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myriad and possible
His spice-induced visions show him a myriad of possible futures where humanity has become extinct and only one where humanity survives.
However, ROTT's engine was still the first to pioneer myriad features which would be found in many later games, such as panoramic skies, simulated dynamic lighting, fog, bullet holes, breakable glass walls, level-over-level environments ( made possible by " gravitational anomaly disks "; suspended objects that collectively form stairs, floors, etc.
Wireless sensor networking, WSN, makes use of miniaturization made possible by advanced IC design to couple full wireless subsystems to sophisticated sensors, enabling people and companies to measure a myriad of things in the physical world and act on this information through IT monitoring and control systems.
They write that the utilitarian calculi upon which Friendly AI theories are based work " only when one has not only great powers of prediction about the likelihood of myriad possible outcomes, but certainty and consensus on how one values the different outcomes.
Quantum turbulence, then, is a tangle of these quantized vortices, making it a pure form of turbulence which is much simpler to model than classical turbulence, in which the myriad of possible interactions of the eddies quickly make the problem too complex to be able to predict what will happen.
The myriad of possible inputs are usually grouped into five categories.
Wood's patents and theoretical work shed much light on the nature and physics of ultra-violet radiation and made possible the myriad of uses of uv-fluorescence which became popular after World War I.
It is also possible to hike to the peak, along the myriad of small, but well-marked paths to the top.
Help is dispatched at the insistence of five-year-old " torch " ( a person who, among other things, can see the life forces of people and under certain conditions, their myriad alternate futures ) Peggy Guester, who sees Alvin and Alvin's possible future as a Maker.
All Patryns are capable of using rune magic, which manipulates the Wave of possibilities, allowing Patryns to view a myriad of possible outcomes and select one to occur.

myriad and references
Its first section discusses the ten Sandman collections sequentially, analyzing their meaning, explaining some of Gaiman's myriad references and sometimes providing information on the writing of the comics.
In order to give context to his work, Dadd subsequently wrote a strange poem by the name of Elimination of a Picture & its Subject — called The Fellers ' Master Stroke in which each of the characters appearing in the picture is given a name and purpose — including myriad references to old English folklore and Shakespeare — in an apparent attempt to show that the painting's unique composition was not merely a product of random, wild inspiration.
Umberto Eco includes myriad references to both scholarly and popular culture in the book ( notably the Flash Gordon strips ), and has drawn heavily on his own experiences growing up in Benito Mussolini's Fascist Italy.
Voltage references are used in power supply voltage regulators, analog-to-digital converters and digital-to-analog converters, and myriad other measurement and control systems.
The song has myriad of primarily 1980's and early 1990s cultural references, including: Cherry Coke, Macaulay Culkin in Home Alone, Alex P. Keaton, New Edition, Kevin Bacon in Footloose, New Kids on the Block, Beastie Boys, Larry Bird, William Shakespeare, Abercrombie and Fitch, Michael J Fox, Cherry Pez, " Paul Revere ", Mr. Limpet, Chinese Food, pogo sticks, Candy Girl, The Color Purple and Fun Dip.

myriad and models
Pertec's most successful products were hard disk drives and tape drives, which were sold as OEM to the top computer manufacturers including IBM, Siemens and Digital Equipment Corporation, DEC. Pertec manufactured multiple models of seven and nine track half-inch tape drives with densities 800CPI ( NRZI ) and 1600CPI ( PE ) and phase-encoding formatters which were used by a myriad of original equipment manufacturers as I / O devices for their product lines.
However, like all statistical models, profit charts have myriad valid applications when used properly and honestly.

myriad and by
Gradually, it faded out of existence and was replaced by myriad minor leagues and associations around the country.
To govern by virtue, let us compare it to the North Star: it stays in its place, while the myriad stars wait upon it.
Equally, gays and lesbians do not see the Bible as unequivocally true because they are forced by its use against them to read it more closely and with less credulity, leading them to note its myriad contradictions.
It is easily hydrolyzed by dilute acid or base as well as myriad hemicellulase enzymes.
The conception that in religious matters anyone, however ignorant, can judge for himself, is the direct denial of the old Jewish maxim,The ignorant cannot be pious ( Avot 2: 5 )… The majority vote of a Board of Directors of a synagogue is, after all, a negligible quantity when it is in opposition to the vote of historical Judaism with its myriad of Saints and thousands of Sages … The sorting, distributing, selecting, harmonizing and completing can only be done by experienced hands.
Modern Greek still uses the word " myriad " by itself, but also to form the word for million.
Musically, Campbell-Lyons and Spyropoulos blended myriad musical styles including rock, pop, folk, jazz, Latin rhythms and classical music, primarily augmented by baroque chamber-style arrangements to create a unique entity.
p53 becomes activated in response to a myriad of stress types, which include but are not limited to DNA damage ( induced by either UV, IR, or chemical agents such as hydrogen peroxide ), oxidative stress, osmotic shock, ribonucleotide depletion, and deregulated oncogene expression.
The prefix myria -, ten thousand, denoting a factor of, originated from the Greek μύριοι ( mýrioi ), that is, myriad, for ten thousand, and the prefixes demi-and double -, denoting a factor of and 2, respectively, were parts of the original metric system adopted by France in 1795.
It retained this status until the late 19th century, despite a myriad of attacks by the French throughout the 18th century, including the battle of St. Kitts in 1782.
* Izanagi-no-Mikoto ( male ) and Izanami-no-Mikoto ( female ) were called by all the myriad gods and asked to help each other to create a new land which was to become Japan.
# Primacy of the Mythic: The creative Imagination, an external world of symbols, glyphs, myths, synchronicities and the myriad, along with image, all as a universal reality for the interplay conjoined by creative mind.
Except for the Black Sea shore in the south, Bessarabia remained outside direct Roman control ; the myriad of tribes there are called by modern historians Free Dacians.
The other is magnetic heating, in which magnetic energy is continuously built up by photospheric motion and released through magnetic reconnection in the form of large solar flares and myriad similar but smaller events — nanoflares.
In East Asia, the swastika is a Chinese character, defined by Kangxi Dictionary, published in 1716, as " synonym of myriad, used mostly in Buddhist classic texts ", by extension, the word later evolved to represent eternity and Buddhism.
Competence in sleep medicine requires an understanding of a myriad of very diverse disorders, many of which present with similar symptoms such as excessive daytime sleepiness, which, in the absence of volitional sleep deprivation, " is almost inevitably caused by an identifiable and treatable sleep disorder ", such as sleep apnea, narcolepsy, idiopathic central nervous system ( CNS ) hypersomnia, Kleine-Levin syndrome, menstrual-related hypersomnia, idiopathic recurrent stupor, or circadian rhythm disturbances.
Worldwide, a huge number of PCs are " white box " systems assembled by a myriad of local systems builders.
The book was rejected by different publishing houses for a myriad of reasons.
Although defined as a mononeuritis ( involving only one nerve ), patients diagnosed with Bell s palsy may have " myriad neurological symptoms " including " facial tingling, moderate or severe headache / neck pain, memory problems, balance problems, ipsilateral limb paresthesias, ipsilateral limb weakness, and a sense of clumsiness " that are " unexplained by facial nerve dysfunction ".
Lucretia Mott read a humorous newspaper piece written by her sister Martha Wright in which Wright questioned why, after an overworked mother completed the myriad daily tasks that were required of her but not of her husband, she was the one upon whom written advice was " so lavishly bestowed.
The American Medical Association ( AMA ) has stated that because of the lack of scientific evidence, based on well-controlled clinical trials, that supports a cause-and-effect relationship between exposure to very low levels of chemicals and the myriad symptoms reported by clinical ecologists, MCS is not recognized as an established organic disease.
In 691 an octagonal Islamic building topped by a dome was built by the Caliph Abd al-Malik around the rock, for a myriad of political, dynastic and religious reasons, built on local and Koranic traditions articulating the site's holiness, a process in which textual and architectural narratives reinforced one another.

myriad and demonstrate
Archaeological surveys and excavations, documented in myriad professional publications, as well as books for the public available at Moquegua's Museo Contisuyo, demonstrate a sequence of occupation stretching from more than 10, 000 B. C.

myriad and
Contrary to Professor Behe s assertions with respect to these few biochemical systems among the myriad existing in nature, however, Dr. Miller presented evidence, based upon peer-reviewed studies, that they are not in fact irreducibly complex.
Fishes of myriad varieties are the main predators in most of the world s water bodies, both freshwater and marine.
Seydor s movie is also a poetic flight on the myriad possibilities of movie directing.
The Russian philosopher and semiotician Mikhail Bakhtin s theory of dialogue emphasized the power of discourse to increase understanding of multiple perspectives and create myriad possibilities.
Although there are materials and techniques which are commonly used and frequently favored by mailartists for their availability, convenience and ability to produce copies, Mail Art s potential to surprise and delight is in part due to the unregulated wealth of media and styles employed by myriad mailartists.
He also starred in Steve Levitan s Phil Hendrie and wrote, executive produced and starred in Phil at the Gate, as well as performing a myriad of character voices on several episodes of the animated television shows “ King of the Hill ” and “ Futurama .”
Emami states his view on Sepehri s poetry, “ He praises life and God's myriad creations-everything, animate or inanimate, that he encounters under the sun.
" In the opening salok to pauri 4 —" bhai vichi pavanu vahai sadvau ", " in ( the Lord s ) fear bloweth the wind with its myriad breezes " — is expressed wonder at the cosmic “ fear ” under which the universe operates in obedience to the Divine Law, the Lord alone being exempt from such fear.
She tends to distances herself from other people because of a myriad of lies and given reasons ; such as that she doesn t want others to get hurt, or that strong people don t need to rely on others.
:" Cole s campaign is thinly veiled ideological propaganda, and it comes with myriad problems, not the least of which is the simple fact that almost nobody believes “ underperforming teachers ” should be protected.
The myriad rainbow bridges and myths built by the world s peoples clearly tell us more about human hopes and fears than they do about nature s rainbow.
One gown, typical of the masquerade parties of Worth s era, included a myriad of symbols, including butterflies, bats, bees, lovers faces, and flames.
Facial nerve disorders may stem from a myriad of contributing factors: Bell s palsy, injury resulting from surgical error, trauma to the temporal bone, otitis media, multiple sclerosis, mumps, chicken pox, and other conditions.
QMA s ongoing exhibition schedule reflects the Museum s identity as a local and international art center — local in its focus on the myriad communities to which it belongs, and international in its embrace of artists from every corner of the globe – the very internationalism that is reflected in the hyper-diversity of Queens.
These devices can be placed on a myriad of surfaces, including directly onto the top batter head of an actual 14 ” snare drum or other drum ( one possessing a true rim bearing a diameter greater than the total span of the base of the device ), which, when struck, could have the added effect of transferring to the drum s natural snare-side response along with severely muting the sound of the drum.
Although Favela Funk remained an interest ( the Favela on Blast documentary just saw release in 2009 ), his Mad Decent imprint would serve as a blank palette for Diplo to showcase the myriad different sounds he d come across while touring around the world.
Of the myriad Irish dynasties, the most important included the O Neills ( Uí Néill ) in central Ulster ( Tir Eoghain ) — flanked to their west by the O Donnells — the O Byrnes and O Tooles in County Wicklow, the Kavanaghs in County Wexford, the MacCarthys and O Sullivans in County Cork and County Kerry and the Ó Briain lordship of Thomond in County Clare.

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