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As a part of the renovation of the learningTheory.org web site, we are launching a series of interviews with leading researchers in learning theory and related fields. We are proud that Prof. Vladimir Vapnik accepted our invitation to be the first to be interviewed.
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In this paper we consider a nondeterministic computation by deterministic multi-head 2-way automata having a read-only access to an auxiliary memory.
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This paper shows how maximum possible configuration efficiency of an indefinitely large software system is constrained by chosing a fixed upper limit to the number of program units per subsystem.
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EVOC (for EVOlution of Culture) is a computer model of culture that enables us to investigate how various factors such as barriers to cultural diffusion, the presence and choice of leaders, or changes in the ratio of innovation to imitation affect the diversity and effectiveness of ideas.
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There are different kinds of HTTP caches that are useful for different kinds of things. I want to talk about gateway caches — or, “reverse proxy caches” — and consider their effects on modern, dynamic web application design.
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Deploy Rails applications with Capistrano automaticaly, just by git push-ing into a Github repository, thanks to it’s post-receive URL hooks. Now your designer friends can deploy using GitGUI.
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A tutorial book on Asseembly language
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This paper introduces a set of combinators for building lexical analysers in a lazy functional language. During lexical analysis, the combinators generate a deterministic, table-driven analyser on the fly. Consequently, the presented method combines the efficiency of off-line scanner generators with the flexibility of the combinator approach.
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Haskell was 15 years old at the POPL’03 meeting, when Simon Peyton Jones presented this talk: it was born at a meeting at the 1987 conference on Functional Programming and Computer Architecture (FPCA’87).
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The Authors Guild, the Association of American Publishers (AAP), and Google today announced a groundbreaking settlement agreement on behalf of a broad class of authors and publishers worldwide that would expand online access to millions of in-copyright books and other written materials in the U.S. from the collections of a number of major U.S. libraries participating in Google Book Search.
links for 2008-11-18
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© Mingli Yuan 2010.
© Mingli Yuan 2010.