Beijing 2008: Official Magazine of Beijing 2008 Olympic Games
issue 10 | exe | 106 pages | English
The 2008 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XXIX
Olympiad, were awarded to Beijing, China after an exhaustive ballot of
the International Olympic Committee (IOC) on July 13, 2001. The games
will be celebrated from August 8, 2008 to August 24, 2008, with the
opening ceremony commencing at 08:08pm and 08 seconds.
Some events, including football (soccer), sailing, and new 10 km
swimming marathon events will be held in other cities of China. With
the equestrian events being held in Hong Kong, this marks the second
time the same edition of the Olympic Games has been hosted by two
National Olympic Committees (NOCs).
The official logo of the games, titled "Dancing Beijing," features a
stylized calligraphic character jīng (京, meaning capital), referencing
the host city. The mascots of Beijing 2008 are the five Fuwa (formerly
known as the "friendlies"), each representing one color of the Olympic
rings. The motto of the Games is "One World, One Dream." The games
will consist of 302 events in 28 sports, just one event more than the
Athens games of 2004. In addition to new events, several new NOCs that
may compete at the games have been recognized by the IOC.
DOWNLOAD LINK:
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Thursday, July 31, 2008
PMP: Project Management Professional Workbook
| Paperback: 320 pages |
| Publisher: Sybex; Workbook edition (June 25, 2003) |
| Language: English |
| ISBN-10: 0782142400 |
| ISBN-13: 978-0782142402 |
| Here's the one-of-a-kind book that will give you hands-on experience |
| as you prepare for the PMP exam sponsored by the Project Management |
| Institute. This Sybex Workbook provides: |
| * Clear introductions that put the exercises in context and explain |
| the importance of key project management skills |
| * Dozens of exercises designed by two veteran project managers to |
| correlate directly with PMP objectives |
| * Cross-references to Sybex's PMP Study Guide for additional |
| instructional content |
| Each chapter comprehensively covers a different PMP objective domain: |
| * Scope Management |
| * Time Management |
| * Cost Management |
| * Quality Management |
| * Human Resource Management |
| * Communication Management |
| * Risk Management |
| * Contracts and Procurement Management |
| * Project Integration and Professional Responsibility |
DOWNLOAD LINK:
| http://rapidshare.com/files/128925713/PMP.rar |
Mens Are From Mars Womens Are From Venus
| Mens Are From Mars, Womens Are From Venus | 1.1 MB |
| The Classic Guide to Understanding the Opposite Sex-By John Gray |
| #1 New York Times Bestseller |
DOWNLOAD LINK:
| http://rapidshare.com/files/128461980/947MARMWARV.rar |
Cisco Express Forwarding (Networking Technology)
| Author: Nakia Stringfield, Russ White and Stacia McKee |
| Hardcover: 288 pages |
| Publisher: Cisco Press (May 4, 2007) |
| Language: English |
| ISBN-10: 1587052369 |
| ISBN-13: 978-1587052361 |
| Format: chm |
| Details: |
| Understanding and troubleshooting CEF in Cisco routers and switches |
| How does a router switch a packet? What is the difference between |
| routing a packet, switching a frame, and packet switching? What is the |
| Cisco® Express Forwarding (CEF) feature referred to in Cisco |
| documentation and commonly found in Cisco IOS® commands? CEF is a |
| general term that describes the mechanism by which Cisco routers and |
| Catalyst® switches packet-switch (route) frames. CEF is found in |
| almost all Cisco routers and Catalyst switches, and understanding how |
| CEF operates can improve the performance, scalability, and efficiency |
| of your network. |
| Cisco Express Forwarding demystifies the internal workings of Cisco |
| routers and switches, making it easier for you to optimize performance |
| and troubleshoot issues that arise in Cisco network environments. This |
| book addresses common misconceptions about CEF and packet switching |
| across various platforms, helping you to improve your troubleshooting |
| skills for CEF- and non-CEF-related problems. |
| The first part of the book provides an overview of packet-switching |
| architectures and CEF operation and advanced features. It also covers |
| the enhanced CEF structure and general troubleshooting. The second |
| part of the book provides case studies that focus on the common topics |
| that have been problematic for customers and those supporting Cisco |
| networks. |
| Full of practical examples and configurations, this book draws on |
| years of experience to help you keep your Cisco networks running |
| efficiently. |
| Nakia Stringfield, CCIE® No. 13451, is a network consulting engineer |
| for Advanced Services at Cisco, supporting top financial customers |
| with network design and applying best practices. She was formerly a |
| senior customer support engineer for the Routing Protocols Technical |
| Assistance Center (TAC) team troubleshooting issues related to CEF and |
| routing protocols. Nakia has been with Cisco for more than six years, |
| previously serving as a technical leader for the Architecture TAC |
| team. |
| Russ White, CCIE No. 2635, is a Principle Engineer in the Routing |
| Protocol Design and Architecture team at Cisco. He is a member of the |
| IETF Routing Area Directorate, co-chair of the Routing Protocols |
| Security Working Group in the IETF, a regular speaker at Cisco |
| Networkers, a member of the CCIE Content Advisory Group, and the |
| coauthor of six other books about routing and routing protocols, |
| including Optimal Routing Design from Cisco Press. Russ primarily |
| works in the development of new features and design architectures for |
| routing protocols. |
| Stacia McKee is a customer support engineer and technical leader of |
| the Routing Protocols Technical Assistance Center (TAC) team. This |
| team focuses on providing post-sales support of IP routing protocols, |
| MPLS, QoS, IP multicast, and many other Layer 3 technologies. Stacia |
| has been with Cisco for more than six years, previously serving as a |
| technical leader of the Architecture TAC team and a member of the WAN/ |
| Access TAC team. |
| Learn the key features of packet-switching architectures |
| Understand the basics of the CEF architecture and operation |
| Examine the enhanced CEF structure, which improves scalability |
| Learn how to troubleshoot in software-switching environments |
| Understand the effect of CEF on a Cisco Catalyst 6500 Supervisor 720 |
| Configure and troubleshoot load sharing with CEF |
| Evaluate the effect of CEF in an MPLS VPN environment |
| Review CEF design considerations that impact scalability |
DOWNLOAD LINK:
| http://rapidshare.com/files/94551579/Cisco.Express.Forwarding-virTuAlZin.rar |
| http://rapidshare.com/files/117619093/nostradamus_-_prophecies.pdf.html |
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Inflation Report
Inflation Report, May 2008
In the United Kingdom, output growth moderated and surveys point to
further easing. Indicators of household spending were mixed, while the
investment climate worsened. International prospects deteriorated,
especially in the united States. Stresses in global financial and
credit markets intensified in March but latterly there have been signs
of improvement. Sterling depreciated further and in April the MPC cut
Bank Rate by 0.25 percentage points.
Under the assumption that Bank Rate moves in line with market yields,
the Committee’s central projection is for output growth to slow
further over the next year and then recover. But there is a risk that
the slowdown may be more prolonged.
CPI inflation was 2.5% in March. Energy and import cost pressures
increased. Pay growth remained muted but measures of household
inflation expectations rose. In the central projection, higher energy
and import prices push inflation up sharply in the near term. The
emerging margin of spare capacity, together with a declining
contribution from energy and import prices, then brings inflation back
to around the 2% target in the medium term. The conflicting risks to
inflation from a more prolonged slowdown in demand growth and from the
impact of persistently elevated inflation on inflation expectations
have both increased since the February Report. Overall, the balance of
risks is presently judged to lie to the upside.
DOWNLOAD LINK:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=WF1VNGIC
http://rapidshare.com/files/126212582/inflationReport08may.rar
In the United Kingdom, output growth moderated and surveys point to
further easing. Indicators of household spending were mixed, while the
investment climate worsened. International prospects deteriorated,
especially in the united States. Stresses in global financial and
credit markets intensified in March but latterly there have been signs
of improvement. Sterling depreciated further and in April the MPC cut
Bank Rate by 0.25 percentage points.
Under the assumption that Bank Rate moves in line with market yields,
the Committee’s central projection is for output growth to slow
further over the next year and then recover. But there is a risk that
the slowdown may be more prolonged.
CPI inflation was 2.5% in March. Energy and import cost pressures
increased. Pay growth remained muted but measures of household
inflation expectations rose. In the central projection, higher energy
and import prices push inflation up sharply in the near term. The
emerging margin of spare capacity, together with a declining
contribution from energy and import prices, then brings inflation back
to around the 2% target in the medium term. The conflicting risks to
inflation from a more prolonged slowdown in demand growth and from the
impact of persistently elevated inflation on inflation expectations
have both increased since the February Report. Overall, the balance of
risks is presently judged to lie to the upside.
DOWNLOAD LINK:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=WF1VNGIC
http://rapidshare.com/files/126212582/inflationReport08may.rar
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