Dell computer parts

December 31, 2007

Little Miss Marker

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 9:43 pm

For other meanings, see the disambiguation page Marker

Little Miss Marker (also known as The Girl in Pawn) is a 1934 film starring Shirley Temple, Adolphe Menjou and Dorothy Dell.


Synopsis

The film tells the story of “Marky” (Temple), whose father gives her to a gangster-run gambling operation as a “marker” (collateral) for a bet. When the man loses his bet and commits suicide, the gangsters are left with the girl on their hands. They decide to keep her temporarily and use her to help pull off one of their fixed races, naming her the owner of the horse to be used in the race.

Marky is sent to live with bookie Sorrowful Jones (Menjou). Initially upset about being forced to look after the girl, the gangster eventually begins to develop a father-daughter relationship with her. His fellow gangsters become fond of her and begin to fill the roles of her extended family. Bangles (Dell), the girlfriend of gang kingpin Big Steve (Bickford) also begins to care for Marky. Being around the gang has a somewhat bad influence on the child, and she begins to develop a cynical nature and a wide vocabulary of gambling terminology and slang.


Cast

The film stars Shirley Temple, Adolphe Menjou, Charles Bickford, Lynn Overman, and Dorothy Dell. Overman’s character, Regret, is meant to be mafia accountant Otto Berman, best friend of writer Damon Runyon, who wrote the story on which the film is based.


Recognition

The film has been deemed “culturally significant” by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.


Remakes

The film was remade in 1949 as Sorrowful Jones with Bob Hope and Lucille Ball and again as Little Miss Marker in 1980 with Walter Matthau, Julie Andrews, Tony Curtis, Bob Newhart, Brian Dennehy, and Lee Grant.


External links

Information

Ethnography of communication

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:39 pm

The Ethnography of communication (EOC) is the a method of discourse analysis in linguistics, which draws on the anthropological field of ethnography. Unlike ethnography proper, though, it takes both language and culture to be constitutive as well as constructive. According to Deborah Cameron (2001), EOC can be thought of as the application of ethnographic methods to the communication patterns of a group. Littlejohn & Foss (2005) recall that Dell Hymes suggests that “cultures communicate in different ways, but all forms of communication require a shared code, communicators who know and use the code, a channel, a setting, a message form, a topic, and an event created by transmission of the message (p. 312).”

So, EOC can be used as a means by which to study the interactions among members of various cultures: being able to discern which communication acts and/or codes are important to different groups, what types of meanings groups apply to different communication events, and how group members learn these codes provides insight into particular communities. This additional insight may be used to enhance communication with group members, make sense of group members’ decisions, and distinguish groups from one another, among other things.


History

Originally coined “Ethnography of speaking” in Dell Hymes eponymous 1962 paper, it was redefined in his 1964 paper, Introduction: Toward Ethnographies of Communication to accommodate for the non-vocal and non-verbal characteristics of communication.


Notable studies

Several research studies have used ethnography of communication as a methodological tool when conducting empirical research. A couple examples of this work include: Philipsen’s (1975) study which examined the ways in which blue-collar men living near Chicago communicated or did not communicate based on communication context; and Katriel’s (1990) study of Israeli communication acts involving griping and joking about national and public problems. These studies not only identify communication acts, codes, rules, functions, and norms, but they also offer different ways in which the method can be applied.


References

  • Hymes, D.H. (1962). “The ethnography of speaking”. T. Gladwin and W. C. Sturtevant (eds) Anthropology and Human Behaviour. Washington, D. C.: Anthropology Society of Washington.
  • Katriel, T. (1990). ‘Griping’ as a verbal ritual in some Israeli discourse. In D. Carbaugh (Ed.), Cultural Communication and Intercultural Contact. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, pp. 99-114.
  • Lindlof, T. R, & Taylor, B. C. (2002). Qualitative Communication Research Methods 2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 44-47.
  • Littlejohn, S. W., & Foss, K. A. (2005). Theories of human communication (8th ed.). USA: Thompson Wadsworth, pp. 312-315.
  • Philipsen, G. (1975). Speaking “like a man” in Teamsterville: Culture patterns of role enactment in an urban neighborhood. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 61, 13-22.

Information

  • sale cheap laptops used laptop and refurbished computer Computer thinkpad pavilion presario canada. Laptop - Notebook Computer ordering Cheap notebook parts ibm Lenovo thinkpad · Dell Latitude D600 D400
  • Dell Recycling Dell is a direct partner to businesses and consumers that delivers innovative impact of old computers, computer parts and other electronic products.

Sabrina Simoni

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:21 am

Sabrina Simoni was born in Bologna, Italy in 1969 and has been interested in classical music since her childhood. She graduated from Music Conservatory in Ferrara. She joined the Institute of Antoniano di Bologna around 1991. At first she was working with the teenager/studentchoir Le Verdi Note. When Mariele Ventre, the conductor of the better known Antoniano children’s choir Piccolo Coro dell’ Antoniano had to have an urgent operation exactly during the preparations of the 1992 children’s songfestival Zecchino d´Oro, she asked Sabrina Simoni and her friend Antonella Tosti (ex-Piccolo Coro singer) to take charge of the children’s choir and the preparations for the festival. Afterwards, Mariele Ventre has been teaching and preparing Sabrina Simoni to one day take over the direction of the Piccolo Coro. After Mariele Ventre’s death in 1995, Sabrina became the new conductor of the Piccolo Coro dell’ Antoniano.
Her job as conductor and music teacher to very young children has led Sabrina Simoni to publish two children’s books: Favole inCanto (2003) and La tastiera incantata (2003). Both books have the goal of developing a young child’s musical ear in a playful manner.

External link :

  • Sabrina Simoni info at Official Homepage of Antoniano

Information

  • Dell Recycling As personal computers have become common in most homes, there is a growing concern about the environmental impact of old computers, computer parts and other

Flashing Swords!

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 5:07 am

Flashing Swords! was a series of fantasy anthologies published by Dell Books from 1973 to 1981 under the editorship of Lin Carter. It showcased the heroic fantasy work of the members of the Swordsmen and Sorcerers’ Guild of America (SAGA), a somewhat informal literary group active from the 1960s to the 1980s, of which Carter was the guiding force. Most of the important sword and sorcery writers at the time of the group’s founding were members; later, membership was extended to other fantasy authors.

The Flashing Swords! series provides a cross-section of the heroic fantasy of the period. Carter and SAGA also sponsored The Gandalf Award from 1974-1981. With the collapse of Carter’s health in the 1980s the anthology series, the Gandalf award, and likely SAGA itself all went into abeyance.


The series

Flashing Swords #1 (ed. .Lin Carter, Dell 2640, July 1973, 266 pp.)

Contents:

  1. Introduction: Of Swordsmen and Sorcerers by Lin Carter
  2. The Sadness of the Executioner (Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser) by Fritz Leiber
  3. Morreion (Dying Earth) by Jack Vance
  4. The Merman’s Children by Poul Anderson
  5. The Higher Heresies of Oolimar (Amalric the Mangod) by Lin Carter

Flashing Swords! #2 (ed. Lin Carter, Dell 3123, February 1974, 268 pp.

Contents:

  1. Introduction: Flashing Swords and Black Magicians by Lin Carter
  2. The Rug and the Bull (Pusad) by L. Sprague de Camp
  3. The Jade Man’s Eyes (Elric of Melniboné) by Michael Moorcock
  4. Toads of Grimmerdale (Witch World) by Andre Norton
  5. Ghoul’s Garden (Brak the Barbarian) by John Jakes

Flashing Swords! #3: Warriors and Wizards (ed. Lin Carter, Dell 2579, August 1976, 272 pp.)

Contents:

  1. Introduction: Warriors and Wizards by Lin Carter
  2. Two Yards of Dragon (Eudoric Dambertson) by L. Sprague de Camp
  3. The Frost Monstreme (Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser) by Fritz Leiber
  4. Spider Silk (Witch World) by Andre Norton
  5. The Curious Custom of the Turjan Seraad (Amalrik the Mangod) by Lin Carter
  6. Caravan to Illiel by Avram Davidson

Flashing Swords! #4: Barbarians and Black Magicians (ed. Lin Carter, Dell 0-440-12627-4, November 1977, 272 pp.)

Contents:

  1. Introduction: Of Warriors and Wizards by Lin Carter
  2. The Bagful of Dreams (Dying Earth) by Jack Vance
  3. The Tupilak by Poul Anderson
  4. Storm in a Bottle (Brak the Barbarian) by John Jakes
  5. Swords Against the Marluk (Deryni) by Katherine Kurtz
  6. The Lands Beyond the World (Elric of Melniboné) by Michael Moorcock

Flashing Swords! #5: Demons and Daggers (ed. Lin Carter, Dell 0-440-12590-1, December 1981, 250 pp.)

Contents:

  1. Introduction: Where Magic Reigns by Lin Carter
  2. Tower of Ice (Dilvish) by Roger Zelazny
  3. A Thief in Korianth by C. J. Cherryh
  4. Parting Gifts by Diane Duane
  5. A Dealing with Demons (Ebenezum) by Craig Shaw Gardner
  6. The Dry Season by Tanith Lee

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December 30, 2007

Pico BTX

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 9:17 pm

Pico BTX is a computer motherboard and system form factor. Pico BTX motherboards are relatively small, smaller than current small ‘micro’ sized motherboards hence the name ‘pico’. They share a common top-half with the other sizes in the BTX line, but sport only 1-2 expansion slots, designed for half-height or riser-card applications.


Availability

As of January 2007, there are very limited numbers of OEM motherboards and cases for Pico BTX. Complete systems are available from Dell, which embraced BTX quickly within its desktop product line, and appears to use Pico BTX boards in its smallest machines, though no claims are made by Dell in there marketing materials.

Intel as the mainstream mainboard manufacturer is making such boards


See also

  • BTX (Balanced Technology Extended) form factor.


External links

  • Intel BTX press releases: http://www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/p4/btx/
  • Intel sponsored specification site: http://www.formfactors.org/FFDetail.asp?FFID=12&CatID=1
  • Production Intel Pico BTX Motherboard DQ965WC: http://www.intel.com/products/motherboard/DQ965WC/index.htm

Information

Janus (DRM)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:02 pm

Janus is the codename for portable version of Windows Media DRM for portable devices, whose marketing name is Windows Media DRM for Portable Devices (or in short form WMDRM-PD) introduced by Microsoft in 2004 for use on portable media devices which store and access content offline. Napster To Go was the first online music store to require the Janus technology. Supporting Janus often implies that the device also make use of the Media Transfer Protocol (MTP).
Note furthermore that supporting Janus initially also required the device not to support non-Microsoft audio formats such as Ogg Vorbis (Ogg Vorbis being a patent-free open-source encoding format, a competitor of the MP3 and WMA formats), however this has been revoked since. <ref name=”OGG”></ref>


Characteristics

To support Janus devices must support:

  • Secure time
  • License storage for content items
  • Meters

All these are supported by way of challenge-response authentication commands.


Stores that require Janus on portable devices

  • AOL Music Now
  • iMesh
  • BearShare
  • Napster To Go
  • F.Y.E. Download Zone
  • Yahoo! Music Unlimited
  • Rhapsody To Go
  • Ruckus
  • Tesco Downloads
  • Zune Marketplace


Portable devices that use Janus

  • Audiovox SMT 5600 Smartphone
  • Toshiba Gigabeat S
  • Cowon iAudio X5 (as of firmware 2.11b1)
  • Cowon iAudio U3
  • All Creative Zen portable players (except the Creative Zen Stone and Stone Plus)
  • Dell DJ 20GB (Gen 2)
  • Dell DJ 30GB
  • Dell Pocket DJ
  • iriver Clix
  • iriver H10 series (with MTP firmware only)
  • iriver H320 (US version only, after upgrading to EU/KR/JP firmware DRM capabilities are lost)
  • iriver H340 (US version only, after upgrading to EU/KR/JP firmware DRM capabilities are lost)
  • iriver PMC-120 (Portable Media Center)
  • Samsung YH-925 (Not Australian or European version as you lose onboard radio if you upgrade the firmware)
  • Samsung YH-999 Portable Media Center
  • Samsung YP-T7Z
  • Samsung YP-U2JXB/W
  • Palm OS devices using Pocket Tunes software
  • Archos 404
  • Archos 504
  • Archos 604
  • Archos 604 Wifi
  • Archos AV700
  • Archos AV500
  • Archos Gmini402
  • Archos Gmini500
  • All Windows Mobile devices running Windows Media Player 10
  • Nokia N91
  • TrekStor vibez
  • Microsoft Zune (Though incompatible with any of the PlaysForSure stores.)
  • Sandisk Sansa


References

<references/>


External links

  • ,Google Patent
  • AOL Music Now
  • Napster To Go Homepage
  • F.Y.E. Download Center
  • Y! Music Unlimited
  • Rhapsody
  • Nokia N72
  • Cowon iAudio X5 firmware

Information

Alan Dell

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 6:26 pm

Alan Dell (March 8, 1924 - August 18, 1995) was a BBC radio broadcaster, who probably did more than anyone else in the last quarter of the 20th century in Britain to ensure that the dance band music of the 1920s, 30s and early 40s remained in the public consciousness.


Formative years

Dell grew up in South Africa where he graduated from Keamsey College in Natal. He joined the South African Broadcasting Corporation in 1943, introducing for several years a programme called Rhythm Club. Moving to England in the 1950s, Dell worked on Radio Luxembourg (which then had recording studios in London), the BBC Light Programme and its successor Radio 2 until shortly before his death.


The Dance Band Days

Dell’s most celebrated programme, The Dance Band Days, ran from 1969 (initially - and perhaps ironically - on Radio 1, the BBC’s “pop” channel, launched in 1967 as a replacement for the offshore pirate stations) until 1995 and, in later years, did so in a sequence on Monday evenings with Dell’s “other side”, The Big Band Sound. The former included recordings by the likes of Jack Hylton, Ambrose, Henry Hall, Geraldo and other dance bandleaders. The main elements of these programmes were retained after Dell’s death, in a Sunday night programme introduced on Radio 2 by Malcolm Laycock that was still running in 2007. (Dance band recordings were sometimes played also on the digital channel PrimeTime Radio 2000-6.)


Other work for the BBC

Though Dell mostly presented programmes of music from the dance band and swing eras, he was also an early presenter of Pick of the Pops in 1956 and, in his later years, of Sounds Easy, a Sunday afternoon programme on Radio 2 which was notable for its attention to the recordings of Frank Sinatra and Peggy Lee (both of whom he pre-deceased). He has won a 1983 Grammy Award in the Best Historical Album category for The Tommy Dorsey/Frank Sinatra Sessions - Vols. 1, 2 & 3.


Digital technology

In the 1980s, with the onset of digital technology, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation used the Packman Audio Noise Suppressor, a machine developed by a sound engineer, Robert Parker (1936-2005), to produce stereophonic sound of high quality from 78rpm mono recordings (see The Stage, 1 March 2005). Dell provided the sleeve notes for Dance Bands UK (1988), a BBC compact disc of ABC “transfer” recordings, thereby illustrating his authority as a historian of such music.

Information

WS-Management

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 6:03 pm

WS-Management is a specification of a SOAP-based protocol, based on Web Services, for the management of servers, devices, applications and more. The specification was published in March, 2005 by a group of companies, including AMD, Dell, Intel, Microsoft, Sun Microsystems and others.

The specification is quite rich, supporting much more than get/set of simple variables, and in that it is closer to WBEM or Netconf than to SNMP. A mapping of the DMTF-originated Common Information Model into WS-Management was also defined.


External links

  • WS-Management specifications
  • WS-Management introduction
  • Openwsman: Open-source implementation of WS-Management
  • Wiseman: Open-source java implementation of WS-Management
  • SOA4D (Service Oriented for Devices): Open-source C implementation of DPWS stack and WS-Management

Information

Bodnant Garden

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 4:58 pm

Bodnant Garden is a National Trust property in Tal-y-Cafn, Colwyn Bay, near Conwy, North Wales.

This important garden occupies an area of over 80 acres surrounding Bodnant House, most of which was first laid out by Henry Davis Pochin, a successful industrial chemist, from 1874 onwards until his death in 1895. Bodnant House had been built in 1792 but was remodelled by Pochin and on his death it was inherited by his daughter (whose husband became the first Baron Aberconway in 1911). The garden, but not the House or other parts of the estate, was presented to the National Trust, with an endowment, in 1949. The House was the home of the late Lord Aberconway, and members of his family continue to be actively involved in the management of the garden, its tea pavilion and car parks on behalf of the National Trust.

The gardens are varied and include formal gardens bounded by clipped box hedges, ornamental pools and formal herbaceous borders, an enclosed larburnum arch and many rose gardens. However, Bodnant is most famous for its breeding programme, especially of varieties of Rhododendrons and azaleas examples of which are now grown throughout the world. Also noted are the collections of Magnolia, Camellia, Clematis and Hydrangea.

Bodnant Garden is situated above the River Conwy and overlooks the valley towards the Carneddau range of mountains. Begun in 1875, it is the creation of four generations of Aberconways and is divided into two parts: the upper level (around the house) features huge Italianate terraces, specimen trees and formal lawns, with paths descending to at lower level “The Dell” with a wooded valley, stream and wild garden below. Included within the Dell are the Old Mill, the mill pond with the mill race and an attractive spillway waterfall into the River Hiraethlyn, to give the delightful babbling brook through the Dell its proper name.

Of the many specimen trees within the Dell and the Woodland, notable are several Californian Redwoods including Sequoiadendron giganteum planted in 1886 and at 146 feet high, surpassed in height only by another tree from the western United States, the Oregon Douglas Fir Pseudotsuga menziesit at 158 feet. From China in 1949 came the Dawn Redwood, previously known only from fossils and believed to have been extinct.

Above the Dell is “The Poem”, the family mausoleum from which a network of paths leads through shrubberies and the Rosemary garden to the front lawn (separated from the old park by a ha-ha) and across the lawn to the Round garden.


References

  • The Garden at Bodnant Jarrold Publishing Norwich and Bodnant Garden, 2001.


External links

  • Bodnant Garden information at the National Trust
  • Welcome to Bodnant Garden
  • Bodnant Garden Illustrated Guide to Snowdonia
  • A Visit to Bodnant Garden

Information

Bedford-St. Martin’s

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 2:02 pm

Bedford/St. Martin’s is a United States publishing company, specializing in college humanities textbooks. Bedford/St. Martin’s is part of the Bedford, Freeman, and Worth Publishing group owned by the Stuttgart, Germany-based Georg von Holtzbrinck Publishing Group. Editorial offices are located in Boston and New York. The company was founded in 1981 by Charles Christensen as Bedford Books, an imprint of St. Martin’s Press. The current President is Joan Feinberg.

Bedford/St. Martin’s publishes some of the most successful[1] textbooks in the publishing industry, including, A Writer’s Reference by Diana Hacker, Patterns for College Writing, The Bedford Reader, The American Promise and more. The texts are widely adopted in college courses as well as high school Advanced Placement courses. St. Martin’s Press is related.


See also

  • The Bedford Reader


External links

  • [2]

Information

Xdrive

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:33 am

The term xDrive can refer to the following:

  • BMW xDrive, an all-wheel-drive system that powers the BMW X3 and the BMW X5, and also available in certain 3 Series and 5 Series models.
  • Xdrive, a subsidiary of AOL that offers 5 Gigabytes of free online storage/remote backup service or higher levels of storage for monthly fees.

Information

EmperorLinux

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 5:45 am

EmperorLinux, Inc.[1], was founded in 1999 on the premise that Linux users needed a source for fully out-of-the-box supported laptops. EmperorLinux was started by Lincoln Durey, a EE Ph.D. from Tulane University. The company’s first product was the BlackPerl Linux laptop, based on a Sony VAIO 505TR with a highly modified Linux kernel. Since 1999 the company has added a range of IBM ThinkPads, Dell Latitudes, and Sharp laptops to its lineup.

These laptops are available with most major Linux distributions[2], including Fedora, RHEL, Debian, Ubuntu, and SuSE. Significant improvements to stock Linux distributions come from the empkernel[3], and a carefully configured /etc directory. Supported features include APM and ACPI suspend and hibernate support, CPU throttling, LCD backlight brightness control, wireless, and generally full support of the hardware under Linux.

The company is privately held and based in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.


External links

  • Company Website

Information

Dracula (Dell Comics)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 5:41 am

Dracula is a superhero comic book series published by Dell Comics, based on the three classic Universal Pictures monsters (The other two titles were Frankenstein and Werewolf).


Publication history

Dracula lasted 3 issues from 1966 through 1967, numbered 2 through 4. (#1, published in 1962, was an adaptation of the 1931 film). In 1972-73, Dell reprinted the series, numbering them #6-8 (the reason for skipping issue #5 is unknown).


Series background

The hero of the comic, Dracula, is a direct descendant of the original Count Dracula, now working as a medical researcher in the old Dracula castle. Due to his experiments, he gains certain bat-like powers (like being able to turn into a bat, etc.). He then embarks on a superhero career, making a costume and leaving for America (since the local peasants have burned down his castle). In America, he adopts the secret identity of “Al U. Card.” In issue #4, his lab assistant B.B. Beebe accidentally gains the same powers, and became his sidekick, Fleeta.


References

  • Dracula’s entry at International Catalog of Superheroes
  • Dracula’s entry at Toonopedia

Information

American Book Award

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 5:27 am

The American Book Award was established in 1978 by the Before Columbus Foundation. It seeks to recognize outstanding literary achievement by contemporary American authors, without restriction to race, sex, ethnic background, or genre. It was established partially in response to more restrictive or ordered awards such as the National Book Awards.


Source

  • List of Past Winners

Information

River Edge Elementary School District

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 4:31 am

The River Edge Elementary School District is a community public school district that serves students in Kindergarten through sixth grade from River Edge, in Bergen County, New Jersey, in the United States.

River Edge shares secondary schooling with Oradell. Together, they make up the River Dell Regional School District. Students in grades 7 and 8 attend River Dell Regional Middle School in River Edge. Students in grades 9 - 12 attend River Dell Regional High School in Oradell.


Awards and recognition

During the 1998-99 school year, Cherry Hill School received the Blue Ribbon Award from the United States Department of Education, the highest honor that an American school can achieve.<ref>Blue Ribbon Schools Program: Schools Recognized 1982-1983 through 1999-2002 (PDF), accessed May 11, 2006.</ref>


Schools

River Edge has two primary schools as part of the district, both of which serve students in Kindergarten through 6th grade. Schools in the district (with 2004-05 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics<ref>data for the River Edge Elementary School District, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed September 6, 2007.</ref>) are:

  • Cherry Hill School (578 students) which is on the south side of town.

    • Denise Heitman - Principal of Cherry Hill Elementary School
  • Roosevelt School (526 students) which is located on the north side of town.
    • Anthony Vouvalides - Principal of Roosevelt Elementary School


Administration

  • Erika Steinbauer - Superintendent of Schools
  • Debbie Trainor - School Business Administrator / Board Secretary
  • Rosemary Kuruc - Supervisor of Special Services
  • John Lyons - Supervisor of Buildings and Grounds


References


External links

  • River Edge Elementary School District
  • National Center for Education Statistics data for the River Edge Elementary School District
  • River Dell Regional School District

Information

Dell Theory of Conflict Prevention

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 4:26 am

Dell Theory of Conflict Prevention also known as simply “Dell Theory” has been presented by Thomas Friedman in his book The World Is Flat.

“The Dell Theory stipulates: No two countries that are both part of a major global supply chain, like Dell’s, will ever fight a war against each other as long as they are both part of the same global supply chain.” – The World is Flat (ISBN 1-59397-668-2), Thomas L. Friedman, pg 421

That is, as long as corporations have major supply chain operations in countries other than that corporation’s home country, those countries will never engage in armed conflicts. This is due to the economic interdependence between nations that arises from a large corporation (such as Dell) having supply chain operations in multiple global locations and the reluctance of developing nations (in which supply chain operations commonly take place) to give up their new found wealth.

In his previous book The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Thomas argued that, no two nations with a McDonald’s franchise had ever gone to war with one another. This was known as the Golden Arches theory. But later upgraded that theory into the “Dell Theory of Conflict Prevention” by saying that people or nations don’t just want to have a better standard of living as symbolized by McDonald’s franchise in their downtown, but want to have the lump of the labour sector that is created by globalization. That is, developing nations do not want to risk the trust of the multi-national companies who venture into their markets and include them in the global supply chain.

Thomas Friedman also warns in his book The World Is Flat that the Dell Theory should not be interpreted as a guarantee that nations who are deeply involved in global supply chains will not go to war with each other. It rather means that the governments of these nations and their citizens will have very heavy economic costs to consider as they contemplate the possibility of war. These costs include the long-term loss of the country’s profitable participation in the global supply chain.


References

  • Global is good, excerpt from book, The Guardian, April 2005 via Google Cache


See also

  • The World Is Flat
  • Big Mac Index
  • Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention
  • Madonal

Information

December 29, 2007

River Edge Elementary School District

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:25 pm

The River Edge Elementary School District is a community public school district that serves students in Kindergarten through sixth grade from River Edge, in Bergen County, New Jersey, in the United States.

River Edge shares secondary schooling with Oradell. Together, they make up the River Dell Regional School District. Students in grades 7 and 8 attend River Dell Regional Middle School in River Edge. Students in grades 9 - 12 attend River Dell Regional High School in Oradell.


Awards and recognition

During the 1998-99 school year, Cherry Hill School received the Blue Ribbon Award from the United States Department of Education, the highest honor that an American school can achieve.<ref>Blue Ribbon Schools Program: Schools Recognized 1982-1983 through 1999-2002 (PDF), accessed May 11, 2006.</ref>


Schools

River Edge has two primary schools as part of the district, both of which serve students in Kindergarten through 6th grade. Schools in the district (with 2004-05 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics<ref>data for the River Edge Elementary School District, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed September 6, 2007.</ref>) are:

  • Cherry Hill School (578 students) which is on the south side of town.

    • Denise Heitman - Principal of Cherry Hill Elementary School
  • Roosevelt School (526 students) which is located on the north side of town.
    • Anthony Vouvalides - Principal of Roosevelt Elementary School


Administration

  • Erika Steinbauer - Superintendent of Schools
  • Debbie Trainor - School Business Administrator / Board Secretary
  • Rosemary Kuruc - Supervisor of Special Services
  • John Lyons - Supervisor of Buildings and Grounds


References


External links

  • River Edge Elementary School District
  • National Center for Education Statistics data for the River Edge Elementary School District
  • River Dell Regional School District

Information

  • Dell Support Dell Support. Welcome to Dell Support, please select your country/area. Select A Country/Area. Australia · China |中国

Bodnant Garden

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:29 pm

Bodnant Garden is a National Trust property in Tal-y-Cafn, Colwyn Bay, near Conwy, North Wales.

This important garden occupies an area of over 80 acres surrounding Bodnant House, most of which was first laid out by Henry Davis Pochin, a successful industrial chemist, from 1874 onwards until his death in 1895. Bodnant House had been built in 1792 but was remodelled by Pochin and on his death it was inherited by his daughter (whose husband became the first Baron Aberconway in 1911). The garden, but not the House or other parts of the estate, was presented to the National Trust, with an endowment, in 1949. The House was the home of the late Lord Aberconway, and members of his family continue to be actively involved in the management of the garden, its tea pavilion and car parks on behalf of the National Trust.

The gardens are varied and include formal gardens bounded by clipped box hedges, ornamental pools and formal herbaceous borders, an enclosed larburnum arch and many rose gardens. However, Bodnant is most famous for its breeding programme, especially of varieties of Rhododendrons and azaleas examples of which are now grown throughout the world. Also noted are the collections of Magnolia, Camellia, Clematis and Hydrangea.

Bodnant Garden is situated above the River Conwy and overlooks the valley towards the Carneddau range of mountains. Begun in 1875, it is the creation of four generations of Aberconways and is divided into two parts: the upper level (around the house) features huge Italianate terraces, specimen trees and formal lawns, with paths descending to at lower level “The Dell” with a wooded valley, stream and wild garden below. Included within the Dell are the Old Mill, the mill pond with the mill race and an attractive spillway waterfall into the River Hiraethlyn, to give the delightful babbling brook through the Dell its proper name.

Of the many specimen trees within the Dell and the Woodland, notable are several Californian Redwoods including Sequoiadendron giganteum planted in 1886 and at 146 feet high, surpassed in height only by another tree from the western United States, the Oregon Douglas Fir Pseudotsuga menziesit at 158 feet. From China in 1949 came the Dawn Redwood, previously known only from fossils and believed to have been extinct.

Above the Dell is “The Poem”, the family mausoleum from which a network of paths leads through shrubberies and the Rosemary garden to the front lawn (separated from the old park by a ha-ha) and across the lawn to the Round garden.


References

  • The Garden at Bodnant Jarrold Publishing Norwich and Bodnant Garden, 2001.


External links

  • Bodnant Garden information at the National Trust
  • Welcome to Bodnant Garden
  • Bodnant Garden Illustrated Guide to Snowdonia
  • A Visit to Bodnant Garden

Information

Apple Cinema Display

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 9:42 pm

The Apple Cinema Display is a product line of widescreen flat panel monitors made by Apple Inc.. Apple initially introduced the 22″ Apple Cinema Display in September 1999 alongside the Power Mac G4. The display used DVI, and was enclosed in a high-density plastic frame with an easel-style stand.

Apple upgraded the Cinema Display in July 2000, by running DVI, USB and 25V power through a single ADC connector. In March 2002, Apple replaced the 22″ model with a 23″ model supporting full 1080p resolution, which was redesignated the “Cinema Display HD”. In June 2004, Apple completely redesigned the Cinema Display line in an aluminum case, introducing a 30″ Cinema Display HD as the flagship model. These later models have an aluminum stand with a design similar to the current iMac stand, and a surface that matches Apple’s Mac Pro and MacBook Pro computers. They come in 20″, 23″ and 30″ models.

While designed to be paired with Apple computers, the displays are also compatible with other personal computers equipped with an appropriate video card. (The 30″ Cinema HD Display requires a dual-link DVI connection.) Currently LG.-Philips produces the LCD panel used by the Cinema Displays.


Criticism

While they are favored by graphics designers and Mac fans, the monitors have attracted some criticism due to their relatively high prices. One of the first notable examples is the comparison of the Dell UltraSharp 2005FPW with the simliarly configured 20-inch Apple Cinema Display of the 2004 generation of Cinema Displays. Both displays use the same LG.Philips LCD display[1]. At the release of the 2005 series of Dell LCD monitors, the Dell 2005FPW was the first widescreen monitor available retail at under $1000USD at the price point of $799USD while the 20-inch Apple Cinema Display stood at over $1200USD. As of April 2007, the 20-inch Cinema Display was selling for $599USD on Apple’s web site. In contrast, the Dell 2007WFP (a competing 20-inch widescreen LCD monitor) was selling for $399USD during that time.

The displays are also criticized for lack of drivers to support the displays. As a result of this, many users who attempted to make use of the USB and firewire connections (that connect from the displays to the computer) experienced problems including unresponsive display side buttons and the operating system not properly recognizing the display. This has led to the creation of unofficial drivers such as WinACD.


Models

Introduced Discontinued Inches Pixels PPI Frame Model Number Plug Name Power
September 1999 July 2000 22 1600×1024 86.35 polycarbonate M5662 DVI-D Apple Cinema Display 62-77W
July 2000 January 2003 22 1600×1024 86.35 polycarbonate M8149 ADC Apple Cinema Display 62-77W
March 2002 June 2004 23 1920×1200 98.44 polycarbonate M8536 ADC Apple Cinema Display HD 70W
January 2003 June 2004 20 1680×1050 99.06 polycarbonate A1038 ADC Apple Cinema Display 60W
June 2004 20 1680×1050 99.06 aluminum A1081 DVI-D Apple Cinema Display 65W
June 2004 23 1920×1200 98.44 aluminum A1082 DVI-D Apple Cinema HD Display 90W
June 2004 30 (29.7 viewable) 2560×1600 101.65 aluminum A1083 Dual Link DVI-D Apple Cinema HD Display 150W


See also

  • Apple displays


External links

  • Apple - Cinema Displays
  • Kubicki, Kristopher. “The 20 inch LCD shootout: Dell versus Apple”, “AnandTech”, 27 April 2005.
  • Luepke, Lara. “Battle of the 30-inch monitors: Apple Cinema Display vs. Dell UltraSharp 3007WFP”, “CNET prizefight”, 22 March 2006.

Information

San Francisco Call

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 8:37 pm

The San Francisco Call was a newspaper that served San Francisco, California. The paper was also called The San Francisco Call & Post, the San Francisco News-Call Bulletin, and the News-Call Bulletin before being absorbed by the San Francisco Examiner.


History

Between December 1856 to March 1895 The San Francisco Call was named The Morning Call, but its name was changed when it was purchased by John D. Spreckels. In the period from 1863 and 1864 Mark Twain worked as one of the paper’s writers.

In 1913 M. H. de Young, owner of the San Francisco Chronicle, purchased the paper and sold it to William Randolph Hearst who brought in editor Fremont Older, former Editor of the San Francisco Evening Bulletin. In December of that year, Hearst merged The San Francisco Call with the Evening Post and the papers became The San Francisco Call & Post.

Its most famous editor, crusading journalist Fremont Older agitiated for years against civic corruption and colluded with wealthy San Franciscan Rudolph Spreckels to bring down the Mayor, Eugene Schmitz and political boss, Abe Ruef.

On 29 August 1929, the newspaper name was changed again to the San Francisco Call-Bulletin, when the San Francisco Call & Post merged with the San Francisco Bulletin. In 1959 the San Francisco Call-Bulletin merged with Scripps-Howard’s San Francisco News becoming the News-Call Bulletin. In 1965 the paper merged with the San Francisco Examiner.


External links

  • Image of the San Francisco Call
  • Chronology of San Francisco newspapers

Information

  • Dell Recycling Dell is a direct partner to businesses and consumers that delivers innovative impact of old computers, computer parts and other electronic products.

Internet Exchange of Puerto Rico

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 6:21 pm

The Internet Exchange of Puerto Rico (IXPR) is an internet exchange point situated in San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was established on November 22, 2005 by the Gauss Research Laboratory of the University of Puerto Rico. Packet Clearing House (PCH) and Dell donated the equipment. Bill Woodcock from PCH served as technical advisor.

IXPR was the first internet exchange point set in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean. Centennial of Puerto Rico, ULTRACOM, Caribe.Net, and the University of Puerto Rico were the first nodes to exchange data through the point. As of today, IXPR uses a Cisco gigabit Ethernet switch.


Trivia

The original name for IXPR was PRIX


External links

  • ix.pr - official site.

Information

Carole Rosenthal

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 3:30 pm

Carole Rosenthal (born 13 December 1940) is a feminist fiction writer, the author of It Doesn’t Have To Be Me, a collection of short stories.


Written works

Her fiction appears in a wide variety of periodicals, ranging from literary magazines like Transatlantic Review, Confrontation, Other Voices, and The Cream City Review, to Mother Jones and Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine.


Reception

Her short stories have been dramatized for radio and television, translated into eleven languages, and her articles and reviews published in newspapers and with presses including Dell, Arbor House, and the Modern Language Association.


Current activities

She teaches at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, where she is a distinguished professor.


External links

  • http://www.hamiltonstone.org/carolerosenthal.html

Information

Dell DRAC

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 1:20 pm

The Dell Remote Access Card or DRAC is an interface card which provides out-of-band management. The card has its own processor, memory, battery, network connection, and access to the system bus. Key features include power management, virtual media access and remote console, all available through a supported web browser. This gives system administrators the ability to configure a machine as if they were sitting at the local terminal.


Power Management

With the DRAC enabled and by having it’s own separate network connection a user may login and reboot the system even if the core operating system has crashed. If the correct drivers are loaded onto the Operating system the DRAC will attempt to shutdown the system gracefully. Without this feature and with the system running, the remote console can be used to access the operating system to shut it down.


Remote console

The remote console features of the DRAC let you interface with the computer as if you were sitting in front of it, and indeed you even share the local inputs from keyboard and mouse as well as video output (sound is not supported remotely). This is accomplished through an Active X or Java plugin (depending on the model) which gives you a window displaying the video of the local terminal and takes mouse and keyboard input. This behavior is almost identical to other remote access solutions such as VNC or RDP. In fact, the DRAC uses the VNC protocol.


Virtual media

The DRAC enables you to mount remotely shared disk images as if they were connected to the system. When this is combined with the remote console you have the ability to completely re-install an operating system, a task which had traditionally required local console access to the physical machine. Virtual media can be controlled through the browser or through the OpenManage tools provided by Dell.


See also

  • Out-of-band management


External links

  • Managing out-of-band management in Infoworld
  • The joys of Dell’s RAC about Linux and a Dell remote access card (DRAC)
  • DRAC product info from Dell
  • Dell™ Remote Access Controller 5 (DRAC 5) Version 1.20

Information

Annali dell’Islam

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 1:03 pm

Annali dell’ Islam is a ten volume collection about Islam authored by Leone Caetani between 1904 and 1926.

Information

OpenManage

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:57 pm

OpenManage, a Dell, Inc. product, consists of a number of network management and systems management applications.


Products

  • OpenManage Server Assistant - used to deploy PowerEdge servers.
  • OpenManage Server Administrator (OMSA) - used to manage, monitor, and run diagnostics on currently-running servers and their internal storage. The tool resides on the server and has a web interface.
  • OpenManage IT Assistant (ITA) - the workstation component of OpenManage, allowing a single PC to monitor many servers with a web interface.
  • OpenManage Client (OMC) - client software for the OpenManage networked environment


External Links

  • Dell OpenManage Resources - Application Demos, Collateral, Dell Power Solutions Articles, Industry Analyst Reports, and White Papers


OMSA Tutorials


How to set up RAID Arrays

  • RAID 0
  • RAID 1
  • RAID 5
  • RAID 10
  • RAID 50


ITA Tutorials

  • How to Configure SNMP
  • How to Configure Email Alert Actions and Filters


Sources

  • OpenManage Systems Management
  • Dell Community Forum

Information

Soup (novel)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:38 am

Soup is a 1974 children’s novel by Robert Newton Peck.

Its main characters are two boys, Robert (the narrator) and his close friend Luther, better known as “Soup”. It takes place during the 1930s in a small town in Vermont where the author also grew up, and deals with the daily lives of these two boys. Soup is a well-meaning but mischievous schemer, constantly coming up with elaborate plans that invariably land him and his pal Rob in trouble. Rob is more sensible but less wily and frequently finds himself conned into doing Soup’s dirty work. The two are best pals, however, and watch out for one another. Their frequent antagonist is school bully Janice Ryker, and Rob has a mad crush on the lovely Norma Jean Bissel.

Typical moments include the boys losing their clothes and stealing more from a rummage sale that has only women’s clothes, or Soup painting his name on a barn without permission and running the P over onto the corner, causing the farmer to yell “‘Souf’! I’ll get you ‘Souf’!”

There are several sequels to this book, including Soup and Me, Soup for President, Soup On Fire, Soup’s Hoop, and Soup 1776. Soup and Me and Soup For President were adapted into half-hour television episodes starring Christian Berrigan and Shane Sinutko for the TV series The ABC Weekend Special. The author, Robert Newton Peck, also wrote the popular book A Day No Pigs Would Die.


Books in the Soup series

  • Soup (Knopf, 1974)
  • Soup & Me (Knopf, 1975)
  • Soup for President (Knopf, 1978)
  • Soup’s Drum (Knopf, 1980)
  • Soup on Wheels (Knopf, 1981)
  • Soup in the Saddle (Knopf, 1983)
  • Soup’s Goat (Knopf, 1984)
  • Soup on Ice (Knopf, 1985)
  • Soup on Fire (Knopf, 1987)
  • Soup’s Uncle (Delacorte, 1988)
  • Soup’s Hoop (Delacorte, 1990)
  • Soup in Love (Delacorte, 1992)
  • Soup Ahoy (Delacorte, 1994)
  • Soup 1776 (Knopf/Random House, 1995)


Little Soup series

A series for younger readers.

  • Little Soup’s Birthday (Dell, 1991)
  • Little Soup’s Turkey (Dell, 1992)
  • Little Soup’s Bunny (Dell, 1993)

Information

Janus (DRM)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:18 am

Janus is the codename for portable version of Windows Media DRM for portable devices, whose marketing name is Windows Media DRM for Portable Devices (or in short form WMDRM-PD) introduced by Microsoft in 2004 for use on portable media devices which store and access content offline. Napster To Go was the first online music store to require the Janus technology. Supporting Janus often implies that the device also make use of the Media Transfer Protocol (MTP).
Note furthermore that supporting Janus initially also required the device not to support non-Microsoft audio formats such as Ogg Vorbis (Ogg Vorbis being a patent-free open-source encoding format, a competitor of the MP3 and WMA formats), however this has been revoked since. <ref name=”OGG”></ref>


Characteristics

To support Janus devices must support:

  • Secure time
  • License storage for content items
  • Meters

All these are supported by way of challenge-response authentication commands.


Stores that require Janus on portable devices

  • AOL Music Now
  • iMesh
  • BearShare
  • Napster To Go
  • F.Y.E. Download Zone
  • Yahoo! Music Unlimited
  • Rhapsody To Go
  • Ruckus
  • Tesco Downloads
  • Zune Marketplace


Portable devices that use Janus

  • Audiovox SMT 5600 Smartphone
  • Toshiba Gigabeat S
  • Cowon iAudio X5 (as of firmware 2.11b1)
  • Cowon iAudio U3
  • All Creative Zen portable players (except the Creative Zen Stone and Stone Plus)
  • Dell DJ 20GB (Gen 2)
  • Dell DJ 30GB
  • Dell Pocket DJ
  • iriver Clix
  • iriver H10 series (with MTP firmware only)
  • iriver H320 (US version only, after upgrading to EU/KR/JP firmware DRM capabilities are lost)
  • iriver H340 (US version only, after upgrading to EU/KR/JP firmware DRM capabilities are lost)
  • iriver PMC-120 (Portable Media Center)
  • Samsung YH-925 (Not Australian or European version as you lose onboard radio if you upgrade the firmware)
  • Samsung YH-999 Portable Media Center
  • Samsung YP-T7Z
  • Samsung YP-U2JXB/W
  • Palm OS devices using Pocket Tunes software
  • Archos 404
  • Archos 504
  • Archos 604
  • Archos 604 Wifi
  • Archos AV700
  • Archos AV500
  • Archos Gmini402
  • Archos Gmini500
  • All Windows Mobile devices running Windows Media Player 10
  • Nokia N91
  • TrekStor vibez
  • Microsoft Zune (Though incompatible with any of the PlaysForSure stores.)
  • Sandisk Sansa


References

<references/>


External links

  • ,Google Patent
  • AOL Music Now
  • Napster To Go Homepage
  • F.Y.E. Download Center
  • Y! Music Unlimited
  • Rhapsody
  • Nokia N72
  • Cowon iAudio X5 firmware

Information

  • COMPUTER PARTS(LAPTOP AND DESKTOP) COMPUTER PARTS FOR DELL LAPTOP AND DESKTOP COMPUTERS.INSTALLATION AVAILABLE OPTIPLEX |SX270/280 PWR SUPPLIES $45 SMALL FORM FACTOR POWER SUPPLY $75

Google Labs

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:52 am

Google Labs is a website demonstrating new Google projects “that aren’t quite ready for prime time”. It serves as a testing ground for new services being developed. This is a way for Google to gain feedback on the products before releasing the final versions. Google’s services do not always appear on the Labs page; some are beta tested by invitation-only, like Gmail and Google Calendar once were.


Logo

In 2006, all Google Labs products had a consistent logo, using the flask, and a gray title, as opposed to other color-coded Google products, such as Google News and Google Maps. This warns users that the product may contain bugs, and could be unfit for general use.


See also

  • List of Google products
  • Windows Live Ideas
  • Yahoo! Next


External links

  • Google Labs
  • Google Labs India

Information

  • Reuters - Professional products Reuters professional data products put fast, accurate, unbiased content at the fingertips of media and financial professionals around the world.

The Dell (Southampton F.C.)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:12 am

The Dell in Milton Road, Southampton, England was the home ground of Southampton Football Club, between 1898 and 2001.


Early days

The stadium was opened in September 1898, with the inaugural match on 3 September being against Brighton United. The first goal at the stadium was scored by Watty Keay and Saints won 4-1. The stadium had been built for an estimated £10,000 by George Thomas, a local fish merchant, who had bought the land just off Hill Lane and had transformed what was a natural dell, a lake flanked by banks of woodland. Thousands of tons of rubble had to be used to provide the foundations for the new ground. Initially the stadium had open staging behind each of the goals with stands along each side. The estimated capacity on opening was 24,500, of which 4,000 were seated.


Redevelopment

In 1927, the original West Stand was demolished (together with the club secretary’s house) and the new West Stand was built. This was designed by Archibald Leitch, one of the greatest football stand designers of the day, who had also designed stands at Roker Park and at Goodison Park. A year later, on the last day of the 1928-29 season a dropped cigarette caused a fire which destroyed the East Stand. A replacement stand was built which mirrored the West Stand, increasing the ground capacity to approximately 30,000.


Wartime incidents

On 30 November 1940, a German bomb fell on the stadium during The Blitz, creating an 18-foot crater in the Milton Road penalty area. While the pitch was being restored, Saints had to play their remaining fixtures in 1940-41 away, although in February 1941, they played a “home” War Cup tie with Brentford at Fratton Park, Portsmouth.

In March 1941, an explosion of munitions stored at the ground caused a major fire in the West Stand although this was rebuilt soon afterwards.

At the start of the 1941-42 season they played their home games at Dew Lane, Eastleigh, before the Dell was re-opened in October 1941.


Post-war

In 1950, The Dell became the first ground in England to have permanent floodlighting installed. The first game played under the lights was on 31 October 1950, in a friendly against Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic, followed a year later by the first “official” match under floodlights, a Football Combination (Reserve team) match against Tottenham Hotspur on 1 October 1951.

During the post-war years, huge crowds packed into The Dell. The attendance record was broken on 8 October 1969, when 31,044 watched Saints lose 3-0 to a Manchester United team which included George Best and Bobby Charlton.


Further redevelopment

In the 1980s there were several changes at the ground, with the makeshift chocolate boxes at the Milton Road end being replaced by a new stand, and the standing areas under the East and West stands being fitted with bench seats, before The Dell became an all-seater stadium in the wake of the Hillsborough disaster. New stands were erected at both ends of the stadium and the ground’s capacity plunged to a little over 15,000, the smallest in the top level of English football. The Milton Road Stand was notable for its wedge-like appearance.
[1]


Final days

By this time, the Saints were looking for a new home. In the 1990s it seemed as if the search was over as the club announced plans to move to a new stadium at Stoneham near Eastleigh. However, the club fell into a dispute with the local council about the lack of community facilities. Many people in Eastleigh were also unhappy with having another town’s football club in their area (Refer to EBC Planning application Z/32214/003/00
). The dispute was resolved when the Chairman, Rupert Lowe, declared new plans for the club to move to a new 32,000 all-seater, St Mary’s Stadium, for a cost of £32 million. In 2001 work was completed ahead of schedule.

On 19 May 2001, club legend Matthew Le Tissier said goodbye to the stadium that had been host to his entire career by scoring a spectacular volley in the final minutes of the last league game securing a 3-2 win against Arsenal.

On 26 May the club’s loyal fans said goodbye to The Dell by stripping all of its seats, the pitch and one man even walked off with an advertising board at the end of a friendly with Brighton and Hove Albion - making them the first and last club to play Southampton at the stadium. Saints won this game 1-0, with the goal (the last ever at The Dell) being scored by Uwe Rösler.

During its 103-year life, The Dell had been home to Southampton during some of its finest moments - most of all the 1976 FA Cup victory.

The Dell was demolished later in 2001 and a housing estate now occupies the site [2]. The blocks on the site bear the names of Saints Legends:

  • Stokes Court
  • Ted Bates Court
  • Le Tissier Court
  • Wallace Court
  • Channon Court


References


External links

  • Memorable matches at The Dell - from The Independent
  • Pictures of the old stadium
  • Satellite photo of site today from Google
  • Picture of the old Chocolate Boxes

Information

  • Dell Computer Parts and Accessories Vance Baldwin Electronics distrubutes Dell Computer Parts and Accessories. To begin shopping with us, please select a "Login" option from the menu on the

OpenManage

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 9:20 am

OpenManage, a Dell, Inc. product, consists of a number of network management and systems management applications.


Products

  • OpenManage Server Assistant - used to deploy PowerEdge servers.
  • OpenManage Server Administrator (OMSA) - used to manage, monitor, and run diagnostics on currently-running servers and their internal storage. The tool resides on the server and has a web interface.
  • OpenManage IT Assistant (ITA) - the workstation component of OpenManage, allowing a single PC to monitor many servers with a web interface.
  • OpenManage Client (OMC) - client software for the OpenManage networked environment


External Links

  • Dell OpenManage Resources - Application Demos, Collateral, Dell Power Solutions Articles, Industry Analyst Reports, and White Papers


OMSA Tutorials


How to set up RAID Arrays

  • RAID 0
  • RAID 1
  • RAID 5
  • RAID 10
  • RAID 50


ITA Tutorials

  • How to Configure SNMP
  • How to Configure Email Alert Actions and Filters


Sources

  • OpenManage Systems Management
  • Dell Community Forum

Information

Richard Mason

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 9:18 am

Richard Mason may refer to:

  • Richard Mason (1919-1997), the English author of The World of Suzie Wong
  • Richard Mason (1977-), English writer born in South Africa, the author of The Drowning People
  • Sir Richard Mason (c. 1633-1685) of Sutton, Surrey, England; British Member of Parliament
  • Dr Richard Mason, American physician and political organiser
  • Richard Mason, a boxer who fought for the International Boxing Organization world heavyweight title
  • Richard Mason, an English explorer who was killed by Brazilian Indians in 1961 while on an expedition led by John Hemming
  • Richard Mason, developer of a system for Strategic Assumption Surfacing and Testing
  • Richard Barnes Mason (1797-1850), military governor of California
  • Richard Mason Rocca, an Italian-American basketball player

Information

Bodnant Garden

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 8:13 am

Bodnant Garden is a National Trust property in Tal-y-Cafn, Colwyn Bay, near Conwy, North Wales.

This important garden occupies an area of over 80 acres surrounding Bodnant House, most of which was first laid out by Henry Davis Pochin, a successful industrial chemist, from 1874 onwards until his death in 1895. Bodnant House had been built in 1792 but was remodelled by Pochin and on his death it was inherited by his daughter (whose husband became the first Baron Aberconway in 1911). The garden, but not the House or other parts of the estate, was presented to the National Trust, with an endowment, in 1949. The House was the home of the late Lord Aberconway, and members of his family continue to be actively involved in the management of the garden, its tea pavilion and car parks on behalf of the National Trust.

The gardens are varied and include formal gardens bounded by clipped box hedges, ornamental pools and formal herbaceous borders, an enclosed larburnum arch and many rose gardens. However, Bodnant is most famous for its breeding programme, especially of varieties of Rhododendrons and azaleas examples of which are now grown throughout the world. Also noted are the collections of Magnolia, Camellia, Clematis and Hydrangea.

Bodnant Garden is situated above the River Conwy and overlooks the valley towards the Carneddau range of mountains. Begun in 1875, it is the creation of four generations of Aberconways and is divided into two parts: the upper level (around the house) features huge Italianate terraces, specimen trees and formal lawns, with paths descending to at lower level “The Dell” with a wooded valley, stream and wild garden below. Included within the Dell are the Old Mill, the mill pond with the mill race and an attractive spillway waterfall into the River Hiraethlyn, to give the delightful babbling brook through the Dell its proper name.

Of the many specimen trees within the Dell and the Woodland, notable are several Californian Redwoods including Sequoiadendron giganteum planted in 1886 and at 146 feet high, surpassed in height only by another tree from the western United States, the Oregon Douglas Fir Pseudotsuga menziesit at 158 feet. From China in 1949 came the Dawn Redwood, previously known only from fossils and believed to have been extinct.

Above the Dell is “The Poem”, the family mausoleum from which a network of paths leads through shrubberies and the Rosemary garden to the front lawn (separated from the old park by a ha-ha) and across the lawn to the Round garden.


References

  • The Garden at Bodnant Jarrold Publishing Norwich and Bodnant Garden, 2001.


External links

  • Bodnant Garden information at the National Trust
  • Welcome to Bodnant Garden
  • Bodnant Garden Illustrated Guide to Snowdonia
  • A Visit to Bodnant Garden

Information

The Funnies

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:41 am

The is about the 1930s proto-comic book series The Funnies. For other uses see Funnies (disambiguation)

The Funnies is an American publication of the late 1920s that was a seminal precursor of comic books.

In 1929, George T. Delacorte Jr.’s Dell Publishing, founded eight years earlier, published The Funnies, described by the Library of Congress as “a short-lived newspaper tabloid insert”.<ref>U.S. Library of Congress, “American Treasures of the Library of Congress” exhibition</ref> (This is not to be confused with Dell’s later same-name comic book, which began publication in 1936.) Comics historian Ron Goulart describes the 16-page, four-color, newsprint periodical as “more a Sunday comic section without the rest of the newspaper than a true comic book. But it did offer all original material and was sold on newsstands”.<ref name=”ron”>Goulart, Ron. Comic Book Encyclopedia (Harper Entertainment, New York, 2004) ISBN 0-06-053816-3</ref>

The magazine ran 36 issues, published Saturdays through Oct. 16, 1930. The cover price rose from 10¢ to 30¢ with issue #3. This was reduced to a nickel from issue #22 to the end.

The Funnies helped lay the groundwork for two subsequent publications in 1933: Eastern Color Printing’s similar proto-comic book, the eight-page newsprint tabloid Funnies on Parade, and the Eastern Color / Dell collaboration Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics,<ref>Grand Comics Database: Famous Famous - Carnival of Comics</ref> considered by historians the first true American comic book.<ref>Goulart, p.144, for example, calls it “the cornerstone for one of the most lucrative branches of magazine publishing”.</ref>


Footnotes


References

  • All in Color for a Dime by Dick Lupoff & Don Thompson ISBN 0-87341-498-5
  • The Official Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide by Robert Overstreet — Edition #35 ISBN 0-375-72107-X
  • The Steranko History of Comics, Vol. 1 & 2, by James Steranko — Vol. 1 ISBN 0-517-50188-0
  • CBW Comic History: The Early Years…1896 to 1937, Part II
  • The ComicBooks.com: The History of Comic Books
  • Don Markstein’s Toonopedia: Dell Comics
  • Grand Comics Database: The Funnies (1936 series)

Information

  • Michael Dell Biography From his university dorm room Dell started building and selling personal computers from stock computer parts. The idea that set the young entrepreneur apart

XPS

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:02 am

XPS is a three-letter abbreviation with multiple meanings, as described below:

  • X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
  • XML Paper Specification, a fixed-layout document format
  • The Dell XPS desktop and Notebook lines
  • Extruded polystyrene

Information

José de Viera y Clavijo

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 6:58 am

José de Viera y Clavijo (December 28, 1731-1813), Spanish ecclesiastic, historian, botanist, ethnographer, and professor, best known for his exhaustive History of the Canary Islands (Historia de Canarias). Born in Realejo de Arriba, on the island of Tenerife, he was the son of the town’s mayor, Gabriel Viera del Álama. His mother was Antonia María Clavijo.

In his Noticias, he examined the question of St. Brendan’s Island.

He died in Las Palmas, on the island of Gran Canaria.


Sources

  • José de Viera y Clavijo

Information

Brand alliances

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 6:08 am

Brand alliances is a branding strategy used in a business alliance. Brand alliances are divided into two types:


Cobrands

Cobrands are the usage of two or more brands on one certain product. For example, Dell computers carries three brands on their packages and cases: Dell, Microsoft Windows, and Intel.

A visible example of cobranding is Yum! Brands combining two or more of their restaurants under one roof. In many places it is not unusual to see a Long John Silver’s and KFC or a Pizza Hut and Taco Bell combined.


Brand licenses

Brand licenses are a contractual agreement where a company lets another organisation use its brand on other products in exchange for a licensing fee.

An example of brand licensing is seen in the Walt Disney Company’s relationship to Tokyo Disneyland. The theme park is owned by The Oriental Land Company, which licenses the theme from The Walt Disney Company.


References

Information

  • Dell - 個人のお客様 ホームページ コンピュータシステムのメーカー直販大手・デルコンピュータ株式会社の公式サイト。ノートブック、デスクトップ、サーバ、プリンタ、ソフトウェア、モニタや

O’Dell

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O’Dell is the surname of several interesting people:

  • Cricket O’Dell, fictional character from Archie Comics
  • Dick O’Dell, UK record label owner
  • Hunter Pitts O’Dell, American civil rights activist
  • Kelly O’Dell, an adult film star
  • Nancy O’Dell, the co-host of Access Hollywood
  • Rick O’Dell, American racing driver
  • Scott O’Dell, children’s author.
  • Tom O’Dell, the host of Cutlery Corner
  • Walden “Wally” O’Dell, former CEO of Diebold
  • Jack O’Dell, Matchbox Toys
  • Dennis O’Dell, the only person to win 1st place twice in the “[International Haircutting Competition]” at the IBS 1974 and 1978


See also

  • Dell (disambiguation)

Information

Hazel Dell North, Washington

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Hazel Dell North is a census-designated place and an unincorporated town in Clark County, Washington, United States. The population was 9,261 at the 2000 census.


Geography

Hazel Dell North is located at (45.687155, -122.658146).

According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 6.9 km² (2.7 mi²). 6.9 km² (2.7 mi²) of it is land and 0.37% is water.


Demographics

As of the census of 2000, there were 9,261 people, 3,535 households, and 2,403 families residing in the CDP. The population density was 1,339.2/km² (3,469.3/mi²). There were 3,744 housing units at an average density of 541.4/km² (1,402.5/mi²). The racial makeup of the CDP was 84.29% White, 2.58% African American, 0.87% Native American, 2.24% Asian, 0.41% Pacific Islander, 6.04% from other races, and 3.57% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 11.20% of the population.

There were 3,535 households out of which 34.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 51.7% were married couples living together, 11.9% had a female householder with no husband present, and 32.0% were non-families. 24.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 8.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.62 and the average family size was 3.11.

In the CDP the population was spread out with 27.7% under the age of 18, 9.9% from 18 to 24, 30.5% from 25 to 44, 21.1% from 45 to 64, and 10.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females there were 99.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.4 males.

The median income for a household in the CDP was $43,063, and the median income for a family was $48,610. Males had a median income of $40,087 versus $29,968 for females. The per capita income for the CDP was $19,518. About 11.8% of families and 14.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 23.4% of those under age 18 and 3.8% of those age 65 or over.


External links

Information

Integral Equations and Operator Theory

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Integral Equations and Operator Theory is a journal dedicated to operator theory and its applications to engineering and other mathematical sciences. As some approaches to the study of integral equations (theoretically and numerically) constitute a subfield of operator theory, the journal also deals with the theory of integral equations and hence of differential equations. The journal consists of two sections: a main section consisting of refereed papers and a second consisting of short announcements of important results, open problems, information, etc. It has been published monthly by Springer-Verlag since 1978. The journal is also available online by subscription.


External links

  • Journal homepage

Information

Ben Curtis (actor)

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For other people named Ben Curtis, see Benjamin Curtis.

Benjamin Bowmar Curtis (born November 2, 1980 in Chattanooga, Tennessee), also known as the Dell Dude, is an American actor and former spokesman for Dell Computers. Curtis was prominently featured in the popular “Dell Dude” ads from 2000 to 2003.


Early life and education

Curtis is the second of two children, and has an older sister named Polly Elise Curtis. He attended and graduated from the McCallie School, an all boys school in Chattanooga, Tennessee, after completing elementary school at Saint Nicholas School, also in Chattanooga.

At four years old, Curtis met illusionist David Copperfield. Inspired by Copperfield’s performance, Curtis started his own magic business at the age of thirteen. Curtis went on to compete in and win a few national stage contests. Curtis later attended Tannen’s Magic School in New York City. While at the school, Ben created, produced, directed, and starred in his first full-scale illusion show. The show consisted of his skills in music, acting, magic, and mime.

Curtis attended New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. While at NYU, Ben has attended the Atlantic Theater Company as well as studying the techniques of Grotowski and Brecht at Tisch’s Experimental Theater Wing (both in America and Amsterdam).


The Dell Dude

As part of a commercial advertising campaign, Curtis portrayed the character Steven. This advertising campaign popularized the phrase “Dude, you’re getting a Dell.” The commercials would usually feature chipper Steven informing prospective buyers of all the perks of owning a Dell. When the party was sold on the idea he would close with the catchphrase “Dude, you’re getting a Dell”. The campaign was a huge success and not only helped bring prominence to Dell, but to Curtis as well. [1]


Arrest

On February 9, 2003, Curtis was caught attempting to buy a small bag of marijuana on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Curtis was arrested and charged with criminal possession of marijuana. Word of the arrest of the Dell dude spread quickly through the media.

Since the bag Curtis possessed contained a very small amount of marijuana, the judge in his case was lenient. The case was adjourned in contemplation of dismissal, meaning it would be dismissed and Curtis’s record expunged if he stayed out of trouble for the next year. Despite the incident, Dell spokesman Venancio Figueroa maintained that Curtis’ relationship with the company was “still in place.” However, Dell, Inc. fired Curtis as a result of his arrest due to company policy. It ended Curtis’s relationship with them. [2] However, it is believed that Curtis was already in the process of being phased-out in favor of a new pitch for Dell. In early 2003, the Dude ad campaign was dropped in favor of a new set of commercials about three Dell interns.


Life after Dell

Curtis’ career seems to have survived both the Dell campaign and the marijuana arrest incident. In the spring of 2004, Boca Raton, Florida-based AdSouth Partners hired Curtis to lead its marketing campaign for the launch of Gameznflix, an Internet video game and movie rental service. Regarding the marijuana incident, Curtis told an interviewer for the South Florida Business Journal, “I learned a lesson and that was the thing,” said Curtis, then 23, and a senior at New York University. “I’ve been through that experience and I’ve come out of that a better person. I’ve learned what it means to be a role model and I have a second chance.”

In February 2005, Curtis played the role of Christian, in an off-Broadway 16-show production of John Fisher’s comedy Joy. [3] [4][5] The play and his performance both received generally favorable reviews.


External links

  • Dell Dude’ released after marijuana arrest from CNN
  • ‘Hey Dude, It’s Ben Curtis!’ - A visit with one of the stars of Off-Broadway’s JOY from Broadway World
  • Boy’s Life Article
  • Did Curtis’ career as a pitchman for Dell computers end because he was arrested for possession of marijuana? from Snopes

Information

Carat UK

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Carat UK is a leading independent British media agency based in Covent Garden, London. It handles major blue chip clients including Renault, Abbey and Dell. With billings in excess of £600M annually (2005), it is in the top four UK agencies in terms of client spending. It is a wholly owned agency of Aegis Group PLC. It is part of the worlds largest independent media agency network, Carat


See also

Carat UK website

Information

RAMJAC

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The RAMJAC Corporation is a fictional multinational conglomerate, or megacorp, featured in several novels by Kurt Vonnegut. In Jailbird, the company at its height owns 19 percent of the United States, twice as large as the next largest conglomerate in the “Free World”. Copyrights on Vonnegut’s later books are also held by RAMJAC, much like Isaac Asimov’s later copyrights are held by Nightfall, Inc.


Divisions and holdings of The RAMJAC Corporation

  • Colonel Sanders
  • McDonald’s