Computer Bus Guide Information of basic computer bus architecture. http://www.computerbusguide.com
Extractions: The main purpose of this article is to teach the basic principles of how devices communicate to the CPU by means of a BUS. This article also covers the ISA,PCI,MCA,EISA,VESA and VL-Bus architecture standards, along with a brief overview of the important points. During this article there will be some questions to answer in the form of URL links, these are highlighted in Blue, which when clicked will take you to the next page.
Skeletal Anatomy Overview of current research relating to the computer modeling and understanding of muscle architecture, as well as laboratory information, contacts, and publications. http://dante.med.utoronto.ca/skeletalmuscle/index.htm
Extractions: MUSCLE ANATOMY Oxorn, Valerie*, Agur, Anne, and Nancy McKee*, Departments of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Surgery, and Biomedical Communications, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada. A historical analysis of fourteen published illustrations of the soleus muscle from the sixteenth to the twentieth century reveals obvious inconsistencies in the representational accuracy of the architecture of the muscle. To ensure the most accurate illustrations possible, biomedical communicators should conduct direct laboratory observations. A review of reference images alone is insufficient for assuring anatomical accuracy. Having followed this protocol, three architecturally distinct regions of soleus were observed and illustrated and the final results suggest that soleus is a complex multipennate muscle with significant architectural characteristics not typically represented in published illustrations. In the process of creating anatomical illustrations, the medical illustrator routinely begins by referring to recent anatomical atlases for structural information about the subject. It is generally expected that these resources will provide accurate and relatively consistent information. What if, however, a review of images from trusted resources yields information that is clearly discrepant? How could the creators of these published images have arrived at such different representations of the same anatomical structure and how is an illustrator to determine which, if any, is correct?
CAPLA > School Of Architecture Gives information about the college's academic programs, faculty, students, alumni, research publications, online resources, college calendar, course pages and computer technical support. http://architecture.arizona.edu/architecture/default.htm
Extractions: R epresentation Introduction to ACAAR and its objectives Registration form for ACAAR membership Participate in the ACAAR discussion forum ACAAR is a not-for-profit organisation that has been formed with the primary objective of nurturing a healthy debate on representing architecture data on computers.
Architecture Frame Set Reference Site for computer Architects, Managers, and Software Engineers http://home.sprynet.com/sprynet/jgarriso/
The International Conference On Functional Programming (ICFP) International Conference on Functional Programming an annual programming language conference combining the former Functional Programming and computer architecture (FPCA) and Lisp and Functional Programming (LFP). It is sponsored by the ACM SIGPLAN. Pointers to the individual conferences and related links. http://www.cs.luc.edu/icfp/
Extractions: The International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP) (Be sure to visit our ICFP 2003 pages too!) ICFP (International Conference on Functional Programming) is a new annual programming language conference combining two former biennial conferences: Functional Programming and Computer Architecture (FPCA) and Lisp and Functional Programming (LFP). It is sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery under the aegis of the ACM Special Interest Group on Programming Languages (SIGPLAN), in association with Working Group 2.8 of the International Federation of Information Processing (IFIP). This page is designed to be a permanent home for information about, or relevant to, ICFP. As well as information about the conference itself, it contains pointers to journals, other conferences, language implementations, research groups, and so on, that may be of interest to functional programmers. Please email suggestions for other things that might be included, or URLs to add to lists already included, to Scope The ICFP Steering Committee which gives year-to-year continuity to the conference.
CSA Home Page Housed on Bryn Mawr Campus, US, it provides an archival home for computer models of architectural monuments and archaeological sites. http://csanet.org/
Extractions: Citation information. Search the CSA site. Welcome to the CSA Web site. CSA's aim is to encourage appropriate uses of computers and information technology by those involved in research in archaeology and architectural history - and those who will need the fruits of that research. The key word is appropriate. Particularly in these early stages of the digital era it is not easy to know how best to use the new computing power that has become available to us. Nor is it obvious which computers or computer technologies will turn out to be the best and most appropriate for a given use. Perhaps most important, it is all but impossible to predict which specific approaches to using computers to create digital information will thrive and which will turn out to have been dead ends. It is CSA's mission to help guide users and potential users of information technologies so that, at the least, they can make well-considered choices of computers and software in these poorly charted waters. (If you encounter any problems with our site, please let us know at director@csanet.org.)
ACADIA Information about past and present conferences of the association for computer aided design in architecture. http://www.acadia.org/conferences.html
Extractions: A S S O C I A T I O N F O R C O M P U T E R A I D E D D E S I G N I N A R C H I T E C T U R E Annual Conferences Home Activities Conferences Awards ... Related Links One of ACADIA's major missions is to organize and present an annual conference on topics of interest to the architectural CAD community. The conference and the publication of its proceedings are a major channel of communication among experts in the field of computer-aided design in architecture. The conference site moves each year, providing members the opportunity to see facilities at schools of architecture around the country. 2003: ConnectingCrossroads of Digital Discourse
Center For Computing Sciences Bowie, MD. Research in network security, signal processing, discrete and continuous optimization methods, and symbolic computation, as well as fundamental problems in machine architecture, computer arithmetic, and the design of processor interconnection schemes and advanced processing systems. Information about the center. http://www.super.org/
Untitled Document A short slideshow of computer-generated views by Stephanie Phan of the Baths of Caracalla. http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/~aewhuts/
The Palace Of Rameses III Mohammed Motlib uses computerreconstruction to show how the Window of Appearance could have been used. Part of The Virtual Study Tour, from the New Zealand School of architecture. http://archpropplan.auckland.ac.nz/virtualtour/rameses/
Extractions: Beatriz Colomina speaking on "enclosed by images: the Eameses' Multiscreen Architecture" is presented by the Biennale of Sydney, with the support of FBE, UNSW and the Museum of Contemporary Art. Beatriz, Professor of Architecture and Founding Director of the Program in Media and Modernity at Princeton University, is the author of Architecture Production (1988) Sexuality and Space (1992) and Privacy and Publicity: Modern Architecture as Mass Media (1994)
Web Hosting,Virtual Servers And Dedicated Server Rental ITILbased information technology workshops, consulting and solution services for IT infrastructure architecture and enterprise computer systems management. http://www.infomgrs.com/
LEMA(Presentation) A research department associated with the School of architecture at the Faculty of Applied Sciences of the University of Li¨ge (ULg) in Belgium. Its activities are mainly oriented towards computeraided methods for architectural and urban design, and especially sustainable urban design. http://www.lema.ulg.ac.be/
Center For Jewish Art The institute explains its projects, including the documentation of endangered architecture. Index of Jewish Art, including architecture of synagogues and Jewish monuments, with computer reconstructions. Events, newsletters, educational projects, faculty and staff. http://www.hum.huji.ac.il/cja/
512 Interactive Offers a wide range of IT consulting services including computer manufacturing, website design, ecommerce solutions, backend database architecture, and legacy system integration. http://www.512interactive.com
St Laurence’s Chapel At Bradford-on-Avon Southampton University explains its work on one of the bestpreserved Anglo-Saxon churches. History, architecture, excavation, interpretation and computer-based reconstructions. http://www.arch.soton.ac.uk/research/bradford/
Extractions: Bradford-on-Avon The chapel as it is today (at left), and the computer-generated model. his website results from work on one of the best-preserved early church buildings in England, the chapel of St Laurence at Bradford-on-Avon, to mark the millennium of the gift of Bradford to Shaftesbury Abbey in 1001. It is composed of a series of self-contained sections, three that give background about the building, one that describes an excavation carried out in 2000 and another that gives the detailed interpretations that result from it. The final section describes and shows a three-dimensional computer reconstruction model of the building as it might have looked. Any comments on the site are welcome; contact can be made through the Acknowledgements alternative version of this site.
Introduction To Operating Systems Brief critique of monolithic architecture mostly comparing microkernels, from School of computer Science, University of St Andrews. http://www.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/Rsch/OS_intro.html