, 2002 in New York City) was an American mathematician who worked mainly in algebra and mathematical education.

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Hugues Panassié

Hugues Panassié (27 February 1912, Paris – 8 December 1974, Montauban) was an influential French critic, record producer, and impresario of traditional jazz.

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Hull–White model

In financial mathematics, the Hull–White model is a model of future interest rates.

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Human brain

The human brain is the central organ of the human nervous system, and with the spinal cord makes up the central nervous system.

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Human evolution

Human evolution is the evolutionary process that led to the emergence of anatomically modern humans, beginning with the evolutionary history of primates – in particular genus Homo – and leading to the emergence of Homo sapiens as a distinct species of the hominid family, the great apes.

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Huping Ling

Huping Ling (born 1956) is a professor of history, the founder of the Asian studies program, and the past department chair at Truman State University.

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Hydrogen atom

A hydrogen atom is an atom of the chemical element hydrogen.

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I Could Fall in Love

"I Could Fall in Love" is a song recorded by American Tejano singer Selena for her fifth studio album, Dreaming of You (1995), released posthumously by EMI Latin on June 26, 1995.

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I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold

I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold, also known as The Figure 5 in Gold, is a 1928 painting by American artist Charles Demuth.

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IBM Laboratory Vienna

IBM Laboratory Vienna was an IBM research laboratory based in Vienna, Austria.

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ICEfaces

ICEfaces is an open source Software development kit that extends JavaServer Faces (JSF) by employing Ajax.

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ICTCM Award

The ICTCM Award is presented each year at the International Conference on Technology in Collegiate Mathematics sponsored by Pearson Addison–Wesley & Pearson Prentice Hall publishers.

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Ida Altman

Ida Louise Altman (born 1950) is an American historian of colonial Spain and Latin America.

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Ideal observer theory

Ideal observer theory is the meta-ethical view which claims that.

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IEEE 802.11 (legacy mode)

IEEE 802.11 (legacy mode) or more correctly IEEE 802.11-1997 or IEEE 802.11-1999 refer to the original version of the IEEE 802.11 wireless networking standard released in 1997 and clarified in 1999.

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Impeachment investigations of United States federal judges

There have been numerous attempts to impeach federal judges in the United States; a few have been successful in either forcing resignation or removing the judge.

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Imperial Chinese Tributary System

The Imperial Chinese Tributary System is a term created by John King Fairbank to describe "a set of ideas and practices developed and perpetuated by the rulers of China over many centuries".

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Import

An import is a good brought into a jurisdiction, especially across a national border, from an external source.

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Incidence (geometry)

In geometry, an incidence relation is a binary relation between different types of objects that captures the idea being expressed when phrases such as "a point lies on a line" or "a line is contained in a plane" are used.

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Incidence structure

In mathematics, an abstract system consisting of two types of objects and a single relationship between these types of objects is called an incidence structure.

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Independence (probability theory)

In probability theory, two events are independent, statistically independent, or stochastically independent if the occurrence of one does not affect the probability of occurrence of the other.

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Index of urban sociology articles

Urban sociology is the sociological study of social life and human interaction in metropolitan areas.

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India

India (IAST), also called the Republic of India (IAST), is a country in South Asia.

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Inkscape

Inkscape is a free and open-source vector graphics editor; it can be used to create or edit vector graphics such as illustrations, diagrams, line arts, charts, logos and complex paintings.

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Input offset voltage

The input offset voltage (V_) is a parameter defining the differential DC voltage required between the inputs of an amplifier, especially an operational amplifier (op-amp), to make the output zero (for voltage amplifiers, 0 volts with respect to ground or between differential outputs, depending on the output type).

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Inspector Ghote

Inspector Ganesh V. Ghote (pronounced "GO-tay") is a fictional police officer who is the main character in H. R. F. Keating's detective novels.

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Instruction pipelining

Instruction pipelining is a technique for implementing instruction-level parallelism within a single processor.

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Intellectual giftedness

Intellectual giftedness is an intellectual ability significantly higher than average.

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Intelligence quotient

An intelligence quotient (IQ) is a total score derived from several standardized tests designed to assess human intelligence.

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Interactive Systems Corporation

Interactive Systems Corporation (styled INTERACTIVE Systems Corporation, abbreviated ISC) was a US-based software company and the first vendor of the Unix operating system outside AT&T, operating from Santa Monica, California.

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International Conference on Technology in Collegiate Mathematics

The International Conference on Technology in Collegiate Mathematics (ICTCM) is an annual conference sponsored by Pearson Addison-Wesley & Pearson Prentice Hall publishers.

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Interval arithmetic

Interval arithmetic, interval mathematics, interval analysis, or interval computation, is a method developed by mathematicians since the 1950s and 1960s, as an approach to putting bounds on rounding errors and measurement errors in mathematical computation and thus developing numerical methods that yield reliable results.

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Invariant mass

The invariant mass, rest mass, intrinsic mass, proper mass, or in the case of bound systems simply mass, is the portion of the total mass of an object or system of objects that is independent of the overall motion of the system.

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Inverse function

In mathematics, an inverse function (or anti-function) is a function that "reverses" another function: if the function applied to an input gives a result of, then applying its inverse function to gives the result, and vice versa.

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Invertebrate paleontology

Invertebrate paleontology (also spelled Invertebrate palaeontology) is sometimes described as Invertebrate paleozoology or Invertebrate paleobiology.

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IOzone

IOzone is a file system benchmark utility.

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IQ classification

IQ classification is the practice by IQ test publishers of labeling IQ score ranges with category names such as "superior" or "average".

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IRC flood

Flooding or scrolling on an IRC network is a method of disconnecting users from an IRC server (a form of Denial of Service), exhausting bandwidth which causes network latency ('lag'), or just disrupting users.

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Ircle

Ircle (formerly rendered as "IRCle") was an IRC client developed by Onno Tijdgat for the Macintosh computer platform.

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Irma Becerra Fernandez

Irma Becerra Fernandez is a Cuban-American higher education leader who will take office as the seventh president of Marymount University in Arlington, Virginia on July 1, 2018.

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Irradiance

In radiometry, irradiance is the radiant flux (power) received by a surface per unit area.

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Irving Howe

Irving Howe (June 11, 1920 – May 5, 1993) was a Jewish American literary and social critic and a prominent figure of the Democratic Socialists of America.

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Isotope fractionation

Isotope fractionation describes processes that affect the relative abundance of isotopes, often used in isotope geochemistry.

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Isotopes of hydrogen

Hydrogen (1H) has three naturally occurring isotopes, sometimes denoted 1H, 2H, and 3H.

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Issues in Science and Religion

Issues in Science and Religion is a book by Ian Barbour.

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Istituto Statale Italiano Leonardo Da Vinci

The Istituto Statale Italiano Leonardo Da Vinci (Lycée italien Leonardo da Vinci) is an Italian government-owned Italian international school in Paris, France.

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Iterative refinement

Iterative refinement is an iterative method proposed by James H. Wilkinson to improve the accuracy of numerical solutions to systems of linear equations.

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Ivan T. Sanderson

Ivan Terence Sanderson (January 30, 1911 – February 19, 1973) was a biologist and writer born in Edinburgh, Scotland, who became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

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J. Allen Boone

J.

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J. C. McKinley

John Charnley McKinley (November 8, 1891 - January 3, 1950) was an American neurologist who co-authored the psychological assessment known as the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI).

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J. C. Snead

Jesse Carlyle "J.

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J. Laurie Snell

James Laurie Snell, often cited as J. Laurie Snell, (January 15, 1925 in Wheaton, Illinois – March 19, 2011 in Hanover, New Hampshire) was an American mathematician.

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James A.F. Stoner

James A.F. Stoner (born 1935) is a professor of Management Systems at the Gabelli School of Business Administration of Fordham University, and the holder of Fordham's James A.F. Stoner Chair in Global Quality Leadership.

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James E. Gunn (writer)

James Edwin Gunn (born July 12, 1923) is an American science fiction writer, editor, scholar, and anthologist.

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James Fadiman

James Fadiman (born May 27, 1939) is an American psychologist and writer.

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James H. Wilkinson

James Hardy Wilkinson FRS (27 September 1919 – 5 October 1986) was a prominent figure in the field of numerical analysis, a field at the boundary of applied mathematics and computer science particularly useful to physics and engineering.

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James Kasting

James Fraser Kasting (born January 2, 1953) is an American geoscientist and Distinguished Professor of Geosciences at Penn State University.

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James MacGregor Burns

James MacGregor Burns (August 3, 1918 in Melrose, MA – July 15, 2014 in Williamstown, MA) was an American historian and political scientist, presidential biographer, and authority on leadership studies.

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James Marshall Campbell

James Marshall Campbell (1895-1977) was dean of the college of arts and sciences at The Catholic University of America.

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James Rumbaugh

James E. Rumbaugh (born August 22, 1947) is an American computer scientist and object-oriented methodologist Accessed 22 Jan 2010.

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James Warhola

James Warhola (born March 16, 1955) is an American artist who has illustrated more than two dozen children's picture books since 1987.

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Jane Blalock v. Ladies Professional Golf Association

Jane Blalock v. Ladies Professional Golf Association was an ongoing lawsuit that took place between 1972 and 1975, following a professional golf incident in 1972.

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Jane Eyre (1910 film)

Jane Eyre is a 1910 American silent short classic drama produced by the Thanhouser Film Corporation.

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Jane Roberts

Dorothy Jane Roberts (May 8, 1929 – September 5, 1984) was an American author, poet, self-proclaimed psychic, and spirit medium, who claimed to channel an energy personality who called himself "Seth." Her publication of the Seth texts, known as the Seth Material, established her as one of the preeminent figures in the world of paranormal phenomena.

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Japan and weapons of mass destruction

Beginning in the mid-1930s, Japan conducted numerous attempts to acquire and develop weapons of mass destruction.

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Java annotation

In the Java computer programming language, an annotation is a form of syntactic metadata that can be added to Java source code.

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Java Data Objects

Java Data Objects (JDO) is a specification of Java object persistence.

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Java Native Interface

The Java Native Interface (JNI) is a programming framework that enables Java code running in a Java Virtual Machine (JVM) to call and be called by native applications (programs specific to a hardware and operating system platform) and libraries written in other languages such as C, C++ and assembly.

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Java Platform, Micro Edition

Java Platform, Micro Edition or Java ME is a computing platform for development and deployment of portable code for embedded and mobile devices (micro-controllers, sensors, gateways, mobile phones, personal digital assistants, TV set-top boxes, printers).

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JavaFX

JavaFX is a software platform for creating and delivering desktop applications, as well as rich Internet applications (RIAs) that can run across a wide variety of devices.

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JavaFX Script

JavaFX Script was a scripting language designed by Sun Microsystems, forming part of the JavaFX family of technologies on the Java Platform.

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Jayson Lusk

Jayson Lusk (born 1974) is an economist, Distinguished Professor and Department Head in the Department of Agricultural Economics at Purdue University.

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Jazz education

Each style and era of jazz adopted new techniques to help educate younger musicians.

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Jürgen Stroop

Jürgen Stroop (born Josef Stroop, 26 September 1895 – 6 March 1952) was a German SS commander during the Nazi era, who served as SS and Police Leader in occupied Poland.

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Jean Blondel

Jean Blondel (born Toulon, 26 October 1929) is a French political scientist specialising in comparative politics.

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Jean E. Sammet

Jean E. Sammet (March 23, 1928 – May 20, 2017) was an American computer scientist who developed the FORMAC programming language in 1962.

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Jean-Claude Usunier

Jean-Claude Usunier is an Honorary Professor of Marketing at HEC Lausanne, Switzerland, and author of various books on marketing and culture, including International Marketing: A Cultural Approach, Marketing Across Cultures and International and Cross-Cultural Management Research.

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Jean-Pierre Danthine

Jean-Pierre Danthine (born May 16, 1950 in Havelange, Belgium) is a Swiss-Belgian economist and vice president of the Swiss National Bank.

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Jeff Caponigro

Jeffrey R. Caponigro is an American public relations executive, actor, entrepreneur, and former journalist.

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Jeff Conaway

Jeffrey Charles William Michael Conaway (October 5, 1950 – May 27, 2011) was an American actor and singer known for playing Kenickie in the movie Grease and for his roles in two American television series, Taxi and Babylon 5.

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Jeffrey A. Krames

Jeffrey A. Krames is an American author whose books have been translated into more than 36 languages.

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Jeffrey Sachs

Jeffrey David Sachs (born November 5, 1954) is an American economist and director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, where he holds the title of University Professor, the highest rank Columbia bestows on its faculty.

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Jennifer Roberts (art historian)

Jennifer L. Roberts is Elizabeth Cary Agassiz Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University.

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Jericho

Jericho (יְרִיחוֹ; أريحا) is a city in the Palestinian Territories and is located near the Jordan River in the West Bank.

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Jessica Care Moore

Jessica Care Moore (stylized as jessica Care moore; born October 28, 1971) is an American poet.

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Jessie Street

Jessie Mary Grey Street (née Lillingston, commonly known as Lady Street; 18 April 1889 – 2 July 1970) was an Australian suffragette and an extensive campaigner for peace and human rights.

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Jim Davies (computer scientist)

Jim Davies is Professor of Software Engineering and current Director of the Software Engineering Programme at the University of Oxford, England.

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Jim Horning

James Jay Horning (24 August 1942 – 18 January 2013) was an American computer scientist and ACM Fellow.

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Jim Woodcock

Professor James Charles Paul Woodcock FREng FBCS CEng CITP is a British computer scientist.

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Joan Blades

Joan Blades (b. ca. 1956 in Berkeley, California) is an American businessperson and progressive political activist.

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Joe Bash

Joe Bash is an American comedy-drama television series that aired on ABC from March 28 to May 10, 1986.

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Joe Baugher

Joseph F. Baugher (born 1941) is a retired physicist, software engineer, and author, who has also written articles on aviation.

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Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach (28 July 1750) was a composer and musician of the Baroque period, born in the Duchy of Saxe-Eisenach.

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John Askin Jr.

John Askin Jr. (c1765–1820) was a fur trader, merchant, and official in Upper Canada and Michigan.

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John C. Edmunds

John C. Edmunds is Professor of Finance and Research Director of the Institute for Latin American Business Studies at Babson College.

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John C. Reynolds

John Charles Reynolds (June 1, 1935 – April 28, 2013) was an American computer scientist.

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John Dewey

John Dewey (October 20, 1859 – June 1, 1952) was an American philosopher, psychologist, Georgist, and educational reformer whose ideas have been influential in education and social reform.

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John Evangelist Walsh

John Evangelist Walsh was an American author, biographer, editor, historian and journalist.

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John F. Kennedy High School (Denver, Colorado)

John F. Kennedy High School (also known as "Kennedy" or "JFK") is a public secondary school located in the Bear Valley neighborhood on the southwest side of Denver, Colorado, United States.

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John Joseph Martin

John Joseph Martin (October 19, 1922 – August 7, 1997) was educated as a mechanical engineer, receiving a Ph.

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John O'Neill (video game designer)

John O'Neill (born 1948) is a British artist and video game designer best known for developing the games Lifespan and The Dolphin's Rune.

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John Peterman

John Peterman (born 1941) is an American catalog and retail entrepreneur from Lexington, Kentucky, who operates The J. Peterman Company.

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John R. Stallings

John Robert Stallings Jr. (July 22, 1935 – November 24, 2008) was a mathematician known for his seminal contributions to geometric group theory and 3-manifold topology.

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John R. Talbott

John R. Talbott is an American finance expert, author, commentator, and political analyst.

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John Tschohl

John Tschohl (born June 20, 1947 in Mankato, Minnesota) is an author/speaker/thought leader and service strategist and president of Service Quality Institute.

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John Von Ohlen

John Von Ohlen (born 13 May 1941 Indianapolis) is an American jazz drummer, bandleader, and recording artist, widely known as having been the drummer for Woody Herman in 1967 and 1969, then with Stan Kenton from 1970 to 1972.

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Jonathan Bowen

Jonathan P. Bowen FBCS FRSA (born 1956) is a British computer scientist.

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Jonny Quest (TV series)

Jonny Quest (also known as The Adventures of Jonny Quest) is an American animated science fiction adventure television series about a boy who accompanies his scientist father on extraordinary adventures.

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Jordan normal form

In linear algebra, a Jordan normal form (often called Jordan canonical form) of a linear operator on a finite-dimensional vector space is an upper triangular matrix of a particular form called a Jordan matrix, representing the operator with respect to some basis.

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Joseph Granville

Joseph Ensign Granville (August 20, 1923 – September 7, 2013), often called Joe Granville, was a financial writer and investment seminar speaker.

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Joseph LaPalombara

Joseph LaPalombara (born May 18, 1925) is the Arnold Wolfers Professor Emeritus of Political Science and Management, and a Senior Research Scholar in the Center for Comparative Research at Yale University.

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Joseph LoPiccolo (psychology)

Joseph LoPiccolo (born 1943) is an American psychologist and sex researcher who focuses on female sexual response.

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Joseph P. Ebacher

Joseph P. Ebacher (&mdash) was an American educator and founder of the Ebacher Method.

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JOSS

JOSS (an acronym for JOHNNIAC Open Shop System) was one of the very first interactive, time-sharing programming languages.

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Judiciary of France

In France, career judges are considered civil servants exercising one of the sovereign powers of the state, and, accordingly, only French citizens are eligible for judgeship.

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Julia Faye

Julia Faye (born Julia Faye Maloney, September 24, 1892 – April 6, 1966) was an American actress of silent and sound films.

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Julia Heiman

Dr Julia R. Heiman is an American sexologist and psychologist.

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K-topology

In mathematics, particularly topology, the K-topology is a topology that one can impose on the set of all real numbers which has some interesting properties.

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Kalman filter

Kalman filtering, also known as linear quadratic estimation (LQE), is an algorithm that uses a series of measurements observed over time, containing statistical noise and other inaccuracies, and produces estimates of unknown variables that tend to be more accurate than those based on a single measurement alone, by estimating a joint probability distribution over the variables for each timeframe.

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Kaoru Ishikawa

was a Japanese organizational theorist, Professor at the Faculty of Engineering at The University of Tokyo, noted for his quality management innovations.

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Karl Barth

Karl Barth (–) was a Swiss Reformed theologian who is often regarded as the greatest Protestant theologian of the twentieth century.

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Karl Dawson Wood

Karl Dawson (K.D.) Wood (September 27, 1898 – April 19, 1995) was an aerospace education pioneer specializing in airplane and spacecraft design.

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Karl Drobnic

Karl Drobnic (born 1943) is an American educator and publisher, He pioneered work in English for Specific Purposes during the era of large scale technology transfer programs between developed and underdeveloped nations in the latter half of the twentieth century.

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Karl H. Pribram

Karl H. Pribram (February 25, 1919 – January 19, 2015) was a professor at Georgetown University, in the United States, an emeritus professor of psychology and psychiatry at Stanford University and distinguished professor at Radford University.

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Karlsplatz Stadtbahn Station

Karlsplatz Stadtbahn Station is a former station of the Viennese Stadtbahn.

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Karnaugh map

The Karnaugh map (KM or K-map) is a method of simplifying Boolean algebra expressions.

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Kazimierz Moczarski

Kazimierz Damazy Moczarski (July 21, 1907 – September 27, 1975) was a Polish writer and journalist, officer of the Polish Home Army (noms de guerre: Borsuk, Grawer, Maurycy, and Rafał; active in anti-Nazi resistance).

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Keith Clark

Keith Leonard Clark (born 1943) is a Professor of Computer Science at Imperial College London, England.

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Ken Schwaber

Ken Schwaber (born 1945 in Wheaton, Illinois) is a software developer, product manager and industry consultant.

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Kendrick Frazier

Kendrick Crosby Frazier (born March 19, 1942) is a science writer and longtime editor of Skeptical Inquirer magazine.

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Kenneth R. Miller

Kenneth Raymond Miller (born July 14, 1948) is an American cell biologist and molecular biologist who is currently Professor of Biology and Royce Family Professor for Teaching Excellence at Brown University.

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Kernel panic

A kernel panic (sometimes abbreviated as KP) is a safety measure taken by an operating system's kernel upon detecting an internal fatal error in which it either is unable to safely recover from or cannot have the system continue to run without having a much higher risk of major data loss.

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Kitchen Table International

Kitchen Table International was a fictitious computer company created as a faux amalgam of Radio Shack, Apple Inc., Commodore Business Machines, and other organizations of the time, and was the subject of one of the earliest regular computer humor columns, appearing in Wayne Green’s 80 Micro magazine from January 1980 through July, 1983.

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Kitware

Kitware, Inc. is a technology company headquartered in Clifton Park, New York.

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Knight's tour

A knight's tour is a sequence of moves of a knight on a chessboard such that the knight visits every square only once.

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Kurt H. Debus

Kurt Heinrich Debus (November 29, 1908 – October 10, 1983) was a German V-2 rocket scientist during World War II who, after being brought to the United States under Operation Paperclip, became the first director of NASA's Kennedy Space Center in 1962.

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Kyma (sound design language)

Kyma is a visual programming language for sound design used by musicians, researchers, and sound designers.

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Kyra Petrovskaya Wayne

Kyra Petrovskaya Wayne (December 31, 1918 – June 3, 2018) was a Russian-born American author.

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L. E. Sissman

Louis Edward Sissman (January 1, 1928 Detroit – March 10, 1976) was a poet and advertising executive.

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L. S. Stavrianos

Leften Stavros Stavrianos (1913 – March 23, 2004) was a Greek-Canadian historian.

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Lambert's cosine law

In optics, Lambert's cosine law says that the radiant intensity or luminous intensity observed from an ideal diffusely reflecting surface or ideal diffuse radiator is directly proportional to the cosine of the angle θ between the direction of the incident light and the surface normal.

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Laser

A laser is a device that emits light through a process of optical amplification based on the stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation.

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Lattice stool

The lattice stool was the most popular type of stool in ancient Egypt.

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Lawrence Welk

Lawrence Welk (March 11, 1903 – May 17, 1992) was an American musician, accordionist, bandleader, and television impresario, who hosted the television program The Lawrence Welk Show from 1951 to 1982.

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Layered graph drawing

Layered graph drawing or hierarchical graph drawing is a type of graph drawing in which the vertices of a directed graph are drawn in horizontal rows or layers with the edges generally directed downwards.

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Learning through play

Learning through play is a term used in education and psychology to describe how a child can learn to make sense of the world around them.

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Least common multiple

In arithmetic and number theory, the least common multiple, lowest common multiple, or smallest common multiple of two integers a and b, usually denoted by LCM(a, b), is the smallest positive integer that is divisible by both a and b. Since division of integers by zero is undefined, this definition has meaning only if a and b are both different from zero.

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Lee Caplin

Lee Evan Caplin (born September 8, 1946) is an American entertainment and communications industry executive.

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Lee J. Ames

Lee Judah Ames (January 8, 1921 – June 3, 2011) was an American artist noted for his Draw 50... learn-to-draw books.

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Lennie Niehaus

Lennie Niehaus (né Leonard Niehaus; born June 1, 1929) is an American alto saxophonist, arranger, and composer on the West Coast jazz scene.

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Lenore Romney

Lenore LaFount Romney (November 9, 1908 – July 7, 1998) was an American actress and political figure.

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Leo Carrillo on stage and screen

Leo Carrillo (1881–1961) was an American cartoonist, a comedian in vaudeville, and an actor on stage, film and television.

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Letter-spacing

Examples of headline letter-spacing In typography, letter-spacing, also referred to as tracking by typographers working with pre-WYSIWYG digital systems, refers to an optically consistent degree of increase (or sometimes decrease) of space between letters to affect visual density in a line or block of text.

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Liberalization

Liberalization (or liberalisation) is a general term for any process whereby a state lifts restrictions on some private individual activities.

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Lie bracket of vector fields

In the mathematical field of differential topology, the Lie bracket of vector fields, also known as the Jacobi–Lie bracket or the commutator of vector fields, is an operator that assigns to any two vector fields X and Y on a smooth manifold M a third vector field denoted.

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Lies My Teacher Told Me

Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong is a 1995 book by James W. Loewen, a sociologist.

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Light industry

Light industry is industries that usually are less capital-intensive than heavy industry and is more consumer-oriented than business-oriented, as it typically produces smaller consumer goods.

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Limit point compact

In mathematics, a topological space X is said to be limit point compact or weakly countably compact if every infinite subset of X has a limit point in X. This property generalizes a property of compact spaces.

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Limit state design

Limit state design (LSD), also known as load and resistance factor design (LRFD), refers to a design method used in structural engineering.

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Limnology

Limnology (from Greek λίμνη, limne, "lake" and λόγος, logos, "knowledge"), is the study of inland aquatic ecosystems.

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Linear density

Linear density is the measure of a quantity of any characteristic value per unit of length.

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Linus's Law

Linus's Law is a claim about software development, named in honor of Linus Torvalds and formulated by Eric S. Raymond in his essay and book The Cathedral and the Bazaar (1999).

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Lisa Bradley

Lisa Bradley (born 1951 in Columbus, Ohio) is an American artist who has been exhibiting for over thirty years at galleries and museums in New York City, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, Paris, Helsinki, Tokyo, Brussels and Dakar.

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List of American Muslims

This is an incomplete list of notable Muslims who live or lived in the United States.

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List of astronomical observatories

This is a list of astronomical observatories ordered by name, along with initial dates of operation (where an accurate date is available) and location.

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List of books in computational geometry

This is a list of books in computational geometry. There are two major, largely nonoverlapping categories.

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List of Boston University people

This is a list of notable faculty members and alumni of Boston University.

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List of English-language book publishing companies

This is a list of English-language book publishers.

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List of fake memoirs and journals

This page provides a list of fake memoirs and journals.

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List of group-0 ISBN publisher codes

A list of publisher codes for (978) International Standard Book Numbers with a group code of zero.

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List of important publications in theoretical computer science

This is a list of important publications in theoretical computer science, organized by field.

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List of Pakistani Americans

The following is a list of notable Pakistani Americans, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American descendants.

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List of refrigerants

Chemical refrigerants are assigned an R number which is determined systematically according to molecular structure.

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List of regions of the United States

This is a list of some of the regions in the United States.

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List of school shootings in the United States

This article lists in chronology and provides additional details of incidents in which a firearm was discharged at a school infrastructure or campus in the United States, including incidents of shootings on a school bus.

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List of soft rock artists and songs

The following is a list of notable soft rock bands and artists and their most notable soft rock songs.

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List of state and union territory capitals in India

India is a country located in southern Asia.

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List of style guide abbreviations

This list of style guide abbreviations provides the meanings of the abbreviations that are commonly used as short ways to refer to major style guides.

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List of the highest-grossing media franchises

This is a list of the highest-grossing media franchises.

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List of thermal conductivities

In heat transfer, the thermal conductivity of a substance, k, is an intensive property that indicates its ability to conduct heat.

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List of University of Michigan alumni

There are more than 500,000 living alumni of the University of Michigan.

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Little Crow

Little Crow (Dakota: Thaóyate Dúta; ca. 1810 – July 3, 1863) was a chief of the Mdewakanton Dakota people.

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Local homeomorphism

In mathematics, more specifically topology, a local homeomorphism is a function between topological spaces that, intuitively, preserves local (though not necessarily global) structure.

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Locally simply connected space

In mathematics, a locally simply connected space is a topological space that admits a basis of simply connected sets.

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Logic in computer science

Logic in computer science covers the overlap between the field of logic and that of computer science.

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Longest path problem

In graph theory and theoretical computer science, the longest path problem is the problem of finding a simple path of maximum length in a given graph.

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Loop invariant

In computer science, a loop invariant is a property of a program loop that is true before (and after) each iteration.

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Los Angeles crime family

The Los Angeles crime family is an Italian American criminal organization based in California, as part of the American Mafia (or Cosa Nostra).

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Louise Hawes

Louise Hawes is an American academic and author of more than a dozen novels and several short story collections.

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Louise Meriwether

Louise Meriwether (born May 8, 1923) is an American novelist, essayist, journalist and activist, as well as a writer of biographies of historically important African Americans for children.

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LR parser

In computer science, LR parsers are a type of bottom-up parser that efficiently read deterministic context-free languages, in guaranteed linear time.

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Lucy (chimpanzee)

Lucy (1964–1987) was a chimpanzee owned by the Institute for Primate Studies in Oklahoma, and raised by Maurice K. Temerlin, Ph.D., a psychotherapist and professor at the University of Oklahoma and his wife, Jane.

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Lucy Kellaway

Kellaway in 2016 Lucy Kellaway (born 26 June 1959) is a British journalist turned teacher.

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Lyapunov redesign

In nonlinear control, the technique of Lyapunov redesign refers to the design where a stabilizing state feedback controller can be constructed with knowledge of the Lyapunov function V. Consider the system where x \in R^n is the state vector and u \in R^p is the vector of inputs.

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Lyn Christie

Lyn Christie MD, (born Lyndon Van Christie; 3 August 1928) is an Australian-born American-based jazz bassist.

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Lynda Benglis

Lynda Benglis (born October 25, 1941) is an American sculptor and visual artist known especially for her wax paintings and poured latex sculptures.

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Lynne Mapp Drexler

Lynne Mapp Drexler (1928–1999) was an American abstract and representational artist, who was a painter and photographer.

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Lysithea (moon)

Lysithea (Λυσιθέα) is a prograde irregular satellite of Jupiter.

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M15 Halftrack

The M15 Halftrack, officially designated M15 Combination Gun Motor Carriage, was a self-propelled anti-aircraft gun on a halftrack chassis used by the United States Army during World War II.

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MACD

MACD, short for moving average convergence/divergence, is a trading indicator used in technical analysis of stock prices, created by Gerald Appel in the late 1970s.

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Macroeconomics

Macroeconomics (from the Greek prefix makro- meaning "large" and economics) is a branch of economics dealing with the performance, structure, behavior, and decision-making of an economy as a whole.

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Magnet

A magnet is a material or object that produces a magnetic field.

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Magnetic field

A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence of electrical currents and magnetized materials.

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Magnetic moment

The magnetic moment is a quantity that represents the magnetic strength and orientation of a magnet or other object that produces a magnetic field.

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Magnus von Braun

Magnus "Mac" Freiherr von Braun (10 May 1919 – 21 June 2003) was a German chemical engineer, Luftwaffe aviator, and rocket scientist at Peenemünde, the Mittelwerk, and after emigrating to the United States via Operation Paperclip, at Fort Bliss.

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Manchester code

In telecommunication and data storage, Manchester code (also known as phase encoding, or PE) is a line code in which the encoding of each data bit is either low then high, or high then low, for equal time.

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Manfredo do Carmo

Manfredo Perdigão do Carmo (15 August 1928 – 30 April 2018) was a Brazilian mathematician, doyen of Brazilian differential geometry, and former president of the Brazilian Mathematical Society.

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Manufacturing

Manufacturing is the production of merchandise for use or sale using labour and machines, tools, chemical and biological processing, or formulation.

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Marc Nohr

Marc Nohr is a creative entrepreneur best known for co-founding integrated agency Kitcatt Nohr.

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Margaret Walker

Margaret Walker (Margaret Abigail Walker Alexander by marriage; July 7, 1915 – November 30, 1998) was an American poet and writer.

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Marie de' Medici cycle

The Marie de' Medici Cycle is a series of twenty-four paintings by Peter Paul Rubens commissioned by Marie de' Medici, widow of Henry IV of France, for the Luxembourg Palace in Paris.

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Marilyn Singer

Marilyn Singer (born 1948) is an award-winning author of children's books in a wide variety of genres, including fiction and non-fiction picture books, juvenile novels and mysteries, young adult fantasies, and poetry.

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Mark Brill

Mark Brill (born January 19, 1964) is an American musicologist, particularly known for his work on Latin American Music.

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Mark E. Petersen

Mark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death.

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Mark Surman

Mark Surman is the executive director of the Mozilla Foundation.

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Marketing management

Marketing management is the process of developing strategies and planning for product or services, advertising, promotions, sales to reach desired customer segment.

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Marshall S. Cornwell

Marshall Silas Cornwell (October 18, 1871 – May 26, 1898) was a 19th-century American newspaper publisher and editor, writer, and poet in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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Martha O'Driscoll

Martha O'Driscoll (March 4, 1922 – November 3, 1998) was an American film actress from 1937 until 1947.

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Martin H. Greenberg

Martin Harry Greenberg (March 1, 1941 – June 25, 2011) was an American academic and speculative fiction anthologist.

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Mary Ann Horton

Mary Ann Horton, formerly Mark R. Horton (born November 21, 1955), is a Usenet and Internet pioneer.

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Mary Cunningham Agee

Mary Cunningham Agee is an American business executive and author.

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Mary Ellen Snodgrass

Mary Ellen Snodgrass (born February 29, 1944) is an American author born in Wilmington, North Carolina to William Russell and Lucy Ella (Hester) Robinson.

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Mass balance

A mass balance, also called a material balance, is an application of conservation of mass to the analysis of physical systems.

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Massachusetts

Massachusetts, officially known as the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, is the most populous state in the New England region of the northeastern United States.

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Matched filter

In signal processing, a matched filter is obtained by correlating a known signal, or template, with an unknown signal to detect the presence of the template in the unknown signal.

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Mathai Joseph

Mathai Joseph is a leading Indian computer scientist.

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Matrix (mathematics)

In mathematics, a matrix (plural: matrices) is a rectangular array of numbers, symbols, or expressions, arranged in rows and columns.

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Matrix splitting

In the mathematical discipline of numerical linear algebra, a matrix splitting is an expression which represents a given matrix as a sum or difference of matrices.

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Matthew Henson

Matthew Alexander Henson (August 8, 1866March 9, 1955) was the first African-American Arctic explorer, an associate of Robert Peary on seven voyages over a period of nearly 23 years. They made six voyages and spent a total of 18 years in expeditions., Globe Pequot, 2009, pp. 3–6 Henson served as a navigator and craftsman, traded with Inuit and learned their language, and was known as Peary's "first man" for these arduous travels. During their 1909 expedition to Greenland, Henson accompanied Peary in the small party, including four Inuit men, that has been recognized as the first to reach the Geographic North Pole (although this has also been subject to dispute). Henson was invited in 1937 as a member of The Explorers Club due to his achievement and was the first African American to be accepted. In 1948 he was made an honorary member, a distinction for 20 people annually. Based on research into Peary's diary and astronomical observations, Wally Herbert, a later Arctic explorer who reached the North Pole in 1969, concluded in 1989 that Peary's team had not reached the pole. This has been widely accepted, but some dispute this conclusion. Henson published his memoir, A Negro Explorer at the North Pole (1912), which included a foreword and praise by Peary. Since the late 20th century, Henson's contributions have received more recognition. By presidential order, in 1988, the remains of Henson and his wife were re-interred with a monument at Arlington National Cemetery, near that for Peary and his wife. Henson has received numerous posthumous honors since then. In the late 20th century, Henson's and Peary's elderly sons by their Inuit "country wives" were tracked down, and their descendants invited to the United States to meet other family members, as well as to attend the 1988 ceremonies.

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Matthew Pittinsky

Matthew Pittinsky is an American technology entrepreneur, educator and academic.

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Maximum entropy spectral estimation

Maximum entropy spectral estimation is a method of spectral density estimation.

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Maxwell Maltz

Maxwell Maltz (March 10, 1889 – April 7, 1975) was an American cosmetic surgeon and author of Psycho-Cybernetics (1960), which was a system of ideas that he claimed could improve one's self-image.

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Maxwell's equations

Maxwell's equations are a set of partial differential equations that, together with the Lorentz force law, form the foundation of classical electromagnetism, classical optics, and electric circuits.

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Mechanism (philosophy)

Mechanism is the belief that natural wholes (principally living things) are like complicated machines or artifacts, composed of parts lacking any intrinsic relationship to each other.

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Mechanophilia

Mechanophilia (or mechaphilia) is a paraphilia involving a sexual attraction to machines such as bicycles,Alleyne, Richard (26 October 2007).

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Mehdi Jazayeri

Mehdi Jazayeri is the founding dean of the faculty of informatics of the Università della Svizzera italiana (University of Lugano) in Lugano, Switzerland, and author of several textbooks on computer software.

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Mel Byars

Mel Byars (born in Columbia, South Carolina), is an American design historian.

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Mental Research Institute

The Palo Alto Mental Research Institute (MRI) is one of the founding institutions of brief and family therapy.

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Meredith Publishing Company

The Meredith Publishing Company, a division of Meredith Corporation, purchased D. Appleton & Company in 1960, and Duell, Sloan and Pearce in 1961.

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Mesa

Mesa (Spanish and Portuguese for table) is the American English term for tableland, an elevated area of land with a flat top and sides that are usually steep cliffs.

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Mesosphere (mantle)

In geology, the mesosphere refers to the part of the Earth's mantle below the lithosphere and the asthenosphere, but above the outer core.

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Metal-mesh optical filter

Metal-mesh optical filters are optical filters made from stacks of metal meshes and dielectric.

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Method chaining

Method chaining, also known as named parameter idiom, is a common syntax for invoking multiple method calls in object-oriented programming languages.

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Michael E. Wysession

Michael E. Wysession (born December 6, 1961) is a Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, and author of numerous science textbooks published by Pearson Education and Prentice Hall.

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Michael Hinchey

Michael Gerard Hinchey (born 1969) is an Irish computer scientist and Director at the Irish Software Engineering Research Centre (Lero), a multi-university research centre headquartered at the University of Limerick, Ireland.

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Michael James (quilt artist)

Michael Francis James (born 30 June 1949) is an American artist, educator, author, and lecturer.

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Michael Spivey

Michael Spivey (commonly known as Mike Spivey) is a British computer scientist at the University of Oxford.

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Mickey Cohen

Meyer Harris "Mickey" Cohen (September 4, 1913 – July 29, 1976) was an American gangster based in Los Angeles and boss of the Cohen crime family.

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Microbial enhanced oil recovery

Microbial enhanced oil recovery (MEOR) is a biological based technology consisting in manipulating function or structure, or both, of microbial environments existing in oil reservoirs.

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Mike Beedle

Mike (Miguel) Beedle was an American theoretical physicist turned software engineer who was a co-author of the Agile Manifesto.

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Miles Park Romney

Miles Park Romney (August 18, 1843 – March 1904) was born in Nauvoo, Illinois, the son of Miles Romney.

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Minimum weight

In error-correcting coding, the minimum Hamming weight, commonly referred to as the minimum weight wmin of a code is the weight of the lowest-weight non-zero code word.

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MINIX

MINIX (from "mini-Unix") is a POSIX-compliant (since version 2.0), Unix-like operating system based on a microkernel architecture.

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MINIX 3

MINIX 3 is a project to create a small, high availability, high functioning Unix-like operating system.

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MINIX file system

The MINIX file system is the native file system of the MINIX operating system.

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Minnette Gersh Lenier

Minnette Ella Gersh Lenier (July 9, 1945 in Atlanta, Georgia – February 7, 2011 in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California) was a teacher and professional magician who used stage magic to improve students' reading and learning skills.

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Miranda IM

Miranda IM is an open source multiprotocol instant messaging application, designed for Microsoft Windows.

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Mitchel H. Mark

Mitchel H. Mark a.k.a. Mitchell Mark a.k.a. Mitchell H. Mark (born as Mitchel Henry Mark) (1868 – March 20, 1918) was a pioneer of motion picture exhibition in the United States.

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Modern Operating Systems

Modern Operating Systems is a book written by Andrew Tanenbaum, a version (which does not target implementation) of his book Operating Systems: Design and Implementation.

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Modular arithmetic

In mathematics, modular arithmetic is a system of arithmetic for integers, where numbers "wrap around" upon reaching a certain value—the modulus (plural moduli).

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Molecular property

Molecular properties include the chemical properties, physical properties, and structural properties of molecules, including drugs.

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Molecule

A molecule is an electrically neutral group of two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds.

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Molefi Kete Asante

Molefi Kete Asante (born Arthur Lee Smith Jr.; August 14, 1942) is an African-American professor.

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Moral relativism

Moral relativism may be any of several philosophical positions concerned with the differences in moral judgments across different people and cultures.

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Motivation

Motivation is the reason for people's actions, desires, and needs.

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Mountain Moving Coffeehouse

The Mountain Moving Coffeehouse for Womyn and Children was a lesbian feminist music venue, located in Chicago and known across the United States.

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Moving frame

In mathematics, a moving frame is a flexible generalization of the notion of an ordered basis of a vector space often used to study the extrinsic differential geometry of smooth manifolds embedded in a homogeneous space.

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Mr. Mugs

Mr.

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Muhammad Ali Mazidi

Muhammad Ali Mazidi is an Iranian electrical engineer and lecturer.

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Multiplexer

In electronics, a multiplexer (or mux) is a device that selects one of several analog or digital input signals and forwards the selected input into a single line.

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Multiplicity (chemistry)

In spectroscopy and quantum chemistry, the multiplicity of an energy level is defined as 2S+1, where S is the total spin angular momentum.

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Murasaki Shikibu Diary Emaki

The is a mid-13th century emaki, a Japanese picture scroll, inspired by the private diary (nikki) of Murasaki Shikibu, lady-in-waiting at the 10th/11th centuries Heian court and author of The Tale of Genji.

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Music of New York City

The music of New York City is a diverse and important field in the world of music.

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Musical analysis

Musical analysis is the study of musical structure in either compositions or performances.

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My Blue Heaven (song)

"My Blue Heaven" is a popular song written by Walter Donaldson with lyrics by George A. Whiting.

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MyRichUncle

MyRichUncle was a loan product that was marketed to students by MRU Holdings, Inc.

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N-sphere

In mathematics, the n-sphere is the generalization of the ordinary sphere to spaces of arbitrary dimension.

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Nathan Lyons

Nathan Lyons (January 10, 1930 – August 31, 2016) was an American photographer, curator, and educator.

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National Book Store

National Book Store, Inc. (abbreviated as NBS) is a retail company based in Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines.

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Native American Preparatory School

The Native American Preparatory School was a residential preparatory school located in Rowe, New Mexico.

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Natural hazard

A natural hazard is a natural phenomenon that might have a negative effect on humans or the environment.

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Neal E. Miller

Neal Elgar Miller (August 3, 1909 – March 23, 2002) was an American experimental psychologist.

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Neapolitan chord

In music theory, a Neapolitan chord (or simply a "Neapolitan") is a major chord built on the lowered (flatted) second (supertonic) scale degree.

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Nebula Award for Best Short Story

The Nebula Award for Best Short Story is a literary award assigned each year by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) for science fiction or fantasy short stories.

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NetBeans

NetBeans is an integrated development environment (IDE) for Java.

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NetRexx

NetRexx is an open source, originally IBM's, variant of the REXX programming language to run on the Java virtual machine.

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Network covalent bonding

A network solid or covalent network solid is a chemical compound (or element) in which the atoms are bonded by covalent bonds in a continuous network extending throughout the material.

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Network layer

In the seven-layer OSI model of computer networking, the network layer is layer 3.

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New Economic Policy

The New Economic Policy (NEP, Russian новая экономическая политика, НЭП) was an economic policy of Soviet Russia proposed by Vladimir Lenin in 1921 as a temporary expedient.

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New religious movement

A new religious movement (NRM), also known as a new religion or an alternative spirituality, is a religious or spiritual group that has modern origins and which occupies a peripheral place within its society's dominant religious culture.

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New York City English

New York City English, or Metropolitan New York English, is a regional dialect of American English spoken by many people in New York City and much of its surrounding metropolitan area.

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New York Friars Club

The Friars Club is a private club in New York City, founded in 1904 that hosts risqué celebrity roasts.

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New York Institute of Finance

The New York Institute of Finance is an American Education Company that was founded by the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).

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Newton–Cartan theory

Newton–Cartan theory (or geometrized Newtonian gravitation) is a geometrical re-formulation, as well as a generalization, of Newtonian gravity first introduced by Élie Cartan and Kurt Friedrichs and later developed by Dautcourt, Dixon, Dombrowski and Horneffer, Ehlers, Havas, Künzle, Lottermoser, Trautman, and others.

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Nirvana fallacy

The nirvana fallacy is the informal fallacy of comparing actual things with unrealistic, idealized alternatives.

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Nivation

Nivation refers to the processes that occur under a snow patch.

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Noise music

Noise music is a category of music that is characterised by the expressive use of noise within a musical context.

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Nokia

Nokia is a Finnish multinational telecommunications, information technology, and consumer electronics company, founded in 1865.

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Non-return-to-zero

In telecommunication, a non-return-to-zero (NRZ) line code is a binary code in which ones are represented by one significant condition, usually a positive voltage, while zeros are represented by some other significant condition, usually a negative voltage, with no other neutral or rest condition.

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Nondualism

In spirituality, nondualism, also called non-duality, means "not two" or "one undivided without a second".

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NOP

In computer science, a NOP, no-op, or NOOP (pronounced "no op"; short for no operation) is an assembly language instruction, programming language statement, or computer protocol command that does nothing.

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Normal space

In topology and related branches of mathematics, a normal space is a topological space X that satisfies Axiom T4: every two disjoint closed sets of X have disjoint open neighborhoods.

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Norman Abramson

Norman Manuel Abramson (April 1, 1932) is an American Jewish engineer and computer scientist, most known for developing the ALOHAnet system for wireless computer communication.

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Norman Matloff

Norman Saul Matloff (born December 16, 1948) is an American professor of computer science at the University of California, Davis.

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North Raleigh Christian Academy

North Raleigh Christian Academy (NRCA) is a private, coeducational, primary and secondary Christian day school located in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States.

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Northeastern United States

The Northeastern United States, also referred to as the American Northeast or simply the Northeast, is a geographical region of the United States bordered to the north by Canada, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the south by the Southern United States, and to the west by the Midwestern United States.

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Nursing pin

A nursing pin is a type of badge, usually made of metal such as gold or silver, which is worn by nurses to identify the nursing school from which they graduated.

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Nuruddin Farah

Nuruddin Farah (Nuuradiin Faarax, نورالدين فارح) (born 24 November 1945) is a Somali novelist.

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O'Reilly Media

O'Reilly Media (formerly O'Reilly & Associates) is an American media company established by Tim O'Reilly that publishes books and Web sites and produces conferences on computer technology topics.

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Object-oriented programming

Object-oriented programming (OOP) is a programming paradigm based on the concept of "objects", which may contain data, in the form of fields, often known as attributes; and code, in the form of procedures, often known as methods. A feature of objects is that an object's procedures can access and often modify the data fields of the object with which they are associated (objects have a notion of "this" or "self").

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Object-role modeling

Object-role modeling (ORM) is used to model the semantics of a universe of discourse.

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Observatory

An observatory is a location used for observing terrestrial or celestial events.

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Occam's razor

Occam's razor (also Ockham's razor or Ocham's razor; Latin: lex parsimoniae "law of parsimony") is the problem-solving principle that, the simplest explanation tends to be the right one.

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Oceanography

Oceanography (compound of the Greek words ὠκεανός meaning "ocean" and γράφω meaning "write"), also known as oceanology, is the study of the physical and biological aspects of the ocean.

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Oh, Jeff...I Love You, Too...But...

Oh, Jeff...I Love You, Too...But... (sometimes Oh, Jeff) is a 1964 oil and magna on canvas painting by Roy Lichtenstein.

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Olive Deering

Olive Deering (born Olive Corn; October 11, 1918 – March 22, 1986) was an American actress of film, television, and the stage, active from the late 1940s to the mid-1960s.

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On-balance volume

On-balance volume (OBV) is a technical analysis indicator intended to relate price and volume in the stock market.

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One-piece swimsuit

A one-piece swimsuit or one-piece bathing suit most commonly refers to swimwear worn by women and girls when swimming in the sea or in a swimming pool, or for any activity in the sun, such as sun bathing.

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Opacifier

An opacifier is a substance added to a material in order to make the ensuing system opaque.

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Open and closed maps

In topology, an open map is a function between two topological spaces which maps open sets to open sets.

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Operating system

An operating system (OS) is system software that manages computer hardware and software resources and provides common services for computer programs.

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Operating Systems: Design and Implementation

Operating Systems: Design and Implementation is a computer science textbook written by Andrew S. Tanenbaum, with help from Albert S. Woodhull.

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Operation Red Hat

Operation Red Hat was a U.S. military action taking place in 1971, which involved the movement of chemical warfare munitions from Okinawa, Japan to Johnston Atoll in the North Pacific Ocean.

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Ordinary differential equation

In mathematics, an ordinary differential equation (ODE) is a differential equation containing one or more functions of one independent variable and its derivatives.

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Organic field-effect transistor

An organic field-effect transistor (OFET) is a field-effect transistor using an organic semiconductor in its channel.

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Organisation's goals

Organisational goals – the goals that the organisation tries to achieve, intentions on which the organisation's decisions and actions are based.

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Organisational ideology

Organisational ideology consists of the beliefs concerning organisation that make it distinct from other organisations.

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Orson Welles bibliography

This is a bibliography of books by or about the director and actor Orson Welles.

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OSGi

The OSGi Alliance, formerly known as the Open Services Gateway initiative, is an open standards organization founded in March 1999 that originally specified and continues to maintain the OSGi standard.

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Otto Titzling

Otto Titzling is a fictional character who is apocryphally described as the inventor of the brassiere in the 1971 book Bust-Up: The Uplifting Tale of Otto Titzling, published by Macdonald in London, and by Prentice-Hall in the USA.

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Outcome (probability)

In probability theory, an outcome is a possible result of an experiment.

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Outline of political science

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to politics and political science: Politics – the exercise of power; process by which groups of people make collective decisions.

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Outposts: Journeys to the Surviving Relics of the British Empire

Outposts, Journeys to the surviving relics of the British Empire is a book by Simon Winchester.

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Pac-Man

, stylized as PAC-MAN, is an arcade game developed by Namco and first released in Japan as Puck Man in May 1980.

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Panos Prevedouros

Panos D. Prevedouros (born October 2, 1961), is Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, subcommittee chair of the Transportation Research Board (a unit of the National Academy of Engineering), co-author of the textbook Transportation Engineering and Planning, published by Prentice Hall 1993 and 2001.

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Paradise Garden (Georgia)

Paradise Garden in Summerville, Georgia, was the home and workplace of Baptist minister and folk artist Howard Finster and is now a public park dedicated to his life and art.

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Parallel axis theorem

The parallel axis theorem, also known as Huygens–Steiner theorem, or just as Steiner's theorem, after Christiaan Huygens and Jakob Steiner, can be used to determine the mass moment of inertia or the second moment of area of a rigid body about any axis, given the body's moment of inertia about a parallel axis through the object's center of gravity and the perpendicular distance between the axes.

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Parametric model

In statistics, a parametric model or parametric family or finite-dimensional model is a family of distributions that can be described using a finite number of parameters.

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Paramount Pictures

Paramount Pictures Corporation (also known simply as Paramount) is an American film studio based in Hollywood, California, that has been a subsidiary of the American media conglomerate Viacom since 1994.

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Parity (physics)

In quantum mechanics, a parity transformation (also called parity inversion) is the flip in the sign of one spatial coordinate.

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Patch test (finite elements)

The patch test in the finite element method is a simple indicator of the quality of a finite element, developed by Bruce Irons.

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Patricia Lake

Patricia Van Cleeve Lake (between 1919 and 1923 – October 3, 1993), known as Patricia Lake, was an American socialite, actress, and radio comedian.

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Paul Cootner

Paul Harold Cootner (May 24, 1930 – April 16, 1978) was a financial economist noted for his book The Random Character of Stock Market Prices.

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Paul E. Beaudoin

Paul E. Beaudoin (born 1960 in Hialeah, Florida) is an American composer, theorist and author.

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Paul G. Hewitt

Paul G. Hewitt is an American physicist, former boxer, uranium prospector, author, and cartoonist born in Saugus, Massachusetts in 1931.

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Paul Rimstead

Paul Rimstead (1935–1987) was a featured page 5 columnist for the Toronto Sun during the 1970s and 1980s.

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Paul Ziff

(Robert) Paul Ziff (22 October 1920 in New York City – 9 January 2003 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina) was an American artist and philosopher specializing in semantics and aesthetics.

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Paula Martinac

Paula Martinac (born July 30, 1954) is an American writer.

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PDP-11

The PDP-11 is a series of 16-bit minicomputers sold by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) from 1970 into the 1990s, one of a succession of products in the PDP series.

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PDP-11 architecture

The PDP-11 architecture is an instruction set architecture (ISA) developed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC).

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Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test

The Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, the 2007 edition of which is known as the PPVT-IV, is an untimed test of receptive vocabulary for Standard American English and is intended to provide a quick estimate of verbal ability and scholastic aptitude.

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Peachpit

Peachpit is a publisher of books focused on graphic design, web design, and development.

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Pearson Education

Pearson Education (see also Pearson PLC) is a British-owned education publishing and assessment service to schools and corporations, as well as directly to students.

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Pegasus Mail

Pegasus Mail is a donationware (previously freeware), proprietary, email client that is developed and maintained by David Harris and his team.

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Pelvic spur

Pelvic spurs are the externally visible portion of the vestigial remnants of legs found on each side of the vent in primitive snakes, such as boas and pythons.

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Penguin Group

The Penguin Group is a trade book publisher and part of Penguin Random House.

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Periodic continued fraction

In mathematics, an infinite periodic continued fraction is a continued fraction that can be placed in the form x.

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Peripheral cycle

In graph theory, a peripheral cycle (or peripheral circuit) in an undirected graph is, intuitively, a cycle that does not separate any part of the graph from any other part.

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Perry Meisel

Perry Meisel, former Professor of English at New York University for over forty years, has written on literature, music, psychoanalysis, theory, and culture since the early 1970s.

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Perspective (graphical)

Perspective (from perspicere "to see through") in the graphic arts is an approximate representation, generally on a flat surface (such as paper), of an image as it is seen by the eye.

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Peter Bergmann

Peter Gabriel Bergmann (Berlin, 24 March 1915 – Seattle, 19 October 2002) was a German-American physicist of Jewish origins best known for his work with Albert Einstein on a unified field theory encompassing all physical interactions.

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Peter Coad

Peter Coad (born December 30, 1953) is a software entrepreneur and author of books on programming.

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Peter Drucker

Peter Ferdinand Drucker (November 19, 1909 – November 11, 2005) was an Austrian-born American management consultant, educator, and author, whose writings contributed to the philosophical and practical foundations of the modern business corporation.

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Peter Halloran

Peter M. Halloran is the founder and CEO of Pharos Financial Group, an investment firm active in global markets since 1997.

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Peter Landin

Peter John Landin (5 June 1930, Sheffield – 3 June 2009) was a British computer scientist.

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Peter Lucas (computer scientist)

Peter Lucas (born 13 January 1935 in Vienna, Austria – 2 February 2015 in California, United States) was an Austrian computer scientist and university professor.

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Phase diagram

A phase diagram in physical chemistry, engineering, mineralogy, and materials science is a type of chart used to show conditions (pressure, temperature, volume, etc.) at which thermodynamically distinct phases occur and coexist at equilibrium.

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Phil Silvers

Phil Silvers (May 11, 1911 – November 1, 1985) was an American entertainer and comedic actor, known as "The King of Chutzpah".

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Philosophy of artificial intelligence

The philosophy of artificial intelligence attempts to answer such questions as follows.

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Phoenix, Arizona

Phoenix is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Arizona.

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Photon

The photon is a type of elementary particle, the quantum of the electromagnetic field including electromagnetic radiation such as light, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force (even when static via virtual particles).

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Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis is a process used by plants and other organisms to convert light energy into chemical energy that can later be released to fuel the organisms' activities (energy transformation).

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Piezoelectric accelerometer

A piezoelectric accelerometer is an accelerometer that employs the piezoelectric effect of certain materials to measure dynamic changes in mechanical variables (e.g., acceleration, vibration, and mechanical shock).

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Pigasus Award

The Pigasus Award is the name of an annual tongue-in-cheek award presented by noted skeptic James Randi.

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Pizzaland

Pizzaland was a chain of pizza restaurants owned by Associated Newspapers and then by United Biscuits.

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Pluriharmonic function

In mathematics, precisely in the theory of functions of several complex variables, a pluriharmonic function is a real valued function which is locally the real part of a holomorphic function of several complex variables.

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Pointwise convergence

In mathematics, pointwise convergence is one of various senses in which a sequence of functions can converge to a particular function.

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Polarity (mutual inductance)

In electrical engineering, dot marking convention, or alphanumeric marking convention, or both, can be used to denote the same relative instantaneous polarity of two mutually inductive components such as between transformer windings.

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Political science

Political science is a social science which deals with systems of governance, and the analysis of political activities, political thoughts, and political behavior.

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Polly Bergen

Polly Bergen (born Nellie Paulina Burgin; July 14, 1930 – September 20, 2014) was an American actress, singer, television host, writer and entrepreneur.

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Polyinstantiation

Polyinstantiation in computer science is the concept of type (class, database row or otherwise) being instantiated into multiple independent instances (objects, copies).

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Port of Singapore

The Port of Singapore refers to the collective facilities and terminals that conduct maritime trade handling functions in harbours and which handle Singapore's shipping.

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Portamento

In music, portamento (plural: portamenti, from portamento, meaning "carriage" or "carrying") is a pitch sliding from one note to another.

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Porter Hanks

Porter Hanks (c. 1785–August 16, 1812) was a lieutenant in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812.

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Prayer

Prayer is an invocation or act that seeks to activate a rapport with an object of worship, typically a deity, through deliberate communication.

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Precondition

In computer programming, a precondition is a condition or predicate that must always be true just prior to the execution of some section of code or before an operation in a formal specification.

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Prentice (disambiguation)

Prentice is both a given name and a surname.

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Prentice Hall International Series in Computer Science

Prentice Hall International Series in Computer Science is a series of books on computer science published by Prentice Hall.

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Print culture

Print culture embodies all forms of printed text and other printed forms of visual communication.

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Printing

Printing is a process for reproducing text and images using a master form or template.

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Prisoner's dilemma

The prisoner's dilemma is a standard example of a game analyzed in game theory that shows why two completely rational individuals might not cooperate, even if it appears that it is in their best interests to do so.

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Process calculus

In computer science, the process calculi (or process algebras) are a diverse family of related approaches for formally modelling concurrent systems.

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Project DIANE

Project DIANE, an acronym for Diversified Information and Assistance NEtwork, was a very early videoconferencing based community service network created in the United States.

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Proof mass

A proof mass or test mass is a known quantity of mass used in a measuring instrument as a reference for the measurement of an unknown quantity.

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Propagator

In quantum mechanics and quantum field theory, the propagator is a function that specifies the probability amplitude for a particle to travel from one place to another in a given time, or to travel with a certain energy and momentum.

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Psychological evaluation

Psychological evaluation is defined as a way of assessing an individual's behavior, personality, cognitive abilities, and several other domains.

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Public Relations Journal

The Public Relations Journal is an open-access peer-reviewed, electronic academic journal covering topics having to do with public relations and communication studies.

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Push (novel)

Push is the 1996 debut novel of American author Sapphire.

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Put–call parity

In financial mathematics, put–call parity defines a relationship between the price of a European call option and European put option, both with the identical strike price and expiry, namely that a portfolio of a long call option and a short put option is equivalent to (and hence has the same value as) a single forward contract at this strike price and expiry.

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PyQt

PyQt is a Python binding of the cross-platform GUI toolkit Qt, implemented as a Python plug-in.

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Q-learning

Q-learning is a reinforcement learning technique used in machine learning.

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Qt (software)

Qt ("cute") is a cross-platform application framework and widget toolkit for creating classic and embedded graphical user interfaces, and applications that run on various software and hardware platforms with little or no change in the underlying codebase, while still being a native application with native capabilities and speed.

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Quality control

Quality control, or QC for short, is a process by which entities review the quality of all factors involved in production.

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Quine–McCluskey algorithm

The Quine–McCluskey algorithm (or the method of prime implicants) is a method used for minimization of Boolean functions that was developed by Willard V. Quine and extended by Edward J. McCluskey.

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Radiometric dating

Radiometric dating or radioactive dating is a technique used to date materials such as rocks or carbon, in which trace radioactive impurities were selectively incorporated when they were formed.

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Ralph Burns

Ralph Jose P. Burns (29 June 1922 – 21 November 2001) was an American jazz pianist, composer, and arranger.

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Ramsey interferometry

Ramsey interferometry, also known as Ramsey–Bordé interferometry or the separated oscillating fields method, is a form of atom interferometry that uses the phenomenon of magnetic resonance to measure transition frequencies of atoms.

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Raphael Patai

Raphael Patai (Hebrew רפאל פטאי) (November 22, 1910 − July 20, 1996), born Ervin György Patai, was a Hungarian-Jewish ethnographer, historian, Orientalist and anthropologist.

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Rayleigh flow

Rayleigh flow refers to frictionless, non-Adiabatic flow through a constant area duct where the effect of heat addition or rejection is considered.

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Raymond E. Foster

Raymond E. Foster is a retired Lieutenant of the Los Angeles Police Department, author, and college lecturer.

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Raymond Harry Brown

Raymond Harry "Ray" Brown (born November 7, 1946) is an American composer, arranger, trumpet player, and jazz educator.

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Real analysis

In mathematics, real analysis is the branch of mathematical analysis that studies the behavior of real numbers, sequences and series of real numbers, and real-valued functions.

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Real line

In mathematics, the real line, or real number line is the line whose points are the real numbers.

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Receiver operating characteristic

In statistics, a receiver operating characteristic curve, i.e. ROC curve, is a graphical plot that illustrates the diagnostic ability of a binary classifier system as its discrimination threshold is varied.

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Red Rock Job Corps Center

Red Rock Job Corps Center is a Job Corps training center in Colley Township, Sullivan County, Pennsylvania, USA.

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Reduced residue system

Any subset R of the integers is called a reduced residue system modulo n if.

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Reginald Aldworth Daly

Reginald Aldworth Daly (March 18, 1871 – September 19, 1957) was a Canadian geologist.

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Regis Brodie

Regis Brodie (born 1942) is a tenured Professor of Art at the Department of Art and Art History at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY and a potter.

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Regular space

In topology and related fields of mathematics, a topological space X is called a regular space if every closed subset C of X and a point p not contained in C admit non-overlapping open neighborhoods.

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Reinhold Niebuhr

Karl Paul Reinhold Niebuhr (June 21, 1892June 1, 1971) was an American theologian, ethicist, commentator on politics and public affairs, and professor at Union Theological Seminary for more than 30 years.

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Relative humidity

Relative humidity (RH) is the ratio of the partial pressure of water vapor to the equilibrium vapor pressure of water at a given temperature.

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Religious conversion

Religious conversion is the adoption of a set of beliefs identified with one particular religious denomination to the exclusion of others.

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Religious experience

A religious experience (sometimes known as a spiritual experience, sacred experience, or mystical experience) is a subjective experience which is interpreted within a religious framework.

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Rendleman–Bartter model

The Rendleman–Bartter model (Richard J. Rendleman, Jr. and Brit J. Bartter) in finance is a short rate model describing the evolution of interest rates.

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Repartimiento

The Repartimiento (Spanish, "distribution, partition, or division") was a colonial forced labor system imposed upon the indigenous population of Spanish America and the Philippines.

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Republic of Entre Ríos

The Republic of Entre Ríos was a short-lived republic in South America in the early nineteenth century.

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Reverdie

The reverdie is an old French poetic genre, which celebrates the arrival of spring.

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Rexx

Rexx (Restructured Extended Executor) is an interpreted programming language developed at IBM by Mike Cowlishaw.

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Rhea Perlman

Rhea Jo Perlman (born March 31, 1948) is an American actress, best known for her role as head-waitress Carla Tortelli on the sitcom Cheers from 1982 to 1993.

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Richard Alba

Richard D. Alba (born December 22, 1942) is an American sociologist, who is a Distinguished Professor at the Graduate Center, CUNY.

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Richard Burton

Richard Burton, CBE (born Richard Walter Jenkins Jr.; 10 November 19255 August 1984) was a Welsh actor.

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Richard Greene (journalist)

Richard Greene (born February 25, 1954) is an American media personality, author and journalist.

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Richard Mabey

Richard Thomas Mabey (born 20 February 1941) is a writer and broadcaster, chiefly on the relations between nature and culture.

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Richard Theodore Greener

Richard Theodore Greener (January 30, 1844 – May 2, 1922) was the first African-American graduate of Harvard College and dean of the Howard University School of Law.

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Ridley–Watkins–Hilsum theory

In solid state physics the Ridley–Watkins–Hilsum theory (RWH) explains the mechanism by which differential negative resistance is developed in a bulk solid state semiconductor material when a voltage is applied to the terminals of the sample.

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Rikki Ducornet

Rikki Ducornet (born Erica DeGre, April 19, 1943 in Canton, New York) is an American writer, poet, and artist.

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Rise and Resurrection of the American Programmer

Rise and Resurrection of the American Programmer is a book written by Edward Yourdon in 1996.

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Rise time

In electronics, when describing a voltage or current step function, rise time is the time taken by a signal to change from a specified low value to a specified high value.

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Robert C. Martin

Robert Cecil Martin (colloquially known as Uncle Bob) is an American software engineer and author.

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Robert Cogan

Robert Cogan (born 1930) is an American music theorist, composer and teacher.

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Robert E. Ornstein

Robert Evan Ornstein (born 1942) The web page gives the birth year as 1942.

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Robert Gauldin

Robert "Bob" Luther Gauldin (born 1931) is an American composer and Professor Emeritus of Music Theory at the Eastman School of Music.

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Robert H. McBride

Robert Henry McBride (May 25, 1918 – December 26, 1983) was an American diplomat.

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Robert Ian Tricker

Bob Tricker is an expert in corporate governance who wrote the first book to use the title Corporate Governance in 1984, based on his research at Nuffield College, Oxford.

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Robert Kegan

Robert Kegan (born August 24, 1946) is an American developmental psychologist and author.

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Robert L. Shook

Robert L. Shook (born April 7, 1938) is an American author who specializes in business books.

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Robert Lee Constable

Robert "Bob" Lee Constable is a professor of computer science and first and former dean of the department at Cornell University, United States.

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Robert Maxwell

Ian Robert Maxwell (10 June 1923 – 5 November 1991), born Ján Ludvík Hyman Binyamin Hoch, was a British media proprietor and Member of Parliament (MP).

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Robert Morris (artist)

Robert Morris (born February 9, 1931 in Kansas City, Missouri) is an American sculptor, conceptual artist and writer.

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Robert Quine

Robert Wolfe Quine (December 30, 1942 – May 31, 2004) was an American guitarist, known for his innovative guitar solos.

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Robert Randall (photographer)

Robert Shelby Randall Jr. (December 17, 1918 – September 19, 1984) Search for Robert S. Randall, PHOM1, US Navy, year of death 1984.

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Robert S. Wood

Robert S. Wood (born December 25, 1936) has had a career in the dual areas of state and religion, both as a leader and advisor to senior civilian and military officials of the United States Government in the area of National security affairs, and as a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).

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Robin Miller (technology journalist)

Robin "Roblimo" Miller (October 30, 1952 – May 24, 2018) was an American journalist specializing in technology who worked for Open Source Technology Group, the company that owned Slashdot, SourceForge.net, freshmeat, Linux.com, NewsForge, and ThinkGeek from 2000 to 2008.

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Robust decision-making

Robust decision-making (RDM) is an iterative decision analytic framework that aims to help identify potential robust strategies, characterize the vulnerabilities of such strategies, and evaluate the tradeoffs among them.

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Robyn Dawes

Robyn Mason Dawes (July 23, 1936 – December 14, 2010) was an American psychologist who specialized in the field of human judgment.

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Roger Elwood

Roger Elwood (January 13, 1943 – February 2, 2007) was an American science fiction writer and editor, perhaps best known for having edited a large number of anthologies and collections for a variety of publishers in the early 1970s.

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Roman Verostko

Roman Verostko (born September 12, 1929) is an American artist and educator who creates code-generated imagery, known as algorithmic art.

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Romney family

The Romney family, prominent in U.S. politics and other professions,, Grace Wyler.

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Ron Larson

Roland "Ron" Edwin Larson (born October 31, 1941) is a professor of mathematics at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, Pennsylvania.

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Ronold W. P. King

Ronold Wyeth Percival King (September 19, 1905 – April 10, 2006) was an American applied physicist, known for his contributions to the theory and application of microwave antennas.

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Rosemary Ellen Guiley

Rosemary Ellen Guiley (born July 8, 1950) is an American writer on topics related to spirituality, the occult, and the paranormal.

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Roy Harte

Roy S. Harte (May 27, 1924 – October 26, 2003) was an American jazz drummer and co-founder of Nocturne Records and Pacific Jazz Records.

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Runge–Kutta methods

In numerical analysis, the Runge–Kutta methods are a family of implicit and explicit iterative methods, which include the well-known routine called the Euler Method, used in temporal discretization for the approximate solutions of ordinary differential equations.

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Rutherford backscattering spectrometry

Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) is an analytical technique used in materials science.

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Safari Books Online

Safari Books Online LLC is a digital library founded in July 2000 and headquartered in Sebastopol, California, with offices in Boston and Scottsdale.

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Sammy Luftspring

Sammy Luftspring was a Jewish Canadian boxer.

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Sample space

In probability theory, the sample space of an experiment or random trial is the set of all possible outcomes or results of that experiment.

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Sanjiva Weerawarana

Sanjiva Weerawarana is a CEO, software developer and open source evangelist.

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Sard's theorem

Sard's theorem, also known as Sard's lemma or the Morse–Sard theorem, is a result in mathematical analysis that asserts that the set of critical values (that is, the image of the set of critical points) of a smooth function f from one Euclidean space or manifold to another is a null set, i.e., it has Lebesgue measure 0.

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Satellite television

Satellite television is a service that delivers television programming to viewers by relaying it from a communications satellite orbiting the Earth directly to the viewer's location.

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Schell Leather Company

The Schell Leather Company (Schell Leather Goods or Schell Leather Goods Company or Schell Inc.) is a manufacturer of leather (originally), plastic, vinyl, nylon, and synthetic material goods originally based in Cincinnati, Ohio founded by Albert and Charles J. Schell at Google Patent Search at Google Patent Search from 1865 or 1870, Mitch Lubitz, The Evening Independent, 5 April 1985, p. 11-A at Google News -- Article states 115 years from 1985.

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Scientific temper

The Scientific temper is a way of life (defined in this context as an individual and social process of thinking and acting) which uses the scientific method and which may, consequently, include questioning, observing physical reality, testing, hypothesizing, analysing, and communicating (not necessarily in that order).

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Scott Cutlip

Scott Munson Cutlip (July 15, 1915 in Buckhannon, West Virginia - August 18, 2000 in Madison, Wisconsin) was a pioneer in public relations education.

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Secret Six (Chicago)

The Secret Six was a name given (by James Doherty of The Chicago Tribune) to six influential businessmen in Chicago who organized the business community against Al Capone.

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Sectoral balances

The sectoral balances (also called sectoral financial balances) are a sectoral analysis framework for macroeconomic analysis of national economies developed by British economist Wynne Godley.

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Sed

sed (stream editor) is a Unix utility that parses and transforms text, using a simple, compact programming language.

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Sedimentary rock

Sedimentary rocks are types of rock that are formed by the deposition and subsequent cementation of that material at the Earth's surface and within bodies of water.

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SEE-I

SEE-I is a method of clarification and understanding.

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Selective Repeat ARQ

Selective Repeat ARQ / Selective Reject ARQ is a specific instance of the Automatic Repeat-Request (ARQ) protocol used to solve sequence number dilemma in communications.

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Separation of powers in Singapore

Separation of powers in Singapore is founded on the concept of constitutionalism, which is itself primarily based upon distrust of power and thus the desirability of limited government.

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Sequentially compact space

In mathematics, a topological space is sequentially compact if every infinite sequence has a convergent subsequence.

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Serial art

Serial art is an art movement in which uniform elements or objects were assembled in accordance with strict modular principles.

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Server (computing)

In computing, a server is a computer program or a device that provides functionality for other programs or devices, called "clients".

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Service normalization pattern

Service normalization is a design pattern, applied within the service-orientation design paradigm, whose application ensures that services that are part of the same service inventory do not contain any redundant functionality.

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Seven Basic Tools of Quality

The Seven Basic Tools of Quality is a designation given to a fixed set of graphical techniques identified as being most helpful in troubleshooting issues related to quality as per The American Society for Quality.

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Sheridan Titman

Sheridan Dean Titman is a professor of finance at the University of Texas at Austin, where he holds the McAllister Centennial Chair in Financial Services at the McCombs School of Business.

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Shielding gas

Shielding gases are inert or semi-inert gases that are commonly used in several welding processes, most notably gas metal arc welding and gas tungsten arc welding (GMAW and GTAW, more popularly known as MIG and TIG, respectively).

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Shift-invariant system

A shift invariant system is the discrete equivalent of a time-invariant system, defined such that if y(n) is the response of the system to x(n), then y(n–k) is the response of the system to x(n–k).

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Shine On, Harvest Moon

"Shine On, Harvest Moon" is a popular early-1900s song credited to the married vaudeville team Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth.

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Shmuel Joseph Schweig

Samuel Joseph Schweig, in Israel known as Shmuel Yosef Schweig (1905 in Tarnopol, Austria-Hungary – 19 March 1985 in Jerusalem, Israel) was an Israeli photographer.

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Sigmund Suskind

Sigmund Richard Suskind was a microbiologist.

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Signal processing

Signal processing concerns the analysis, synthesis, and modification of signals, which are broadly defined as functions conveying "information about the behavior or attributes of some phenomenon", such as sound, images, and biological measurements.

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Signaling (telecommunications)

In telecommunication, signaling has the following meanings.

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Significand

The significand (also mantissa or coefficient) is part of a number in scientific notation or a floating-point number, consisting of its significant digits.

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Simon & Schuster

Simon & Schuster, Inc., a subsidiary of CBS Corporation, is an American publishing company founded in New York City in 1924 by Richard Simon and Max Schuster.

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Simple precedence grammar

A simple precedence grammar is a context-free formal grammar that can be parsed with a simple precedence parser.

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Simulation preorder

In theoretical computer science a simulation preorder is a relation between state transition systems associating systems which behave in the same way in the sense that one system simulates the other.

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Singing

Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice and augments regular speech by the use of sustained tonality, rhythm, and a variety of vocal techniques.

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Single responsibility principle

The single responsibility principle is a computer programming principle that states that every module or class should have responsibility over a single part of the functionality provided by the software, and that responsibility should be entirely encapsulated by the class.

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Sitting Bull

Sitting Bull (Tȟatȟáŋka Íyotake in Standard Lakota orthography, also nicknamed Húŋkešni or "Slow"; c. 1831 – December 15, 1890) was a Hunkpapa Lakota leader who led his people during years of resistance to United States government policies.

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Slavery in Africa

Slavery has historically been widespread in Africa, and still continues today in some countries.

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Sliding mode control

In control systems, sliding mode control, or SMC, is a nonlinear control method that alters the dynamics of a nonlinear system by application of a discontinuous control signal (or more rigorously, a set-valued control signal) that forces the system to "slide" along a cross-section of the system's normal behavior.

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Slough (hydrology)

A slough is a wetland, usually a swamp or shallow lake, often a backwater to a larger body of water.

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Social Foundations of Thought and Action

Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory is a landmark work in psychology published in 1986 by Albert Bandura.

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Social psychology

Social psychology is the study of how people's thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others.

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Social stigma

Social stigma is disapproval of (or discontent with) a person based on socially characteristic grounds that are perceived.

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Software design pattern

In software engineering, a software design pattern is a general, reusable solution to a commonly occurring problem within a given context in software design.

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Software framework

In computer programming, a software framework is an abstraction in which software providing generic functionality can be selectively changed by additional user-written code, thus providing application-specific software.

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Soil

Soil is a mixture of organic matter, minerals, gases, liquids, and organisms that together support life.

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Sol Berkowitz

Sol Berkowitz (27 April 1922 – 29 July 2006) was an American composer and music educator.

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South Shore Furniture

South Shore Furniture (incorporated as Les Industries de la Rive Sud Ltée and also known as Meubles Rive Sud) is a Canadian furniture manufacturer.

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Space Invaders

is an arcade game created by Tomohiro Nishikado and released in 1978.

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Space telescope

A space telescope or space observatory is an instrument located in outer space to observe distant planets, galaxies and other astronomical objects.

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Spacistor

The spacistor was a type of transistor developed in the 1950s as an improvement over the point-contact transistor and the later alloy junction transistor.

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SPARC

SPARC, for Scalable Processor Architecture, is a reduced instruction set computing (RISC) instruction set architecture (ISA) originally developed by Sun Microsystems.

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Spharophon

The Sphärophon or a Spherophone is an electrical musical instrument that was first made as the "Electrophon" around 1921 by Jörg Mager, later modified, renamed and exhibited in 1926.

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Spiro Mounds

Spiro Mounds (34 LF 40) is a major Northern Caddoan Mississippian archaeological site located in present-day Eastern Oklahoma.

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Split labor market theory

Split labor market theory was proposed by sociologist Edna Bonacich in the early 1970s as an attempt to explain racial/ethnic tensions and labor market segmentation by race/ethnicity in terms of social structure and political power rather than individual-level prejudice.

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Spoofing attack

In the context of network security, a spoofing attack is a situation in which a person or program successfully masquerades as another by falsifying data, to gain an illegitimate advantage.

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Spool heel

A spool heel is a heel that is wide at the top and bottom and narrower in the middle, so resembling a cotton reel or an hourglass.

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Springtail

Springtails (Collembola) form the largest of the three lineages of modern hexapods that are no longer considered insects (the other two are the Protura and Diplura).

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St-planar graph

In graph theory, an st-planar graph is a bipolar orientation of a plane graph for which both the source and the sink of the orientation are on the outer face of the graph.

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St. John the Baptist (Ghiberti)

St.

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Stable isotope ratio

The term stable isotope has a meaning similar to stable nuclide, but is preferably used when speaking of nuclides of a specific element.

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State observer

In control theory, a state observer is a system that provides an estimate of the internal state of a given real system, from measurements of the input and output of the real system.

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Statistical inference

Statistical inference is the process of using data analysis to deduce properties of an underlying probability distribution.

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Statistical signal processing

Statistical signal processing is an approach to signal processing which treats signals as stochastic processes, utilizing their statistical properties to perform signal processing tasks.

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Stephen Brobst

Stephen Brobst (born September 21, 1962) is an American technology executive.

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Stephen Crane

Stephen Crane (November 1, 1871 – June 5, 1900) was an American poet, novelist, and short story writer.

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Stephen P. Boyd

Stephen P. Boyd is an American professor and control theorist.

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Stephen Schiff

Stephen Schiff is an American screenwriter and journalist.

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Steve Turre

Stephen Johnson Turre (born 12 September 1948 Omaha, Nebraska) is an American jazz trombonist and a pioneer of using seashells as instruments, a composer, arranger, and educator at the collegiate-conservatory level.

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Steve Turre discography

Steve Turre (né Stephen Johnson Turre; born 12 September 1948 Omaha, Nebraska) is an American jazz trombonist, a pioneering musical seashell virtuoso, a composer, arranger, and educator at the collegiate-conservatory level who, for years, has been active in jazz, rock, and Latin jazz – in live venues, recording studios, television, and cinema production.

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Stiff diagram

A Stiff diagram, or Stiff pattern, is a graphical representation of chemical analyses, first developed by H.A. Stiff in 1951.

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Stiff equation

In mathematics, a stiff equation is a differential equation for which certain numerical methods for solving the equation are numerically unstable, unless the step size is taken to be extremely small.

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Strategic leadership

Strategic Leadership is the ability to influence others to voluntarily make decisions that enhance the prospects for the organisation's long-term success while maintaining long-term financial stability.

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Strict-feedback form

In control theory, dynamical systems are in strict-feedback form when they can be expressed as \dot_1.

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Structural material

Structural engineering depends on the knowledge of materials and their properties, in order to understand how different materials support and resist loads.

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Stuart Madnick

Stuart E. Madnick (born 1944) is an American computer scientist, and professor of information technology at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology school of engineering.

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Subtle body

A subtle body is one of a series of psycho-spiritual constituents of living beings, according to various esoteric, occult, and mystical teachings.

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Superconductivity

Superconductivity is a phenomenon of exactly zero electrical resistance and expulsion of magnetic flux fields occurring in certain materials, called superconductors, when cooled below a characteristic critical temperature.

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Surface bargaining

In collective bargaining, surface bargaining is a strategy in which one of the parties "merely goes through the motions," with no intention of reaching an agreement.

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Susan Nycum

Susan H. Nycum is a lawyer who specialises in computer security and intellectual property issues.

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Symbolic anthropology

Symbolic anthropology or, more broadly, symbolic and interpretive anthropology, is the study of cultural symbols and how those symbols can be used to gain a better understanding of a particular society.

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Symmetric difference

In mathematics, the symmetric difference, also known as the disjunctive union, of two sets is the set of elements which are in either of the sets and not in their intersection.

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Syntropy (software)

Syntropy is a second-generation object-oriented analysis and software design method developed at Object Designers Limited in the UK during the early 1990s.

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System identification

The field of system identification uses statistical methods to build mathematical models of dynamical systems from measured data.

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Systematic code

In coding theory, a systematic code is any error-correcting code in which the input data is embedded in the encoded output.

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Tail drop

Tail drop is a simple queue management algorithm used by network schedulers in network equipment to decide when to drop packets.

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Tamamushi Shrine

The is a miniature shrine owned by the Hōryū-ji temple complex of Nara, Japan.

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Tansy

Tansy (Tanacetum vulgare) is a perennial, herbaceous flowering plant of the aster family, native to temperate Europe and Asia.

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Tcl

Tcl (pronounced "tickle" or tee cee ell) is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language.

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Technical support

Technical support (often shortened to tech support) refers to a plethora of services by which enterprises provide assistance to users of technology products such as mobile phones, televisions, computers, software products or other informatic, electronic or mechanical goods.

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Technostructure

Technostructure is the group of technicians, analytics within an organisation (enterprise, administrative body) with considerable influence and control on its economy.

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Temple Israel (Memphis, Tennessee)

Temple Israel is a Reform Jewish congregation in Memphis, Tennessee, in the United States.

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Territorial nationalism

Territorial nationalism describes a form of nationalism based on the belief that all inhabitants of a particular territory should share a common national identity, regardless of their ethnic, linguistic, religious, cultural and other differences.

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Terry Halpin

Terence Aidan (Terry) Halpin (born 1950s) is an Australian Computer scientist who is known for his formalization of the Object Role Modeling notation.

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Tetrode transistor

A tetrode transistor is any transistor having four active terminals.

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The Alan Parsons Project

The Alan Parsons Project were an English rock band active between 1975 and 1990, whose rosters consisted of Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson.

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The Amityville Horror

The Amityville Horror is a book by American author Jay Anson, published in September 1977.

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The Aunt and the Sluggard

"The Aunt and the Sluggard" is a short story by P. G. Wodehouse, and features the young gentleman Bertie Wooster and his valet Jeeves.

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The C Programming Language

The C Programming Language (sometimes termed K&R, after its authors' initials) is a computer programming book written by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie, the latter of whom originally designed and implemented the language, as well as co-designed the Unix operating system with which development of the language was closely intertwined.

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The Canonization

"The Canonization" is a poem by English metaphysical poet John Donne.

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The Civil War series

The Civil War book series chronicles in great detail the American Civil War.

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The Deliberate Stranger

The Deliberate Stranger is a book and television film about American serial killer Ted Bundy.

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The Economics of John Maynard Keynes

The Economics of John Maynard Keynes: The Theory of Monetary Economy is a non-fiction work by Dudley Dillard which seeks to make The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money by John Maynard Keynes understandable to both the economist and to the non-economist.

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The Pact (2002 book)

The Pact: Three Young Black Men Make a Promise and Fulfill a Dream is a 2002 New York Times Bestselling non-fiction autobiography by Sampson Davis, George Jenkins, Rameck Hunt, and Lisa Frazier.

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The Room (play)

The Room is Harold Pinter's first play, written and first produced in 1957.

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The Ten Commandments (1956 film)

The Ten Commandments is a 1956 American epic religious drama film produced, directed, and narrated by Cecil B. DeMille, shot in VistaVision (color by Technicolor), and released by Paramount Pictures.

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The Unix Programming Environment

The Unix Programming Environment, first published in 1984 by Prentice Hall, is a book written by Brian W. Kernighan and Rob Pike, both of Bell Labs and considered an important and early document of the Unix operating system.

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Theatre of Pompey

The Theatre of Pompey (Theatrum Pompeii, Teatro di Pompeo) was a structure in Ancient Rome built during the latter part of the Roman Republican era: completed in 55BC.

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Thermal oxidation

In microfabrication, thermal oxidation is a way to produce a thin layer of oxide (usually silicon dioxide) on the surface of a wafer.

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Thinking in Java

Thinking in Java is a book about the Java programming language, written by Bruce Eckel and first published in 1998.

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This Book Needs No Title

This Book Needs No Title: A Budget of Living Paradoxes is a 1980 collection of essays about logic, paradoxes, and philosophy, by Raymond Smullyan.

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Thomas C. Parramore

Dr.

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Thomas D. Clark

Thomas Dionysius Clark (July 14, 1903 – June 28, 2005) was perhaps Kentucky's most notable historian.

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Thomas Erl

Thomas Erl (born 1967) is a Canadian author, and public speaker known for major contributions to the field of service-oriented architecture.

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Those Were the Days (song)

"Those Were the Days" is a song credited to Gene Raskin, who put a new English lyric to the Russian romance song "Dorogoi dlinnoyu" ("Дорогой длинною", literally "By the long road"), composed by Boris Fomin (1900–1948) with words by the poet Konstantin Podrevsky.

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Throughput

In general terms, throughput is the maximum rate of production or the maximum rate at which something can be processed.

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Tibetan Plateau

The Tibetan Plateau, also known in China as the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau or the Qing–Zang Plateau or Himalayan Plateau, is a vast elevated plateau in Central Asia and East Asia, covering most of the Tibet Autonomous Region and Qinghai in western China, as well as part of Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir, India.

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Ticketmaster Corp. v. Tickets.com, Inc.

Ticketmaster Corp., et al.

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Tim Bell (computer scientist)

Timothy Clinton Bell is a New Zealand computer scientist, with interests in computer science education, computer music and text compression.

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Timeline of binary prefixes

This article presents a timeline of binary prefixes used to name memory units, in comparison of decimal and binary prefixes for measurement of information and computer storage.

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Timeline of computing 1950–79

No description.

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Timeline of New York City

This article is a timeline of the history of New York City in the state of New York, US.

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Tk (software)

Tk is a free and open-source, cross-platform widget toolkit that provides a library of basic elements of GUI widgets for building a graphical user interface (GUI) in many programming languages.

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To Autumn

"To Autumn" is a poem by English Romantic poet John Keats (31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821).

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Tokenism

Tokenism is the practice of making only a perfunctory or symbolic effort to be inclusive to members of minority groups, especially by recruiting a small number of people from underrepresented groups in order to give the appearance of racial or sexual equality within a workforce.

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Tom Liston

Tom Liston is a senior analyst for the Washington, D.C.-based network security consulting firm, InGuardians, Inc.

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Tom Mix

Thomas Edwin Mix (born Thomas Hezikiah Mix; January 6, 1880 – October 12, 1940) was an American film actor and the star of many early Western movies between 1909 and 1935.

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Tony Hoare

Sir Charles Antony Richard Hoare (born 11 January 1934), is a British computer scientist.

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Total quality management

Total quality management (TQM) consists of organization-wide efforts to install and make a permanent climate in which an organization continuously improves its ability to deliver high-quality products and services to customers.

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Translation lookaside buffer

A translation lookaside buffer (TLB) is a memory cache that is used to reduce the time taken to access a user memory location.

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Trinomial tree

The trinomial tree is a lattice based computational model used in financial mathematics to price options.

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Triplet state

In quantum mechanics, a triplet is a quantum state of a system with a spin of quantum number s.

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TU (Time Unit)

A time unit (TU) is a unit of time equal to 1024 microseconds.

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Tube lemma

In mathematics, particularly topology, the tube lemma is a useful tool in order to prove that the finite product of compact spaces is compact.

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Turán's theorem

In graph theory, Turán's theorem is a result on the number of edges in a ''K''''r''+1-free graph.

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TurboGears

TurboGears is a Python web application framework consisting of several WSGI components such as WebOb, SQLAlchemy, Genshi and Repoze.

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Turing (programming language)

Turing is a Pascal-like programming language developed in 1982 by Ric Holt and James Cordy, then of University of Toronto, Canada.

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Tutte polynomial

The Tutte polynomial, also called the dichromate or the Tutte–Whitney polynomial, is a graph polynomial.

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Twixt Twelve and Twenty

’Twixt Twelve and Twenty is a book by Pat Boone which offered advice to teenagers.

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Type safety

In computer science, type safety is the extent to which a programming language discourages or prevents type errors.

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Typography

Typography is the art and technique of arranging type to make written language legible, readable, and appealing when displayed.

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U.S. state

A state is a constituent political entity of the United States.

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Ubuntu (operating system)

Ubuntu (stylized as ubuntu) is a free and open source operating system and Linux distribution based on Debian.

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Ufology

Ufology is the study of reports, visual records, physical evidence, and other phenomena related to unidentified flying objects (UFO).

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Ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy of stereoisomers

Ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy (UV–vis) can distinguish between enantiomers by showing a distinct Cotton effect for each isomer.

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Umran Inan

Ümran Savaş İnan (1950 in Erzincan, Turkey) is a scientist at Koç University and Stanford University in the field of geophysics and very low frequency radio science.

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Unbounded nondeterminism

In computer science, unbounded nondeterminism or unbounded indeterminacy is a property of concurrency by which the amount of delay in servicing a request can become unbounded as a result of arbitration of contention for shared resources while still guaranteeing that the request will eventually be serviced.

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Unidentified flying object

An unidentified flying object or "UFO" is an object observed in the sky that is not readily identified.

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Unification Church

The Unification Church (UC), also called the Unification movement and sometimes colloquially the "Moonies", is a worldwide new religious movement that was founded by and is inspired by Sun Myung Moon, a Korean religious leader also known for his business ventures and support of social and political causes.

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Unification Church of the United States

The Unification Church of the United States, sometimes colloquially referred to as the "Moonies", is a new religious movement in the United States of America.

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Uniform limit theorem

In mathematics, the uniform limit theorem states that the uniform limit of any sequence of continuous functions is continuous.

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United Kingdom Election Results

United Kingdom Election Results is a website and e-book written by David Boothroyd, published in 1994.

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United States Census Bureau

The United States Census Bureau (USCB; officially the Bureau of the Census, as defined in Title) is a principal agency of the U.S. Federal Statistical System, responsible for producing data about the American people and economy.

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Universal prescriptivism

Universal prescriptivism (often simply called prescriptivism) is the meta-ethical view which claims that, rather than expressing propositions, ethical sentences function similarly to imperatives which are universalizable—whoever makes a moral judgment is committed to the same judgment in any situation where the same relevant facts obtain.

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Universally unique identifier

A universally unique identifier (UUID) is a 128-bit number used to identify information in computer systems.

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UNIX Network Programming

Unix Network Programming is a book written by W. Richard Stevens.

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Unum (number format)

The unum (universal number) format is a format similar to floating point, proposed by John Gustafson as an alternative to the now ubiquitous IEEE 754 arithmetic.

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Up the Down Staircase

Up the Down Staircase is a novel written by Bel Kaufman, published in 1964, which spent 64 weeks on ''The New York Times'' Best Seller list.

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Upland South

The terms Upland South and Upper South refer to the northern section of the Southern United States, in contrast to the Lower South or Deep South.

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Upward planar drawing

In graph drawing, an upward planar drawing of a directed acyclic graph is an embedding of the graph into the Euclidean plane, in which the edges are represented as non-crossing monotonic upwards curves.

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Urbanization in Africa

The urbanization of most of Africa is moving fast forward, especially south of the Sahara.

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Vagina

In mammals, the vagina is the elastic, muscular part of the female genital tract.

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Vagina and vulva in art

The vagina and vulva have been depicted in art from prehistory to the contemporary art era of the 21st century.

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Variable (mathematics)

In elementary mathematics, a variable is a symbol, commonly an alphabetic character, that represents a number, called the value of the variable, which is either arbitrary, not fully specified, or unknown.

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Variable structure control

Variable structure control (VSC) is a form of discontinuous nonlinear control.

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Variable structure system

A variable structure system, or VSS, is a discontinuous nonlinear system of the form where \mathbf \triangleq ^ \in \mathbb^n is the state vector, t \in \mathbb is the time variable, and \varphi(\mathbf,t) \triangleq ^: \mathbb^ \mapsto \mathbb^n is a piecewise continuous function.

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Variational method (quantum mechanics)

In quantum mechanics, the variational method is one way of finding approximations to the lowest energy eigenstate or ground state, and some excited states.

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Vasicek model

In finance, the Vasicek model is a mathematical model describing the evolution of interest rates.

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Vector space

A vector space (also called a linear space) is a collection of objects called vectors, which may be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers, called scalars.

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Vernon L. Grose

Vernon Leslie Grose (born June 27, 1928) is an American author, professor, aerospace engineer, air disaster analyst, risk management expert, and former member of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

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Victor Mollo

Victor Mollo (17 September 1909 – 24 September 1987) was a British contract bridge player, journalist and author.

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Victoria Mixon

Victoria Mixon is an American independent fiction editor and writer.

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Vienna Development Method

The Vienna Development Method (VDM) is one of the longest-established formal methods for the development of computer-based systems.

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Vincennes Trace

The Vincennes Trace was a major trackway running through what are now the American states of Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois.

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Vincennes, Indiana

Vincennes is a city in and the county seat of Knox County, Indiana, United States.

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Wabash River

The Wabash River (French: Ouabache) is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Walden

Walden (first published as Walden; or, Life in the Woods) is a book by noted transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau.

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Walden Two

Walden Two is a utopian novel written by behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner, first published in 1948.

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Wallie Herzer

Wallie Herzer (né Walter Henry Herzer; 15 April 1885 San Francisco – 15 October 1961 Redwood City, California) was an American composer of popular music, music publisher, and pianist.

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Wally Hickel

Walter Joseph "Wally" Hickel (August 18, 1919 – May 7, 2010) was an American businessman and politician.

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Walter Woon

Walter Woon Cheong Ming, SC, (born 12 September 1956) is a Singaporean lawyer, academic, diplomat and politician.

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Wave packet

In physics, a wave packet (or wave train) is a short "burst" or "envelope" of localized wave action that travels as a unit.

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WBBM-TV

WBBM-TV, virtual channel 2 (VHF digital channel 12), is a CBS owned-and-operated television station licensed to Chicago, Illinois, United States.

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Web analytics

Web analytics is the measurement, collection, analysis and reporting of web data for purposes of understanding and optimizing web usage.

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West Coast Computer Faire

The West Coast Computer Faire was an annual computer industry conference and exposition most often associated with San Francisco, its first and most frequent venue.

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When Technology Fails

When Technology Fails, edited by Neil Schlager, is a collection of 103 case studies about significant technological disasters, accidents, and failures of the 20th century.

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Wild arc

In geometric topology, a wild arc is an embedding of the unit interval into 3-dimensional space not equivalent to the usual one in the sense that there does not exist an ambient isotopy taking the arc to a straight line segment.

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Will Hudson (songwriter)

Will Hudson (né Arthur Murray Hainer; 8 March 1908 Grimsby, Ontario – 16 July 1981 Isle of Palms, South Carolina) was a Canadian-born American composer, arranger, and big band leader who flourished from the mid-1930s through the mid-1950s.

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William Alston

William Payne Alston (November 29, 1921 – September 13, 2009) was an American philosopher.

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William Ennis Thomson

William Ennis Thomson (born 1927) is an American music educator at the collegiate level, music theorist, composer, former Music School Dean and Professor at the Thornton School of Music, University of Southern California from 1980 to 1992.

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William O. Douglas

William Orville Douglas (October 16, 1898January 19, 1980) was an American jurist and politician who served as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.

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Williamson ether synthesis

The Williamson ether synthesis is an organic reaction, forming an ether from an organohalide and a deprotonated alcohol (alkoxide).

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Willy Ley

Willy Otto Oskar Ley (October 2, 1906 – June 24, 1969) was a German-American science writer, spaceflight advocate, and historian of science who helped to popularize rocketry, spaceflight, and natural history in both Germany and the United States.

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Win Mortimer

James Winslow "Win" Mortimer (May 1, 1919 – January 11, 1998) Note: The Marvel Comics 1978 Calendar merchandise lists Mortimer's birth date as June 23 and Comics Buyer's Guide lists it as May 23 per was a Canadian comic book and comic strip artist best known as one of the major illustrators of the DC Comics superhero Superman.

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Wirtinger derivatives

In complex analysis of one and several complex variables, Wirtinger derivatives (sometimes also called Wirtinger operators), named after Wilhelm Wirtinger who introduced them in 1927 in the course of his studies on the theory of functions of several complex variables, are partial differential operators of the first order which behave in a very similar manner to the ordinary derivatives with respect to one real variable, when applied to holomorphic functions, antiholomorphic functions or simply differentiable functions on complex domains.

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Women artists

Though women artists have been involved in the making of art throughout history, their work, when compared to that of their male counterparts, is often both overlooked and undervalued.

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Women in Maya society

Ancient Maya women had an important role in society: beyond propagating the culture through the bearing and raising of children, Maya women participated in economic, governmental and farming activities.

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WxWidgets

wxWidgets ("wix-widgets", formerly wxWindows) is a widget toolkit and tools library for creating graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for cross-platform applications.

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XPIDL

Cross Platform Interface Description Language (XPIDL) is the interface definition language developed by Mozilla.org to specify XPCOM interfaces.

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Yellow journalism

Yellow journalism and the yellow press are American terms for journalism and associated newspapers that present little or no legitimate well-researched news while instead using eye-catching headlines for increased sales.

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Yugoslav Partisans

The Yugoslav Partisans,Serbo-Croatian, Macedonian, Slovene: Partizani, Партизани or the National Liberation Army,Narodnooslobodilačka vojska (NOV), Народноослободилачка војска (НОВ); Народноослободителна војска (НОВ); Narodnoosvobodilna vojska (NOV) officially the National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Yugoslavia,Narodnooslobodilačka vojska i partizanski odredi Jugoslavije (NOV i POJ), Народноослободилачка војска и партизански одреди Југославије (НОВ и ПОЈ); Народноослободителна војска и партизански одреди на Југославија (НОВ и ПОЈ); Narodnoosvobodilna vojska in partizanski odredi Jugoslavije (NOV in POJ) was the Communist-led resistance to the Axis powers (chiefly Germany) in occupied Yugoslavia during World War II.

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Zeeman effect

The Zeeman effect, named after the Dutch physicist Pieter Zeeman, is the effect of splitting a spectral line into several components in the presence of a static magnetic field.

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Zero of a function

In mathematics, a zero, also sometimes called a root, of a real-, complex- or generally vector-valued function f is a member x of the domain of f such that f(x) vanishes at x; that is, x is a solution of the equation f(x).

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Zeugma and syllepsis

In rhetoric, zeugma (from the Ancient Greek ζεῦγμα,, lit. "a yoking together"Liddell, H. G. & al. A Greek-English Lexicon.. Perseus Project. Retrieved 24 January 2013.) and syllepsis (from the Ancient Greek σύλληψις,, lit. "a taking together"Random House Dictionary.. 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2013.) are figures of speech in which one single phrase or word joins different parts of a sentence.

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ZFS

ZFS is a combined file system and logical volume manager designed by Sun Microsystems and now owned by Oracle Corporation.

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Zooropa (song)

"Zooropa" is a song by Irish rock band U2.

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Zum Riesen

Zum Riesen (The Giant) is a hotel in Miltenberg, Germany and is one of the oldest hotels in the country, dating back to at least 1411.

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Zunk

Zunk was an early version of a digital image editor.

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1603 in music

The year 1603 in music involved some significant events.

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1606 in music

The year 1606 in music involved some significant events.

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1617 in music

The year 1617 in music involved some significant events.

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1652 in music

The year 1652 in music involved some significant events.

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1655 in music

The year 1655 in music involved some significant events.

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1657 in music

The year 1657 in music involved some significant events.

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1677 in music

The year 1677 in music involved some significant events.

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1683 in music

The year 1683 in music involved some significant events.

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1685 in music

The year 1685 in music involved some significant events.

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1702 in music

The year 1702 in music involved some significant events.

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1714 in music

The year 1714 in music involved some significant events.

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2008–09 Keynesian resurgence

Following the global financial crisis of 2007–08, there was a worldwide resurgence of interest in Keynesian economics among prominent economists and policy makers.

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Educational Foundation of America, Pearson Prentice Hall, Prentice Hall International, Prentice Hall PTR, Prentice Hall Pr., Prentice Hall Press, Prentice Hall Professional, Prentice Hall, Inc, Prentice Hall, Inc., Prentice hall, Prentice-Hall, Prentice-Hall Company, Prentice-Hall, Inc, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Prentice-hall, Prentice–Hall, Reston Publishing, Reston Publishing Company, Reston Publishing Company, Inc., Reston Software, Richard Prentice Ettinger.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prentice_Hall

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