Colombian police responsible for ‘massacre’ of 11 people in 2020 protests, U.N.-backed investigators conclude
Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2022 5:58 am
Other forms of optical fibers are designed in such a way that the zigzagging of the light is greatly reduced or virtually eliminated. The cladding bends or reflects inward the light rays that strike its inside surface. A detector, such as a photosensitive device or the human eye, receives the light at the other end of the fiber. Optical fiber bundles are either coherent or incoherent. In a coherent bundle, the fibers are arranged so that images, as well as illumination, can be transmitted. In incoherent bundles, the fibers are not arranged in any particular way and can transmit only illumination. There are two basic types of optical fibers: single-mode fibers and multi-mode fibers. Single mode fibers are designed for the transmission of a single ray as a carrier. Is used for high-speed signal transmission over long distances. They have much smaller cores than multi-mode fibers, and they accept light only along the axis of the fibers.
Air conditioners are energy hogs, so if you want to go green, go off peak. Green energy is a big topic these days, and the list of ways to generate and manage energy more efficiently keeps growing. One innovative way to use energy wisely is through the use of off-peak cooling systems. Off-peak cooling is pretty ingenious because it uses energy at night when the demand is low. Air conditioning is an energy hog, and when some of the electricity needed to cool all that air is distributed over the evening and night hours, it takes some of the burden off the energy grid at the biggest demand times of the day. This redistributes the demand for electricity, helping to avoid brownouts and blackouts and also takes advantage of lower electricity rates during off-peak times. There are other benefits to off-peak cooling systems, too. Conventional air conditioners use more energy as they get hotter, and the more energy they draw, the less efficiently they use it.
Sometimes, however, more meaningful pieces like the Kony2012 video depicting the hunt for African warlord Joseph Kony catch Internet fire. Why do some of them get millions of views while others get a few hundred (or less)? It was all the way back in 350 B.C.E. Aristotle came up with his theory for making speeches memorable. The Greek philosopher concluded that the talk must have an ethical, logical or emotional appeal. Videos with important messages can go viral too. Here, supporters watch a projection from Invisible Children's Kony 2012 video campaign. The nonprofit group wants Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony captured. The video got 100 million views in six days. In order for Web content to go viral, it has to make people feel something. Positive emotions - joy, inspiration, amusement, hope - are the most powerful drivers of clicks and shares, but content that spurs anger, disgust, sadness and frustration can also become viral.
It can represent signals at any resolution, unlike other representations that save signals as discretely sampled values. Thanks to the recent breakthrough in input features, it can now accurately express both low and high frequencies of signals. Despite the fact that INR has recently received great attention, the network parameter efficiency of INR has not been extensively studied. In INR, it has a crucial impact on signal transmission since signals are stored in the form of network parameters. INR from being used for many useful applications that would benefit from it. In this work, we study how to efficiently represent video signals with this emerging representation. However, it is not generally expected that the trained networks fully exploit the spatial and temporal redundancy of video signals to maximize the network parameter efficiency. We propose Neural Residual Flow Fields (NRFF), a novel INR scheme that leverages optical flows and residuals instead of raw colors to represent videos. Motion information, also known as optical flow, is preserved in our proposed NRFF, allowing similar pixel values from other frames to be reused.
If social media is taking a toll on your mental health, don't be afraid to talk to someone about it or contact a trained professional for advice. Browse more resources about social media. Mental blues on the next page. A group of studies reveals that people who downplay their loneliness. Negative emotions online contribute to others' feelings of isolation. Because people are more likely to project a positive image online, it's easy to underestimate everyone else's negative feelings. Amichai-Hamburger, Yair. "Depression through Technology." The New Scientist. Ellison, Nicole et al. Journal of Computer-Mediation Communication. Hardie, Elizabeth and Ming Yi Tee. Australian Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society. Jordan, Alexander et al. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. MedlinePlus. "Depression." National Institute of Mental Health. Nauert, Rick. "Social Media for Elderly Depression." Psych Central. O'Keeffe, Gwenn Schurgin and Kathleen Clarke-Pearson. Steinfield, Charles et al. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology. Szalavitz, Maia. "Misery Has More Company Than You Think, Especially On Facebook." TIME: Healthland. Wilson, Kathryn et al. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.
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Air conditioners are energy hogs, so if you want to go green, go off peak. Green energy is a big topic these days, and the list of ways to generate and manage energy more efficiently keeps growing. One innovative way to use energy wisely is through the use of off-peak cooling systems. Off-peak cooling is pretty ingenious because it uses energy at night when the demand is low. Air conditioning is an energy hog, and when some of the electricity needed to cool all that air is distributed over the evening and night hours, it takes some of the burden off the energy grid at the biggest demand times of the day. This redistributes the demand for electricity, helping to avoid brownouts and blackouts and also takes advantage of lower electricity rates during off-peak times. There are other benefits to off-peak cooling systems, too. Conventional air conditioners use more energy as they get hotter, and the more energy they draw, the less efficiently they use it.
Sometimes, however, more meaningful pieces like the Kony2012 video depicting the hunt for African warlord Joseph Kony catch Internet fire. Why do some of them get millions of views while others get a few hundred (or less)? It was all the way back in 350 B.C.E. Aristotle came up with his theory for making speeches memorable. The Greek philosopher concluded that the talk must have an ethical, logical or emotional appeal. Videos with important messages can go viral too. Here, supporters watch a projection from Invisible Children's Kony 2012 video campaign. The nonprofit group wants Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony captured. The video got 100 million views in six days. In order for Web content to go viral, it has to make people feel something. Positive emotions - joy, inspiration, amusement, hope - are the most powerful drivers of clicks and shares, but content that spurs anger, disgust, sadness and frustration can also become viral.
It can represent signals at any resolution, unlike other representations that save signals as discretely sampled values. Thanks to the recent breakthrough in input features, it can now accurately express both low and high frequencies of signals. Despite the fact that INR has recently received great attention, the network parameter efficiency of INR has not been extensively studied. In INR, it has a crucial impact on signal transmission since signals are stored in the form of network parameters. INR from being used for many useful applications that would benefit from it. In this work, we study how to efficiently represent video signals with this emerging representation. However, it is not generally expected that the trained networks fully exploit the spatial and temporal redundancy of video signals to maximize the network parameter efficiency. We propose Neural Residual Flow Fields (NRFF), a novel INR scheme that leverages optical flows and residuals instead of raw colors to represent videos. Motion information, also known as optical flow, is preserved in our proposed NRFF, allowing similar pixel values from other frames to be reused.
If social media is taking a toll on your mental health, don't be afraid to talk to someone about it or contact a trained professional for advice. Browse more resources about social media. Mental blues on the next page. A group of studies reveals that people who downplay their loneliness. Negative emotions online contribute to others' feelings of isolation. Because people are more likely to project a positive image online, it's easy to underestimate everyone else's negative feelings. Amichai-Hamburger, Yair. "Depression through Technology." The New Scientist. Ellison, Nicole et al. Journal of Computer-Mediation Communication. Hardie, Elizabeth and Ming Yi Tee. Australian Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society. Jordan, Alexander et al. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. MedlinePlus. "Depression." National Institute of Mental Health. Nauert, Rick. "Social Media for Elderly Depression." Psych Central. O'Keeffe, Gwenn Schurgin and Kathleen Clarke-Pearson. Steinfield, Charles et al. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology. Szalavitz, Maia. "Misery Has More Company Than You Think, Especially On Facebook." TIME: Healthland. Wilson, Kathryn et al. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.
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