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List of online databases

List of online databases
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List of academic databases and search engines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article contains a representative list of notable databases and search engines useful in an academic setting for finding and accessing articles in academic journals, institutional repositories, archives, or other collections of scientific and other articles. Databases and search engines differ substantially in terms of coverage and retrieval qualities.[1] Users need to account for qualities and limitations of databases and search engines, especially those searching systematically for records such as in systematic reviews or meta-analyses.[2] As the distinction between a database and a search engine is unclear for these complex document retrieval systems, see: the general list of search engines for all-purpose search engines that can be used for academic purposesthe article about bibliographic databases for information about databases giving bibliographic information about finding books and journal articles. Operating services[edit] [edit] [edit]

Ontology (information science) While the etymology is Greek, the oldest extant record of the word itself, the New Latin form ontologia, appeared in 1606 in the work Ogdoas Scholastica by Jacob Lorhard (Lorhardus) and in 1613 in the Lexicon philosophicum by Rudolf Göckel (Goclenius). The first occurrence in English of ontology as recorded by the OED (Oxford English Dictionary, online edition, 2008) came in Archeologia Philosophica Nova or New Principles of Philosophy by Gideon Harvey. Contemporary ontologies share many structural similarities, regardless of the language in which they are expressed. Most ontologies describe individuals (instances), classes (concepts), attributes and relations. Common components of ontologies include: Individuals Instances or objects (the basic or "ground level" objects) Aspects, properties, features, characteristics or parameters that objects (and classes) can have Ways in which classes and individuals can be related to one another Function terms Restrictions Rules Axioms

List of open-access journals This is a list of open-access journals, by field. The list contains selected, particularly notable journals with at least some free content, available through all forms of open access, including delayed open access, and hybrid open access. It only includes individual journals, not collections or indexing services. Agriculture[edit] Open Access Journal of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants Biology[edit] Computer science[edit] Chemistry[edit] Dance[edit] Contact Quarterly Educational technology[edit] Engineering[edit] Advances in Production Engineering & Management Environmental studies[edit] General science[edit] Higher education[edit] Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement Materials science[edit] Mathematics[edit] Music theory[edit] Gamut: The Journal of the Music Theory Society of the Mid-Atlantic Nutrition[edit] Journal of Nutrition Medicine[edit] Pharmaceutical sciences[edit] Scientia Pharmaceutica Philosophy[edit] Physics[edit] Political science[edit] Social science[edit] See also[edit]

26 Things to Note Before You Develop a Website 1 Domain Choose a name that people can remember well and choose wisely (and appropriately) whether you will use.com, .net or something else. 2 Hosting Choose a reliable one and look at how much capacity you need. 3 Tech Technology you can use: HTML5, CSS3, PHP, JQuery, Javascript, etc. 4 Purpose What is the purpose of the website: business, corporate, e-commerce, etc. 5 Layout & Color Color affects the 'feel' of your site. 6 Site Map Clear site map & flow chart. 7 Content Your website has to provide a good and informative content to the users. 8 Audience You have to know who your audiences are, then you can build content that will attract them. 9 Advertisement Don't put too much advertisement in your website. 10 Pop Up Message Prevent pop up messages. 11 Attractive Design Good website should be simple, yet professional. 12 Buttons Make an eye catching buttons and "call to" action buttons like buy now or download now. 13 Background 14 Image 15 Easy Navigation Users can easily find what they are looking for.

Category:Online databases This is a list of databases made available on computer networks, usually the Internet. Some of these sites are freely available and some require payment or membership. Subcategories This category has the following 18 subcategories, out of 18 total. Pages in category "Online databases" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 237 total. (previous 200) (next 200)(previous 200) (next 200) Zooming user interface Example of a ZUI When the level of detail present in the resized object is changed to fit the relevant information into the current size, instead of being a proportional view of the whole object, it's called semantic zooming.[1] Some experts consider the ZUI paradigm as a flexible and realistic successor to the traditional windowing GUI, being a Post-WIMP interface. But little effort is currently spent developing ZUIs, while there are ongoing efforts for developing other types of GUIs. History[edit] GeoPhoenix, a Cambridge, MA, startup associated with the MIT Media Lab, founded by Julian Orbanes, Adriana Guzman, Max Riesenhuber, released the first mass-marketed commercial Zoomspace in 2002-3 on the Sony CLIÉ PDA handheld, with Ken Miura of Sony In 2006, Hillcrest Labs introduced the HoME television navigation system, the first graphical, zooming interface for television.[5] ZUI projects[edit] Eagle Mode’s file manager displaying plain text source code directories See also[edit] References[edit]

Free Public Records MQTT/JQUERY/WEBSOCKETS Controller I wrote a while ago about using web sockets as against something like NETIO for controlling the home – most folk liked the article but I think part of it was a little complicated – and at the time I’d not really thought it out to make it as simple as possible. So, this morning I started again and now I have a decent and easy way to make control interfaces from the mobile phone – to ESP boards. I won’t go into MQTT in detail here – I’ll assume you have an MQTT interface of some description on your WIFI boards – if you need more info on that, look elsewhere on the blog. I’ll also assume you have node-red running somewhere. In my case I have a Raspberry Pi2 sitting in a corner with battery backup, running node-red, MQTT and Apache web server. So – in order to make a half-decent looking phone interface, I decided to go for jQuery Mobile – it is cheap, easy to run and there is a theme generator. Rather than put a ton of code in here – here’s a snippet with the entire page. Pete. p.s.

List of largest wikis Wikipedia's distinction shown on the table between a "conservative" and an "inclusive" number of pages originated in 2002 with the replacement of UseModWiki's spontaneous wiki modes with MediaWiki's embedded namespaces. For Wikimedia projects: The conservative number for the Wikipedia excludes redirects, discussion pages, image description pages, user profile pages, templates, help pages, portals, articles without links to other articles, and pages about Wikipedia. This may not be true for other wikis.The conservative number for Wikimedia Commons and Wiktionary excludes "talk" pages, pages about Wikipedia, minimal "stub" pages, redirects, and others that probably don't qualify as content pages. Lists of Wikipedias by various criteria: edit List of largest MediaWiki wikis[edit] Comprehensive Table at Wikimedia Labs, dynamically sortable to any criteria, self-updating every six hours by cronjob. Requests for inclusion into the statistics[edit] List of 10 largest other wikis[edit]

Xaitment Products[edit] xaitment currently sells two AI software modules: xaitMap and xaitControl. xaitMap provides runtime libraries and graphical tools for navigation mesh generation (also called NavMesh generation), pathfinding, dynamic collision avoidance, and individual and crowd movement. xaitControl is a finite-state machine for game logic and character behavior modeling that also includes a real-time debugger. On January 11, 2012, xaitment announced that it making its source code for these modules available to "all current and future US and European licensees". The full versions are available for PC (Windows and Linux), PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Wii. Partners[edit] xaitment's AI software is currently integrated into the Unity game engine, Havok's Vision Engine, Bohemia Interactive's VBS2 Simulation Engine, GameBase's Gamebryo game engine.[3] Customers[edit] xaitment sells its AI software products to video game developers and military and civil simulation developers. References[edit]

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