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these and modules
And the modularity of these large systems was also unique: multiple CPUs, multiple memory modules and multiple I / O and Data Comm processors permitted incremental and cost effective growth of system performance and reliability.
Perl calls these modules.
Some of these perform bootstrapping tasks, such as ExtUtils :: MakeMaker, which is used for building and installing other extension modules ; others, like CGI. pm, are merely commonly used.
Then, if these " digital modules " were able to build a self-sustaining business, the company would be free to use them to develop a complete computer in their Phase II.
Despite the recession of the late 1950s, the company sold $ 94, 000 worth of these modules during 1958 alone, turning a profit at the end of its first year.
This new office will focus on the boundary between general-purpose computers and the physical world, such as sensors, displays and the first few layers of specialized signal-processing that couple these modules to standard computer interfaces.
They argued that existing neural models had failed to produce intelligent behaviour because they were too small, and that in order to create " artificial brains " it was necessary to manually assemble tens of thousands of evolved neural modules together, with the billion neuron " CAM-Brain " requiring around 10 million modules ; this idea was rejected by Igor Aleksander, who said " The point is that these puzzles are not puzzles because our neural models are not large enough.
Computer programs typically comprise several parts or modules ; all these parts / modules need not be contained within a single object file, and in such case refer to each other by means of symbols.
* undefined symbols, which call the other modules where these symbols are defined, and
Hennessy's team viewed these interlocks as a major performance barrier since they had to communicate to all the modules in the CPU which takes time, and appeared to limit the clock speed.
For example, components and modules are useful for large-scale programming, but the interaction of macros and these other constructs must be defined for their use together.
In this, of course, he has been born out by modern neuropsychology which now can describe both discrete cognitive capacities ( see Howard Gardner's work on " multiple intelligences ") and discrete neurological evolutionary " modules " which account for these abilities ( for example, as described in Joseph Ledoux's book The Synaptic Self ).
Some of these modules take the form of sensory maps, mapping some aspect of the world across part of the brain's surface.
Most published modules for the game followed these themes.
* There are also other non-player races in the Star Frontiers universe, including many in the printed modules, but these five are the only races who developed space drive technology within the Frontier.
Some of these functions may be on combined modules.
None of these modules would have reached the end of their useful lives in 2016 or 2020.
In this case the " bad " property is that these elements annihilate all simple left and right modules of the ring.
Twenty of these modules were accumulators, which could not only add and subtract but hold a ten-digit decimal number in memory.
However, the expansion modules attached to these interfaces, though functionally the same as expansion cards, are not technically expansion cards, due to their physical form.
In both of the modules, these four notes move from G3 to Eb4.
The Certificate consists largely of University of Kent Stage 1 modules in Politics and Sociology, taught both at the University and at Chaucer College, together with a smaller number of modules designed specifically for Japanese students and taught at the College ( one of these modules is available to University of Kent students under a reciprocal arrangement ).

these and Langlands
The Langlands program is a far-reaching web of these ideas of ' unifying conjectures ' that link different subfields of mathematics, e. g. number theory and representation theory of Lie groups ; some of these conjectures have since been proved.
Langlands then generalized these to automorphic cuspidal representations, which are certain infinite dimensional irreducible representations of the general linear group GL ( n ) over the adele ring of Q.
Langlands attached automorphic L-functions to these automorphic representations, and conjectured that every Artin L-function arising from a finite-dimensional representation of the Galois group of a number field is equal to one arising from an automorphic cuspidal representation.
Most children who lived in these areas would have attended Langlands Primary, St Joseph's Primary or Carbrain Primary, and later Cumbernauld High School, Greenfaulds High School or Our Lady's High School.
Langlands used the base change lifting to prove the tetrahedral case, and Tunnell extended his work to cover the octahedral case ; Wiles used these cases in his proof of the Taniyama – Shimura conjecture.

these and correspondence
The correspondence between these values and the physical states of the underlying storage or device is a matter of convention, and different assignments may be used even within the same device or program.
Some of these constructs, such as space and time, correspond to the way the world is structured by the laws of physics ; for others the correspondence is not as clear.
Within Chinese medicine texts the Wu Xing are also referred to as Wu Yun ( 五運 wŭ yùn ) or a combination of the two characters ( Wu Xing-Yun ) these emphasise the correspondence of five elements to five ' seasons ' ( four seasons plus one ).
It is characteristic of early literature that the evolution of the thought, or the grammatical form of the sentence, is guided by the structure of the verse ; and the correspondence which consequently obtains between the rhythm and the syntax — the thought being given out in lengths, as it were, and these again divided by tolerably uniform pauses — produces a swift flowing movement such as is rarely found when periods are constructed without direct reference to the metre.
An important guide for making these choices is the correspondence principle, which states that the predictions of quantum mechanics reduce to those of classical mechanics when a system moves to higher energies or — equivalently — larger quantum numbers, i. e. whereas a single particle exhibits a degree of randomness, in systems incorporating millions of particles averaging takes over and, at the high energy limit, the statistical probability of random behaviour approaches zero.
Many of these letters are pious and poetic and express a desire to be in closer or more frequent contact with a loved one that is far enough away to only be reached by written correspondence.
While criticized by some as overly bureaucratic, these regulations only extend existing laws for ( paper ) business correspondence to email.
"(...) Aristotle sounds much more like a genuine correspondence theorist in the Categories ( 12b11, 14b14 ), where he talks of " underlying things " that make statements true and implies that these " things " ( pragmata ) are logically structured situations or facts ( viz., his sitting, his not sitting ).
As Jerome completed his translations of each book of the Bible, he recorded his observations and comments in an extensive correspondence with other scholars ; and these letters were subsequently collected and appended as prologues to the Vulgate text for those books where they survived.
Phonics is a method for teaching reading and writing the English language by developing learners ’ phonemic awareness — the ability to hear, identify, and manipulate phonemes — in order to teach the correspondence between these sounds and the spelling patterns ( graphemes ) that represent them.
While these are frequently the same time, they can differ, as in the case of prerecorded broadcasts or correspondence.
Newton also acknowledged to Halley that his correspondence with Hooke in 1679-80 had reawakened his dormant interest in astronomical matters, but that did not mean, according to Newton, that Hooke had told Newton anything new or original: " yet am I not beholden to him for any light into that business but only for the diversion he gave me from my other studies to think on these things & for his dogmaticalness in writing as if he had found the motion in the Ellipsis, which inclined me to try it ...".
Newton referred to his plans for a second edition in correspondence with Flamsteed in November 1694: Newton also maintained annotated copies of the first edition specially bound up with interleaves on which he could note his revisions ; two of these copies still survive: but he had not completed the revisions by 1708, and of two would-be editors, Newton had almost severed connections with one, Fatio de Duillier, and the other, David Gregory seems not to have met with Newton's approval and was also terminally ill, dying later in 1708.
Newton also acknowledged to Halley that his correspondence with Hooke in 1679 – 80 had reawakened his dormant interest in astronomical matters, but that did not mean, according to Newton, that Hooke had told Newton anything new or original: " yet am I not beholden to him for any light into that business but only for the diversion he gave me from my other studies to think on these things & for his dogmaticalness in writing as if he had found the motion in the Ellipsis, which inclined me to try it.
He found some of these sources at the Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan, a major collection of radical, labor, socialist, and anarchist materials which is now the repository for Black's papers and correspondence.
and his predecessor from their agents in Palestine, leads some Egyptologists to conclude that in the century before the Exodus an active literary intercourse was carried on between these nations, and that the medium of the correspondence was the Babylonian language and script.
O how acceptable to the most glorious God appear the offerings on these altars, when the life of those sacrificing shines in correspondence with the gilded light of the altars!
From the correspondence between Landa's description of the New Year rituals and the depiction of these rituals in the Dresden Codex, it can be inferred that in 16th-century Yucatán, god K was called Bolon Dzacab ' Innumerable ( bolon ' nine, innumerable ') maternal generations ', perhaps a metaphor for fertility.
Different grading systems consider these factors in different ways, so no two grading systems have an exact one-to-one correspondence.
Many of these letters received serious responses ; Novello sometimes continued the charade correspondence at length, with humorous results.
Houck was involved in correspondence with a Mr. Sturdivant at the time of the construction of these lines who lived in Tallapoosa, Georgia.
The precise correspondence between these different kinds of L-functions constitutes Artin's reciprocity law.
She continued an active correspondence with her editors, many fans and friends during these years.
Petri escaped Poland the day before the German invasion in September 1939, but he had to leave behind all his books, music and letters, including his correspondence with Busoni ( these papers survived and have been recovered ).
In 1778 appeared a published correspondence between these two liberal theologians on the subjects of materialism and necessity, wherein Price maintains, in opposition to Priestley, the free agency of man and the unity and immateriality of the human soul.

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