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Harnessing and is
Harnessing the richness of the Internet is another goal.
Elearning Credits have been rolled into the Harnessing Technology Grant which is being distributed to schools via Local Authorities.

Harnessing and by
Harnessing collective intellect, facilitated by interactive computers, became his life's mission at a time when computers were viewed as number crunching tools.
He was Chairman and principal author of the “ Memo to the President-Elect: Harnessing Process to Purpose ,” a blue-ribbon Commission report sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Institute for International Economics.
* The Harnessing of the Black Warrior River by Kenneth Willis
Their next three albums, Unholy Cult, Harnessing Ruin, and Shadows in the Light were released by French label Listenable Records, the same label which released an album by Hernandez's previous band Fallen Christ years before.
Harnessing the work of the earlier New Historicism, this emergent field of historiography began to challenge the hegemony of Medieval historians over the history which they narrate, and opens the door for new modes of thinking by the proposition that " we cannot interpret medieval culture, or any historical culture, except through the prism of the dominat concepts of our own thought worlds.
* Harnessing the intellectuals: censoring writers and artists in today's Cuba by Carlos Ripoll Washington, DC: Cuban American National Foundation 1985 ( CANF pamphlet # 15 )
Harnessing the flexibility and relatively inexpensive resources of electronic publishing, largely developed at the University library by its Digital Library Production Service, the University Library has focused on providing cost-effective, sustainable, permanent, user-friendly, locally operated, and author-friendly intellectual property agreements to counter the opposite effects that the publishing industry has fostered and to offer new models for other, similar publishing ventures.

Harnessing and with
* Video of " Harnessing Quantum Physics ", Peter Shor's panel discussion with Ignacio Cirac, Michele Mosca, Avi Wigderson, Daniel Gottesman and Dorit Aharonov, at the Quantum to Cosmos festival
* 2011 The Seven Spiritual Laws of Superheroes: Harnessing Our Power to Change the World with Gotham Chopra ISBN 978-0-06-205966-6
In the article Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, San Murugesan defines the field of green computing as " the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using, and disposing of computers, servers, and associated subsystems — such as monitors, printers, storage devices, and networking and communications systems — efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment.
In the article Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, San Murugesan defines the field of green computing as " the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using, and disposing of computers, servers, and associated subsystems — such as monitors, printers, storage devices, and networking and communications systems — efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment.

Harnessing and its
ICRISAT conducts its research under four themes: Agro-ecosystems development, Harnessing plant biotechnology and bioinformatics, Crop improvement and management, and Institutions, Markets, policy and Impacts

Harnessing and such
On the band's 2005 album, Harnessing Ruin, there are more lyrics touching on other subjects such as politics.

Harnessing and .
Harnessing a team to a buckboard, they drove out to a willow-lined creek about a half-mile off, then climbed down and began chopping.
Wesley identified the appalling grandparents in Harnessing Peacocks, who bully the pregnant Hebe, as the nearest she came to a portrait of her own parents in old age.
He continued to appear occasionally on television, including playing the leads in Fiddlers Three ( 1991 ) and Harnessing Peacocks ( 1992 ) and an appearance on the American show Magnum, P. I.
Harnessing the explosive energy of the spring, the gymnast directs his or her body hands-first towards the vault.
Harnessing the wheelwork of nature: Tesla's science of energy.
According to Story About Li Bing and His Son in Harnessing the Rivers, in Records of Guansian, Li Erlang assisted his father in the construction of the complex irrigation system that prevented the Min River from flooding and irrigated the Chengdu Plain.
Harnessing a Godmaster's natural ability to manipulate Chokon Power-the energy of the heavens ( Tenchokon ), the Earth ( Chichokon ) and man ( Jinchokon )-Ginrai saw off the Decepticons, and, after a period of deliberation, after which he decided that becoming a Godmaster was the will of God himself, he joined the Autobots.
Harnessing the power of the Golden Fruit just as Sir Pac-alot did, Pac-Man re-imprisons Spooky and returns the Golden Fruit to where they belong.
Harnessing the power of an artificial black hole, the drive was designed to project a focused beam of gravitons, folding space and allowing the ship to pass through and arrive immediately at the new location.
Steve Shalaty replaced Hernandez on Harnessing Ruin.
The Becta Harnessing Technology Schools Survey 2007 indicated that 98 % of secondary and 100 % of primary schools had IWBs.
* Harnessing the creative energy of physical scientists to fuel technology innovations and paradigm shifts in brain studies.
: User-Centric Innovations in New Product Development ; Systematic Identification of Lead User Harnessing Interactive and Collaborative Online-Tools, in: International Journal of Innovation Management, Vol.
Items covered in the contest may cover any equine subject, i. e., Reproduction, Training, Parasites, Dressage, Draft Horses, History and Origins, Anatomy and Physiology, Driving and Harnessing, Horse Industry, Horse Management, Breeds, Genetics, Mustangs, Western Games, Colors, Famous Horses in History, Parts of the Saddle, Types of Bits, Feedstuffs and Nutrition.

Brownian and motion
An additional line of reasoning in support of particle theory ( and by extension atomic theory ) began in 1827 when botanist Robert Brown used a microscope to look at dust grains floating in water and discovered that they moved about erratically — a phenomenon that became known as " Brownian motion ".
# REDIRECT Brownian motion
This is a simulation of the Brownian motion of a big particle ( dust particle ) that collides with a large set of smaller particles ( molecules of a gas ) which move with different velocities in different random directions.
This is a simulation of the Brownian motion of 5 particles ( yellow ) that collide with a large set of 800 particles.
Three different views of Brownian motion, with 32 steps, 256 steps, and 2048 steps denoted by progressively lighter colors
A single realisation of three-dimensional Brownian motion for times 0 ≤ t ≤ 2
Brownian motion or pedesis ( from " leaping ") is the presumably random moving of particles suspended in a fluid ( a liquid or a gas ) resulting from their bombardment by the fast-moving atoms or molecules in the gas or liquid.
The term " Brownian motion " can also refer to the mathematical model used to describe such random movements, which is often called a particle theory.
The mathematical model of Brownian motion has several real-world applications.
Brownian motion is among the simplest of the continuous-time stochastic ( or probabilistic ) processes, and it is a limit of both simpler and more complicated stochastic processes ( see random walk and Donsker's theorem ).
This is because Brownian motion, whose time derivative is everywhere infinite, is an idealised approximation to actual random physical processes, which always have a finite time scale.
The Roman Lucretius's scientific poem " On the Nature of Things " ( c. 60 BC ) has a remarkable description of Brownian motion of dust particles.
Although the mingling motion of dust particles is caused largely by air currents, the glittering, tumbling motion of small dust particles is, indeed, caused chiefly by true Brownian dynamics.
The first person to describe the mathematics behind Brownian motion was Thorvald N. Thiele in a paper on the method of least squares published in 1880.
Their equations describing Brownian motion were subsequently verified by the experimental work of Jean Baptiste Perrin in 1913.
Thus Einstein was led to consider the collective motion of Brownian particles.
Molecular dynamics ( MD ) use either quantum mechanics, Newton's laws of motion or a mixed model to examine the time-dependent behavior of systems, including vibrations or Brownian motion and reactions.
** Brownian dynamics, the occurrence of Langevin dynamics in the motion of particles in solution ( e. g. a grain in water, as was first seen by Brown ); its famous property is: MSD ~ t, where MSD is the mean squared displacement, and t is the time the process is seen
** Normal dynamics, is a stochastic motion having a Gaussian probability density function in position with variance MSD that follows, MSD ~ t, where MSD is the mean squared displacement of the process, and t is the time the process is seen ( normal dynamics and Brownian dynamics are very similar ; the term used depends on the field )
:* Random fractals – use stochastic rules ; e. g., Lévy flight, percolation clusters, self avoiding walks, fractal landscapes, trajectories of Brownian motion and the Brownian tree ( i. e., dendritic fractals generated by modeling diffusion-limited aggregation or reaction-limited aggregation clusters ).
The work of Perrin on Brownian motion ( 1911 ) is considered to be the final proof of the existence of molecules.
When a ferromagnet or ferrimagnet is sufficiently small, it acts like a single magnetic spin that is subject to Brownian motion.

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