Site banner
.
Home Forums Blogs Articles Photos Videos Contact FAQ                    
.
.
Wisdom Archive
Body Mind and Soul
Faith and Belief
God and Religion
Law of Attraction
Life and Beyond
Love and Happiness
Peace of Mind
Peace on Earth
Personal Faith
Spiritual Festivals
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Guidance
Spiritual Inspiration
Spirituality and Science
Spiritual Retreats
More Wisdom
Buddhism Archives
Hinduism Archives
Sustainability
Theology Archives
Even more Wisdom
2012 - Year 2012
Affirmations
Aura
Ayurveda
Chakras
Consciousness
Cultural Creatives
Diksha (Deeksha)
Dream Dictionary
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpreter
Dreams
Enlightenment
Essential Oils
Feng Shui
Flower Essences
Gaia Hypothesis
Indigo Children
Kalki Bhagavan
Karma
Kundalini
Kundalini Yoga
Life after death
Mayan Calendar
Meaning of Dreams
Meditation
Morphogenetic Fields
Psychic Ability
Reincarnation
Spiritual Art, Music & Dance
Spiritual Awakening
Spiritual Enlightenment
Spiritual Healing
Spirituality and Health
Spiritual Jokes
Spiritual Parenting
Vastu Shastra
Womens Spirituality
Yoga Positions
Site map 2
Site map


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum





Bookmark and Share
.

linked

A Wisdom Archive on linked

linked

A selection of articles related to linked

linked

ARTICLES RELATED TO linked

linked: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Types of compilers

Compiler - Native versus cross compiler. Most compilers are classified as either native compilers or cross compilers. A compiler may produce binary output intended to run on the same type of computer and operating system ("platform") as the compiler itself runs on. This is sometimes called a native-code compiler. Alternatively, it might produce binary output designed to run on a different platform. This is known as a cross compiler. Cross compilers are very useful when bringing up a new hardware platform f ...

See also:

Compiler, Compiler - History, Compiler - Types of compilers, Compiler - Native versus cross compiler, Compiler - One-pass versus multi-pass compilers, Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages, Compiler - Compiler design, Compiler - Compiler front end, Compiler - Compiler back end, Compiler - Notes

Read more here: » Compiler: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Types of compilers

linked: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - The Modern Synthesis

The current understanding of the mechanistics of evolution differs considerably from the theory first outlined by Charles Darwin. Importantly, advances in genetics pioneered by Gregor Mendel led to a sophisticated understanding of the basis of variation and the mechanisms of inheritance. In addition natural selection has come to be seen as only one of a number of forces acting in evolution. A notable milestone in this regard was the formulation of the neutral theory of molecular evolution by Motoo Kimura.< ...

See also:

Evolution, Evolution - Overview of evolution, Evolution - Evidence of evolution, Evolution - History of evolutionary thought, Evolution - Misconceptions about modern evolutionary biology, Evolution - Social and religious controversies, Evolution - Science of evolution, Evolution - Academic disciplines, Evolution - The Modern Synthesis, Evolution - Heredity, Evolution - Mechanisms of evolution, Evolution - Speciation and extinction, Evolution - Notes and references

Read more here: » Evolution: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - The Modern Synthesis

linked: Encyclopedia II - Wget - Criticisms of Wget

Several criticisms of Wget have recurred in public forums and mailing lists. The most important ones are: Wget supports few download protocols, especially compared to cURL. It doesn't support any of the media streaming protocols, such as mms and rtsp, nor the increasingly popular P2P protocols. While not supporting media protocols can be explained with their lack of specifications, it is also true that many see Wget's code base as being centered around HTTP and FTP. It has lagged behind with support for the more recent ...

See also:

Wget, Wget - Features, Wget - Robustness, Wget - Recursive download, Wget - Non-interactiveness, Wget - Portability, Wget - Other, Wget - Using Wget, Wget - Authors and copyright, Wget - History, Wget - Early history, Wget - Notable releases, Wget - Development and release cycle, Wget - Source contributions, Wget - Releases, Wget - Criticisms of Wget, Wget - License

Read more here: » Wget: Encyclopedia II - Wget - Criticisms of Wget

linked: Encyclopedia II - Uniform Resource Locator - URLs in everyday use

An HTTP URL combines into one simple address the four basic items of information necessary to retrieve a resource from anywhere on the Internet: the protocol to use to communicate, the host (server) to communicate with, the network port on the server to connect to, the path to the resource on the server (for example, its file name). A typical URL can look like: http:// ...

See also:

Uniform Resource Locator, Uniform Resource Locator - Definition, Uniform Resource Locator - URIs and URLs, Uniform Resource Locator - URL scheme, Uniform Resource Locator - Generic URL syntax, Uniform Resource Locator - Example: HTTP URLs, Uniform Resource Locator - URI references, Uniform Resource Locator - Case-sensitivity, Uniform Resource Locator - URLs in everyday use, Uniform Resource Locator - The big picture

Read more here: » Uniform Resource Locator: Encyclopedia II - Uniform Resource Locator - URLs in everyday use

linked: Encyclopedia II - Wget - Authors and copyright

GNU Wget was written by Hrvoje Nikšić with contributions by many other people, including Dan Harkless, Ian Abbott, and Mauro Tortonesi. Significant contributions are credited in the AUTHORS file included in the distribution, and all remaining ones are documented in the changelogs, also included with the program. Wget is now maintained by Mauro Tortonesi. The copyright to Wget belongs to the Free Software Foundation, whose policy is to require copyright assignments for all ...

See also:

Wget, Wget - Features, Wget - Robustness, Wget - Recursive download, Wget - Non-interactiveness, Wget - Portability, Wget - Other, Wget - Using Wget, Wget - Authors and copyright, Wget - History, Wget - Early history, Wget - Notable releases, Wget - Development and release cycle, Wget - Source contributions, Wget - Releases, Wget - Criticisms of Wget, Wget - License

Read more here: » Wget: Encyclopedia II - Wget - Authors and copyright

linked: Encyclopedia II - Wget - Development and release cycle

Wget is developed in an open fashion, most of the design decisions typically being discussed on the public mailing list [7] followed by users and developers. Bug reports are relayed to the same list. Wget - Source contributions. The preferred method of contributing to Wget's code and documentation is through source updates in the form of textual patches generated by the diff utility. Patches intended for inclusion in Wget are submitted to a designated mailing list [8] where they are reviewed by the maintai ...

See also:

Wget, Wget - Features, Wget - Robustness, Wget - Recursive download, Wget - Non-interactiveness, Wget - Portability, Wget - Other, Wget - Using Wget, Wget - Authors and copyright, Wget - History, Wget - Early history, Wget - Notable releases, Wget - Development and release cycle, Wget - Source contributions, Wget - Releases, Wget - Criticisms of Wget, Wget - License

Read more here: » Wget: Encyclopedia II - Wget - Development and release cycle

linked: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - Science of evolution

The word "evolution" has been used to refer both to a fact and a theory, and it is important to understand both these different meanings of evolution, and the relationship between fact and theory in science. When "evolution" is used to describe a fact, it refers to the observations that populations of one species of organism do, over time, change into new species. In this sense, evolution occurs whenever a new species of bacterium evolves that is resistant to ...

See also:

Evolution, Evolution - Overview of evolution, Evolution - Evidence of evolution, Evolution - History of evolutionary thought, Evolution - Misconceptions about modern evolutionary biology, Evolution - Social and religious controversies, Evolution - Science of evolution, Evolution - Academic disciplines, Evolution - The Modern Synthesis, Evolution - Heredity, Evolution - Mechanisms of evolution, Evolution - Speciation and extinction, Evolution - Notes and references

Read more here: » Evolution: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - Science of evolution

linked: Encyclopedia II - Uniform Resource Locator - The big picture

The term URL is also used outside the context of the World Wide Web. Database servers specify URLs as a parameter to make connections to it. Similarly any Client-Server application following a particular protocol may specify a URL format as part of its communication process. Example of a database URL : jdbc:datadirect:oracle://myserver:1521;sid=testdb If a webpage is uniquely and more or less permanently defined by a URL it can be linked to (see also permalink, deep linking). This is not always the case, e.g. a men ...

See also:

Uniform Resource Locator, Uniform Resource Locator - Definition, Uniform Resource Locator - URIs and URLs, Uniform Resource Locator - URL scheme, Uniform Resource Locator - Generic URL syntax, Uniform Resource Locator - Example: HTTP URLs, Uniform Resource Locator - URI references, Uniform Resource Locator - Case-sensitivity, Uniform Resource Locator - URLs in everyday use, Uniform Resource Locator - The big picture

Read more here: » Uniform Resource Locator: Encyclopedia II - Uniform Resource Locator - The big picture

linked: Encyclopedia II - Wget - History

Wget - Early history. Wget is the descendant of an earlier program named Geturl by the same author, the development of which commenced in late 1995. The name was changed to Wget after the author became aware of an earlier Amiga program named GetURL, written by James Burton in AREXX. Wget filled a gap in the web downloading software available in the mid-1990s. No single program was able to reliably download files via both HTTP and FTP protocols. Existing programs either only supported F ...

See also:

Wget, Wget - Features, Wget - Robustness, Wget - Recursive download, Wget - Non-interactiveness, Wget - Portability, Wget - Other, Wget - Using Wget, Wget - Authors and copyright, Wget - History, Wget - Early history, Wget - Notable releases, Wget - Development and release cycle, Wget - Source contributions, Wget - Releases, Wget - Criticisms of Wget, Wget - License

Read more here: » Wget: Encyclopedia II - Wget - History

linked: Encyclopedia II - United States dollar - Overview

The U.S. dollar uses the decimal system, consisting of 100 cents (symbol ¢). In another division, there are 1,000 mills or ten dimes to a dollar; additionally, the term eagle was used in naming gold coins. However, only cents are in everyday use as divisions of the dollar; "dime" is used solely as the name of the coin with the value of 10¢, while "eagle" and "mill" are largely unknown to the general public, though mills are sometimes used in matters of tax levies and gasoline prices. When currently issued in cir ...

See also:

United States dollar, United States dollar - Overview, United States dollar - United States coins, United States dollar - International use, United States dollar - Origin of the name dollar, United States dollar - The dollar symbol, United States dollar - Current USD exchange rates

Read more here: » United States dollar: Encyclopedia II - United States dollar - Overview

linked: Encyclopedia II - Coupling computer science - Types of coupling

The types of coupling, in order of lowest to highest coupling, are as follows: Data coupling Data coupling is when modules share data through, for example, parameters. Each datum is an elementary piece, and these are the only data which are shared (e.g. passing an integer to a function which computes a square root). Stamp coupling (Data-structured coupling) Stamp coupling is when modules share a composite data structure, each module not knowing which part of the data structure will be used by the other ...

See also:

Coupling computer science, Coupling computer science - Low coupling, Coupling computer science - Types of coupling, Coupling computer science - Known uses

Read more here: » Coupling computer science: Encyclopedia II - Coupling computer science - Types of coupling

linked: Encyclopedia II - Coupling computer science - Known uses

Dependency is also common in talking about software package management. One software package, in order to work or to be fully functional, may depend on other software packages and thus must also be installed, and their specific versions must be known if backward compatibility is broken between versions. The Apt package format, as well as some versions of the RPM package format, include dependency information between packages. This is convenien ...

See also:

Coupling computer science, Coupling computer science - Low coupling, Coupling computer science - Types of coupling, Coupling computer science - Known uses

Read more here: » Coupling computer science: Encyclopedia II - Coupling computer science - Known uses

linked: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Compiler back end

While there are applications where only the compiler front end is necessary, such as static language verification tools, a real compiler hands the intermediate representation generated by the front end to the back end, which produces a functional equivalent program in the output language. This is done in multiple steps: Compiler analysis - This is the process to gather program information from the intermediate representation of the input source files. Typical analysis are variable define-use and use-define chain, dependence anal ...

See also:

Compiler, Compiler - History, Compiler - Types of compilers, Compiler - Native versus cross compiler, Compiler - One-pass versus multi-pass compilers, Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages, Compiler - Compiler design, Compiler - Compiler front end, Compiler - Compiler back end, Compiler - Notes

Read more here: » Compiler: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Compiler back end

linked: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Compiler design

In the past, compilers were divided into many passes[1] to save space. A pass in this context is a run of the compiler through the source code of the program to be compiled, resulting in the building up of the internal data of the compiler (such as the evolving symbol table and other assisting data). When each pass is finished, the compiler can free the internal data space needed during that pass. This 'multipass' method of compiling was useful in the early days of computing due to the small main memories of host com ...

See also:

Compiler, Compiler - History, Compiler - Types of compilers, Compiler - Native versus cross compiler, Compiler - One-pass versus multi-pass compilers, Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages, Compiler - Compiler design, Compiler - Compiler front end, Compiler - Compiler back end, Compiler - Notes

Read more here: » Compiler: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Compiler design

linked: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Types of compilers

Compiler - Native versus cross compiler. Most compilers are classified as either native or cross-compilers. A compiler may produce binary output intended to run on the same type of computer and operating system ("platform") as the compiler itself runs on. This is sometimes called a native-code compiler. Alternatively, it might produce binary output designed to run on a different platform. This is known as a cross compiler. Cross compilers are very useful when bringing up a new hardware platform for the fir ...

See also:

Compiler, Compiler - History, Compiler - Types of compilers, Compiler - Native versus cross compiler, Compiler - One-pass versus multi-pass compilers, Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages, Compiler - Compiler design, Compiler - Compiler front end, Compiler - Compiler back end, Compiler - Notes

Read more here: » Compiler: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Types of compilers

linked: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages

Many people divide higher-level programming languages into compiled languages and interpreted languages. However, there is rarely anything about a language that requires it to be compiled or interpreted. Compilers and interpreters are implementations of languages, not languages themselves. The categorization usually reflects the most popular or widespread implementations of a language -- for instance, BASIC is thought of as an interpreted language, and C a compiled ...

See also:

Compiler, Compiler - History, Compiler - Types of compilers, Compiler - Native versus cross compiler, Compiler - One-pass versus multi-pass compilers, Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages, Compiler - Compiler design, Compiler - Compiler front end, Compiler - Compiler back end, Compiler - Notes

Read more here: » Compiler: Encyclopedia II - Compiler - Compiled versus interpreted languages

linked: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - Science of evolution

The word "evolution" has been used to refer both to a fact and a theory, and it is important to understand both these different meanings of evolution, and the relationship between fact and theory in science. When "evolution" is used to describe a fact, it refers to the observations that populations of one species of organism do, over time, change into new species. In this sense, evolution occurs whenever a new species of bacterium evolves that is resistant to ...

See also:

Evolution, Evolution - Overview of evolution, Evolution - Evidence of evolution, Evolution - History of evolutionary thought, Evolution - Misconceptions of modern evolutionary biology, Evolution - Social and religious controversies, Evolution - Science of evolution, Evolution - Academic disciplines, Evolution - The Modern Synthesis, Evolution - Heredity, Evolution - Mechanisms of evolution, Evolution - Speciation and extinction, Evolution - Notes and references

Read more here: » Evolution: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - Science of evolution

linked: Encyclopedia II - United States dollar - The dollar symbol

Main Article: Dollar sign There are various stories on origin of the "$" sign to represent "dollar." Because the dollar was originally the Spanish 8 reales coin, it is suggested that the 'S' derives from the number '8' which appeared on the coin. The most widely accepted explanation, according to the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing, is that "$" is a corruption of the letters "PS" (for 'peso' or 'piastre' - especially the former, as each letter could represent each syllable of "Pe-So") written over each other in Spanish. E ...

See also:

United States dollar, United States dollar - Overview, United States dollar - United States coins, United States dollar - International use, United States dollar - Origin of the name dollar, United States dollar - The dollar symbol, United States dollar - Current USD exchange rates

Read more here: » United States dollar: Encyclopedia II - United States dollar - The dollar symbol

linked: Encyclopedia II - Borromean rings - Molecular Borromean rings

In 1997, biologists Chengde Mao and coworkers of New York University succeeded in constructing Borromean rings from DNA (Nature, vol 386, page 137, March 1997). In 2003, chemist Fraser Stoddart and coworkers at UCLA utilised coordination chemistry to construct molecular Borromean rings in one step from 18 components. This work was published in Science 2004, 304, 1308-1312. Abstract ...

See also:

Borromean rings, Borromean rings - History of origin and depictions, Borromean rings - Molecular Borromean rings

Read more here: » Borromean rings: Encyclopedia II - Borromean rings - Molecular Borromean rings

linked: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - The Modern Synthesis

The current understanding of the mechanistics of evolution differs considerably from the theory first outlined by Charles Darwin. Importantly, advances in genetics pioneered by Gregor Mendel led to a sophisticated understanding of the basis of variation and the mechanisms of inheritance. In addition natural selection has come to be seen as only one of a number of forces acting in evolution. A notable milestone in this regard was the formulation of the neutral theory of molecular evolution by Motoo Kimura.< ...

See also:

Evolution, Evolution - Overview of evolution, Evolution - Evidence of evolution, Evolution - History of evolutionary thought, Evolution - Misconceptions of modern evolutionary biology, Evolution - Social and religious controversies, Evolution - Science of evolution, Evolution - Academic disciplines, Evolution - The Modern Synthesis, Evolution - Heredity, Evolution - Mechanisms of evolution, Evolution - Speciation and extinction, Evolution - Notes and references

Read more here: » Evolution: Encyclopedia II - Evolution - The Modern Synthesis

linked: Encyclopedia II - United States dollar - International use

A few nations besides the United States use the U.S. dollar as their official currency, a process known as official dollarization. Ecuador, El Salvador, and East Timor all adopted the currency independently. The former members of the US-administered Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, which included Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Marshall Islands, chose not to issue their own currency after becoming independent. Additionally, the local currencies of Bermuda, the Bahamas, Panama, and a few other states can be fr ...

See also:

United States dollar, United States dollar - Overview, United States dollar - United States coins, United States dollar - International use, United States dollar - Origin of the name dollar, United States dollar - The dollar symbol, United States dollar - Current USD exchange rates

Read more here: » United States dollar: Encyclopedia II - United States dollar - International use




Bookmark and Share
Search the Global Oneness web site
Global Oneness is a huge, really huge, web site. Almost whatever you are searching for within health, spirituality, personal development and inspirationals - you will find it here!
Google
 
 

Rate this archive!

Please rate this archive with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.

.



Bookmark and Share

  » Home » » Home »