This document contains a short exchange between Michaela Losekoot and Michelle Losekoot from 2013. Michaela shares her name and the year, and Michelle responds with thanks and signs off with her name and what appears to be a nickname or handle. The document provides little other context or information to summarize.
The document is a proposal for a future urban gallery called Park Artlet. It outlines concepts for the gallery including thinking globally, creating a communal space, incorporating urban art, and infusing the space with greenery. The proposal describes Park Artlet as a design that converts parking spaces into a public space for art, community, and green space. It aims to showcase local creativity and foster innovative collaboration on a global scale.
The document announces a Risk Management Symposium hosted by Transport Canada and The Aloft Group on April 12, 2016 in Ottawa, Canada. The symposium will focus on advancing risk management in aviation by sharing experiences with BowTie risk analysis models. It will include panels on the benefits of sharing risk information applications and a way forward by linking to existing safety initiatives. A preliminary agenda is provided along with registration information. An introductory BowTie training workshop on April 13-14 will provide foundational training on the BowTie methodology and software for a fee.
The document discusses the Cultural Institute project, which aims to create virtual street views of major museums around the world using Google technology. This provides affordable digital access to museum collections and addresses limitations of physical access due to distance and cost. Street views allow online visitors to navigate museum galleries as if they were there in person. The project demonstrates thinking globally and acting locally by making local museums accessible to international audiences online or in-person, if possible.
Carlos proposes creating an urban gallery in a neighborhood to engage the local community. Artists, both local and international, would work with the community to choose themes and create art addressing issues about the neighborhood. The goal is to enhance quality of life and bring the community and artists together while promoting the neighborhood. The gallery would be financed by the local government. Digital maps would show the locations and themes of artworks across the city.
This document provides a communications management plan for a gallery project team. It includes an introduction outlining the purpose and scope of the plan. It then identifies the project coordinator and four team members, and defines their goals and responsibilities. Finally, it outlines the team's communication vehicles including an Asana project management site and IDI forum, project meetings, and reporting and deliverables for tasks, final art, post-mortems, and follow ups.
This document contains a short exchange between Michaela Losekoot and Michelle Losekoot from 2013. Michaela shares her name and the year, and Michelle responds with thanks and signs off with her name and what appears to be a nickname or handle. The document provides little other context or information to summarize.
The document is a proposal for a future urban gallery called Park Artlet. It outlines concepts for the gallery including thinking globally, creating a communal space, incorporating urban art, and infusing the space with greenery. The proposal describes Park Artlet as a design that converts parking spaces into a public space for art, community, and green space. It aims to showcase local creativity and foster innovative collaboration on a global scale.
The document announces a Risk Management Symposium hosted by Transport Canada and The Aloft Group on April 12, 2016 in Ottawa, Canada. The symposium will focus on advancing risk management in aviation by sharing experiences with BowTie risk analysis models. It will include panels on the benefits of sharing risk information applications and a way forward by linking to existing safety initiatives. A preliminary agenda is provided along with registration information. An introductory BowTie training workshop on April 13-14 will provide foundational training on the BowTie methodology and software for a fee.
The document discusses the Cultural Institute project, which aims to create virtual street views of major museums around the world using Google technology. This provides affordable digital access to museum collections and addresses limitations of physical access due to distance and cost. Street views allow online visitors to navigate museum galleries as if they were there in person. The project demonstrates thinking globally and acting locally by making local museums accessible to international audiences online or in-person, if possible.
Carlos proposes creating an urban gallery in a neighborhood to engage the local community. Artists, both local and international, would work with the community to choose themes and create art addressing issues about the neighborhood. The goal is to enhance quality of life and bring the community and artists together while promoting the neighborhood. The gallery would be financed by the local government. Digital maps would show the locations and themes of artworks across the city.
This document provides a communications management plan for a gallery project team. It includes an introduction outlining the purpose and scope of the plan. It then identifies the project coordinator and four team members, and defines their goals and responsibilities. Finally, it outlines the team's communication vehicles including an Asana project management site and IDI forum, project meetings, and reporting and deliverables for tasks, final art, post-mortems, and follow ups.
The document outlines the minutes from Team Cadmium's first meeting. Key discussion points included:
- Choosing titles and roles for team members and creating an organizational chart.
- Reviewing and approving a management and communication plan to coordinate work and provide feedback.
- Discussing and establishing rules for setting goals, providing feedback, and conducting post-project reviews.
- Debating various gallery themes and concepts, ultimately agreeing to create a "Future Gallery" that uses signs and elements of different cultures to challenge notions of interpretation and meaning across borders.
Apache Big_Data Europe event: "Integrators at work! Real-life applications of...Hajira Jabeen
This document discusses the Big Data Europe (BDE) architecture, which aims to empower communities with data technologies. It describes the evolution of the BDE architecture and its key components, including the BDE stack, support layer, user interfaces, data lake, and semantics analytics stack. The document also covers developing and deploying components on the BDE platform, available user interfaces, capabilities beyond other systems like orchestration and a semantic data lake, and compares BDE to other big data distributions like Hadoop.
Green manufacturing aims to minimize waste and pollution through product and process design. It implements substitutions that reduce energy use, waste, and pollution. Green manufacturing follows principles of manufacturing for reuse and design for disassembly. Case studies presented green manufacturing practices in automotive, oil, and heavy electrical industries that improved corporate image, production efficiency, and cost savings while reducing environmental impact.
This document discusses military standards for acceptance sampling, including Military Standard 105E and Military Standard 414. MIL STD 105E provides sampling schemes for attributes data using single, double, or multiple sampling plans. It describes normal, tightened, and reduced inspection levels based on a vendor's quality history. MIL STD 414 provides variables acceptance sampling plans that use sample sizes based on lot size and inspection level, assuming the quality characteristic is normally distributed. It includes plans based on sample standard deviation, range, and known process standard deviation. The document provides examples of using these standards to determine acceptance sampling plans.
This document discusses production systems and cellular manufacturing. It defines production systems as transforming inputs into finished products using people, materials, and machines. Production systems are classified as job shop, batch, or mass production depending on product customization and volume. Cellular manufacturing organizes equipment into machine cells that specialize in specific part families. This improves production flow and flexibility while reducing space and inventory requirements. The document also covers group technology, how to identify part families, and provides a case study comparing traditional and cellular layouts that demonstrates reduced flow times using the latter approach.
This document discusses the components and workings of CNC machines. It begins by explaining numerical control machines and their evolution into CNC machines, which are controlled by a microcomputer rather than hardwiring. The main electrical components of CNC machines are stepper motors and servo motors. Stepper motors move in discrete steps while servo motors use feedback control. Mechanical components include recirculating ball screws and roller screws which convert sliding motion to rolling motion for precision positioning.
This document discusses reverse engineering, which is the process of redesigning an existing product to improve its functions, quality, and useful life. Reverse engineering involves measuring an existing physical object without drawings or documentation to develop a CAD model. This process reduces manufacturing costs and allows for redesigning undesirable features. Key steps include digitizing the physical object through contact or non-contact scanning, manipulating the collected data points to develop surface models, and generating CAD files that can be used for applications like manufacturing or medical imaging. The document outlines advantages like cost savings, quality improvements, and competitive advantages through reverse engineering.
The document outlines the minutes from Team Cadmium's first meeting. Key discussion points included:
- Choosing titles and roles for team members and creating an organizational chart.
- Reviewing and approving a management and communication plan to coordinate work and provide feedback.
- Discussing and establishing rules for setting goals, providing feedback, and conducting post-project reviews.
- Debating various gallery themes and concepts, ultimately agreeing to create a "Future Gallery" that uses signs and elements of different cultures to challenge notions of interpretation and meaning across borders.
Apache Big_Data Europe event: "Integrators at work! Real-life applications of...Hajira Jabeen
This document discusses the Big Data Europe (BDE) architecture, which aims to empower communities with data technologies. It describes the evolution of the BDE architecture and its key components, including the BDE stack, support layer, user interfaces, data lake, and semantics analytics stack. The document also covers developing and deploying components on the BDE platform, available user interfaces, capabilities beyond other systems like orchestration and a semantic data lake, and compares BDE to other big data distributions like Hadoop.
Green manufacturing aims to minimize waste and pollution through product and process design. It implements substitutions that reduce energy use, waste, and pollution. Green manufacturing follows principles of manufacturing for reuse and design for disassembly. Case studies presented green manufacturing practices in automotive, oil, and heavy electrical industries that improved corporate image, production efficiency, and cost savings while reducing environmental impact.
This document discusses military standards for acceptance sampling, including Military Standard 105E and Military Standard 414. MIL STD 105E provides sampling schemes for attributes data using single, double, or multiple sampling plans. It describes normal, tightened, and reduced inspection levels based on a vendor's quality history. MIL STD 414 provides variables acceptance sampling plans that use sample sizes based on lot size and inspection level, assuming the quality characteristic is normally distributed. It includes plans based on sample standard deviation, range, and known process standard deviation. The document provides examples of using these standards to determine acceptance sampling plans.
This document discusses production systems and cellular manufacturing. It defines production systems as transforming inputs into finished products using people, materials, and machines. Production systems are classified as job shop, batch, or mass production depending on product customization and volume. Cellular manufacturing organizes equipment into machine cells that specialize in specific part families. This improves production flow and flexibility while reducing space and inventory requirements. The document also covers group technology, how to identify part families, and provides a case study comparing traditional and cellular layouts that demonstrates reduced flow times using the latter approach.
This document discusses the components and workings of CNC machines. It begins by explaining numerical control machines and their evolution into CNC machines, which are controlled by a microcomputer rather than hardwiring. The main electrical components of CNC machines are stepper motors and servo motors. Stepper motors move in discrete steps while servo motors use feedback control. Mechanical components include recirculating ball screws and roller screws which convert sliding motion to rolling motion for precision positioning.
This document discusses reverse engineering, which is the process of redesigning an existing product to improve its functions, quality, and useful life. Reverse engineering involves measuring an existing physical object without drawings or documentation to develop a CAD model. This process reduces manufacturing costs and allows for redesigning undesirable features. Key steps include digitizing the physical object through contact or non-contact scanning, manipulating the collected data points to develop surface models, and generating CAD files that can be used for applications like manufacturing or medical imaging. The document outlines advantages like cost savings, quality improvements, and competitive advantages through reverse engineering.
❼❷⓿❺❻❷❽❷❼❽ Dpboss Matka ! Fix Satta Matka ! Matka Result ! Matka Guessing ! Final Matka ! Matka Result ! Dpboss Matka ! Matka Guessing ! Satta Matta Matka 143 ! Kalyan Matka ! Satta Matka Fast Result ! Kalyan Matka Guessing ! Dpboss Matka Guessing ! Satta 143 ! Kalyan Chart ! Kalyan final ! Satta guessing ! Matka tips ! Matka 143 ! India Matka ! Matka 420 ! matka Mumbai ! Satta chart ! Indian Satta ! Satta King ! Satta 143 ! Satta batta ! Satta मटका ! Satta chart ! Matka 143 ! Matka Satta ! India Matka ! Indian Satta Matka ! Final ank
5. BUT HE IS HAVING A HARD
TIME ADAPTING TO THE
CULTURE THERE -
HE HAS BEEN AWAY
FOR SO LONG . . .
Fig. 5 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Quito - Concept Development (2015)
6. ECUADOR IN THE
FUTURE LOOKS VERY
DIFFERENT FROM
WHAT IT USED TO BE
Fig. 6 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Descargando en el Mercado (2013)
7. BUT DESPITE PROGRESS
AND MODERNIZATION
MANY TRADITIONS AND
NUANCES HAVE SURVIVED
THE PASSAGE OF TIME
Fig. 7 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Rider (2015)
8. I WANT TO INVITE
YOU ON THIS
JOURNEY WITH
WASHI
AND DISCOVER
ECUADOR
Fig. 8 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Mecánica Amazonas (2013)
9. YOU WILL MEET
THE LOCALS,
AND THEIR
TRADITIONS
Fig. 9 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Gloria - Concept Development (2015)
10. YOU WILL SEE THE
WAY OF LIFE IN A
SOCIETY THAT NO
LONGER RELIES ON
LAND TRANSPORT
Fig. 10 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Reina del Camino - Concept Development (2015)
11. BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY
YOU WILL JOIN WASHI ON HIS
SEARCH FOR HOMEFig. 11 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Quito - Concept Development (2015)
12. THIS PROJECT IS ABOUT
LOOKING AT THE FUTURE
OF ECUADOR FROM A
LOCAL PERSPECTIVE
Fig. 12 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Untitled (2015)
13. SCIENCE FICTION IS
OFTEN CENTERED
AROUND
WESTERN
SOCIETIES
MY PROJECT TALKS
ABOUT THE FUTURE
FROM AND WITHIN A
LATINO SOCIETY
Fig. 13 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, La Cubacha - Concept Development (2015)
14. THIS PROJECT IS ALSO A
PERSONAL REFLECTION ON
IMMIGRATION
MANY OF US COME FROM
DIFFERENT PLACES AND
CULTURES
WE REMEMBER HOME LIKE
WHEN WE LEFT
BUT WITH TIME
HOME BECOMES A
DIFFERENT PLACE
Fig. 14 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Gloria - Portrait (2015)
15. AT THE MOMENT I AM
DEVELOPING THE STORY
AND THE CONCEPT DESIGN
THE NEXT STEP IS TO
CREATE A
WORKING
PROTOTYPE
THROUGH THE ANDEAN
SKY IS AN
INTERACTIVE
EXPERIENCE
FOCUSED ON
NARRATIVE
Fig. 15 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Rider (2015)
16. THE FINAL PRODUCT
WILL BE AN
ANIMATED
INTERACTIVE
COMIC
CLICK TO PLAY
SAMPLE
Fig. 16 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Untitled (2015)
18. List of Images
Fig. 1 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Viaje por el Páramo (2013)
Fig. 2 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Washi - Portrait (2015)
Fig. 3 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Untitled (2015)
Fig. 4 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Cotopaxi (2015)
Fig. 5 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Quito - Concept Development (2015)
Fig. 6 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Descargando en el Mercado (2013)
Fig. 7 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Rider (2015)
Fig. 8 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Mecánica Amazonas (2013)
Fig. 9 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Gloria - Concept Development (2015)
Fig. 10 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Reina del Camino - Concept Development (2015)
Fig. 11 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Quito - Concept Development (2015)
Fig. 12 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Untitled (2015)
Fig. 13 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, La Cubacha - Concept Development (2015)
Fig. 14 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Gloria - Portrait (2015)
Fig. 15 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Rider (2015)
Fig. 16 Carlos Villarreal Kwasek, Untitled (2015)