251 research outputs found

    Rzeki Adda i Pad jako miejsca pamięci literackiej w idylli Adda Alessandra Manzoniego

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    The article aims at analyzing the idyll Adda by Alessandro Manzoni, one of the greatest representatives of the Italian Romanticism. The Adda is one of the early, neoclassical works of Manzoni. The young author presents the monologue of the nymph Adda, the goddess of the river of the same name, who invites to her humble kingdom the poet Vincenzo Monti, born on the banks of the great Po. The rivers Adda and Po are presented in the Manzoni’s idyll as the places of the literary memory

    A Fault and Mobility Tolerant Location Server for Large-scale Ad-hoc networks

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    There are many essential applications for quorum systems in ad-hoc networks, such as that of location servers in large-scale networks. Existing research proposes many approaches to the problems, many of which are incomplete, cumbersome, or incur significant cost. We describe and analyse a self-organising quorum system that creates an emergent intelligence to minimise overhead and maximise survivability. We compare our quorum system with ones proposed in the literature in terms of delivery success and find that it performs favourably

    Quorum based geographically static data storage in ad-hoc networks

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    Large-scale wireless ad-hoc networks are formed automatically and allow nodes to communicate over greater distances. Every node acts as a router forming a complex network, which is simplified by the use of geodesic routing. However, a method to discover a node.s location is needed for geodesic routing. In this paper we propose two algorithms which could support location servers in ad-hoc networks and examine their performance

    Gebel Adda and its environs: 50 years on

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    [First paragraph] Following the 2015 Kirwan Memorial Lecture delivered by Dr Grzymski (see also Grzymski 2010) this further brief article concerning the ARCE excavations at Gebel Adda has been prepared drawing on personal records of one of the participants (RH) and information provided by Horst Jaritz and the late Richard Edlund1 relating to a range of archaeological material in and around Gebel Adda. This summarises a much more extensive series of notes prepared by the first author (RH) along with drawings and photographs. With the aid of aerial photographs from the collections of George Gerster a composite map of Gebel Adda and its environs has also been prepared (fig.1) indicating some of the main sites in and around the ARCE concession including the outlines of the main cemeteries. It is hoped that this may be useful for those working with the various published reports which lack supporting mapping/plans

    Gebel Adda and its environs: 50 years on

    No full text
    [First paragraph] Following the 2015 Kirwan Memorial Lecture delivered by Dr Grzymski (see also Grzymski 2010) this further brief article concerning the ARCE excavations at Gebel Adda has been prepared drawing on personal records of one of the participants (RH) and information provided by Horst Jaritz and the late Richard Edlund1 relating to a range of archaeological material in and around Gebel Adda. This summarises a much more extensive series of notes prepared by the first author (RH) along with drawings and photographs. With the aid of aerial photographs from the collections of George Gerster a composite map of Gebel Adda and its environs has also been prepared (fig.1) indicating some of the main sites in and around the ARCE concession including the outlines of the main cemeteries. It is hoped that this may be useful for those working with the various published reports which lack supporting mapping/plans

    Self organizing quorum systems for ad hoc networks

    No full text
    There are many essential applications for quorum systems in ad-hoc networks, such as that of location servers in large-scale networks. Existing research proposes many approaches to the problems, many of which are incomplete, cumbersome, or incur significant cost. We describe and analyse a self-organising quorum system that creates an emergent intelligence to minimise overhead and maximise survivability. We then examine the quorum.s performance as a location server and suggest improvements to the query mechanism and routing algorithm using the information

    Gebel Adda Cemeteries 3 and 4 (1963-1964)

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    The excavation team of the American Research Center in Egypt, under the direction of Dr Nicholas B. Millet, first arrived at Gebel Adda in January 1963, for what were to be four excavation seasons. Excavations started in Cemetery 1, which included numerous tumuli, extending over c. 450m from the southern end of the concession to north east of the Citadel (Millet 1963). Work began in the south of the cemetery and excavated c. 127 tumuli, dated to the later post-Meroitic (X-Group) period. In the same area, amongst the tumuli, c. 30 medieval (Christian) graves were also found, thought likely to date to the earliest period of Christianization at Gebel Adda. Four examples of the double domed mud-brick tombs of the post-medieval (Islamic) period were also excavated in Cemetery One. In March 1963 excavations were also begun in Cemetery 3, lying some 160m south east of the Citadel hill (Figure 1, Plate 1), an area covered with much wind-blown sand, exposing c. 400 tombs during the first season (Millet 1963, 154). This work was continued in the second (1963-1964) season (Millet 1964) and the third season, for which no preliminary report was published (see also Millet 1967b; 1968; 2005; Grzymski 2010). Some preliminary observations of this area were published as the excavations were still underway by Millet (Millet 1963; 1964), but little else relating to this important work has yet been published. However, the first author (RH), as a member of the ARCE team, can throw some further light on some features of the excavations. Most importantly, having carried out much of the original preparation of site plans, it has been possible to reconstruct here some partial plans of Cemetery 3, which together with personal photographs of the site provide some useful new information concerning this part of the Gebel Adda excavations. Until the surviving site archives are more fully studied, and hopefully published, this brief report, as with previous reports (Huber and Edwards 2009; 2010), can provide a few further insights into the fascinating and clearly complex history of the Gebel Adda cemeteries
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