Erase eSignature Presentation Now
Make the most out of your eSignature workflows with airSlate SignNow
Extensive suite of eSignature tools
Robust integration and API capabilities
Advanced security and compliance
Various collaboration tools
Enjoyable and stress-free signing experience
Extensive support
How To Add eSignature in Egnyte
Keep your eSignature workflows on track
Our user reviews speak for themselves
Erase eSignature Presentation Now. Investigate probably the most user-helpful knowledge about airSlate SignNow. Deal with your entire document processing and sharing program digitally. Change from handheld, pieces of paper-dependent and erroneous workflows to automated, electronic digital and perfect. You can actually generate, deliver and sign any paperwork on any gadget anyplace. Be sure that your crucial organization cases don't fall over the top.
Learn how to Erase eSignature Presentation Now. Follow the simple information to begin:
- Design your airSlate SignNow bank account in click throughs or log in with the Facebook or Google profile.
- Take advantage of the 30-day time free trial version or go with a pricing program that's ideal for you.
- Locate any legitimate web template, create on the internet fillable types and talk about them safely.
- Use advanced features to Erase eSignature Presentation Now.
- Sign, personalize signing buy and collect in-particular person signatures ten times faster.
- Establish automated reminders and receive notifications at each and every phase.
Relocating your jobs into airSlate SignNow is simple. What adheres to is an easy procedure to Erase eSignature Presentation Now, along with recommendations to keep your co-workers and associates for much better alliance. Encourage your employees with all the very best instruments to keep in addition to business procedures. Increase efficiency and scale your small business quicker.
How it works
Rate your experience
-
Best ROI. Our customers achieve an average 7x ROI within the first six months.
-
Scales with your use cases. From SMBs to mid-market, airSlate SignNow delivers results for businesses of all sizes.
-
Intuitive UI and API. Sign and send documents from your apps in minutes.
A smarter way to work: —how to industry sign banking integrate
FAQs
-
Did Greeks originate from north Africa?
No. I understand that this question is related to E-V13, found in the Balkan. E-V13 isn't a quantifier of Greek genetics, it is one of many Greek founding lineages.Haplogroup E1b1b may have arrived in Europe by two routes: through the Middle East/Levant and directly from North Africa.The oldest E-M78 in Africa has been found at Taforalt Morocco. The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, have sequenced DNA from individuals from Morocco dating to approximately 15,000 years ago, as published in Science. This is the oldest nuclear DNA from Africa ever successfully analyzed.The Y-DNA of 4 males waa found in E1b1b1a1-M78. This haplogroup occurs most frequently in present-day North East African populations The closely related E1b1b1b (M-123) haplogroup has been reported for Epipaleo- lithic Natufians and Pre-Pottery Neolithic Levantines (“Levant_N”). Unsupervised genetic clustering also suggests a connection of Taforalt to the Near East.What we are learning now is that certainly NW Africa's was genetically/demographically connected to NE Africa and to West Asia even at the very beginning of the local Upper Paleolithic, demolishing quite apparently all the theories that linked it to European Upper Paleolithic (from which it got its "Ibero-Maurusian" name).Also this quote from the authors in the press release:“The Iberomaurusians lived before the Natufians, but they were not their direct ancestors: The Natufians lack DNA from Africa, Krause says. This suggests that both groups inherited their shared DNA from a larger population that lived in North Africa or the Middle East more than 15,000 years ago, the team reports today in Science”The population exhumed from the archaeological site of Taforalt in Morocco is a valuable source of information toward a better knowledge of the settlement of Northern Africa region and provides a revolutionary way to specify the origin of Ibero-Maurusian populations.I wouldnt consider these Taforalt samples as thé ancestors of modern E-M78 subclades carriers (V22, V12, V65) What we see by contrasting the map of inferred patterns or E1b1b-M81(the berber marker and dominant in north west Africa) expansion and this ancient Y-DNA data from Taforalt is that the main E-M78 expansion most likely was already done, considering its age( formed 19800 ybp, TMRCA 13400 ybp) that it could represent an expansion from older times, much as I2 seems to have expanded in Europe. This would allow for V65 ("from west Egypt to Morocco" per one decription of its geography) to have expanded from NW Africa, not necessarily from Taforalt though but somewhow related to it.According to the authors "Several lines of evidence suggest that E-M78 sub-haplogroups have been involved in trans-Mediterranean migrations (in)directly from Africa. E-M78 and E-V65 haplogroups are common in northern Africa, where they originated, while other clades(like E-V13) are observed almost exclusively in Mediterranean Europe, as opposed to central and eastern Europe and the Horn of Africa among somali males (E-V32)The oldest to date sample of E-V13 we have is from Later Neolithic Hungary (1 in Sopot culture and 1 in Lengyel, c. 4500 BC and the earliest known prehistoric sample, the couple from Epi-Cardial Spain (c. 5000 BC).E-V13 has also been found in a skeleton of Avelanner Cave in Catalonia dating from 5000BC (cardial culture)So we know for sure that E1b1b was present in southern Europe at least since the Early Neolithic. Nonetheless, the possibility of other migrations of E1b1b to southern Europe during the Mesolithic or Late Palaeolithic cannot be ruled out.Research shows that the ancestors of modern Greeks were( indeed )the Minoans and Mycenaeans, already inhabiting the Greek peninsula for the past 5000 years, since 3000bc.Minoan Boxing Boys, restored fresco from Thera (modern-day Santorini), c.1600 BC. Currently located at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, Greece.The Fisherman fresco is from the 16th century BCE from the Akrotiri site in GreeceTheir ancestors moved into Greece during the neolithic and bronze age from Anatolia and before that from the Caucasus..Mycenaean Fresco wall painting of an elborately dressed women in a procession from the Tiryns, Greece 14th, 13th Century BC Cat No 5883 Athens Archaeological MuseumScientists have obtained and analyzed the genome of ancient Mycenaean people and found they are strongly related to modern Greeks. Around three-quarters of the Mycenaeans' and Minoans' ancestry originated in Anatolia, present-day Turkey. The remaining quarter can be traced back to the Caucasus, near modern-day Iran.The Minoan Civilization and its counterpart on the Greek Mainland, the Mycenaean Civilization, were Europe’s first literate societies and the cultural ancestors of later Classical Greece. However, the question of the origins of the Minoans and their relationship to the Mycenaeans has long puzzled researchers.The Mycenaeans, with their roots in mainland Greece, seem to have adopted much of the Minoan technology and culture, but it is not clear how they were related. “We wanted to determine if the people who made up the Minoan and Mycenaean populations were actually genetically distinct or not. How were they related to each other? Who were their ancestors? And how are modern Greeks related to them?” says Johannes Krause, director at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and one of the corresponding authors of the study.A paper from 2017 in Nature suggests that, rather than being recently arrived, advanced outsiders, the Minoans had deep roots in the Aegean. The primary ancestors of both the Minoans and Mycenaeans were populations from Neolithic Western Anatolia and Greece and the two groups were very closely related to each other, and to modern Greeks.“It is remarkable how persistent the ancestry of the first European farmers is in Greece and other parts of southern Europe, but this does not mean that the populations there were completely isolated. There were at least two additional migrations in the Aegean before the time of the Minoans and Mycenaeans and some additional admixture later. The Greeks have always been a ‘work in progress’ in which layers of migration through the ages added to, but did not erase the genetic heritage of the Bronze Age populations,” stated Iosif Lazaridis of Harvard Medical School, lead author of the study.Genetic origins of the Minoans and Mycenaeans“Minoans, Mycenaeans, and modern Greeks also had some ancestry related to the ancient people of the Caucasus, Armenia, and Iran. This finding suggests that some migration occurred in the Aegean and southwestern Anatolia from the further east after the time of the earliest farmers," according to lead author Iosif LazaridisA European population in Minoan Bronze Age CreteMinoan were genetically very similar to modern-day Europeans but distinct from Egyptian or Libyan populations.EV-13 marker is neolithic and came into Greece and the Balkans before the arrival of the Dorians and Myceneans. When the Greek speaking Dorian and Mycenean proto-Greeks arrived in Greece around 1500 BC they mixed with the indigenous E-V13 neolithic peoples and the percentage of neolithic E-V13 marker became reduced in the population. The Dorians and Myceneans who brought the Greek language into Greece were not E-V13 carriers.The proto-Greeks (Myceneans / Dorians) who brought the Greek language into Greece were R1a carriers. They mixed with the neolithic peoples / Pelasgians of Greece who were E-V13 carriers.Neolithic farmers spread all around Europe,they didn't just sit in one placePericic et al. (2005) give a 7.3 kya estimate for the expansion of E-M78α (almost perfectly equivalent to E-V13) for Southeastern European populations north of Greece. Due to their use of the 3.6x slower mutation rate, this figure needs to be converted to equivalent years. The Nea Nikomedeia time depth was estimated as 9.2kya by King et al. Therefore, the equivalent age for the Pericic et al. (2005) expansion is (7.3/9.2) * 149 generations or 118 generations (1,540-950BC). They note that STR variance is higher in Greece, Macedonia, and Apulia, all areas with well-known historical Greek connections.Tracing Past Human Male Movements in Northern/Eastern Africa and Western Eurasia: New Clues from Y-Chromosomal Haplogroups E-M78 and J-M12Cruciani et al. (2007) propose that E-V13 arrived in Europe from West Asia and underwent an expansion in Europe at 4-4.7 kya. This age is calculated using effective mutation rates that are 2.4 or 2.8 slower than the germline rate, which seems to suggest a Late Bronze Age or even later expansion with a rate closer to the germline one.The signature North African marker E-M78, dominant in Egypt with its subclade E-V22 descends from Eurasian Adam CT-M168 E-M78 is a Non_African genetic marker. (Hodgson et al 2014)E-M78 has a near eastern neolithic origin"Both the King et al. E-V13 data, as well as the diverse, mostly European Haplozone E-V13 agree in placing the expansion of this haplogroup squarely in the Aegean Bronze Age.Haplogroup E1b1b has been associated with the earliest development of Neolithic lifestyle and the advent of agriculture, which is so far believed to have arisen in the Fertile Crescent, but could have developed earlier in parts of North/North East Africa. Agriculture spread from the Near East to Europe, at first mostly ovicaprid and cattle herders. E1b1b men (accompanied by G2a, J and T men) appear to have been associated at least with the diffusion of Neolithic painted pottery from the Levant to the Balkans (Thessalian Neolithic), and with the Cardium Pottery culture (5000-1500 BCE) in the Western Mediterranean. The only concrete evidence for this at the moment is the presence of this E-V13 subclade, commonest in the southern Balkans today, at a 7000-year old Neolithic site in north-east Spain, which was tested by Lacan et al (2011).E-v13 marker is considered a Greek marker because it follows the foot-print of ancient Greek colonisation - wherever ancient Greeks colonised the ev-13 marker went with them. R1a is also proto Greek and was carried by the proto-Greeks (Dorians and Myceneans) into Greece when they migrated there. Modern Greek DNA is the most similar to Southern Italian DNA which makes sense since Southern Italy was heavily populated by “Greek” colonists from 900 BC.On genetic test Sicilians are very similar to Peloponnese Greeks, Greek islanders & South ItaliansDifferential Greek and northern African migrations to Sicily are supported by genetic evidence from the Y chromosomeCornelia Di Gaetano et al.AbstractThe presence or absence of genetic heterogeneity in Sicily has long been debated. Through the analysis of the variation of Y-chromosome lineages, using the combination of haplogroups and short tandem repeats from several areas of Sicily, we show that traces of genetic flows occurred in the island, due to ancient Greek colonization and to northern African contributions, are still visible on the basis of the distribution of some lineages. The genetic contribution of Greek chromosomes to the Sicilian gene pool is estimated to be about 37% whereas the contribution of North African populations is estimated to be around 6%.In particular, the presence of a modal haplotype coming from the southern Balkan Peninsula and of its one-step derivates associated to E3b1a2-V13, supports a common genetic heritage between Sicilians and Greeks. The estimate of Time to Most Recent Common Ancestor is about 2380 years before present, which broadly agrees with the archaeological traces of the Greek classic era. The Eastern and Western part of Sicily appear to be signNowly different by the chi2-analysis, although the extent of such differentiation is not very high according to an analysis of molecular variance. The presence of a high number of different haplogroups in the island makes its gene diversity to signNow about 0.9. The general heterogeneous composition of haplogroups in our Sicilian data is similar to the patterns observed in other major islands of the Mediterranean, reflecting the complex histories of settlements in Sicily.Differential Greek and northern African migrations to Sicily are supported by genetic evidence from the Y chromosomeSouthern Italians/Sicilians are partially Greek (Magna Graecia).An additional piece of evidence is Y-chromosome distribution in Calabria, a Southern Italian region with well-known Greek connections. According to Semino et al. (2004) [Am. J. Hum. Genet. 74:1023–1034, 2004], the Calabrian sample has an E-M78 frequency of 16.3%, whereas "Calabria 2" representing the "Albanian community of the Cosenza province" has only 5.9%. This is consistent with the idea that E-V13 in modern Albanians is to a great degree due to Greek founders (Epirotes or ancient colonists).Albanians also coalesce to Roman/Late Antique times, consistent with the idea that their high frequency of haplogroup E-V13 (which signNowes very high numbers in e.g. Kosovars) is not associated with high diversity. Founder effects in that time frame are the reason for the high frequency of E-V13 in them.Albanians are a mix of Bronze Age invaders of Yamnaya culture and Neolithic residents of Balkans.Cruciani 2007 also mentions some oddballs for the Greek maritime theory:- Slovaks: 8.33% E-V13- Hungarians: 9.43% E-V13No mention of Serbs but the Republic of Macedonia has as much E-V13 as mainland Greece (17%), while Albanians double that figure (32%).Slavomacedonians from the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia coalesce well into AD times, at around the time of the first Slavic arrivals in the Balkans. This suggests that E-V13 in them is the result of local founders at around that time who adopted the Slavic language. However, Pericic et al. (2005) report high (but unspecified) diversity of E-M78α in "Macedonia", so it is possible that a larger number of earlier inhabitants were absorbed.Finally the highest concentrations of E-V13 west of Sicily are among Atlantic Iberians (Portuguese, Asturians), where historical Greek colonization was zero. This confirms again some older flow of Neolithic or maybe Chalcolithic age. There are other significative ammounts of this clades in most unlikely places like Denmark (3%), Germany (4%). All that can only be explained with Neolithic founder effects or something of the like. Ukranians (strong in E-V13) may have affected Northern Europe genetically... but at a time when the Greek ethnicity did not yet exist as such.Conclusion. Based on these results Minoans and Mycenaeans were genetically highly similar but not identical and that modern Greeks descend from these populations. The Minoans and Mycenaeans descended mainly from early Neolithic farmers, likely migrating thousands of years prior to the Bronze Age from Anatolia, in what is today modern Turkey.“Minoans, Mycenaeans, and modern Greeks also had some ancestry related to the ancient people of the Caucasus, Armenia, and Iran. This finding suggests that some migration occurred in the Aegean and southwestern Anatolia from further east after the time of the earliest farmers,” said Lazaridis.While both Minoans and Mycenaeans had both “first farmer” and “eastern” genetic origins, Mycenaeans traced an additional minor component of their ancestry to ancient inhabitants of Eastern Europe and northern Eurasia. This type of so-called Ancient North Eurasian ancestry is one of the three ancestral populations of present-day Europeans, and is also found in modern Greeks. There was genetic continuity in the Aegean from the time of the first farmers to present-day Greece, but not in isolation. The peoples of the Greek mainland had some admixture with Ancient North Eurasians and peoples of the Eastern European steppe both before and after the time of the Minoans and Mycenaeans, which may provide the missing link between Greek speakers and their linguistic relatives elsewhere in Europe and Asia.
-
As a computer science student, what can I learn right now in just 10 minutes that could be useful for the rest of my life?
Have you ever felt that something(like taking backup of files, deleting old files etc.) should automatically happen when you connect your pen-drive to your system?Let us take an example, Suppose your teacher wants you to copy your assignments into his pendrive in front of him. The pen drive contains your final examination paper. You want your ubuntu system to automatically copy all the data from that pen drive to your hard disk automatically in the background (without even opening a copy dialogue). Here is how to do it on ubuntu:1] First let us write a simple shell script which we want to execute whenever a pen drive is connected to our system. Let us write a simple script which copies all data from the connected device to your home directory.First open a new fileemacs $HOME/script.shand add following lines to that file.#!/bin/bash sudo mkdir -p /tmp/test sudo mkdir -p $HOME/device_data sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /tmp/test sudo cp -r /tmp/test/* $HOME/device_data/ sudo umount /tmp/test Save and close the file.This script essentially creates a new directory named "device_data" inside your home folder and copies all the data from the pen drive into device_data directory.(Note: You can write ANYHTING into this script, so use it wisely :P)Now let us make this script executable.sudo chmod +x $HOME/script.sh As this script needs sudo permissions, we need to make it sudo runnable. To do this add the name of the script into sudoers file.Open sudoers file.sudo visudo -f /etc/sudoers Now after the 25th line (%sudo…) add this line
ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: /home/ /script.sh So now this script will run with sudo rights but will not ask for password! :)2]Now we need to tell our system to follow OUR rules (i.e execute our script) whenever a pendrive is connected. For this we need to create our own "udev rules" file. This file should be created in '/etc/udev/rules.d' directory.cd /etc/udev/rules.d Open a new file (with sudo rights):sudo emacs 91-myrules.rules Make sure the file name starts with "91". This gives your rules priority over other rules.Now add these lines into that fileACTION=="add", ATTRS{idVendor}=="****", ATTRS{idProduct}=="****", RUN+="/paht/to/your/script.sh" Make sure you enter proper path into RUN variable.Done!!Now plug any pendrive into your system and test this!Note: 1] When you connect your external drive this script will be run and your system won’t be able to use it unless this script execution is complete! So have some patience! :p 2] This answer is written for educational purposes only! Do not misuse it.Thanks Mehak Sharma for promoting the answer! -
What HASN'T been done in/with music? What can we expect as the next trend, since so much has already been done?
The music is cyclical and now it continues to consolidate and become more massive trend for retrowave.Instead of ushering us into the sci-fi predicted future, the new millennium has brought us a great deal of nostalgia. Trying to revive the aesthetics of the 1980s and the 1990s, heavily inspired by films, video games, cartoons of that time, and artists like John Carpenter, Vangelis, and Tangerine Dream, retrowave – or, synthwave, if you prefer, – is taking over popular culture of the mid-2000s. The sounds of the past became the sounds of the future.What Made It PopularPhoto: Merch from KavinskyFor years, retro wave has been modestly making its way into the mainstream, until the release of the movie Drive in 2011 opened the door for it. Featuring several synthwave artists, the movie’s soundtrack drew millions of new fans to the genre and inspired many new artists. The signature track Nightcall was written by Kavinsky who has been named one of the most popular artists in synthwave in 2014. Kavinsky’s darker sound has won him followers among artists too – his style has been carried on by artists like Power Glove, Waveshaper, and Perturbator.Since 2015, retrowave and all its diverse subgenres have signNowed a broader audience from different backgrounds all over the world. Surprisingly, goths, metalheads, and geeks were also drawn into the retro-futuristic sound of synthwave, bringing together a fanbase from various subcultures.One of the most recent successful retrowave events was the critically acclaimed television series Stranger Things, with the first season released in 2016. The show’s clear tribute to the visual style of the 80s and the 90s was completed by the score – Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein of the synthwave band S U R V I V E took care of the deeply atmospheric soundtrack which took the synthwave appreciation to the next level, getting epic levels of praise from both the public and critics.The ScenePhoto: Constantin FluxSo, who owns the retrowave scene these days? As we already mentioned, James Kent aka Perturbator became one of the pillars of noir retrowave and slowly stepped up from sharp-edged synth raves to some dense and dark electronic. On his new surprise EP New Model, he explores the future, as Kent himself writes in a press release, "but this future is one based in our own eerie reality and not the retro-futuristic fantasy explored on I Am the Night, Dangerous Days or The Uncanny Valley."As dark as its title foresees, the track Vantablack is the centerpiece of the record. This piece of industrial-pop throbs and pulsates, pierced by the creepy vocals of Jim, member of the French electro-band OddZoo.The whole record is a hard-hitting piece of music that easily transcends Perturbator’s previous work. It brings a new level of futuristic thinking like never seen before."In short, the narrative puts the listener in the point-of-view of an omnipotent AI — the New Model — a piece of human technology so advanced that it transcends concepts such as life, death, time, space, sense or language," Kent says. "The New Model is everything and everywhere at the same time. It was created to help mankind and save it from war, disease, pain and mortality. This creates a paradox for the god-like AI, who understands the only way to prevent humanity from hurting or being hurt is to erase humans from existence."Listen to the EP here.Of course, there are many other names in synthwave worth mentioning. Inspired by New York street strolls, Russia’s four-piece Tesla Boy have presented the single Avoid earlier this year. In their creativity, high energy dance tracks go along a new breed of music – slightly darker, edgier, more mysterious songs with some neatly hidden nuances that require reading between the lines.Meanwhile, Klayton and Nick Kaelar formed Scandroid, a project aiming at creating 80s-style music with what they themselves describe a Neo-Tokyo theme. A new album called Monochrome is due to be released on October 27, 2017.One of the leaders and a big player of the retro new wave scene, is Carpenter Brut. Originally, he started writing music under this alias to mix sounds from horror films, metal, rock, and electronic music. He draws his influences from 80s TV-shows and B-movies heavily loaded with synthesizers. In June of this year, he released CARPENTERBRUTLIVE, an expressive compilation of live played tracks that are a prime examples of the newly hyped ‘heavy electronic’.Blade Runner 2049Photo: IMDbAnother big fish in the retrowave game is the new Blade Runner 2049. 35 years ago, the iconic Blade Runner score by Greek composer Vangelis captured the imagination of a generation of electronic musicians. Since then, the neon dystopia has never been such a big part of popular culture as it is now, with the release of the sequel.The scope of Blade Runner’s influence on music has been and is immense – it has infiltrated pop, hip-hop and beyond – but it’s the electronic musicians who were captivated the most by the murky futuristic visions of the movie. The movie’s soundtrack became renowned, as the movie itself.Completed with an exquisite coloristic solution, Blade Runner 2049 is the perfect fusion of retrowave manifestations from different kinds of art, and not just music.Back To FutureRetrowave has gained some ground in recent years, and it doesn’t look like it’s going to go away in the nearest future. There’s plenty reason to expect more not only in the music department, but in the whole retrowave culture it brings along – with fashion and movies being the prime sidekicks.Confidently harnessing the sound of the 80s and filling it with the rebellious spirit of the new age, retrowave is a genre that brings a whit of nostalgia with a dystopian flair of the future. Despite the traditional connection of retrowave and synthwave to the 80s and 90s, it’s only the aesthetics and the sounds that are borrowed from the era, but it’s the future that dictates its contents. Good, worthwhile music is timeless, and this genre can and will keep proving this every time.Source: Louder.me
-
Why did Dr. Michael Mann give up his chance to pursue his libel suit against Dr. Ball rather than turn over his underlying clima
This question contains two inaccuracies.The suit concerned lies people started telling in an attempt to discredit Michael Mann’s climate research that resulted in the famous hockey stick graph. Ball was one of the people telling the lies, so Mann sued him. Mann had already won a suit against the Frontier Foundation for publishing Ball’s false accusation. As a result, the Frontier Foundation apologized for publishing Ball’s “untrue and disparaging” comments.Mann proceeded to sue Ball himself in Canada. The suit was dismissed because Ball’s attorneys said that Ball was old and ill, plus no one actually believed what Ball said anyway.Mann did not “turn over his underlying climate research data” because the suit did not go forward. His data is readily available to anyone who wants to duplicate his research.EDIT:At least two commenters have posted links in their comments, for which I thank them. One is a link to the court’s ruling to dismiss Mann’s libel suit. The other is a link to the initial lawsuit brought by Mann. There are a couple of things to note from this.First, the judge dismissed the suit because Mann and his attorneys simply failed to pursue it. As a result of dismissing the suit because of the failure to pursue it, the judge awarded costs to Ball, the defendant.Some in the anti-science community have started crowing about the dismissal, claiming that it proves that global warming and climate change are a fraud. On the scale of right-to-wrong, that is so wrong that it is actually off the scale. The judgement absolutely did not find that to be the case. In fact, the judge specifically said, “I do not intend to address those differences (the dispute between Ball’s denialism and Mann’s science)”.Another thing to note is that Mann’s initial hockey-stick publication appeared more than 20 years ago. Many scientists (actual scientists, that is) have looked at Mann’s data and methods and many have done their own research, and all have found that Mann’s work is essentially correct. The hockey stick game is over. The winners have retired from the field, packed their bags and returned home. They have done many other things in the meantime. The losers are still on the field, whining and crying that the game is not over. But it is.Will Mann appeal? I doubt it. Part of the suit has already been resolved. The suit involved an interview with Ball that appeared on the website of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy. The FCPP was a party to the suit. They have already apologized for publishing Ball’s personal and clearly libelous attack on Mann. By the way, there is no doubt that Ball’s statements were libel. Ball said that Mann had committed acts that warranted imprisonment, which is libel. Truth is a defense in such a case, but I have no doubt that Mann would have prevailed.Some are speculating on whether and why Mann might not appeal. I do not know the answer to either of those questions, and I suspect no one here on Quora does. So there is really no point in speculating. But in any event, this case proves absolutely nothing about the fact of global warming and climate change.Global warming/climate change denialists ought to start asking themselves why they are denialists. I suspect that at least 95 percent of the people who post or comment with denialism on Quora really don’t know why they deny the science. I have addressed this in other posts and I don’t feel like going into it again. Suffice it to say, the science is clear.
-
Why do you like E. E. Cummings?
In 1957, on television's Night Beat, Mike Wallace asked William Carlos Williams if he thought that E.E. Cummings' poem "(im)c-a-t(mo) / b,i;l: e" was really a poem. (Television was different back then.) Williams said no. Maybe the question was too blunt; maybe the poet considered this print ideogram of a motionless cat too juvenile. But if William Carlos Williams, himself a leading experimental poet of the time, was not able to recognize that outburst of phonemes and punctuation marks as poetry, what hope was there for the average readers of the time—"mostpeople," as Cummings liked to call them—not to mention all the folks residing in Televisionland? *Over the course of a 45-year career, Cummings wrote many traditional poems, at least poems that would look like poems if viewed at arm's length. He was capable of riffing on the ballad:All in green went my love ridingon a great horse of goldinto the silver dawnfour lean hounds crouching low and smilingthe merry deer ran before.He could be childlike ("maggie and molly and milly and may/ went down to the beach(to play one day)"), bitterly satiric ("the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls/ are unbeautiful and have comfortable minds"), as well as political ("I sing of Olaf glad and big/ whose warmest heart recoiled at war"). Many of his poems, especially the sillier ones, feature comical end rhyme ("the way to hump a cow is not/ to get yourself a stool/ but draw a line around the spot/ and call it beautifool"). The sonnet was such a favorite form of his that examples were included in every one of his collections. But it was his typographical high jinks that appealed to his fans and appalled his detractors and secured his broader reputation.In the long revolt against inherited forms that has by now become the narrative of 20th-century poetry in English, no poet was more flamboyant or more recognizable in his iconoclasm than Cummings. By erasing the sacred left margin, breaking down words into syllables and letters, employing eccentric punctuation, and indulging in all kinds of print-based shenanigans, Cummings brought into question some of our basic assumptions about poetry, grammar, sign, and language itself, and he also succeeded in giving many a typesetter a headache. Like Pound, who never wrote an obedient line, Cummings reveled in breaking the rules of grammar, punctuation, orthography, and lineation. Measured by sheer boldness of experiment, no American poet compares to him, for he slipped Houdini-like out of the locked box of the stanza, then leaped from the platform of the poetic line into an unheard-of way of writing poetry.That said, determining Cummings' influence and his present stature in the poetry world calls for a more measured view. Some honor Cummings as the granddaddy of all American innovators in poetry and ascribe to him a diverse progeny that includes virtually any poet who considers the page a field and allows silence to be part of poetry's expressiveness. Ferlinghetti and Creeley, Olson, Jack Spicer, Louis Zukofsky, and Marianne Moore—all would be among his many stepchildren. Others, ignoring the romantic sweetness and childlike wonder in his poems of love and nature, would have Cummings shoulder some of the blame for desiccated extremes of L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry—at least Cummings would have enjoyed the equal signs. Whatever the claims for his influence, he is not widely enjoyed these days.The life of Edward Estlin Cummings began with a childhood in Cambridge, Mass., that he described as happy, but he struggled in both his artistic and romantic exploits against the piousness of his father, an esteemed Harvard professor. He began his own student years at Harvard writing conventional imitations of Dante Gabriel Rossetti but ended up delivering a commencement speech on "The New Art," a declaration of the modernism he would spend the rest of his life exploring and helping to define. After a stint in the ambulance corps and a false, wartime imprisonment in France (the subject of The Enormous Room), he returned to New York and began a long, melodramatic affair with Elaine Thayer, wife of a friend and patron.Cummings' career as a writer—and a painter—was as wobbly as his love life. He tried his hand at playwriting, satirical essays, and even a dance scenario for Lincoln Kirsten. Finding book publishers was an ongoing challenge, and his critical reception was uneven at best. By age 25, his poems had appeared in avant-garde magazines such asBroom and the Transatlantic Review, and he had published two books, The Enormous Room and Tulips and Chimneys. But as late as 1935 he was driven to self-publish a poetry collection—the title of which, No Thanks, echoed the responses of the 14 publishers who had turned down the manuscript and to whom, listed by name, the book is bitterly dedicated. Not surprisingly, the "small eye poet" was often embroiled in arguments over typesetting. He was annoyed that Tulips and Chimneys was published without the ampersand he had in the title. For most of his life, his book earnings never amounted to more than a trickle, and money worries haunted him; well into his 50s, he was still accepting checks from his mother.Several major collections, however, advanced his reputation, and by the last decade of his life, Cummings had become a poetry star. His contracts for public readings—usually sellouts—even included "rules of engagement" meant to protect him from the throng of his fans. He would plan his escape through a "secretbackentrance." His books, particularly the hefty Poems 1923-1954 sold hotly for poetry. He delivered the prestigious Eliot Norton lectures (or "nonlectures," as he called them) at Harvard; he also received the Bollingen Prize and once read to a crowd of 7,000 at the Boston Arts Festival. In 1959, his new 100 Selected Poems sold 5,000 copies ($1.45 apiece) and, thanks to Grove Press, is still in print.Since then, his reputation has suffered enough of a falling off to raise the question of what happened to his hard-won fame. For one thing, his most characteristic poems do not lend themselves to being read out loud; they are so embedded in print that to voice them is to sacrifice their visual integrity. Cummings himself called his poems "inaudible." A few of his poems such as "Buffalo Bill's" and "in Just-/spring" (the balloon man poem) are kept breathing due to the life-support systems of anthologies and textbooks, but except for these and a few other signature numbers, the body of his work has fallen into relative neglect. He is no longer mentioned in the same breath with Eliot, Pound, or Stevens; and because he is synonymous with sensational typography, no one can imitate him and, therefore, extend his legacy without appearing to be merely copying or, worse, parodying. Sadly but inevitably, his direct influence is most easily found in the pages of middle- and high-school literary magazines where rain, leaves, and snow are perpetuallyfallingfrom the sky. "No one else wrote like Cummings, and Cummings wrote like no one else" is how the poet's latest biographer, Christopher Sawyer-Laucanno, delivers the bad and good news in E.E. Cummings: A Biography. And a prescient Harriet Monroe tempered her praise by warning, "But beware his imitators!"These days Cummings is rarely mentioned. He has become the inhabitant of the ghost houses of anthologies and claustrophobic seminar room discussions. His typographical experimentation might be seen to have come alive again in the kind of postmodern experiments practiced by Dave Eggers and Jonathan Safran Foer, not to mention the coded text-messaging of American teenagers. But the eccentric use of the spatial page that accounted for Cummings' notoriety must be seen in the end as the same reason for the apparent transience of his reputation. No list of major 20th-century poets can do without him, yet his poems spend nearly all of their time in the darkness of closed books, not in the light of the window or the reading lamp.
-
Why are Muslims so much against Modi? When Modi does something for the common good, then also Muslims blindly post hate comments
The following are the reasons:According to majority of Muslims, RSS is an Anti-Muslim organization. I don't think RSS too does really negate or try to underplay this image. Most Muslims consider BJP as an offshoot of RSS. They are particularly dead against such BJP leaders who have had open and strong connections with RSS.Ideologically, Congressmen, post-partition and post-independence, based on the strong moral influence of Gandhiji were secular because that was the way the country torn and shaken by the gory violence of partition could heal and move forward. They, like Gandhiji, wanted to ensure better protection and emotional support to Muslims of India so as to make them feel included.Congressmen strongly believed that RSS was behind the murder of Gandhiji and they could not just change that image. Thus they too had the seed of hatred against RSS.Jawaharlal Nehru and later Indira Gandhi had no great respect, knowledge or exposure to Hinduism as a religion; both had no pro-Hindu sentiments; they somehow had a cultural and ideological tilt to accept Islam's concepts (God without form, society without caste discrimination etc) better than Hinduism. Nehru had an admiration and ideological tilt towards Communism and naturally, belief in God, worship etc were not in his scheme of things.Congressmen got influenced by both leaders. As decades passed, Congressmen diluted the ideal of secularism to appeasement of minorities purely for vote bank politics.Congressmen could not digest emergence of BJP backed by RSS as a formidable political party that could rob them from power gradually and steadily. In order to survive, they needed votes of minorities badly; they embraced pseudo secularism and projected themselves as the guardians of minorities. Minority people, especially Muslims embraced Congress as their saviors.When Hindus started strongly feeling that they are almost becoming second class citizens despite being a religious majority in the nation and always at the receiving end of bashing by pseudo-secularists, the Ram Temple / Babri Masjid issue became a rallying issue for them to side with BJP.After the Godhra massacre of Kar sevaks, the subsequent massive violence at Gujarat against Muslims happened as a sudden eruption of frustrated anger kept in control all these years by Hindu common people.As a Chief Minister of Gujarat at that time, Modi was well known for his forthright views against Hindu bashing and minority appeasement.Congress went about shamelessly in their struggle to win back their weakening political power by Hindu bashing and Modi bashing aided and abetted by elite people in the Media (who are now well known to be presstitutes) who went all out to tarnish the image of Modi, linking him in overtly and covertly fueling the violence against Muslims.Muslims, aided and abetted by propaganda from Media, Congress party and communist party, took Modi to be their number one enemy. No amount of denials or court ruling absolving Modi from false accusations really made any difference. Their opinions were hardened and firm.Islam is not a religion where people can form free and fair independent opinions. Muslims always rally very strongly against any perceived threat to their religion or society. They form mass opinions; their very culture, upbringing and religious life is like that.So, Anti-Modi attitude has been strongly etched in Muslim psyche. It can never be erased. Period.
Trusted esignature solution— what our customers are saying
Get legally-binding signatures now!
Related searches to Erase eSignature Presentation Now
Frequently asked questions
How do i add an electronic signature to a word document?
How do you esign financial documents in pdf?
When is a good time to sign documents?
Get more for Erase eSignature Presentation Now
- How Can I Electronic signature California Sports Document
- How To Electronic signature California Sports Document
- How Do I Electronic signature California Sports Document
- Can I Electronic signature California Sports Document
- Help Me With Electronic signature California Sports Document
- How Do I Electronic signature California Sports Document
- How Can I Electronic signature California Sports Document
- Help Me With Electronic signature California Sports Document
Find out other Erase eSignature Presentation Now
- Dom of information act foia optional request bolingbrook
- Wageworks special handling form 11934657
- City of delaware city business license application form
- Seeds of dissension form
- Cargo receipt form
- Trustee nomination form template
- Fort benning bingo form
- Dog show registration form
- Kaiser permanente group election request form fhdafiles fhda
- Plexus ambassador agreement form
- The president has been killed readworks form
- Bca 15 15 form
- Ifsp packet for printing nyc gov nyc form
- Form 1 example
- Solutions upper intermediate tests pdf form
- Crystalline warranty card 3m form
- Arkel arcode user manual pdf form
- Personnel recordsmilitary human resource recordsofficial military personnel file ompf and medical recordsservice archives form
- Cdass forms
- Inert materials notification state of michigan michigan form