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    nls

    Explore "nls" with insightful episodes like "Der Streit rund um den Nürburgring: Kein Ende in Sicht - Update", "#040 Katharina Maria Gessner - Entdecke die verborgene Kraft", "#20 Bez Tabletek / Jak wykryć rzęsistek czy chlamydie za pomocą Mezatora M1", "Jo Caulfield, Martel Maxwell and Jamie MacDonald" and "Liz Lochhead, Damian Barr and Leanne Crichton" from podcasts like ""Motorsport", "HAUT-SACHE MIT HERZ", "Bez Tabletek", "Treasures of The National Library of Scotland" and "Treasures of The National Library of Scotland"" and more!

    Episodes (14)

    Der Streit rund um den Nürburgring: Kein Ende in Sicht - Update

    Der Streit rund um den Nürburgring: Kein Ende in Sicht - Update
    In dieser Podcast-Episode werfen wir einen genauen Blick auf die brisante Entscheidung des Oberlandesgerichts Koblenz, die den Nürburgring in eine heikle Situation gebracht hat. Nach dem Urteil stehen zwei Veranstaltern, nämlich der VLN/NLS und NES/AvD, mindestens sieben Termine für Rennen auf der Nordschleife zur Verfügung. Das OLG Koblenz hat entschieden, dass die Nürburgring 1927 GmbH & Co. KG der VLN Sport GmbH & Co. KG im Jahr 2024 Zugang zur Rennstrecke gewähren muss. Dies wirft zahlreiche Fragen auf, da die ursprünglich vom Landgericht gewährten acht Veranstaltungen mit neun Rennen revidiert wurden. Die Nürburgring 1927 GmbH & Co. KG reagiert darauf, indem sie ...


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    #040 Katharina Maria Gessner - Entdecke die verborgene Kraft

    #040 Katharina Maria Gessner - Entdecke die verborgene Kraft
    Katharina Maria Gessner ist eine inspirierende Persönlichkeit, die seit 2004 als selbstständige Expertin für Marketing, Klarheit und Positionierung tätig ist. Mit einer beeindruckenden Bandbreite an Fähigkeiten und Erfahrungen hat sie sich als Produktentwicklerin, Mindset-Coach, zertifizierte Epigenetik-Coach und Professional Neuro Linguistic Seller einen Namen gemacht.

    #20 Bez Tabletek / Jak wykryć rzęsistek czy chlamydie za pomocą Mezatora M1

    #20 Bez Tabletek / Jak wykryć rzęsistek czy chlamydie za pomocą Mezatora M1

    Warsztaty podczas, których poznasz objawy, przebieg, leczenie jak i terapie lecznicze.W szkoleniu wykorzystano również możliwości urządzenia diagnostycznego Mezator M1.

    Ten jubileuszowy podcast będzie niecodzienny gdyż jest on zapisem szkolenia dla posiadaczy urządzenia Mezator M1

    Powyższe szkolenie zostało przygotowane przez mgr Bożenę Heller, specjaliste z Evitum i dostępne jest tylko dla naszych subskrybentów.

    Dołącz już od 10 zł miesięcznie i odbierz natychmiastowy dostęp do ekskluzywnych szkoleń w formie video,ebooków czy podcastów.

    Dołącz do naszej społeczności już dzisiaj klikając tutaj

    Jo Caulfield, Martel Maxwell and Jamie MacDonald

    Jo Caulfield, Martel Maxwell and Jamie MacDonald
    'Treasures of The National Library of Scotland' is a new permanent exhibition at the National Library of Scotland on George IV Bridge, Edinburgh. It provides a unique insight into Scotland’s history, culture and people and its place in the world. At the Library we collect and preserve the memory of the Scottish nation on behalf of the people of Scotland.

    This exhibition reflects ideas and innovation, creativity and social change from across the centuries. It features objects from early printed books to video installations, and from maps and medieval manuscripts to passports and letters.

    This episode features beloved comics, audio from the early 1900s and an often-overlooked heroic explorer. Presenter and journalist Martel Maxwell is an ambassador for Dundee, and it’ll come as no surprise that she’s chosen the archives of one of Scotland’s greatest publishers to discuss. Comedian Jamie MacDonald delves deeper into the audio collection from the exhibition, finding a recording of a fiddler who was nothing short of a superstar in his day. Fellow comedian Jo Caulfield completes the episode, after discovering the diaries of a Scottish explorer, botanist and filmmaker who rivals any of her contemporaries.

    Hosted by Julia Sutherland.

    For more information, visit https://www.nls.uk/treasures/

     

     

    Liz Lochhead, Damian Barr and Leanne Crichton

    Liz Lochhead, Damian Barr and Leanne Crichton
    'Treasures of The National Library of Scotland' is a new permanent exhibition at the National Library of Scotland on George IV Bridge, Edinburgh. It provides a unique insight into Scotland’s history, culture and people and its place in the world. At the Library we collect and preserve the memory of the Scottish nation on behalf of the people of Scotland.

    This exhibition reflects ideas and innovation, creativity and social change from across the centuries. It features objects from early printed books to video installations, and from maps and medieval manuscripts to passports and letters.

    This episode features former Makar of Scotland, Liz Lochhead, who can barely hide her excitement after viewing a handwritten letter from The Bard, which features one of his most loved poems. Former Scottish international and current Motherwell player/coach Leanne Crichton has a natural affinity for one of the biggest collections the library has in its archives, and writer and literary salon host Damian Barr revels in his love for the poetry of another former Makar, who also represents a new aspect of the National Library. Hosted by Julia Sutherland.

    For more information, visit https://www.nls.uk/treasures/

    Grant Stott, Len Pennie and Sanjeev Kohli

    Grant Stott, Len Pennie and Sanjeev Kohli
    'Treasures of the National Library of Scotland' is a new permanent exhibition at the National Library of Scotland on George IV Bridge, Edinburgh. It provides a unique insight into Scotland’s history, culture and people and its place in the world. At the Library we collect and preserve the memory of the Scottish nation on behalf of the people of Scotland.

    This exhibition reflects ideas and innovation, creativity and social change from across the centuries. It features objects from early printed books to video installations, and from maps and medieval manuscripts to passports and letters.

    Hosted by Julia Sutherland, this episode features actor and radio host Grant Stott, whose passion for recorded music is represented by the collection of wax cylinders from around 1909; poet Len Pennie discovers inspiration in the one of the first colour films made in Scotland, ‘Where the Bens Stand Sentinel’; and actor and comedian Sanjeev Kohli finds the origins of the information age in an extremely rare and valuable book from the 15th century.

    For more information, visit https://www.nls.uk/treasures/

    Coming Soon: Treasures of The National Library of Scotland

    Coming Soon: Treasures of The National Library of Scotland

    To mark the opening of the ‘Treasures of The National Library of Scotland’, we’ve asked some of Scotland’s real life national treasures to select their favourite items from the exhibition.

    Hosted by Julia Sutherland, this series of podcasts takes a deeper dive into the objects, collections and artifacts that each guest finds most interesting. They explore the historical significance of the items to the country, and how that resonates with them personally.

    Featuring Grant Stott, Liz Lochhead, Sanjeev Kohli, Jo Caulfield, Damian Barr, Len Pennie, Leanne Crichton, Jamie MacDonald and Martel Maxwell.

    For more information, visit https://www.nls.uk/treasures/

    Episode 70 - The oN-Line System, Part 2

    Episode 70 - The oN-Line System, Part 2
    NLS, or the oN-Line System, is often looked at as a mile marker in the development of modern computing. It was the first system to use a mouse, one of the first functional examples of hypertext, pioneered remote collaboration, and so much more. But how much do you know about NLS itself? In this series of episode I'm picking apart the system behind the legend.
    In Part 2 we are looking at the development of NLS itself. Along the way we talk timesharing, strange custom hardware, and complex programming practices. Does NLS live up to the hype? You'll have to listen to find out.
    Selected Sources:
    https://dougengelbart.org/content/view/374/ - Go watch the Mother of All Demos
    https://www.dougengelbart.org/content/view/140/ - 1968 NLS progress report
    http://web.archive.org/web/20160210002938/https://web.stanford.edu/dept/SUL/library/extra4/sloan/mousesite/EngelbartPapers/B2_F5_ARNAS1.html - 1966 progress report

    Episode 69 - The oN-Line System, Part 1

    Episode 69 - The oN-Line System, Part 1
    NLS, or the oN-Line System, is often looked at as a mile marker in the development of modern computing. It was the first system to use a mouse, one of the first functional examples of hypertext, pioneered remote collaboration, and so much more. But how much do you know about NLS itself? In this series of episode I'm picking apart the system behind the legend.
    Part 1 deals primarily with the early roots of NLS, Augmenting Human Intellect, and Doug Engelbart's vision of hypertext. Surprisingly, a lot of this episode has to do with punch cards and a more obscure related technology: the edge notched card.
    Selected Sources:
    https://dougengelbart.org/content/view/138 - Augmenting Human Intellect
    https://americanhistory.si.edu/comphist/englebar.htm - Engelbart Oral History, with the Smithsonian

    Frauen im Motorsport: Laura Luft (Nürburgring-Langstrecken-Serie)

    Frauen im Motorsport: Laura Luft (Nürburgring-Langstrecken-Serie)
    Heute gibts in Runde 3 unserer Serie "Frauen im Motorsport" einen Auflug in die Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie, ehemals VLN. Im Grunde gehts aber auch ins Kart, wie man will. Laura Luft ist jedenfalls eine Frau, die es sich selber erarbeitet hat, im Motorsport aktiv zu sein. Sie verdient ihr eigenes Geld, geht in der Woche Vollzeit arbeiten, damit sie am Wochenende Rennen fahren kann - ihre ganze Karriere lang. Die 36-jährige Hessin ist nicht auf den Mund gefallen, das werdet ihr merken. Sie hat das Herz auf der Zunge und eine brennende Leidenschaft für den Motorsport. Bei Moderator Kevin Scheuren geht sie ins ...



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    Episode 18 - Evolution of the Mouse

    Episode 18 - Evolution of the Mouse

    The computer mouse is a ubiquitous device, it's also one of the least changed devices we use with a computer. The mice we use today have only seen small incremental improvements since the first mouse was developed. So how did such a long lasting design take shape, and how did it travel the decades up to now?

    Like the show? Then why not head over and support me on Patreon. Perks include early access to future episodes, and stickers: https://www.patreon.com/adventofcomputing

    Important dates in this episode:

    1961: First Mouse Developed at Engelbart's ARC Lab
    1972: Xerox Develops Rollerball Mouse for Alto
    1979: Apple LISA Mouse Designed

    The Mother Of All Demos

    The Mother Of All Demos

    Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us for the innovations of the future! Today we’re going to cover a special moment in time. Picture this if you will. It’s 1968. A collection of some 1,000 of the finest minds in computing is sitting in the audience of the San Francisco Civic Center. They’re at a joint conference of the Association for Computing Machinery and the IEEE or the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Fall Join Computer Conference in San Francisco. They’re waiting to see the a session called A research center for augmenting human intellect. Many had read Vannevar Bush’s “As We May Think” Atlantic article in 1946 that signified the turning point that inspired so many achievements over the previous 20 years. Many had witnessed the evolution from the mainframe to the transistorized computer to timesharing systems. The presenter for this session would be Douglas Carl Engelbart. ARPA had strongly recommended he come to finally make a public appearance. Director Bob Taylor in fact was somewhat adamant about it. The talk was six years in the making and ARPA and NASA were ready to see what they had been investing in. ARPA had funded his Augmentation Research Center Lab in SRI, or the Stanford Research Institute. The grad instigator J.C.R. Licklider had started the funding when ARPA was still called DARPA in 1963 based on a paper Engelbart published in 1962. But it had really been going since Engelbart got married in 1950 and realized computers could be used to improve human capabilities, to harness the collective intellect, to facilitate truly interactive computing and to ultimately make the world a better place. Englebart was 25. He’d been from Oregon where he got his Bachelors in 48 after serving in World War II as a radar tech. He then come to Berkely in 53 for is Masters, sating through 1955 to get his PhD. He ended up at Stanford’s SRI. There, he hired people like Don Andrews, Bill Paxton, Bill English, and Jeff Rulifson. And today Engelbart was ready to show the world what his team had been working on. The computer was called the oNLine System, or NLS. Bill English would direct things onsite. Because check this out, not all presenters were onsite on that day in 1968. Instead, some were at ARC in Menlo Park, 30 miles away. To be able to communicate onsite they used two 1200 baud modems connecting over a leased line to their office. But they would also use two microwave links. And that was for something crazy: video. The lights went dark. The OnLine Computer was projected onto a 22 foot high screen using an Eidophor video projector. Bill English would flip the screen up as the lights dimmed. The audience was expecting a tall, thin man to come out to present. Instead, they saw Doug Englebart on the screen in front of them. The one behind the camera, filming Engelbart, was Stewart Russel Brand, the infamous editor of the Whole Earth Catalog. It seems Englebart was involved in more than just computers. But people destined to change the world have always travelled in the same circles I supposed. Englebart’s face came up on the screen, streaming in from all those miles away. And the screen they would switch back and forth to. That was the Online System, or NLS for short. The camera would come in from above Englebart’s back and the video would be transposed with the text being entered on the screen. This was already crazy. But when you could see where he was typing, there was something… well, extra. He was using a pointing device in his right hand. This was the first demo of a computer mouse Which he had applied for a patent for in 1967. He called it that because it had a tail which was the cabe that connected the wooden contraption to the computer. Light pens had been used up to this point, but it was the first demonstration of a mouse and the team had actually considered mounting it under the desk and using a knee to move the pointer.But they decided that would just be too big a gap for normal people to imagine and that the mouse would be simpler. Engelbart also used a device we might think of more like a macro pad today. It was modeled after piano keys. We’d later move this type of functionality onto the keyboard using various keystrokes, F keys, and a keyboard and in the case of Apple, command keys. He then opened a document on his screen. Now, people didn’t do a lot of document editing in 1968. Really, computers were pretty much used for math at that point. At least, until that day. That document he opened. He used hyperlinks to access content. That was the first real demo of clickable hypertext. He also copied text in the document. And one of the most amazing aspects of the presentation was that you kinda’ felt like he was only giving you a small peak into what he had. You see, before the demo, they thought he was crazy. Many were probably only there to see a colossal failure of a demo. But instead they saw pure magic. Inspiration. Innovation. They saw text highlighted. They saw windows on screens that could be resized. They saw the power of computer networking. Video conferencing. A stoic Engelbart was clearly pleased with his creation. Bill Paxton and Jeff Rulifson were on the other side, helping with some of the text work. His style worked well with the audience, and of course, it’s easy to win over an audience when they have just been wowed by your tech. But more than that, his inspiration was so inspiring that you could feel it just watching the videos. All these decades later. can watching those videos. Engelbart and the team would receive a standing ovation. And to show it wasn’t smoke and mirrors, ARC let people actually touch the systems and Engelbart took questions. Many people involved would later look back as though it was an unfinished work. And it was. Andy van Dam would later say Everybody was blown away and thought it was absolutely fantastic and nothing else happened. There was almost no further impact. People thought it was too far out and they were still working on their physical teletypes, hadn't even migrated to glass teletypes yet. But that’s not really fair or telling the whole story. In 1969 we got the Mansfield Amendment - which slashed the military funding pure scientific research. After that, the budget was cut and the team began to disperse, as was happening with a lot of the government-backed research centers. Xerox was lucky enough to hire Bob Taylor, and many others immigrated to Xerox PARC, or Palo Alto Research Center, was able to take the concept and actually ship a device in 1973, although not as mass marketable yet as later devices would be. Xerox would ship the Alto in 1973. The Alto would be the machine that inspired the Mac and therefore Windows - so his ideas live on today. His own team got spun out of Stanford and sold, becoming Tymshare and then McDonnel Douglas. He continued to have more ideas but his concepts were rarely implemented at McDonnel Douglas so he finally left in 1986, starting the Bootstrapp Alliance, which he founded with his daughter. But he succeeded. He wanted to improve the plight of man and he did. Hypertext and movable screens directly influenced a young Alan Kay who was in the audience and was inspired to write Smalltalk. The Alto at Xerox also inspired Andy van Dam, who built the FRESS hypertext system based on many of the concepts from the talk as well. It also did multiple windows, version control on documents, intradocument hypertext linking, and more. But, it was hard to use. Users needed to know complex commands just to get into the GUI screens. He was also still really into minicomputers and timesharing, and kinda’ missed that the microcomputer revolution was about to hit hard. The hardware hacker movement that was going on all over the country, but most concentrated in the Bay Area, was about to start the long process of putting a computer, and now mobile device, in every home in the world. WIth smaller and smaller and faster chips, the era of the microcomputer would transition into the era of the client and server. And that was the research we were transitioning to as we moved into the 80s. Charles Irby was a presentter as well, being a designer of NLS. He would go on to lead the user interface design work on the Xerox star before founding a company then moving on to VP of development for General Magic, a senior leader at SGI and then the leader of the engineering team that developed the Nintendo 64. Bob Sproull was in the audience watching all this and would go on to help design the Xerox Alto, the first laser printer, and write the Principles of Interactive Computer Graphics before becoming a professor at Conegie Mellon and then ending up helping create Sun Microsystems Laboratories, becoming the director and helping design asuynchronous processors. Butler Lampson was also there, a found of Xerox PARC, where the Alto was built and co-creator of Ethernet. Bill Paxton (not the actor) would join him at PARC and later go on to be an early founder of Adobe. In 2000, Engelbart would receive the National Medal of Technology for his work. He also He got the Turing Award in 1997, the Locelace Medal in 2001. He would never lose his belief in the collective intelligence. He wrote Boosting Our Collective IQ in 1995 and it has Englebart passed away in 2013. He will forever be known as the inventor of the mouse. But he gave us more. He wanted to augment the capabilities of humans, allowing us to do more, rather than replace us with machines. This was in contrast to SAIL and the MIT AI Lab where they were just doing research for the sake of research. The video of his talk is on YouTube, so click on the links in the show notes if you’d like to access it and learn more about such a great innovator. He may not have brought a mass produced system to market, but as with Vanevar Bush’s article 20 years before, the research done is a turning point in history; a considerable milestone on the path to the gleaming world we now live in today. The NLS teaches us that while you might not achieve commercial success with years of research, if you are truly innovative, you might just change the world. Sometimes the two simply aren’t mutually exclusive. And when you’re working on a government grant, they really don’t have to be. So until next time, dare to be bold. Dare to change the world, and thank you for tuning in to yet another episode of the History of Computing Podcast. We’re so lucky to have you. Have a great day! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJDv-zdhzMY

    TWiV 328: Lariat tricks in 3D

    TWiV 328: Lariat tricks in 3D

    Hosts: Vincent RacanielloDickson DespommierAlan DoveRich Condit, and Kathy Spindler

    The TWiVocateurs discuss how the RNA polymerase of enteroviruses binds a component of the splicing machinery and inhibits mRNA processing.

     

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