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2) Three kingdoms emerged during the Han dynasty rule of Korea but the Silla kingdom eventually defeated the others and claimed rule over the entire Korean peninsula in the mid-600s.
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The document provides 10 steps for improving conversations on blogs, starting with asking for comments from readers, thanking people for commenting, getting to know readers by engaging with them, answering all questions from readers promptly, and sharing personal experiences to develop connections and trust with the audience. The goal is to have conversations that create a ripple effect by bonding with readers and paying attention to their needs to encourage them to support the blog.
How does Wegener make money online, how did they choose a SEM partner, and how did that SEM partner, being Onetomarket, optimize their newspaper sites.
1) Korea is located in East Asia between China and Japan, with unique geography that influenced the spread of Buddhism and Confucianism in the region.
2) Three kingdoms emerged during the Han dynasty rule of Korea but the Silla kingdom eventually defeated the others and claimed rule over the entire Korean peninsula in the mid-600s.
3) The Koryu dynasty lasted from 935 to 1392 and was modeled after China's government system, establishing a Confucian exam system and university, but society remained sharply divided between nobles and commoners.
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- There is a tension between creating DCAPs that are highly specific to resource types versus more general profiles that allow for linking and querying across types.
- Existing conceptual models like FRBR provide a possible "core" model that DCAPs could harmonize with to facilitate integration and querying across resource types.
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OAIS and It's Applicability for Libraries, Archives, and Digital Repositories...faflrt
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This document provides an overview and summary of key topics for a course on database management:
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- Assignments include querying sample databases and designing a personal database project.
- Grades are based on assignments, a group database project, and class participation. A textbook is required reading.
A brief report on the work of the DCMI/IEEE Task Force on interoperability between the IEEE Learning Object Metadata standard and Dublin Core.
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UKOLN supports repositories and provides repository infrastructure support through several JISC-funded projects. It has developed a Dublin Core Application Profile for Scholarly Works that defines a richer metadata model based on FRBR and expresses it using Dublin Core. This profile aims to provide consistent, unambiguous metadata to enable added-value services for repositories. UKOLN is working to promote community adoption of the profile.
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HDF5 has already demonstrated its ability to adapt to diverse applications, and to integrate with other standards, e.g., netCDF. The National Imagery Transfer Format (NITF) is another format which might benefit from HDF5 as it evolves.
NITF is the mandated standard for formatting digital imagery and imagery-related products, and exchanging them among the DoD and a number of US government agencies.
Although NITF has been improved over the years, and although designed to be extensible, there are technical and conceptual limits to its original paradigm: mono- and polychromatic images, symbols, text and associated data. NITF has been a mandated standard for many years, and enterprise architectures have been built around it. There are important reasons why it should be retained.
New sensors and algorithms are at the verge of stressing the standard with multispectral, hyperspectral, extended response, variable scale, time series, radar, video, and multisensor fusion products. Metadata are becoming more complex as the need for annotation and supporting data grows. Some imagery-like products are already originated in HDF, and others would benefit from a flexible format such as HDF.
Portions of the NITF user community are exploring ways to move beyond its limits, to incorporate enhanced metadata, and to set procedures for suitable product profiles. This presentation develops a mapping between HDF5 and NITF structures and features. It concludes with some ideas on how NITF could be extended by harmonization with HDF5, while affording minimal disruption to operational uses.
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The aim of this paper is to evaluate, through indexing techniques, the performance of Neo4j and
OrientDB, both graph databases technologies and to come up with strength and weaknesses os each
technology as a candidate for a storage mechanism of a graph structure. An index is a data structure that
makes the searching faster for a specific node in concern of graph databases. The referred data structure
is habitually a B-tree, however, can be a hash table or some other logic structure as well. The pivotal
point of having an index is to speed up search queries, primarily by reducing the number of nodes in a
graph or table to be examined. Graphs and graph databases are more commonly associated with social
networking or “graph search” style recommendations. Thus, these technologies remarkably are a core
technology platform for some Internet giants like Hi5, Facebook, Google, Badoo, Twitter and LinkedIn.
The key to understanding graph database systems, in the social networking context, is they give equal
prominence to storing both the data (users, favorites) and the relationships between them (who liked
what, who ‘follows’ whom, which post was liked the most, what is the shortest path to ‘reach’ who). By a
suitable application case study, in case a Twitter social networking of almost 5,000 nodes imported in
local servers (Neo4j and Orient-DB), one queried to retrieval the node with the searched data, first
without index (full scan), and second with index, aiming at comparing the response time (statement query
time) of the aforementioned graph databases and find out which of them has a better performance (the
speed of data or information retrieval) and in which case. Thereof, the main results are presented in the
section 6.
Smart semantic content for the Future Internetchessmu
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- There is a tension between creating DCAPs that are highly specific to resource types versus more general profiles that allow for linking and querying across types.
- Existing conceptual models like FRBR provide a possible "core" model that DCAPs could harmonize with to facilitate integration and querying across resource types.
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Julie Allinson, Pete Johnston and Andy Powell, UKOLN, University of Bath, present recent work on developing a Dublin Core Application Profile (DCAP) for describing "scholarly publications" (eprints). They will explain why the Dublin Core Abstract Model is well suited to creating descriptions based on entity-relational models such as the FRBR-based (Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records) Eprints data model. The ePrints DCAP highlights the relational nature of the model underpinning Dublin Core and illustrates that the Dublin Core Abstract Model can support the representation of complex data describing multiple entities and their relationships.
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OrientDB, both graph databases technologies and to come up with strength and weaknesses os each
technology as a candidate for a storage mechanism of a graph structure. An index is a data structure that
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is habitually a B-tree, however, can be a hash table or some other logic structure as well. The pivotal
point of having an index is to speed up search queries, primarily by reducing the number of nodes in a
graph or table to be examined. Graphs and graph databases are more commonly associated with social
networking or “graph search” style recommendations. Thus, these technologies remarkably are a core
technology platform for some Internet giants like Hi5, Facebook, Google, Badoo, Twitter and LinkedIn.
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Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.