The Workbench is the GUI of OS4, a graphical interface file manager and application launcher for the Operating System. It also includes some general purpose tools and utility programs such as a Notepad for typing text, MultiView for viewing images and Amigaguide documents, Unarc for unpacking Archives, a PDF reader, a number of small preferences programs for changing settings of the GUI and OS, among other programs.
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Workbench 2.0 improvements introduced a lot of major advances to the GUI of Amiga operating system. The blue and orange colour scheme was replaced with a grey and light blue with 3D aspect in the border of the windows. The Workbench was no longer tied to the 640256 (PAL) or 640200 (NTSC) display modes, and much of the system was improved with an eye to making future expansion easier. For the first time, a standardised "look and feel" was added. This was done by creating the Amiga Style Guide, and including libraries and software which assisted developers in making conformant software. Technologies included the GUI element creation library gadtools, the software installation scripting language Installer, and the AmigaGuide hypertext help system.
In May 2012 Hyperion announced that they were working on AmigaOS 4.2. It would introduce hardware accelerated 3D support, multi-core support, a vastly improved file system API and many other features.[20]
pyspellchecker supports multiple languages including English, Spanish,German, French, and Portuguese. For information on how the dictionaries werecreated and how they can be updated and improved, please see theDictionary Creation and Updating section of the readme!
Thanks for the info CosmoSkyMaster! I love playing my chanter and know that they're not the "best" dps class out there but they provide buffs for others which is why they are wanted for a grouping. I do have to ask though, I've been told by multiple people that for a gunner to be competitive they have to use a cannon instead of pistols. Why is this?
usually the first place is disputed by Sorcerers, Assassins and Gladiators. And you will find all those classes doing an impresive DPS on the right hands. But Assassins are so dependable on your internet conection. If you have a high ping will be hard for you to do your maximum potential damage. Glads are less dependant on ping and Sorcerers even less. (still all the classes suffer in some way with high ping). Assassins and Glads have their DPS totally realted with the gear you have. You will need to improve your gear a lot to do your max damage. Sorcerers are a little easier at this point. You only need to reach some stats and learn your skills rotation. But Sorcerers have less tools to survive and are harder to keep alive if things get complicated. Songweavers, Clerics, Gunners, Rangers, Spiritmaster can be also nice damage dealers. Clerics and SWs are in some way easy to use. Just like the sorcerer you just need some stats and they can do an impresive DPS. I played a lot with a cleric in DPS mode and I did a nice job. A lot of times I was able to be on top of the DPS inside an instance. But it is true that a good sorcerer can be a hard competence and sometimes they do like 5-10% more final damage. Assassins and Glads are hard to tell. A lot of people with those classes use cheating software and you can see exagerated DPS on them. So it is hard to tell who is honest and who is not to tell you how much more DPS they can do. Gunners can do a lot of DPS, but you need to have a low ping for that. you will be switching weapons all the time and with a high ping that is complicated. SW are a nice DPS so similar to clerics in the way they play. SM and Rangers maybe have a lower DPS than other classes but they have a lot of practical skills that can reduce the damage taken and improve the DPS that other people do. So your real DPS will be more than your direct DPS. Aethertechs is an special class. They can be tanks but they depend so much on their skills and how the player uses them. And they can be also great damage dealers if they have to fight against large groups of mobs. Their DPS is not so high against a single target as it can be against multple targets. Chanters and Templars as DPS is something hard to find. Technically every class can be focused on DPS, but to be honest, those classes are more focused on other tasks.
Modular platforms remain superior in increasing the universality of components and lowering R&D and production costs. At present, most automakers have their own modular platforms, or even multiple platforms. Modular architecture outperforms a modular platform. It is an extension and expansion of the platform concept. With higher universality of components and higher scalability, modular architecture is compatible with vehicles of differing classes and power types. Automakers therefore have started gradual transition from modular platform to modular architecture.
Here comes a very specific case. Sometimes you have to use tools which depends on a specific version of a package. You probably don't want to uninstall and reinstall the package with pip each time you want to use one tool or the other.
C language is known to be very powerful and to execute faster. It has to be compiled (typically using GCC compiler) to be executed. There exist many tools that can convert your Python code to C code to benefit from its performances (Cython, Pythran, ...).
It can encapsulate software and packages in environments, so you can have multiple different versions of a software installed at the same time and avoid incompatibilities between different tools. It also has functionality to easily port and replicate environments, which is important to ensure reproducibility of analyses.
You need to specify your installation destination, e.g. /home/users/sdiehl/tools/miniconda3. You must use the full path and cannot use $HOME/tools/miniconda3. Answer yes to initialize Miniconda3.
When creating this environment file via export, it will list the packages you installed and also all their dependencies and the dependencies of their dependencies down to the lowest level. However, when manually creating the file, it's sufficient to specify the top-level required packages or tools. All the dependencies will be installed automatically.
Electro-optic dual-comb spectrometers have proved to be a promising technology for sensitive, high-resolution and rapid spectral measurements. Electro-optic combs possess very attractive features like simplicity, reliability, bright optical teeth, and typically moderate but quickly tunable optical spans. Furthermore, in a dual-comb arrangement, narrowband electro-optic combs are generated with a level of mutual coherence that is sufficiently high to enable optical multiheterodyning without inter-comb stabilization or signal processing systems. However, this valuable tool still presents several limitations; for instance, on most systems, absolute frequency accuracy and long-term stability cannot be guaranteed; likewise, interferometer-induced phase noise restricts coherence time and limits the attainable signal-to-noise ratio. In this paper, we address these drawbacks and demonstrate a cost-efficient absolute electro-optic dual-comb instrument based on a frequency stabilization mechanism and a novel adaptive interferogram acquisition approach devised for electro-optic dual-combs capable of operating in real-time. The spectrometer, completely built from commercial components, provides sub-ppm frequency uncertainties and enables a signal-to-noise ratio of 10000 (intensity noise) in 30 seconds of integration time.
We stabilized the carrier-envelope phase of the pulses emitted by a femtosecond mode-locked laser by using the powerful tools of frequency-domain laser stabilization. We confirmed control of the pulse-to-pulse carrier-envelope phase using temporal cross correlation. This phase stabilization locks the absolute frequencies emitted by the laser, which we used to perform absolute optical frequency measurements that were directly referenced to a stable microwave clock.
In a multi-location optical FDM network, the frequency of each user's transmitter can be offset-locked, through a Fabry-Perot, to an absolute frequency standard which is distributed to the users. To lock the local Fabry-Perot to the frequency standard, the standard has to be frequency-dithered by a sinusoidal signal and the sinusoidal reference has to be transmitted to the user location since the lock-in amplifier in the stabilization system requires the reference for synchronous detection. We proposed two solutions to avoid transmitting the reference. One uses an extraction circuit to obtain the sinusoidal signal from the incoming signal. A nonlinear circuit following the photodiode produces a strong second-order harmonic of the sinusoidal signal and a phase-locked loop is locked to it. The sinusoidal reference is obtained by a divide- by-2 circuit. The phase ambiguity (0 degree(s) or 180 degree(s)) is resolved by using a selection- circuit and an initial scan. The other method uses a pseudo-random sequence instead of a sinusoidal signal to dither the frequency standard and a surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) matched-filter instead of a lock-in amplifier to obtain the frequency error. The matched-filter serves as a correlator and does not require the dither reference.
We have used continuous-wave (CW) and frequency-domain spectroscopy to investigate the optical properties of the newborn piglet brain in vivo and non-invasively. Three anaesthetized, intubated, ventilated and instrumented newborn piglets were placed into a stereotaxic instrument for optimal experimental stability, reproducible probe-to-scalp optical contact and 3D adjustment of the optical probe. By measuring the absolute values of the brain absorption and reduced scattering coefficients at two wavelengths (758 and 830 nm), frequency-domain spectroscopy provided absolute readings (in contrast to the relative readings of CW spectroscopy) of cerebral haemoglobin concentration and saturation during experimentally induced perturbations in cerebral haemodynamics and oxygenation. Such perturbations included a modulation of the inspired oxygen concentration, transient brain asphyxia, carotid artery occlusion and terminal brain asphyxia. The baseline cerebral haemoglobin saturation and concentration, measured with frequency-domain spectroscopy, were about 60% and 42 µM respectively. The cerebral saturation values ranged from a minimum of 17% (during transient brain asphyxia) to a maximum of 80% (during recovery from transient brain asphyxia). To analyse the CW optical data, we have (a) derived a mathematical relationship between the cerebral optical properties and the differential pathlength factor and (b) introduced a method based on the spatial dependence of the detected intensity (dc slope method). The analysis of the cerebral optical signals associated with the arterial pulse and with respiration demonstrates that motion artefacts can significantly affect the intensity recorded from a single optode pair. Motion artefacts can be strongly reduced by combining data from multiple optodes to provide relative readings in the dc slope method. We also report significant biphasic changes (initial decrease and successive increase) in the reduced scattering coefficient measured 2ff7e9595c
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