The Vim editor (or Vi IMproved) was first released by Bram Moolenaar in November 1991 as a clone of the Unix editor vi for the Amiga platform.
The first release of Vim for the Unix platform was out a year later and right away, it started to become an alternative to the vi editor.
The second edition of WiMax Operator鈥檚 Manual includes most of the material from the first
edition, plus new discussions of
鈥?The ultra-high-speed mobile telephone standard, HSDPA
鈥?Ultrawideband (UWB)
鈥?Changes to DSL technologies
鈥?Mobile voice
鈥?Mobile entertainment
鈥?New backup systems
The new edition also reflects the changes that have occurred in the industry over the last year and half, including the emergence of restandards wireless broadband equipment with fully developed mobile capabilities, ignificant alterations in the competitive landscape, and he opening of valuable new spectrum for roadband wireless operators.
Maya Calendar
During his last sabbatical, professor M. A. Ya made a surprising discovery about the old Maya calendar. From an old knotted message, professor discovered that the Maya civilization used a 365 day long year, called Haab, which had 19 months. Each of the first 18 months was 20 days long, and the names of the months were pop, no, zip, zotz, tzec, xul, yoxkin, mol, chen, yax, zac, ceh, mac, kankin, muan, pax, koyab, cumhu. Instead of having names, the days of the months were denoted by numbers starting from 0 to 19. The last month of Haab was called uayet and had 5 days denoted by numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, 4. The Maya believed that this month was unlucky, the court of justice was not in session, the trade stopped, people did not even sweep the floor.
CDMA has been quite successful as a second-generation cellular system,having achieved widespread use in particular in North America and Korea by the turn of the twenty-first century.
ieee754的標準,原英文版的!Twenty years ago anarchy threatened floating-point arithmetic. Over a dozen commercially significant arithmetics
boasted diverse wordsizes, precisions, rounding procedures and over/underflow behaviors, and more were in the
works. “Portable” software intended to reconcile that numerical diversity had become unbearably costly to
develop.
Thirteen years ago, when IEEE 754 became official, major microprocessor manufacturers had already adopted it
despite the challenge it posed to implementors. With unprecedented altruism, hardware designers had risen to its
challenge in the belief that they would ease and encourage a vast burgeoning of numerical software. They did
succeed to a considerable extent. Anyway, rounding anomalies that preoccupied all of us in the 1970s afflict only
CRAY X-MPs — J90s now.
This program applies Simplified DES (S-DES) Ciphering Algorithm
Developed by Maimouna Al-ammar
5th Year, Computer Engineering Department, University of Damascus
Information and Network Security Material
This program applies Message Digest (MD5) Algorithm
Developed by Maimouna Al-ammar
5th Year, Computer Engineering Department, University of Damascus
Information and Network Security Material
this is a document about radio frequency identification RFID, this was a project ,i have done last year ,actually this technology is a very inpotrtant one due to its relation with newest technologies , like GPS , or the miniturization of integrated circuits ,and that is described in chapter 3 . chapter 1 gives an introduction of the technology RFID , chapter 2 gives a discussion of a library using RFID , and chapter 3 is about the future of RFID , and finally the conclusion .
Like many of my colleagues in this industry, I learned Windows programming from Charles Petzold s Programming Windows—a classic programming text that is the bible to an entire generation of Windows programmers. When I set out to become an MFC programmer in 1994, I went shopping for an MFC equivalent to Programming Windows. After searching in vain for such a book and spending a year learning MFC the old-fashioned way, I decided to write one myself. It s the book you hold in your hands. And it s the book I would like to have had when I was learning to program Windows the MFC way.
Computing and the way people use C for doing it keeps changing as years go by. So overwhelming has been the response to all the previous editions of “Let Us C” that I have now decided that each year I would come up with a new edition of it so that I can keep the readers abreast with the way C is being used at that point in time.