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Architecture of Observation Towers

It seems to be human nature to enjoy a view, getting the higher ground and taking in our surroundings has become a significant aspect of architecture across the world. Observation towers which allow visitors to climb and observe their surroundings, provide a chance to take in the beauty of the land while at the same time adding something unique and impressive to the landscape.
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Model Making In Architecture

The importance of model making in architecture could be thought to have reduced in recent years. With the introduction of new and innovative architecture design technology, is there still a place for model making in architecture? Stanton Williams, director at Stirling Prize-winning practice, Gavin Henderson, believes that it’s more important than ever.
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Can Skyscrapers Be Sustainable

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Assembly Language or Machine Code ?

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작성자 Augusta
댓글 0건 조회 3회 작성일 24-08-17 12:19

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1991: Internet Society founded under leadership of Vinton Cerf, sponsored by the Corporation for National Research Initiatives (Mister Cerf and Robert Kahn). 1992: Internet Activities Board renamed Internet Architecture Board, and placed under the Internet Society. The Pentium IV had a new seventh-generation "Net Burst" architecture. 1993: microprocessor Intel Pentium of 4 Gigabytes of 32 bits at 64 Megahertz. 1981: PC-DOS, Personal Computer Disk Operating System, of 16 bits (Microsoft Corporation, based on 86-DOS), later continued only by International Business Machines. However, it was very much slower in every other computer. Fortran was used for teaching before Pascal took much of the academic field. 1987: workshop on hyper text systems in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, helping to form Siglink in 1989 (later renamed ACM Sig Web), organisation that has for many years centred attention with its annual conferences on most of the academic research on hyper text. 1987: Hyper Card, programme to create graphical hyper text documents, by Bill Atkinson (Macintosh).


Java Script: a programming language for use in Web documents, that allows dynamic content executed client side. Clipper: a high level programming language. The I. E. S. G. and the I. E. T. F. become main responsibles for Internet standards, at equal level with I. A. B. 1992: it is calculated that Internet counts about 1 000 000 host-servers. Since the 1950's, most programming has been done in medium level (assembly) or in high level. Before that year most programming in any language was done with little or no modular structure, just a single block, maybe jumping lines forward or backward. Ada is based on Pascal, combined with other languages, and considered the most advanced programming language ever created. Sun Systems adopted it in 1995 and renamed it "Java Script", developing the language to its current state. Language List by Bill Kinnersley. Gopher presents a list of menus from which a document can be chosen. Late 1990 or early 1991: release of the HTTP-HTML 'World Wide Web' by Mister Tim Berners Lee (Centre d'Etudes sur la Recherche Nucleaire, Genevre, Switzerland), and of WWW-Talk posting list. The rest of the world in 1990 was not yet connected to Internet, but to Bitnet or to some other network, or simply unconnected.


The show guaranteed the inter-operability of computers accessing Internet, from no matter which one of the brands present. At this time, DARPA was no longer the main financial supporter of Internet, that responsibility having been taken by the National Science Foundation and by other official departments in North America, in Great Britain, and in a few other European nations. 1988: report on "Towards a National Research Network" by Leonard Kleinrock, Robert Kahn and David Clark (National Research Council, with support of the National Science Foundation). He and David Clark dissolved the Internet Configuration Control Board and created task forces instead, each task force focusing on a particular technical area. The Internet Engineering Task Force combined work groups into technical areas, forming an Internet Engineering Steering Group with the leaders of those areas, recognised by the I. A. B. as predominant. In 1985, the I. E. T. F. was divided into work groups. 1989: proposal of a World Wide Web, system of linked information able to work with different kinds of computers, by Tim Berners-Lee and Robert Caillau (Centre d'Etudes sur Recherche Nucleaire, Genevre, Switzerland). 1990: the Internet begins spreading over the World.


However, the World Wide Web Consortium approved in October 2014 the official specification of HTML version 5, which is not based on SGML anymore. 1992: WWW browser (later Nexus Web browser) by Tim Berners-Lee, implemented in Objective-C, for NeXT work stations and the first version of HTML. September 1988: first Interop Trade Show, with over 5 000 technicians from about 50 private companies involved with TCP/IP. 1985: Workshop for All, organised by Dan Lynch and the Internet Activities Board, for explaining the characteristics of TCP/IP to private companies. 1990: Arpanet project discontinued, after having succesfully developed itself into the Internet backbones of the National Science Foundation. 1985: NFSnet (National Science Foundation), led by Dennis Jennings in 1985 and by Steve Wolff in 1986, made inter-operability with the Internet of DARPA (managed by the Internet Activities Board), extended TCP/IP, distributed costs for development and maintenance to other North American organisations, and helped to form a Federal Networking Council as a coordinator with international organisations (such as R. A. R. E. in Europe) through the Intercontinental Research Committee. Algol, Algorithmic Language: intended as another lingua franca of programming, it was created in 1958 by an international committee assembled in Zurich.



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