great memory
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2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 722-733
Author(s):  
Chun-Feng Wu ◽  
Yuan-Hao Chang ◽  
Ming-Chang Yang ◽  
Tei-Wei Kuo

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawly Arrel Dionnie Greatalya

Growing up, human body needs a lot of nutritions. Those nutritions are meant to reinforce our organs to develop. One most crucial organ in our body, brain, also needs those specific nutrients. Omega 3 is one of the nutrients that play important role in the brain. Omega 3 can be found in a lot of food sources especially fishes. Sea fish such as sardine contains high omega 3. Brain’s full development will be shown in a great memory and cognitive development. Children below the age of 10 need a lot of omega 3 to support their rapid growth and development.


2015 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-31
Author(s):  
Jacob A. Latham

In modern scholarship, Pope Gregory I “the Great” (590–604) is often simultaneously considered the final scion of classical Rome and the first medieval pope. The letania septiformis, a procession organized into seven groups that Gregory instituted in 590 in the face of plague and disease (and performed only once thereafter in 603), has similarly been construed as the very moment when Antiquity died and the Middle Ages were born. However, his Roman contemporaries in the papal curia largely ignored Gregory and his purportedly epochal procession. In fact, memory of the procession languished in Italy until the late-eighth century when Paul the Deacon made it the center of his Life of Gregory. At Rome, remembrance of the procession lay dormant in the papal archives until John the Deacon dug it out in the late-ninth century. How then did the letania septiformis come to be judged so pivotal? Over the course of centuries, the letania septiformis was inventively re-elaborated in literature, liturgy, and legend as part of the re-fashioning of the memory of Gregory. Shorn of its context, the letania septiformis gained greater imaginative power, becoming the emblem of Gregory's pontificate, if not also of an historical era.


2012 ◽  
Vol 197 ◽  
pp. 596-603
Author(s):  
Ling Zhao ◽  
Yi Hou ◽  
Rong Ke Liu

This paper presents a layered two-phase message passing (L-TPMP) decoding algorithm for general quasi-cyclic low-density parity-check (QC-LDPC) codes, which not only achieves high hardware utilization efficiency (HUE), but also brings in great memory block reduction. The main idea is to split the check matrix into several layers row-wise, then to perform the message passing computations sequentially layer by layer and the two-phase computations of different layers can be overlapped performed. There is no constraint to layer the check matrix hence L-TPMP decoding can be used in both high and low throughput applications for any QC-LDPC codes. The overall architecture of L-TPMP decoder is also discussed and an efficient memory arrangement scheme is proposed to reduce the memory blocks. For the (3048, 7493) LDPC code selected form Chinese DTTB, L-TPMP decoding saves over 85% memory blocks comparing with the conventional TPMP decoding, and the HUE of the L-TPMP decoder is 0.97.


2011 ◽  
Vol 88-89 ◽  
pp. 750-754
Author(s):  
Ze Feng Zheng ◽  
Jiu Xi Li

With the sharpness of market competition, the design of automobile outline becomes more and more important. By far, no systematic method can direct designers to carry out creative design orderly. In fact, most of the instances are created by designers’ cerebrum independently. The rise of the evolution computation provides us a new approach for conceptual creative design; therefore, it has become one of the most important techniques for computational and creative design. This paper pays more attention to the computer aided environment in the automobile outline design, proposes the automobile outline modularization design method and classifies component base into two categories. This method stores the data in the format of XML, which can save great memory and amount of rebuild component time.


2007 ◽  
pp. 105-119
Author(s):  
Gordana Kacanski-Udovicic

The word (notion) alms or pisanija signified the house-to-house collection of small amounts of money for the Orthodox Christian monasteries in Serbia and beyond its borders. In one case (1831/1832), it was collected for the inauguration of the metropolitan and two bishops. There are no grounds for the assumption that the giving of alms originated in the times of Nemanjic rule (XII-XV century), in view of the fact that, in those centuries, the monasteries were largely endowed by the rulers and the nobility - placing their subjects under obligation by law, and in material terms. When the development of the Serbian nation was violently interrupted by enslavement under the Ottoman Turks, there were periodical outbreaks of religious arrogance with the destruction of the Serbian monasteries and the flight of their monks. Tradition - preserving the great memory of the size and importance of the monasteries in its own ways - was flawlessly handed down through the centuries. During the times of Ottoman rule, the people undertook the task of maintaining the monasteries by working for them and giving alms in the measure they were able to in those conditions of general hardship. ?Our ancestors? served as a model to them. After 1815 and specially after the autonomy of the Principality of Serbia in 1831, the emerging state (of Prince Milos) supported this spontaneously born tradition and approved the giving of alms. The monks themselves collected them with the approval and support of the state, for their respective monasteries. The monasteries were obliged to collect alms because there were very few monks - sometimes one or two, and rarely more in each monastery. Alms were also collected by the civil or ecclesiastical authorities if it involved the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. In that case, alms were considered to be a kind of obligatory contribution and lost their essential feature - of being voluntary.


PMLA ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 281-292
Author(s):  
Donald Weeks

There are poets whose art is an accumulating cluster of images that become more and more identified with specific ideas. I believe Yeats to have been such a poet, in whom a cluster of images grew in significance to produce the great poems of the period from the first World War to the second. Generally accepted as one of Yeats' finest lyrics is The Second Coming. I believe that the poem gains in richness by being considered in the light of associations that had long preoccupied Yeats, and that are frequently found together in his writings: Shelley, and especially his Prometheus Unbound; the Great Memory; and the Second Coming.


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