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Vestiges and open
Vestiges of design ideas first adopted in the iBook G3 can still be seen today: moving interface ports from the back to the sides and leaving them uncovered, omitting a latch for the computer's lid and providing color options and an eye-catching design intended to be seen with the computer open.

Vestiges and system
Vestiges of the system remain in use in the US Navy, in the form of Material Conditions of Readiness, used in damage control.
Vestiges was published in New York, and in response the April 1845 issue of the North American Review published a long review, the start of which was scathing about its reliance on speculative scientific theories: " The writer has taken up almost every questionable fact and startling hypothesis, that have been promulgated by proficients and pretenders in science during the present century ... The nebular hypothesis ... spontaneous generation ... the Macleay system, dogs playing dominoes, negroes born of white parents, materialism, phrenology ,-he adopts them all, and makes them play an important part in his own magnificent theory, to the exclusion, to a great degree, of the well-accredited facts and established doctrines of science.

Vestiges and also
Peacock also recorded with David Kahne at the Automatt and at Moon Studios with Stephen Holsapple during this period and those recordings became the album Last Vestiges of Honor which was released in 1998.
Vestiges of the longer-tenured employees of Gemco can still be found today at many Costco stores ( also a membership department store ) in the San Francisco Bay Area, where management includes many former Gemco management employees.
In the same year the anonymous Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation brought wide public interest in evolutionary ideas, but also showed the need for sound evidence to gain scientific acceptance of evolution.
Robert Chambers in his anonymous Vestiges also clearly made the point.
Vestiges also are found in two broad paved causeways of the two main streets of Athribis, which crossed each other at right angles, and probably divided the town into four main quarters.

Vestiges and persist
Vestiges of their native animism still persist, however, especially in the realm of traditional medicine.
Vestiges of their native animism still persist, however, especially in the realm of traditional medicine.

Vestiges and where
Diagram from the 1844 book Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation by Robert Chambers shows a model of development where fish ( F ), reptiles ( R ), and birds ( B ) represent branches from a path leading to mammals ( M ).
While the season's fashionable use of Vestiges as a conversation piece in London society avoided theological implications, the book was read very differently in Liverpool, where it was first made public that men of science condemned the book, and it became the subject of sustained debate in newspapers.

Vestiges and long
Vestiges on the island suggest that humans used it in the early Stone Age, not long after its formation.
Vestiges of their worship persisted long after Christianity and other major religions extirpated nearly every trace of the major pagan pantheons, and indeed, they continue even today, in one form or another ( and in fact may have taken on some of their own, including statues to various saints, such as St. Francis to protect a garden, or gargoyles in older churches ).
Vestiges remain, but its life, grandeur and elegance has long since disappeared.

Vestiges and ground
In defence of public morals and Evangelical Tory dominance in the city, the Reverend Abraham Hume, Anglican priest and lecturer, delivered a detailed attack on Vestiges at the Liverpool Literary and Philosophical Society on 13 January 1845, demonstrating that the book conflicted with standard specialist scientific texts on nebulae, fossils and embryos, and accusing it of manipulative novelistic techniques occupying " the debatable ground between science and fiction ".

Vestiges and are
Vestiges of these ancient times are still to be found today.
Vestiges of this practice remain: some Christians sign a cross on their forehead before hearing the Gospels during Mass ; foreheads are marked with an ash cross on Ash Wednesday ; holy oil ( called chrism ) is applied on the forehead for the sacrament of Confirmation ( in the East, the Holy Mystery of Chrismation, as Orthodox call the Sacraments by the name " Holy Mystery ").
Vestiges of the Lung Pe Chhoi religion can be seen in the behaviour of the Lamas, who are believed to possess certain supernatural powers.
He turned down several invitations to review Vestiges, pleading lack of time, but in March read it closely and on 6 April discussed with other leading clergymen the " rank materialism " of the book " against which work he & all other scientific men are indignant ".

Vestiges and used
Vestiges used evidence from the fossil record and embryology to support the claim that living things had progressed from the simple to the more complex over time.
The earliest usage of the term ' scientific romance ' is thought to be in 1845, by critics describing Robert Chambers ' Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, a speculative natural history published in 1844, and was used again in 1851 by the Edinburgh Ecclesiastical Journal and Literary Review in reference to Thoman Hunt's Panthea, or the Spirit of Nature.
His aim was to inform superficial London society used to skimming books as conversation pieces and lacking properly prepared minds to deal with real philosophy and real science, and he avoided mentioning Vestiges by name.
He only mentioned the Vestiges to note that Robert's suspected authorship was used as a means to discredit him when he ran for the office of Lord Provost of Edinburgh in 1848.

Vestiges and for
Vestiges had significant influence on public opinion, and the intense debate helped to pave the way for the acceptance of the more scientifically sophisticated Origin by moving evolutionary speculation into the mainstream.
* The anonymously written Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation is published and paves the way for the acceptance of Darwin's book The Origin of Species.
The Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, authored by Robert Chambers in St Andrews and published anonymously in England in 1844, proposed a theory which combined radical phrenology with Lamarckism, causing political controversy for its radicalism and unorthodoxy, but exciting popular interest and preparing a huge and prosperous audience for Darwin.
Vestiges of one-way flows of communication still exist in many formal organizations outside the military, and for many of the same reasons as described above.
Vestiges of the old base still remain such as the imprint of the mooring circle and a paved path for a small tram that would transport passengers to the airship.
Vestiges caused a shift in popular opinion which – Charles Darwin believed – prepared the public mind for the scientific theories of evolution by natural selection which followed from the publication of On the Origin of Species in 1859.
Thus, it was naturally tempting for some critics to simply dismiss Vestiges as Lamarckian.
The British Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting was held at Cambridge in June 1845, giving its president John Herschel a platform to counter Vestiges.
Vestiges crucially undermined the separation between man and beast, and endangered hopes for the afterlife.
For a year he had been tentatively discussing his evolutionary ideas in correspondence with Joseph Dalton Hooker, who wrote to Darwin on 30 December 1844 that he had " been delighted with Vestiges, from the multiplicity of facts he brings together, though I do agree with his conclusions at all, he must be a funny fellow: somehow the books looks more like a 9 days wonder than a lasting work: it certainly is “ filling at the price ”.— I mean the price its reading costs, for it is dear enough otherwise ; he has lots of errors.
The author of the ' Vestiges of Creation ' would, I presume, say that, after a certain unknown number of generations, some bird had given birth to a woodpecker, and some plant to the mistletoe, and that these had been produced perfect as we now see them ; but this assumption seems to me to be no explanation, for it leaves the case of the coadaptations of organic beings to each other and to their physical conditions of life, untouched and unexplained.
In a letter to Thomas Henry Huxley in 1854 ( five years before his own book on evolution was published but twelve years after its ideas had first been sketched out in an unpublished essay ), Darwin expressed sympathy for the ( still anonymous ) author of Vestiges in the face of a savage review by Huxley: " I must think that such a book, if it does no other good, spreads the taste for Natural Science.
But I am perhaps no fair judge, for I am almost as unorthodox about species as the Vestiges itself, though I hope not quite so unphilosophical.
Vestiges of the fort remained for many years afterwards, but the site was graded over and sodded in preparation for the establishment of the nearby Scadding Cabin in 1879.

Vestiges and .
Vestiges in NizwaOman adopted Islam in the 7th century, during the lifetime of the prophet Muhammad.
Vestiges of the original alphabetical layout remained in the " home row " sequence DFGHJKL.
In November 1844, the anonymously published popular science book Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, written by Scottish journalist Robert Chambers, widened public interest in the concept of transmutation of species.
He knew that his readers were already familiar with the concept of transmutation of species from Vestiges, and his introduction ridicules that work as failing to provide a viable mechanism.
Unlike the still-popular Vestiges, it avoided the narrative style of the historical novel and cosmological speculation, though the closing sentence clearly hinted at cosmic progression.
There was much less controversy than had greeted the 1844 publication Vestiges of Creation, which had been rejected by scientists, but had influenced a wide public readership into believing that nature and human society were governed by natural laws.
Its proponents made full use of a surge in the publication of review journals, and it was given more popular attention than almost any other scientific work, though it failed to match the continuing sales of Vestiges.
Despite this, the first review claimed it made a creed of the " men from monkeys " idea from Vestiges.
Scientific readers were already aware of arguments that species changed through processes that were subject to laws of nature, but the transmutational ideas of Lamarck and the vague " law of development " of Vestiges had not found scientific favour.
Huxley had been planning to leave Oxford on the previous day, but, after an encounter with Robert Chambers, the author of Vestiges, he changed his mind and decided to join the debate.
Vestiges remain of its defensive walls of this period, in opus quadrata.
* Becker, Charles, " Vestiges historiques, trémoins matériels du passé clans les pays sereer ", Dakar.
Malthus on population, James Hutton and Lyell on geology, Darwin's Voyage of the Beagle, and above all, the anonymous Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, which put evolution into everyday discussion amongst literate folk.
Vestiges of Sequent's innovations live on in the form of data clustering software from PolyServe, various projects within OSDL, IBM contributions to the Linux kernel, and claims in the SCO v. IBM lawsuit.
Vestiges of this extension can be seen from Interstate 95 in the form of stub ramps and the mainline coming to an abrupt end as a barricaded bridge.

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