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"Whether you're looking to change messaging servers, modify your administration tasks to a simpler and more efficient level, or ensure the security and flexibility of your web application server, Lotus Domino Administration in a Nutshell will give you the everyday help you need to make the most of this reliable and scalable integrated server platform."--Jacket.
National security, a topic routinely discussed behind closed doors by Washington’s political scientists and policy makers, is believed to be an insider’s game. All too often this highly specialized knowledge is assumed to place issues beyond the grasp—and interest—of the American public. Author D. Robert Worley disagrees. The U.S. national security system, designed after World War II and institutionalized through a decades-long power conflict with the Soviet Union, is inadequate for the needs of the twenty-first century, and while a general consensus has emerged that the system must be transformed, a clear and direct route for a new national security strategy proves elusive. Furnishing the tools to assist in future national security reforms, Orchestrating the Instruments of Power articulates and synthesizes the concepts of America’s economic, political, and military instruments of power.
Writing and upgrading applications for the latest Lotus Notes Domino Platform.
This book covers the upcoming Domino server upgrade, which includes expanded Internet connectivity features. The text presents experienced first-hand perspective on Notes messaging, replication, security, scheduling, and calendaring.
A unique update to one of the bestselling titles in the Lotus/Domino arena, with a description of the different ways to approach network design with Domino and comparing and contrasting Domino with Microsoft Exchange. The CD-ROM includes Domino Toolkit databases, applications to help estimate network requirements, and more.
Modernity and Power provides a fresh conceptual overview of twentieth-century United States foreign policy, from the Roosevelt and Taft administrations through the presidencies of Kennedy and Johnson. Beginning with Woodrow Wilson, American leaders gradually abandoned the idea of international relations as a game of geopolitical interplays, basing their diplomacy instead on a symbolic opposition between "world public opinion" and the forces of destruction and chaos. Frank Ninkovich provocatively links this policy shift to the rise of a distinctly modernist view of history. To emphasize the central role of symbolism and ideological assumptions in twentieth-century American statesmanship, Ninkovich focuses on the domino theory—a theory that departed radically from classic principles of political realism by sanctioning intervention in world regions with few financial or geographic claims on the national interest. Ninkovich insightfully traces the development of this global strategy from its first appearance early in the century through the Vietnam war. Throughout the book, Ninkovich draws on primary sources to recover the worldview of the policy makers. He carefully assesses the coherence of their views rather than judge their actions against "objective" realities. Offering a new alternative to realpolitic and economic explanations of foreign policy, Modernity and Power will change the way we think about the history of U.S. international relations.
The latest issue of Australian Foreign Affairs examines China's ultimate goals as an emerging superpower, including the extent of its territorial ambitions. New Domino Theory looks at Australia's place in China's long-term plans and at the threat – if any – that Beijing poses to Australian security, politics and society. Essays include: Red peril: What does China want from Australia? – James Curran Uncommon destiny: How Beijing sees the world – Merriden Varrall Agents and influence: Inside the foreign interference threat – Yun Jiang No daylight: Behind the Labor–Coalition consensus on AUKUS and China PLUS correspondence, The Fix, and more