20 Rare Pictures and Photos of Historical Events or ConferencesFrantisek Krivda
These stunning pictures reveal how conferences and (sporting) events looked 100 years ago.
Find out why we love events at: http://www.sli.do/
It’s reassuring to realise that over the century the need for face to face meetings and events has not diminished with the increase of technology. It has just made the organisation a bit easier..
Made by Juraj Holub, @Juraj_Holub
20 Rare Pictures and Photos of Historical Events or ConferencesFrantisek Krivda
These stunning pictures reveal how conferences and (sporting) events looked 100 years ago.
Find out why we love events at: http://www.sli.do/
It’s reassuring to realise that over the century the need for face to face meetings and events has not diminished with the increase of technology. It has just made the organisation a bit easier..
Made by Juraj Holub, @Juraj_Holub
Movie homage - a nostalgic view on the great movies in the 20. centuryMilanStankovic19
Movie homage is an nostalgic view on movies history in the 20. century. There are pictures only and the names of directors, also the year of the first presentation. Sometimes is good to remember. Enjoy.
Inducing Sequentiality Using Grammatical Genetic Codeskknsastry
This paper studies the inducement of sequentiality in genetic algorithms (GAs) for uniformly-scaled problems. Sequentiality is a phenomenon in which sub-solutions converge sequentially in time in contrast to uniform convergence observed for uniformly-scaled problems. This study uses three different grammatical genetic codes to induce sequentiality. Genotypic genes in the grammatical codes are interpreted as phenotypes according to the grammar, and the grammar induces sequential interactions among phenotypic genes. The experimental results show that the grammatical codes can indeed induce sequentiality, but the GAs using them need exponential population sizes for a reliable search.
Movie homage - a nostalgic view on the great movies in the 20. centuryMilanStankovic19
Movie homage is an nostalgic view on movies history in the 20. century. There are pictures only and the names of directors, also the year of the first presentation. Sometimes is good to remember. Enjoy.
Inducing Sequentiality Using Grammatical Genetic Codeskknsastry
This paper studies the inducement of sequentiality in genetic algorithms (GAs) for uniformly-scaled problems. Sequentiality is a phenomenon in which sub-solutions converge sequentially in time in contrast to uniform convergence observed for uniformly-scaled problems. This study uses three different grammatical genetic codes to induce sequentiality. Genotypic genes in the grammatical codes are interpreted as phenotypes according to the grammar, and the grammar induces sequential interactions among phenotypic genes. The experimental results show that the grammatical codes can indeed induce sequentiality, but the GAs using them need exponential population sizes for a reliable search.
A Life of Duty and Service: Post-war political and social activism of Napoleonic era naval officers by Lorna M. Campbell and Heather Noel-Smith
Port Towns and Urban Cultures Conference, Portsmouth July 2013
Smoking Chimneys and Fallen Women - The several reinventions of Sir Henry HartLorna Campbell
Presentation given at the Maritime Masculinities 1815 - 1940 Conference, University of Oxford, December 2016, https://maritimemasculinities.wordpress.com/
Early film: Technology & Technique 1800-1905Diana Lee
This slide show introduces the development of cinema from hand-cranked contraptions like the Kinetoscope and Muybridge's experiment to early moving pictures.
1. Welcome to a whole new world of photography. Included on this disk is a sample of the diverse and dynamic images that comprise our collection. 50,000 digital images and millions more in the archive. Including science, industry, technology, photography, media and transport. Some of the most celebrated names in photography are represented including Julia Margaret Cameron, William Fox Talbot and Tony Ray Jones. I hope you enjoy the presentation. To see more, please go to www.scienceandsociety.co.uk Kind Regards, Mark Bezodis Picture Library Manager Science and Society Picture Library / Exhibition Road / London SW7 2DD 0207 942 4400 phone / 0207 942 4401 fax [email_address]