205,998 research outputs found
mei-friend
<p>This release coincides the following publication: Goebl & Weigl (2024), "mei-friend: An Interactive Web-based Editor for Digital Music Encodings", <em>The Journal of Open Source Software</em> (in press).</p>
<p>Since the previous release, we have implemented the following changes:</p>
<ul>
<li>Support for simultaneous display of multiple facsimile source images</li>
<li>End-to-end unit testing via Playwright</li>
<li>Many bug fixes and small improvements</li>
</ul>
<p>For more information, please see <a href="https://github.com/mei-friend/mei-friend/blob/bee2acc/CHANGELOG.md">CHANGELOG.md</a></p>If you use this software, please cite it as below
Letter from Friend Fletcher to Alden Partridge, 3 August 1848
Friend P. Fletcher writes from Bridport, Vermont, to Alden Partridge in Norwich, Vermont; he is not certain whether he can be there on September 4th (to attend the commencement activities at the American Literary, Scientific and Military University in Norwich, Vermont?); reports that business is dull, but he is very busy.Transcription by Raymond Bouchard. Transcriptions may be subject to error
Letter from Friend Fletcher to Alden Partridge, 22 August 1848
Friend P. Fletcher writes from Bridport, Vermont, to Alden Partridge in Norwich, Vermont; he will not be able to attend the commencement exercises on 4 September (at the American Literary, Scientific, and Military University in Norwich, Vermont?) due to the recent ill health of his father and brother.Transcription by Raymond Bouchard. Transcriptions may be subject to error
Letter from Friend Fletcher to Alden Partridge, 20 March 1848
Friend P. Fletcher writes from Bridport, Vermont, to Alden Partridge in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; he is unable to deliver an address at commencement exercises in Norwich, Vermont, (at the American Literary, Scientific, and Military University?) in August, but hopes to attend; knows the new president of Norwich University, Henry Wheaton, well and shares his impressions of him and his wife (Sarah Barker Tufts Wheaton); mentions the Norwich University Board of Trustees, of which he is a member; has shared Partridge's news with "Wallace Benjamin" (William Wallace Benjamin?); has recently gotten married.Transcription by Raymond Bouchard. Transcriptions may be subject to error
Bio-dependent bed parameters as a proxy tool for sediment stability in mixed habitat intertidal areas
The stability of cohesive and non-cohesive sediments in a mixed intertidal habitat within the Ria Formosa tidal lagoon, Portugal, was examined during two field campaigns as part of the EU F-ECTS project. The cohesive strength meter Mk III was used to determine critical erosion shear stress (c) within a variety of different intertidal habitats and substrata, including Spartina maritima fields and Zostera noltii beds. The best predictor(s) for c were derived from a range of properties measured for the surface sediments (chlorophyll a, colloidal carbohydrate, water, organic content, % fraction <63 m, and seabed elevation). Pigment biomarkers were used to identify the dominant algal groups within the surface phytobenthic assemblage.Strong, seasonally dependent relationships were found between c and habitat type, chl a, colloidal carbohydrate and bed elevation. Typically, critical erosion thresholds decreased seawards, reflecting a change from biostabilisation by cyanobacteria in the upper intertidal areas, to biostabilisation by diatoms on the bare substrata of the channel edges. In the late summer/early autumn, cyanobacteria were the main sediment stabilisers, and colloidal carbohydrate was the best bio-dependent predictor of c across the entire field area. In the late winter/early spring, cyanobacterial activity was lower, and sediment stabilisation by Enteromorpha clathrata was important; the best predictor of c was bed elevation. The implications and use of proxies for sediment stability are discussed in terms of feedback and sedimentation processes operating across the intertidal area
Emergence and Collapse of Peace with Friend Selection Strategies
A society consisting of agents who can freely choose to attack or not to attack others inevitably evolves into a battling society (a \'war of all against all\'). We investigated whether strategies based on C. Schmitt\'s concept of the political, the distinction of a friend and an enemy, lead to the emergence and collapse of social order. Especially, we propose \'friend selection strategies\' (FSSs), one of which we called the \'us-TFT\' (tit for tat) strategy, which requires an agent to regard one who did not attack him or his \'friends\' as a \'friend\'. We carried out evolutionary simulations on an artificial society consisting of FSS agents. As a result, we found that the us-TFT results in a peaceful society with the emergence of an us-TFT community. In addition, we found that the collapse of a peaceful society is triggered by another FSS strategy called a \'coward\'.Community, Carl Schmitt, a Friend and an Enemy, Tit for Tat, Coward, Evolutionary Simulation
Letter from S. P. Hochstetler regarding Our Florida Friend
Letter from S. P. Hochstetler about subscription to Our Florida Friend. The one-page handwritten letter is dated 11 February 1913. There is a transcript of the correspondence in the item PDF
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