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Summer Star Gazing Planets, constellations dazzle visitors at BSC
77 days ago

Source: www.forrester.com --- 8 days ago
Scattered business information permeates many enterprises. This disunited data often conforms to various schemas and formats, resides in sundry databases and applications, and falls under the purview of myriad owners, administrators, and business domains. Such a fragmented state of affairs can prove frustrating for information workers who require a single, unified view of disparate operational data within their reports, dashboards, query tools, and other business intelligence (BI) applications. The most common approach for integrating heterogeneous data into a single, unified BI view is enterprise data warehousing (EDW), which has constraints that often limit its applicability in highly decentralized and agile environments. When users simply need unified, near-real-time, on-demand access to data that originates in many source applications, data federation is an attractive alternative. Information and knowledge management (I&KM) professionals should also consider data federation a complementary approach that can extend and enrich their current EDW environment. ...
Source: www.forrester.com --- 24 days ago
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Source: talkingmoai.com --- 38 days ago
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Source: jzholloway.wordpress.com --- 36 days ago
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Source: www.pomofrag.org --- 14 days ago
olala, le premier tome de Constellations sort début octobre chez Ankama, label araignée.  popcube et moi, on a mis pas mal de choses dans ce bouquin, et j espère qu il va trouver son public. on a prévu entre 3 et 5 tomes. ...
Source: backyard-sketches.co.uk --- 7 days ago
I remember the last time I did manage to get out with my telescope, which was sometime earlier in the year - maybe early spring, I didn’t really see a lot because I had no idea where or at what I was looking. It had been so long since I had been out observing I [...] ...
Source: www.wired.com --- 9 days ago
In honor of the telescope's 400th anniversary, we here at Wired.com want to see your favorite telescope photo. Whether it's Constellations, your telescope from home or a giant observatory you visited last summer, show us your best tribute to this epic invention. Use the Reddit widget below to submit your favorite telescopes photo and vote for your favorite among the other submissions. Please tell us who to credit the image to and submit images that are relatively large, the ideal size being 800 to 1200 pixels or larger on the longest side. Please include a description of your photo, which may include exposure information, equipment used, etc. We don't host the photos, so you'll have to upload it somewhere else and submit a link to it. If you're using Flickr, Picasa or another photo-sharing site to host your image, please provide a link to the image directly and not just to the photo page where it's displayed. Using an online photo service that requires that you login will not work. If your photo doesn't show up, it's because the URL you have entered is incorrect. Check it and make sure it ends with the image file name (XXXXXX.jpg). Please bookmark this page and check back periodically over the next two weeks to vote on new submissions! Vote on telescopes photos submitted by other readers. Show entries that are: hot | new | top-rated. Submit your telescopes photo. Submit your telescopes photo. (No more than one every 30 minutes. N ...
Source: space.about.com --- 37 days ago
People have looked at the stars for many, many years. They could imagine pictures in stars. Those pictures are called Constellations. After you do this activity, see if you can find the Constellations in the night sky. ...
Source: www.ibm.com --- 9 days ago
Could we BE more nebula-ous? : Isn't there always a big dark mass up to something somewhere? Called a "dark flow" by astronomers, astronomers have observed patches of matter in the universe moving at very high speeds in a uniform direction; they cannot account for why. That's why they think that whatever is pulling this stuff must be from outside the observable universe (that means beyond the distance light could travel since the universe's beginning). What they've observed: Clusters of galaxies moving at 2 million miles per hour toward a region in the sky between the Constellations of Centaurus and Vela; the motion is different from the outward expansion of the universe motion. Return to zone ||| Return to blog ||| Previous postings ...
Source: www.film.com --- 3 days ago
"It's a smart, funny picture. Somewhere Socrates is up in the Constellations, chilling with his gods and goddesses. And he's smiling. " There has been as much tap dancing around this movie as there have been arguments for and against it. I will try to do neither of these things, but keep a close eye on my feet. For many religious people, Bill Maher is a modern-day boogie man. He wouldn't be so scary were he to devolve into hate-filled tirades. He's a threat because he's a… ...
Source: blogs.discovery.com --- 1 day ago
Last night I had the pleasure of meeting pianist and composer Liz Story, who is a three-time Grammy nominee. She and her husband, bassist Joel DiBartolo, have together and separately been involved in creating some of the world's most memorable music. (The famous du da du da in the "Jaws" soundtrack, "Saturday Night Fever," "Star Wars," Story's famous Windham Hill recordings...) Liz Story Story mentioned how she used to live on the top of a mountain in near solitude. She didn't even have a refrigerator or the usual mess of noisy electrical appliances that most of us have. So her environment was quiet, save for the sounds provided by nature and her music. One day a fly came into the domed area where her piano was. The fly sounded incredibly loud, with no humming refrigerator, loud airplane or buzzing computer to diminish its sound-producing power.  Distracted, Story tried to match the fly's noise to a musical note. She finally figured it out. Flies buzz in the key of "F." (The same thing happened when a big bumblebee made its way into her studio. The bee buzzed in the key of "E" flat.) So much of her work arises from a genuine interest in nature. Her latest CD, "Night Sky Essays," is a beautiful compilation inspired by the 12 Constellations of the zodiac. You can read and hear about it by clicking on this link. I was next to a scientist from NASA who said he and his colleagues often play this CD as they study the planets and stars. So m ...
Source: www.ecademy.com --- 8 days ago
Leadership seminars and teambuilding with horses in Germany , international train the trainer seminars 2008 in Denmark , Sweden , Italy , USA , Poland , and HorseDream partner license workshops for people (so far) from Europe, Near East, USA, Canada . "Integral HorseMapping" is about working with single clients, groups, and teams in personal, structural, and organizational Constellations. This HorseDream concept is based on the Integral Approach of Ken Wilber, Fred Kofman, Don Beck, Peter Senge, and others. You can book Integral HorseMapping workshops for your company or your team, and you can attend an open workshop with HorseDream and partners in Denmark , Germany , Italy , Sweden , and in the USA . In the UK Licensed HorseDream Partner David (Horse Guy) Harris is offering Integral HorseMapping workshops. Watch a short video from our international workshop in Vienna, Austria (October 2007): ...
Source: thescotsman.scotsman.com --- 9 days ago
A SOPHISTICATED computer program, developed to help astronomers analyse Constellations in space, is set to revolutionise breast -screening services in Britain and save countl ...
Source: support.yuku.com --- 4 days ago
Or just at Poetic Constellations? I know y'all have missed me LOL ...
Source: www.miamiherald.com --- 7 days ago
The Museum of Discovery and Science presents Reach for the Stars, which uses reading, singing, demonstration and an interactive activity to teach kids about the skies and how ancient people used the Constellations to know when to plant crops, tell stories and find their way home. ...
Source: www.kk.org --- 1 hour ago
The SkySout is an interactive guide for exploring the heavens with or without a telescope. When you point it towards a certain spot in the sky, the built-in GPS receiver identifies a particular constellation and stars -- and you can then opt to hear an audio tour about the celestial items that have been identified. The SkyScout employs a database purported to hold 6,000 stars, 1,500 double & variable stars, all 88 Constellations, and 100 deep space objects (galaxies, nebulae, clusters, et. al.), which will be more than enough targets to keep me and my family engaged for quite sometime. If the millions upon millions of light years involved with observable objects in space were analogous to a city map, the SkyScout can get you within a couple of blocks of your exact destination (which is pretty darn good!). Though the unit can be used as a spotter for those wishing to leverage a telescope, thus far, we enjoy exploring the night sky sans scope so the whole family can participate and listen to the audio lessons without having to wrestle for viewing time. It's proven very wonderful for engaging my young children in something they've grown to enjoy and I hope they carry forward in their lives. We've now had ours for a few months and use it a minimum of once a week (mostly weekends, weather permitting). Mostly, we star gaze from our backyard in the ‘burbs -- not a "dark-sky certified" area with a dramatic showing of stars hidden by the ...
Source: www.earthtimes.org --- 6 days ago
Hamburg - For centuries, astrologers studied celestial Constellations in a bid to unravel the future. Thanks to modern technology, a glance at your computer screen suffices nowadays. Beginners can check Astrology 2008 from Rondomedia publishing. User... ...
Source: www.wickedlocal.com --- 8 days ago
  Stars of early fall Join local amateur astronomers for an evening of family astronomy on Friday, Oct. 3, 6:30 p.m., under the dark skies of Green Meadow Farm, 656 Asbury St., Hamilton. Learn some of the season’s most prominent Constellations including Cygnus, Lyra, Delphinus and more, before they leave for the winter months. Bring a telescope or binoculars if you have them. Sky maps and other handouts will be provided. Telescope instruction will also be provided. Dress for a cool fall evening. Sign up is required, and all ages are welcome. Cost: $5 per person. Call 978-468-3720 to register.   Heart of the Home Kitchen Tour to benefit Wenham Museum New England tradition meets classic contemporary style and design in Wenham Museum’s Heart of the Home Kitchen Tour on Saturday, Oct. 4, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Travel through Hamilton and Wenham’s scenic countryside as you tour 10 never-before-opened kitchens. Discover the latest in state of the art appliances, countertops, lighting and floor coverings inspiring you to create your own unique kitchen. Find room for everything in organized mudrooms, designer cabinets and butler’s pantries. Meet gracious homeowners ready to share decorating stories and before and after pictures. Complete your tour at the museum, with a visit to a display of historic household items and the colonial hearth in the ca. 1690 Claflin-Richards House, one of America’s early kitchens. Cost: in advance, members $12 and non- ...
Source: io9.com --- 19 hours ago
Welcome back to MangoBot, a biweekly column about Asian futurism by TokyoMango blogger Lisa Katayama. The International Space Station is flying straight at me. "This is a glimpse into the future," a voice says from somewhere above my head. "This is what the ISS will look like when it's completed in 2010." The giant silver ship floats past my head and out of my field of vision, and suddenly, I'm zooming out from the Earth into a sea of auroras and planets. "This is dark matter," the voice says as giant dense blue blobs dance around the room. "It's heavy, and constantly changing shapes because of that." I want to reach out and touch them — does dark matter feel more like jello or marshmallows? — but before I can, we're flying outwards again, past all the other planets in our solar system, visiting the comets in the Oort Cloud, and into a giant sky full of Constellations. We dance around the Constellations for a few minutes, checking them out from all sides, before heading out to the farthest reaches of the Milky Way, then past our galaxy to see an infinite number of galaxies. I'm sitting in the back row of a brand new theater called the Synra Dome, getting a private screening of one of the coolest 3D planetarium technologies ever, realizing just how incredibly tiny and insignificant I am. Tokyo's Science Museum is a half-century old government-run entity situated in a building next to the Imperial Palace. It's a neat little museum ...
Source: www.universetoday.com --- 37 days ago
As the very last of the summer flowers bloom in the dusty grasses of the northern hemisphere, so a cosmic flower blooms in the dusty star fields of the northern Constellations. While this image conjures up a vision of an iris delicately opening its 6 light year wide petals some 1300 light years [...] ...

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