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Time to move [videorecording] / producer, Ko Chit ; executive producer, Danny Sit ; an RTHK production.

Publisher [Hong Kong] : RTHK, c2016.
Location Media Resources Collection
Call No. DS796.H7 H65 2016




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Recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries: processing methods and environmental impacts / Liang An, editor

Online Resource




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International Symposium on Green and Sustainable Technology (ISGST2019): conference date, 23-26 April 2019: location, Perak, Malaysia / editors, Mohammed JK Bashir, Tan Kok Tat, Humaira Nisar, Yamuna Munusamy and Woon Chan Chong

Online Resource




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Organic thermoelectric materials / editors: Zhiqun Lin, Ming He

Online Resource




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Nanostructured materials for next-generation energy storage and conversion: advanced battery and supercapacitors / Qiang Zhen, Sajid Bashir, Jingbo Louise Liu, editors

Online Resource




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Intelligent automatic generation control / Hassan Bevrani, Takashi Hiyama

Online Resource




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Nanostructured materials for next-generation energy storage and conversion: photovoltaic and solar energy / Tulay Aygan Atesin, Sajid Bashir, Jingbo Louise Liu, editors

Online Resource




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High-efficient low-cost photovoltaics: recent developments / Vesselinka Petrova-Koch, Rudolf Hezel, Adolf Goetzberger, editors

Online Resource




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Insulators for icing and polluted environments / Masoud Farzaneh, William A. Chisholm

Online Resource




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Power management for integrated chip design / Ke-Horng Chen

Online Resource




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Women and the Energy Revolution in Asia by Reihana Mohideen

Online Resource




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State Energy Transition: German and American Realities and Chinese Choices / Tong Zhu, Lei Wang

Online Resource




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Design of solar thermal power plants / Zhifeng Wang

Online Resource




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Advanced energy design guide for small to medium office buildings: achieving zero energy / ASHRAE, The American Institute of Architects, Illuminating Engineering Society, U.S. Green Building Council, U.S. Department of Energy

Online Resource




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Strategies of sustainable development in China's wind power industry Jiachun Li, Dexin He

Online Resource




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Energy Technology 2020: recycling, carbon dioxide management, and other technologies / Xiaobo Chen, Yulin Zhong, Lei Zhang, John A. Howarter, Alafara Abdullahi Baba, Cong Wang, Ziqi Sun, Mingming Zhang, Elsa Olivetti, Alan Luo, Adam Powell, editors

Online Resource




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The corporate energy strategist's handbook: frameworks to achieve environmental sustainability and competitive advantage / Jimmy Y. Jia

Online Resource




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The Chinese electronics industry / Michael Pecht [and others]

Online Resource




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The citizen's guide to climate success: overcoming myths that hinder progress / Mark Jaccard, Simon Fraser University, British Columbia

Online Resource




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Energy economics: understanding and interpreting energy poverty in China / Yi-Ming Wei, Hua Liao

Dewey Library - HD9502.C6 W45 2019




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Advances in solar power generation and energy harvesting: select proceedings of ESPGEH 2019 / Vinod Kumar Jain, Vikram Kumar, Abhishek Verma, editors

Online Resource






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The Student by Cary Fagan on CBC’s The Homestretch and I’ve Read This

Book blog I’ve Read This reviews Cary Fagan’s novel The Student: “I’ve decided The Student by Cary Fagan is one of my favourite reads this year . . …

The Student by Cary Fagan on CBC’s The Homestretch and I’ve Read This Read More

The post The Student by Cary Fagan on CBC’s The Homestretch and I’ve Read This appeared first on Freehand Books.




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Oral History

African American history is both discovered in and continued by an ancient oral tradition. Richard Josey describes the process of restoring a community’s voice.




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Washington's Whiskey

George Washington’s retirement venture had a high alcohol content. Mount Vernon’s Director of Preservation, Dennis Pogue, leads us on a tour through Washington’s whiskey distillery.




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George Washington's Farewell

George Washington’s 1796 Farewell Address teems with advice that rings true today. Listen to interpreter Ron Carnegie read excepts from the timeless epistle.




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Harsh World, This World

The diverse relationships between slaves and masters were governed by kindness, betrayal, trust, and cruelty. A new Electronic Field Trip, “Harsh World, This World” examines the complex familiarity of slavery.




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The Science of History

Retired chairman and chief executive officer of the Lockheed Martin Corporation and former under secretary of the Army Norm Augustine says history and science go hand-in-hand.




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Unearthing Indian History

Native American archaeologists reclaim their tribal history in a modern-day dig. Pamunkey tribeswoman Ashley Atkins describes the discoveries.




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A Conversation With George Washington: Part One

We sit down with the first president and ask him questions submitted by podcast listeners. Listen as Ron Carnegie interprets George Washington.




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A Conversation with George Washington: Part Two

George Washington shares his thoughts on the role of government and his hopes for the future in part two of this listener-question interview. Ron Carnegie interprets the first president.




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The Use of Myth in History

Bringing a touch of myth to traditional history makes for a stable mix in the American memory. Author Gil Klein explains.




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A Center for History and Citizenship

Colonial Williamsburg rises to meet the future with a new mission as a Center for History and Citizenship. Foundation President Colin Campbell describes the shift.




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Historic Farming

Historic farming retains a connection to field and yield that modern farming does not. Farmer Ed Shultz describes the animals and methods he uses at Great Hopes Plantation.




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A Conversation with John Hickenlooper

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper says negative politics erodes citizens’ faith in government. Hear his views on the founders, participation, and local involvement.




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The Bitter History of Elections

Political parties were new, the losers became Vice Presidents, and negative campaigning was finding its feet in the election of 1796. Professor Jack Lynch has the history.




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Hidden Symbols and Invisible Ink

In part two, hidden symbols and invisible ink point to a long-lost fort in North Carolina. Jim Horn concludes the tale of discoveries made and discoveries to come.




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History's Myths

Myths abound in history’s retelling. Historian and author Mary Miley Theobald shares some of her favorites.




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A Talking Kitchen: History Speaks at the Wythe House

Listen closely in this kitchen. In it, objects speak of their owners and of their makers. Tools speak of technology and ability. Small personal items speak of meager comforts in a hard life. Curator Amanda Keller worked to outfit the Wythe Kitchen and imbue it with a richly layered history.




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Revolutionary History Meets Modern History

America’s colonial history offers a unique perspective on the modern stage. What inspiration, ideas, and cautions can today’s global revolutionaries draw from the 1776 uprising in the British colonies in America? The Center for Strategic and International Studies brings together leaders, scholars, and historians to debate some of the questions facing emerging democracies.




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George Washington Sneezed Here

The common cold was a nuisance our forbears suffered in much the same way we do today. But what remedies were uniquely colonial? Eighteenth-century apothecarist Robin Kipps shares the causes and eases for the cold.



  • Health & Life
  • Trades & Technology

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A Brief History of Gunpowder

From its origins in Chinese potions for immortality to the agent of death on the battlefield, the history of gunpowder is one of chemistry, ingenuity, and violence. Armorer Ron Potts fascinates with the tale.




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The Color of History

Watching paint dry turns into a fascinating journey through time, history, science and technology when the Department of Architectural Preservation gets involved. Director Matt Webster shares the story behind the changing paint colors in the Historic Area, and why the colors you’ll see on the walls are a window to the 18th century.



  • Archaeology & Conservation

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Who’s that Marching Man?

For Drum Major Lance Pedigo, leading comes naturally. All year round and at any time of day, chances are good that you’ll see him marching at the front of the Fifes and Drums, keeping time and metering the pace of the corps of young men and women who make the music of history ring through […]




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Skill and Science in Historic Trades

Intelligence born of practice combines with the study of science to complete the historic tradesman’s store of knowledge. There was no better spokesman for the Historic Trades program than Director Jay Gaynor. Jay recently passed away and we miss him. This encore podcast is dedicated to him.




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Reading History Backwards

Jamestowne Island’s Director of Archeological Research and Interpretation Bill Kelso says that choosing which historic sites to protect from deterioration of all kinds is a matter of reading history backwards. We must consider “What are the priorities today, what are the legacies today of our history? And then look to what areas contributed.”




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Futuristic Lab Reveals Historic Secrets

Technologies that used to be beyond reach for museum professionals now can lend new insights into the hidden compositions of materials, metals, and paints. Conservator Kirsten Moffitt explains how a spike on a screen can spot a fake or reveal a discovery.




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George Washington’s Wallet

What was in George Washington’s wallet? Long before the establishment of a standard American currency, there was trade, barter and credit. How were these financial activities handled with the myriad coins and metals in circulation?




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The George Washington Seal

A pocket-sized ornament gives monumental insight into the private life of America’s best-known General: George Washington.