bookmarks  172

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    WordPress.com is brought to you by some of the same folks who work on the open source blogging software available at WordPress.org. Open source WordPress has been incredibly successful and risen from a handful of users to the most-used blog tool in its category. However, as easy-to-use as we could make the open source package, there was still a barrier in that it requires a hosting account, a database, FTP, and a whole alphabet soup of acronyms that make normal people like you and me dizzy. We wanted to bring the WordPress experience to a larger audience. So we created WordPress.com, a hosted version of the open source package where you can start a blog in seconds without any technical knowledge. We’re a bit of an underdog, as there are much larger hosted blogging services such as Blogger that have been out for years, but when WordPress.org got started people said the blog software market was saturated and there wasn’t room for anything new. (The big players then were Greymatter and Movable Type.) We think we have something unique to bring to the table. WordPress.com is under very active development, and we roll out updates almost every day. New features and services are driven by you so please use our feedback form to let us know what you want. Almost everything on WordPress.com is free, and things that are currently free will remain free in the future, but we do offer paid a la carte upgrades for things like CSS editing and custom domains. How do we pay for everything? WordPress.com is run by Automattic which currently makes money from the aforementioned upgrades, blog services, Akismet anti-spam technology, and hosting partnerships. We know there are a lot of places you could put your blog, and we’d be extra honored if you consider us. If you’re a current user and you dig what we’re doing, the best way you can help us out is to help a friend get set up as well. It also gives you more buddies for your blogroll.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    WordPress is web software you can use to create a beautiful website or blog. We like to say that WordPress is both free and priceless at the same time.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    CNRI Handle Extension for Firefox embeds a handle/DOI name resolver in the browser. It finds handles and DOI names used as references in web pages, in a variety of formats, sends them directly to the Handle System for resolution, and gets back current information about the identified entity, e.g., current location. The results of that handle resolution are used to determine browser behavior, e.g., display the current version of a document even if it has been moved since the creation of the reference. After installing this extension in your Firefox browser, you will be able to directly access handle URIs like hdl:4263537/4000 or Digital Object Identifier URIs like doi:10.1000/1 by typing them into the address bar, clicking on links with such references, or even having one as the source of an image. Your browser will resolve these handles using the native Handle System protocol. What's more, if you do follow a link to a web-to-handle proxy server (e.g., http://hdl.handle.net/4263537/4000 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1000/1), your browser will recognize this and use the native Handle System protocol instead. The extension will automatically detect if a firewall prevents direct handle resolution and will fall back to using a web-to-handle proxy server in that case. A configuration option can turn off redirecting to URLs embedded in the handle values, allowing you to examine the structure of the handle record.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    Drupal is a free software package that allows anyone to easily publish, manage and organize a wide variety of content on a website.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    Mission The Thermophysical Properties Division provides the best available measurements, theory, computations, and data evaluation for the thermophysical property information required to enable development of standards, enhance productivity, facilitate trade, ensure scientific and technological progress, and improve the quality of life. Overview The Thermophysical Properties Division (TPD) was formed at the beginning of 2008 by a reorganization which separated the old Physical and Chemical Properties Division into two entities with distinct focuses and each housed on one of the two main campuses of NIST. The TPD is a Division of the Material Measurement Laboratory located on the Boulder campus. The Thermophysical Properties Division strives to be the foremost and best source of high quality thermophysical property information. This vision is driven by the ubiquitous importance of this information to commerce, industry, manufacturing, and national policy objectives. The Division meets its challenges through an integrated program of experimental measurement, data collection and evaluation, development of theoretically based models, and simulation of model systems. Among the outputs of the Division are computerized standard reference databases which synthesize thermophysical property information in forms which are conveniently used by our stakeholders. The vast majority of commodity exchanges in chemicals, energy related fluids, and materials are based on physical and chemical properties. In some cases, national and international standards for these properties are needed, such as the AGA-8 equation of state for the properties of natural gas, ASME-IAPWS Properties of Water and Steam, ISO-Standard Equations for refrigerants. Generally these standards are presented in the form of high accuracy equations of state which allow determination of a wide range of thermodynamic properties. Additionally, performance criteria of working fluids, feedstock, chemicals, and cryogenic systems are inextricably linked to thermophysical properties, e.g. density, viscosity, boiling point, phase behavior, heat capacity, stability, etc. Engineering design, optimal operation, and innovation for engines, chemical manufacturing, power generation, heating and air conditioning, distillation, etc. depends critically on knowledge of these properties. Reliable properties data are critical to competitive advantage, sustainability, and innovation. Finally, we note that widespread reliance of industry on properties information, success in setting and achieving national energy, environmental, and security goals often requires an extensive and trustworthy properties information-base. To meet the broad spectrum of needs, only briefly sketched above, the Division’s work is structured along four synergistic themes: * Develop and maintain the measurement capabilities, standard materials and reference data needed to underpin a national system of thermophysical property measurements; * Develop large-scale, readily accessible data resources providing trustworthy property information meeting high priority needs for a broad range of industries and national agendas; * Develop empirical and fundamental predictive capabilities to enable reliable estimation of property values when experimental data are unavailable; Research experimental techniques and address key data-gaps in support of specific, high priority industrial and national initiatives. These themes allow effective response to customer needs and are consistent with the Division’s operating strategy to maintain a highly synergistic research program that includes an appropriate balance of measurement, theory, and predictive models. The combination of the Division’s world class expertise and unrivaled resources in measurement, archiving, and provision of high-quality property data is complemented by its forefront research to develop reliable and highly adaptable methods for estimating property data in cases where measurements are unavailable or extremely difficult and/or costly to obtain. Core Expertise The expertise in the Division is broadly distributed within the fields of thermophysical properties and processes, emphasizing (1) data infrastructure and access; (2) predictive theory and models; and (3) experimental tools and measurements. More specifically, the Division maintains competence in data evaluation and dissemination; property models for industrial use; measurement of thermophysical properties; cryogenic technologies; separation technologies; fuel properties; and properties for environmental chemistry. Key Interactions with Customers Division outputs are routinely used in a variety of industrial, governmental, and academic settings. For instance, through a collaboration with Aspen Technology, evaluated data from the NIST Thermodynamic Data Engine are available to some 60,000 chemical plants world-wide. A consortium of chemical and related companies provides direct input to the data collection and evaluation programs of the Thermodynamic Research Center Group. The NIST REFPROP database was purchased by some 1200 customers in 2008, and all cryogenic flow meters in the U.S. are tied to the Division’s calibration and testing services. The Division houses the editorial offices of the International Journal of Thermophysics (and provides an editor of the Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data) and organizes the triennial Symposium on Thermophysical Properties to maintain connections. Sponsored research in the Division also provides direct links to key customers: work with DOD (primarily the Air Force) is important to our fuels program; DHS funds some of our work on properties and data for explosives; DARPA works with the Division in its micro-cryocooler project; DOE is engaged in our properties work related to advanced power generation and in gas hydrates data. Future Directions and Plans The National challenges related to energy security and monitoring/mitigating anthropogenic climate (or other environmental) changes are reflected in the Division’s plans. The Division recently held workshops on property needs for biofuels and aerospace fuels: alternative fuels and feedstocks will command an increased emphasis in the future.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    NIST Reference Fluid Thermodynamic and Transport Properties Database (REFPROP)
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    The application contains all the elements of the Periodic Table along with images of the elements in their natural state, as well as lots of other information and interactive displays. The Periodic Table Explore has a completely new and innovative user interface that allows for an almost unlimited amount of control over the display. Each display can be opened any number of times, and can show different information. The size, shape and position of each display can be customised too. You can save your favourite layouts for retrieval at a later date. The periodic table now comes in three versions. They all contain the same amount of information. Detailed information on each element Details of isotopes and allotropes Details of important compounds Details of reactions with water, air, halogens and acids Images for each element (300+ images in total), including valence and crystal stucture diagrams Glossary of terms Graphs of important element properties Biographies for the important scientists and element discoverers View the states of the elements at any temperature (from 0 - 6000k) XP style support Search through all content Electron shell diagrams of each element (including orbitals) Atomic width diagram Element names and the majority of the applications buttons are now available in eight different languages. Unfortunately there is just too much text for me to translate (95000+ words).
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    EES ('ease') is a revolutionary program which will change the way you think and work. EES provides capabilities not found in any other equation solving program. EES will solve large sets of non-linear algebraic and differential equations. EES also provides publication-quality plots, linear and non-linear regression, optimization, unit conversion and consistency checking, and uncertainty analyses. Built-in functions are provided for thermodynamic and transport properties of many substances, including steam, air, refrigerants, cryogenic fluids, JANAF table gases, hydrocarbons and psychrometrics. Additional property data can be added. EES also allows user-written functions, procedures, modules, and tabular data. EES can also interface with REFPROP and other NIST fluid property programs. REFPROP provides the most advanced methods for estimating the properties of mixtures. The Professional version allows many other additional features including animation and the ability to make stand-alone programs.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    Infochem Computer Services is the leading independent supplier of thermodynamic software and consultancy services to the oil, gas and chemical industries. Infochem's expertise in physical properties can offer clients cost savings and increased profits through: * Early assessment of potential problems such as solid deposition which may lead to formation damage or pipeline blockage * Choice of the best remediation strategy or most efficient maintenance schedule * Optimisation of production * Avoidance of hazards to personnel or equipment due to fluid properties * High fidelity modelling of processes for design, simulation or operator training * Efficient implementation of thermodynamic software in a range of applications.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    CAELinux: an open source LiveDVD Linux distribution dedicated to computer aided engineering / finite element analysis (CAE / FEA)
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    textext: Inkscape extension for adding LaTeX objects to SVG drawings
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    µTorrent (or uTorrent and commonly abbreviated as "µT" or "uT") is a freeware, closed source BitTorrent client by BitTorrent, Inc. It is available for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. Both versions are written in C++.[10] It gets the "µ" in its name from the SI prefix "micro" meaning one one-millionth and it refers to the program's small footprint. The program is designed to use minimal computer resources while offering functionality comparable to larger BitTorrent clients such as Vuze or BitComet.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    KBibTeX is a BibTeX editor for KDE to edit bibliographies used with LaTeX. KBibTeX is released under the GNU Public License (GPL).
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    Computer Applications in Engineering Education provides a forum for publishing peer-reviewed, timely information on the innovative uses of computers and software tools in education, and for accelerating the integration of computers into the engineering curriculum. The journal encourages articles that present: * New software for engineering education * New educational technologies, such as interactive video and multimedia presentations * Computer use in laboratories * Visualization, computer graphics, video, and I/O issues * Computer-based engineering curricula * Computer uses in classroom or independent study situations * Use of commercial and government-owned software in education * Engineering software development and funding opportunities Papers crossing boundaries between engineering disciplines are welcomed.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    Cantera is a suite of object-oriented software tools for problems involving chemical kinetics, thermodynamics, and/or transport processes. It can be used from MATLAB, Python, C++, or Fortran.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    MATLAB is a high-level technical computing language and interactive environment for algorithm development, data visualization, data analysis, and numerical computation. Using MATLAB, you can solve technical computing problems faster than with traditional programming languages, such as C, C++, and Fortran.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    VirtualDub is a video capture/processing utility for Windows platforms, licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL). It lacks the editing power of a general-purpose editor such as Adobe Premiere, but is streamlined for fast linear operations over video. It has batch-processing capabilities for processing large numbers of files and can be extended with third-party video filters. VirtualDub is mainly geared toward processing AVI files, although it can read (not write) MPEG-1 and also handle sets of BMP images.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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    Sage is a free open-source mathematics software system licensed under the GPL. It combines the power of many existing open-source packages into a common Python-based interface. Mission: Creating a viable free open source alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica and Matlab.
    14 years ago by @thorade
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publications  27