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SUNY Albany - ATM - 100
1019720703196808101971072919780803197207041958062519830627199208241951071219870712
SUNY Albany - ATM - 100
1019530512194803101995052319570516195503251997041119970410196503181966041919790509
SUNY Albany - ATM - 100
1019610903197109171989091219890911198509291969101219740902199509211965091719691013
SUNY Albany - ATM - 511
Synoptic Dynamic Meteorology II (ATM 511) Spring Semester 2009 (3 credits)Lecture: Tuesday & Thursday 1:15-2:35 in ES B13 http:/www.atmos.albany.edu/deas/atmclasses/atm511Instructor:Professor Ryan Torn Office: ES 229 Phone: 442.4560 torn@atmos.albany.e
SUNY Albany - ATM - 100
2519720703196808101971072919780803197207041958062519830627199208241951071219870712197908141951071019760802199108031960080919810810196107211960070519510629196706241982061819650731199507311991072319590814
SUNY Albany - ATM - 350
Course: Atm 350 Meteorological Datasets and Numerical Computation Class Number: 9385; Credits: 1 Schedule: Th 1:15 p.m.2:35 p.m., ES 333 (Maproom) Instructor: Kevin Tyle, ES 235, 4424578, ktyle@atmos.albany.edu Office hours: MoWe 2:00 p.m.3:00 p.m. and by
Widener - ENGR - 658
Application Layer05/01/09 2008 Raymond P. Jefferis IIILect 10 - 1Application Tasks To supply services to the user file transfer World Wide Web browsing mail network management network name services05/01/09 2008 Raymond P. Jefferis IIILect 10 - 2
University of Rochester - PHYS - 344
Physics 344Mon. 2/19 Wed. 2/21 Fri. 2/23 Mon. 3/5 Wed. 3/7 Thurs Fri. 3/9Lect. 13Feb. 21st , 2007HW10,111S 5.1 5.2 Free Energy & Equilibrium HW12: S. 1,5,8,11,20,22 S 5.3 Phase transformation (not van der Waals) HW13: S. 28, 30, 32(not d), 35, 37 S
Midwestern State University - ECON - 101
W. JoerdingEcon 1011Labor Market IIMinimum Wage:We observe wide scale support in public for minimum wage legislation but among economists almost equally wide spread opposition to minimum wages. Why?Copyright 4/11/08 by Wayne Joerding. All rights res
Oregon State University - FE - 538
HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES Hydrol. Process. 15, 16551657 (2001) DOI: 10.1002/hyp.436INVITED COMMENTARYOn hypothesis testing in hydrologyKeith Beven*Institute of Environmental and Natural Sciences, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, UK *Correspondenc
Ill. Chicago - SERVER - 442934
Inside: Autism Center of Excellence Established | 3 Peoria, Rockford Campuses to Expand | 10 125th Anniversary Gala Celebration | 14 Honor Roll of Contributors | 52M E DICI N EA Publication for Alumni and Friends of the UIC College of Medicine and the U
Stanford - VRSN - 1024
Case 5:02-cv-02270-JWDocument 464Filed 02/27/2006Page 1 of 351 LERACH COUGHLIN STOIA GELLER RUDMAN & ROBBINS LLP 2 PATRICK J. COUGHLIN (111070) JEFFREY W. LAWRENCE (166806) 3 DENNIS J. HERMAN (220163) CHRISTOPHER P. SEEFER (201197) 4 SHIRLEY H. HUANG
Northeastern University - CSU - 540
CSG140 Computer Graphics. Spring 2004. Midterm ExamProf. Futrelle This exam is for Thursday 18 March - Closed book/notesQuestion 1. Barycentric coordinates begin with the expression p=a + (b - a) + (c - a) Convert this to a symmetric form and state the
BYU - ME - 537
ME 537 - Take Home Exam 3Winter, 2004 Due: March 25, 2:00 pm in classProblem Statement:The robot in the figure below has two revolute joints. The links are made of aluminum and assumed to be solid. Size the motors which would act at each joint (direct
SUNY Buffalo - PSC - 345
PSC 345 CANADIAN POLITICSPOLITICAL CONFLICTS IN CANADADiscussion: What are the principal political conflicts in Canada? INTRODUCTION: Essence of Politics Two visions of politics Politics as a struggle for the exercise of power. Politics as societal in
University of Rochester - PHYS - 221
Name: Partners:PHYSICS 221 LAB 3: E LECTROSTATICSThe picture above shows several lines that each have a constant electric potential (equipotential lines) due to a person's beating heart. At the instant that the image was made, one side of the heart was
U. Houston - CS - 6360
COSC 6360SECOND MIDTERMNOVEMBER 7, 2005This exam is closed book. You can have one sheet (that is, two pages) of notes. Please answer every part of every question 1. Assuming that you are often carrying data on your flash drive between your home compute
USF - NR - 32316
Office of the Registrar College of Medicine University of South Florida Phone: (813) 974-408912901 Bruce B. Downs Blvd MDC 32 Tampa, FL 33612 Email: mcook@hsc.usf.edu Fax: (813) 974-4619Communicable Disease Prevention Certification Visiting StudentsPri
Duke - CPS - 102
Todays topics Counting Sum rule Product rule Tree diagrams Inclusion/exclusionCombinatorics The study of the number of ways to put things together into various combinations. E.g. In a contest entered by 100 people, how many different top-10 outcomes c
MD University College - ADMN - 631
16 - 1Chapter 16: Capital Structure Decisions: The Basics Overview and preview of capital structure effects Business versus financial risk The impact of debt on returns Capital structure theory Example: Choosing the optimal structure Setting the capital
MD University College - ADMN - 631
15 - 1CHAPTER 15Corporate Valuation, Value-Based Management, and Corporate Governance Corporate Valuation Value-Based Management Corporate Governance15 - 2Corporate Valuation: List the two types of assets that a company owns. Assets-in-place Financi
MD University College - ADMN - 631
14 - 1CHAPTER 14Financial Planning and Forecasting Pro Forma Financial Statements Financial planning Additional Funds Needed (AFN) formula Pro forma financial statements Sales forecasts Percent of sales method14 - 2Financial Planning and Pro Forma Sta
MD University College - ADMN - 631
Chapter 10: The Basics of Capital Budgeting: Evaluating Cash Flows Overview and "vocabulary" Methods Payback, discounted payback NPV IRR, MIRR Profitability Index Unequal lives Economic life10 - 110 - 2What is capital budgeting? Analysis of potential
MD University College - ADMN - 631
13 - 1CHAPTER 13Analysis of Financial Statements Ratio analysis Du Pont system Effects of improving ratios Limitations of ratio analysis Qualitative factors13 - 2Income Statement 2004 2005E Sales 5,834,400 7,035,600 COGS 4,980,000 5,800,000 Other expe
MD University College - ADMN - 631
9-1CHAPTER 9The Cost of Capital Cost of Capital Components Debt Preferred Common Equity WACC9-2What types of long-term capital do firms use? Long-term debt Preferred stock Common equity9-3Capital components are sources of funding that come from inv
MD University College - ADMN - 631
7-1CHAPTER 7Stocks and Their Valuation Features of common stock Determining common stock values Efficient markets Preferred stock7-2Common Stock: Owners, Directors, and Managers Represents ownership. Ownership implies control. Stockholders elect dire
MD University College - ADMN - 631
6-1CHAPTER 6Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk6-2Key Features of a Bond 1. 2. Par value: Face amount; paid at maturity. Assume $1,000. Coupon interest rate: Stated interest rate. Multiply by
MD University College - ADMN - 631
CHAPTER 55-1Risk and Return: Portfolio Theory and Asset Pricing Models Portfolio Theory Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)Efficient frontier Capital Market Line (CML) Security Market Line (SML) Beta calculation Arbitrage pricing theory Fama-French 3-
MD University College - ADMN - 631
2-1Chapter 2 Time Value of Money Future value Present value Rates of return Amortization2-2Time lines show timing of cash flows. 0i%1 CF12 CF23 CF3CF0Tick marks at ends of periods, so Time 0 is today; Time 1 is the end of Period 1; or the beginn
MD University College - ADMN - 631
3-1CHAPTER 3Financial Statements, Cash Flow, and Taxes Balance sheet Income statement Statement of cash flows Accounting income versus cash flow MVA and EVA Personal taxes Corporate taxes3-2Income Statement 2003 2004 Sales 3,432,000 5,834,400 COGS 2,8
MD University College - ADMN - 631
1-1CHAPTER 1Overview of Financial Management and the Financial Environment Financial management Forms of business organization Objective of the firm: Maximize wealth Determinants of stock pricing The financial environment Financial instruments, markets
Michigan State University - LIB - 1932
224Vol. 12, No. 6Putting Tests Upon Bent GrassesBy John Monteith, Jr., and Kenneth WeltonIn this number of the Bulletin the ratings are given of various grasses to be used for putting green purposes based on a summary of reports on a series of demonst
Western Washington - CS - 352
Script started on Mon Apr 20 14:29:03 2009->~/Class/352/makedoe[1]$ cd ex1->~/Class/352/make/ex1doe[2]$ cat -e -t -v Makefile# This is an example makefile$#$$FILES = f1 f2 f3$$result: f1 f2 f3$^Icat f1 f2 f3 > result$$clean:$^Irm -f result$
Western Washington - CS - 352
Script started on Fri Apr 17 13:57:51 2009->~/Class/352/cvsdoe[1]$ cvs tagcvs tag: No CVSROOT specified! Please use the `-d' optioncvs [tag aborted]: or set the CVSROOT environment variable.->~/Class/352/cvsdoe[2]$ ls4-15.txt cat cvs.mgp cvs.ps wor
Western Washington - CS - 352
CSCI 352 - UNIX Software DevelopmentSpring 2009, Assignments 5 and 6Assignment 5 Due: Friday, May 22, 2009. 250 points. Assignment 6 Due: Friday, June 5, 2009. 325 points. For assignment 5, you will continue your work on the mini-shell. Start with the c
Western Washington - CS - 352
Script started on Wed Apr 15 14:22:01 2009->~/Class/352/cvsdoe[1]$ cvs -d /home/phil/CVStest init->~/Class/352/cvsdoe[2]$ ls /home/phil/CVStestCVSROOT->~/Class/352/cvsdoe[3]$ ls4-15.txt cat.c cvs.mgp cvs.pdf cvs.ps default.mgp->~/Class/352/cvsdo
Western Washington - CS - 352
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Rose-Hulman - ES - 204
ROSE-HULMAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGYDepartment of Mechanical EngineeringES 204 Mechanical SystemsReview Problems - Final Exam4.The uniform concrete block, which weighs 171 lb and falls from rest in the horizontal position shown, strikes the fixed corn
Stanford - ME - 118
ME 118Course SyllabusLecture/Lab CalendarLecture 0 Wed. 1/11/95 Course Introduction and Basic Circuits Review 1 Fri. 1/13/95 What's A Microprocessor ? Reading (to be completed before the lecture) H&H: Ch. 1, 2.01-2.20 Out Lab 0 DueH&H Sections 11.12,
North-West Uni. - EECS - 352
Lecture 5The Digital Fourier Transform(Based, in part, on The Scientist and Engineer's Guide to Digital Signal Processing by Steven Smith)Bryan Pardo, 2008, Northwestern University EECS 352: Machine Perception of Music and AudioWhy bother? The ear pr
North-West Uni. - EECS - 352
Lecture 8Clustering, Classification, DistanceBryan Pardo, 2008, Northwestern University EECS 352: Machine Perception of Music and AudioProblem: Group into 2 categoriesBryan Pardo, 2008, Northwestern University EECS 352: Machine Perception of Music and
North-West Uni. - EECS - 352
Lecture 2Human AuditionEECS 352: Machine Perception of Music and Audio Bryan Pardo 2008Why look at human audition? Humans are the final judge for. What is salient information How good things sound Music is designed for human consumption Takes advan
North-West Uni. - EECS - 352
Machine Perception of MusicLecture 1EECS 352: Machine Perception of Music and Audio Bryan Pardo 2008Recording soundMechanical VibrationPressure WavesMotion->Voltage TransducerVoltage over timeEECS 352: Machine Perception of Music and Audio Bryan P
Colby - CS - 351
CS 351 Computer GraphicsGraphics System Specification (C)1OverviewThe purpose of a computer graphics system is to enable a user to construct scenes and views to achieve a desired result. Often, speed or real-time performance is also a major concern. B
New Mexico - ECE - 310
There are two ways to create a binary file (executable) starting witha nasm source program (file).Both methods use nasm -f elf src_file_name.asmto create an object file, src_file_name.oThis object file must then be converted into an executable file
New Mexico - ECE - 310
IntroductionA quick primer for those who prefer to use a command line debugger. Both gbd (Linux) and dbx (Unix) are very similar. In addition, NuMega technologies produces a very powerful Ring 0 command line debugger for Micro$oft Windows named SoftICE (
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design&Programming Linux Device Drivers IVCMPE 310Sculls Memory Usage We need to examine how and why scull performs memory allocation before looking at the read and write methods./* Pointer to next device struct. */ /* Quantum size */ /* Array
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems ProgrammingLinux Device Drivers IICMPE 310The Kernel Symbol Table insmod resolves undefined symbols against the kernel's public symbols. These include both functions and variables.The symbol table lives in /proc/ksyms. Global symbols in your m
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & ProgrammingCoprocessorCMPE 310Coprocessor Basics The 80x87 is able to multiply, divide, add, subtract, nd the sqrt and calculate transcendental functions and logarithms.Data types include 16-, 32- and 64-bit signed integers; 18-digit
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & ProgrammingStack BasicsCMPE 310Purpose of Stack Memory used to pass parameters to procedures. Memory used for allocating space for local variables. Save return address in procedure calls. Save registers to be preserved across proce
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & Programming 80x86 Assembly IVCMPE 310Intel AssemblyMARYLAND BA LTIUNIVERSITY O FU M B CMORE COUNT Y1(Mar. 1, 2002)1966UMBCSystems Design & Programming 80x86 Assembly IVCMPE 310Arithmetic Operationsadd al, [ARRAY + esi]
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & Programming 80x86 Assembly IICMPE 310Data Addressing Modes Base-Plus-Index addressing: Effective address computed as: seg_base + base + index.Base registers: Holds starting location of an array. ebp (stack) ebx (data) Any 32-bit regist
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design and ProgrammingBus InterfaceCMPE 310Bus InterfacesDifferent types of buses: ISA (Industry Standard Architecture) EISA (Extended ISA) VESA (Video Electronics Standards Association, VL Bus) PCI (Periheral Component Interconnect) USB (Univ
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design and ProgrammingDMA ICMPE 310Disk Memory Systems Magnetic and optical: Floppy disks Hard disks CD-ROMs and WORMs (write once/read mostly) DVDFloppy: Outter trackSector Commonly hold between 512 to 1024 bytes of data.Inner trackMARYL
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design and ProgrammingBasic I/O IIICMPE 310Programmable Keyboard/Display Interface - 8279 A programmable keyboard and display interfacing chip. Scans and encodes up to a 64-key keyboard. Controls up to a 16-digit numerical display.Keyboard has
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & ProgrammingInterrupts ICMPE 310Interrupts Interrupt processing is an alternative to polling. Main program Keyboard ISR Printer ISR TimeExecuting task on the MicroprocessorThe Intel microprocessors support hardware interrupts through:
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design and ProgrammingBasic I/O IICMPE 310Programmable Peripheral Interface (82C55)The 82C55 is a popular interfacing component, that can interface any TTLcompatible I/O device to the microprocessor.It is used to interface to the keyboard and
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design and ProgrammingBasic I/O ICMPE 310Basic I/O Instructions We discussed IN, OUT, INS and OUTS as instructions for the transfer of data to and from an I/O device.IN and OUT transfer data between an I/O device and the microprocessors accumu
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & ProgrammingMemory IIICMPE 3108086 - 80386SX 16-bit Memory Interface These machines differ from the 8088/80188 in several ways: The data bus is 16-bits wide. The IO/M pin is replaced with M/IO (8086/80186) and MRDC and MWTC for 80286 an
New Mexico - ECE - 310
Systems Design & ProgrammingMemory ICMPE 310Memory Types Two basic types: ROM: Read-only memory RAM: Read-Write memoryFour commonly used memories: ROM Flash (EEPROM) Static RAM (SRAM) Dynamic RAM (DRAM)Generic pin conguration: Address connection A0 A