5,862 research outputs found

    Monsinjur Victor Grech : bejn storja u Miti

    No full text
    Fis-siegħa ta’ filgħodu tad-19 ta’ Ottubru 1929 twieled f ’Bormla Victor Grech, bin Joseph Grech u Caterina Gafà. Kif kien jiġri f ’dik il-ħabta, ġie mgħammed dakinhar li twieled. L-ismijiet mogħtija lilu fil-magħmudija kienu Victorius, Josephus Maria, Carmelus, Generosus, Michael. Il- parrinijiet kienu Carmelus Gafà u martu Maria1 jiġifieri z-zijiet materni tiegħu. Il-koppja Grech iżżewġet iż-Żejtun, eżattament fil-kappella tal- Ispirtu s-Santu, nhar l-20 ta’ April 1926.2 F’dan iż-żwieġ joħorġu numru ta’ fatturi li madwarhom se nkun qed nibni l-analiżi demografika tiegħi.peer-reviewe

    Measuring and analyzing German and Spanish customer satisfaction of using the iPhone 4S Mobile Cloud service

    No full text
    This paper presents the customer satisfaction analysis for measuring popularity in the Mobile Cloud, which is an emerging area in the Cloud and Big Data Computing. Organizational Sustainability Modeling (OSM) is the proposed method used in this research. The twelve-month of German and Spanish consumer data are used for the analysis to investigate the return and risk status associated with the ratings of customer satisfaction in the iPhone 4S Mobile Cloud services. Results show that there is a decline in the satisfaction ratings in Germany and Spain due to economic downturn and competitions in the market, which support our hypothesis. Key outputs have been explained and they confirm that all analysis and interpretations fulfill the criteria for OSM. The use of statistical and visualization method proposed by OSM can expose unexploited data and allows the stakeholders to understand the status of return and risk of their Cloud strategies easier than the use of other data analysis

    Secular trends and latitude gradients in sex ratios at birth in Australia and New Zealand (1950- 2010) demonstrate uncharacteristic homogeneity

    No full text
    Introduction: The male to female ratio of live births is expressed as the ratio of male live births divided by total live births (M/F). Although this would be more accurately abbreviated as M/T (male births divided by total births), it is widely (albeit technically incorrectly) abbreviated as M/F, and this will be used throughout. Globally, over the past four decades, this is expected to be 0.515, with a slight (1.5%) male excess. M/F exhibits an unexplained contrasting latitude gradient. More males are born towards the south of Europe, and the south of Asia, while more males are born toward the north in North American continent. M/F is also declining overall, in both of these continents. This study investigates secular trends and latitude gradients in M/F in Australia and New Zealand from a World Health Organization (WHO) dataset that includes the past sixty years. Methods: Permission was obtained to source WHO datasets going back to 1950, following which Microsoft Excel was used to calculate M/F ratios. Australian and New Zealand data were available for the years 1950-2006 and 1950-2009 respectively. Chi tests for trend were used for annual male and female births. These were performed using the Bio-Med-Stat Excel add-in for contingency tables. Results: There were 17035325 births for Australia and New Zealand during this period. M/F ratios ranged between 0.507-0.519. No latitude variations in M/F were found between Australia (9° to 44°) and New Zealand (29° to 53°). The overall M/F was 0.5134 - lower than the anticipated 0.515, with an estimated male birth deficit of 28009. Cycles of 30 years duration are apparent in the dataset but not at statistically significant levels. Discussion: The lack of latitude gradient in this region is not unexpected as there is a wide latitude overlap between Australia and New Zealand. It has been hypothesised that M/F exhibits a 30 year cycle due to an unknown mechanism that negatively correlates M/F with the adult sex ratio at the time of conception. Conclusion: The factor/s that are causing a decline in M/F ratios in Europe, North America and Asia are absent or not so strongly influential in Australasia.peer-reviewe

    The Pygmalion-Galatea myth in relation to simulation scenarios in Star Trek

    No full text
    Star Trek has existed since 1966, with a total of 738 hours of viewing time. Like most science fiction, the series frequently alludes to religion or myth but censors such references for the modern world-view by sanitising them with scientific or scientific-sounding explanation. This paper illustrates the depiction of the Galatea-Pygmalion myth in the franchise and relates these to simulation scenarios.peer-reviewe

    Patent arterial duct occlusion with two amplatzer duct occluder devices

    No full text
    It is accepted practice to close large patent arterial ducts (PDA) with Amplatzer duct occluder devices, with extremely low rates of residual PDA. This article reports a child who required device closure of PDA with two Amplatzer PDA devices on two separate occasions, despite the first device deployment being a standard placement of an appropriately sized Amplatzer device in the usual position.peer-reviewe

    Terrorist attacks and the male to female ratio at birth : the bombings of Madrid (3/2004) and London (7/2005)

    No full text
    Introduction: Males are usually in excess of females at birth and the ratio is often expressed as M/F (male divided by total births). Several factors have been shown to be associated with changes in M/F, including major terrorist attacks. These are associated with a transient lowering of M/F for a one month period, three to five months after such events. This study was carried out in order to ascertain whether the Madrid March 2004 bombings and the London July 2005 bombings were similarly associated with changes in M/F in their respective populations. Methods: Monthly live births by gender for Madrid and Spain for 2004 and for England and Wales for 2005 were obtained from the two countries’ National Statistics Offices. Results: There were no significant dips in M/F for any of the months following the March 2004 bombings in Madrid or in Spain. There were no significant dips in M/F for any of the months following the July 2005 London bombings. Discussion: Research to date has shown M/F dips following catastrophic or tragic events, including major terrorist actions with extensive media coverage. Equivalent dips were not noted in this study for the terrorist acts in these instances. The reasons for this may be one or a combination of the following. The population size was not sufficiently large in order to detect an M/F dip. Alternatively, the events were not felt to be sufficiently momentous by the populace such that an M/F dip was not produced. Yet another possibility is that these particular populations are somehow hardier and more resistant to such influences. Not all terrorist events universally cause a significant reduction in M/F.peer-reviewe

    Victor LaValle

    No full text
    Victor LaValle is the author of the short story collection Slapboxing with Jesus, four novels, The Ecstatic, Big Machine, The Devil in Silver, and The Changeling and two novellas, Lucretia and the Kroons and The Ballad of Black Tom. He is also the creator and writer of a comic book Victor LaValle’s DESTROYER. He has been the recipient of numerous awards including a Whiting Writers’ Award, a United States Artists Ford Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Shirley Jackson Award, an American Book Award, and the key to Southeast Queens. He was raised in Queens, New York. He now lives in Washington Heights with his wife and kids. He teaches at Columbia University. The free, public program begins at 6:00 p.m. at Burns Belfry.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/grisham_vis/1002/thumbnail.jp

    [Diary Entry for Saturday, April 13, 1940]

    No full text
    This page is part of a diary by Sir Ellice Victor Elias Sassoon. He wrote that he slept a lot and read a book about the Burma Road for which the author got the idea at his garden party in 1937. He then said he went to bed at 8 and that Edna came in to ask how he was

    Presenting scientific work-news media theory in presentations, abstracts, and posters

    No full text
    The effective presentation of scientific work in abstracts, posters, and PowerPoint presentations resembles popular newspaper writing far more than it does traditional paper writing. In the former three, a good “hook” is essential and must be obvious and apparent up front. A slight element of truthful sensationalism is therefore often helpful. Research preparation and presentation and skills of all sorts are increasingly critical in the incrementally competitive world of academia. This paper will offer factual and practical guidelines with regards to preparing research in these formats since self-presentation is essential for career progression. It is not only what we do but how we are seen to be doing it, acceding to Batman's aphorism: “it's not who I am underneath but what I do that defines me.
    corecore