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From USA Today Bestselling Author, Jade West A filthy proposition.Too much money to say no. One dirty night in a stranger's bed.While my husband watches.A full length contemporary romance novel.
A visit to the zoo using the eyes of quantity, comparison, alliteration and rhyming.
The Web is a layer on top of Internet that for many belongs to the people. In my humble opinion this was not planned, but an accident, the consequence of the appearance of a revolutionary technology as it happens along the evolution. Before Internet arrival communications media, newspapers, Radio and TV worked unidirectional, from a de facto “Established Order” side to the “People’s” side “broadcasting” programmed pieces of information and knowledge, from sellers to buyers, from rulers to ruled, from teachers to students, from truth holders to truth seekers. The Peoples’ side is explored via Darwin, an AI Ontology that enable us to see the Web more and better focusing in Social Networks and the Deep Web, for many the hidden Web. As a demo a Darwin agent makes over Established side a “tomography” for the theme art history, from Altamira Caves to Nanoart.
Mary-Kate and Ashley are interested in the same boy.
This comprehensive PSE programme is a useful tool with which to raise students' confidence and enable them to develop inter-personal, social and communication skills needed in adult life. The programme is spiral, allowing students to revisit themes, and is based around the cross curricular themes of Citizenship, Environment Health, Careers and Economic/Industrial Awareness.
An introduction to the feuding researchers and inventors who made the computer possible, from the huge early models to the creation of the microchip and beyond. It discusses John Mauchly and Presper Eckert who developed the Electric Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) during World War II.
Looks at the history and anthropology of the expression of numbers throughout the ages and across different cultures. It deals with the different ways that number representation has been structured, the history and prehistory of number concepts, and the evolution of numerical representation (in word and symbol). These themes are explored through the various expressions of number-concepts in different cultures in different places and times.
Before Writing gives a new perspective on the evolution of communication. It points out that when writing began in Mesopotamia it was not, as previously thought, a sudden and spontaneous invention. Instead, it was the outgrowth of many thousands of years' worth of experience at manipulating symbols. In Volume I: From Counting to Cuneiform, Denise Schmandt-Besserat describes how in about 8000 B.C., coinciding with the rise of agriculture, a system of counters, or tokens, appeared in the Near East. These tokens—small, geometrically shaped objects made of clay—represented various units of goods and were used to count and account for them. The token system was a breakthrough in data processing and communication that ultimately led to the invention of writing about 3100 B.C. Through a study of archaeological and epigraphic evidence, Schmandt-Besserat traces how the Sumerian cuneiform script, the first writing system, emerged from a counting device. In Volume II: A Catalog of Near Eastern Tokens, Schmandt-Besserat presents the primary data on which she bases her theories. These data consist of several thousand tokens, catalogued by country, archaeological site, and token types and subtypes. The information also includes the chronology, stratigraphy, museum ownership, accession or field number, references to previous publications, material, and size of the artifacts. Line drawings and photographs illustrate the various token types.