ia Trois exercices et 12 nouvelles vocalises pour voix de tenor ou de soprano avec accompagnement de piano By reader.digitale-sammlungen.de Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 13:12:02 +0100 Autor: Bordogni, Marco, 1789-1856 Erschienen 1848 BSB-Signatur 4 Mus.pr. 2012.4811#Beibd.1 URN: urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb11144149-7 URL: http://reader.digitale-sammlungen.de/de/fs1/object/display/bsb11144149_00001.html/ Full Article
ia Coordinated behaviors of artificial micro/nanomachines: from mutual interactions to interactions with the environment By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, Advance ArticleDOI: 10.1039/C9CS00877B, Review ArticleHong Wang, Martin PumeraThe interactions leading to coordinated behaviors of artificial micro/nanomachines are reviewed.To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Visualization of materials using the confocal laser scanning microscopy technique By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, 49,2408-2425DOI: 10.1039/C8CS00061A, Review ArticleXu Teng, Feng Li, Chao LuThis review summarizes the recent applications of confocal laser scanning microscopy in materials science.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Transition metal complex/gold nanoparticle hybrid materials By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, 49,2316-2341DOI: 10.1039/C9CS00651F, Review ArticleCristóbal Quintana, Marie P. Cifuentes, Mark G. HumphreyTransition metal complex/gold nanoparticle hybrid applications in sensing are critiqued, and their potential in imaging, photo-dynamic therapy, nonlinear optics, and catalysis are assessed.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Electrochemically active sites inside crystalline porous materials for energy storage and conversion By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, 49,2378-2407DOI: 10.1039/C9CS00880B, Review ArticleLingjun Kong, Ming Zhong, Wei Shuang, Yunhua Xu, Xian-He BuThis review provides references for the preparation of electroactive CPMs via rational design and modulation of active sites and the space around them, and their application in electrochemical energy storage and conversion systems.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Stereospecific interactions between chiral inorganic nanomaterials and biological systems By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, 49,2481-2503DOI: 10.1039/D0CS00093K, Review ArticleXueli Zhao, Shuang-Quan Zang, Xiaoyuan ChenChirality is ubiquitous in nature and plays mysterious and essential roles in maintaining key biological and physiological processes.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Polyanion-type cathode materials for sodium-ion batteries By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, 49,2342-2377DOI: 10.1039/C9CS00846B, Review ArticleTing Jin, Huangxu Li, Kunjie Zhu, Peng-Fei Wang, Pei Liu, Lifang JiaoThis review summarizes the recent progress and remaining challenges of polyanion-type cathodes, providing guidelines towards high-performance cathodes for sodium ion batteries.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Near-infrared laser driven white light continuum generation: materials, photophysical behaviours and applications By feeds.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2020, Advance ArticleDOI: 10.1039/C9CS00646J, Review ArticleJianhong Wu, Guojun Zheng, Xiaofeng Liu, Jianrong QiuThe current understanding, applications and future perspectives on near-infrared laser driven white light continuum generation in different materials are reviewed.To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
ia Méliès le cinémagicien = Méliès the magician (2008) [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [Paris?] : Arte Vidéo, 2008. Full Article
ia The insult (2017) / written and directed by Ziad Doueiri [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.S.A.] : Cohen Media Group, [2018] Full Article
ia If I had a million (1932) / directed by James Cruze, H. Bruce Humberstone, Ernst Lubitsch, Norman Taurog, Stephen Roberts, Norman McLeod, William A. Seiter [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Saint Augustine, Florida : Gozillaflix, 2015. Full Article
ia Diego Maradona (2019) / directed by Asif Kapadia [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.K.] : Altitude, [2019] Full Article
ia Crime and punishment (2007) / directed by Liang Zhao [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [France] : Institut National de l'Audiovisuel (INA), [2010] Full Article
ia A city of sadness (1989) / directed by Hou Hsiao-hsien [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [Japan] : Cinefil Imagica, [2012] Full Article
ia Blaxploitalian: 100 years of blackness in Italian cinema (2016) / directed by Fred Kudjo Kuwornu [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [Brooklyn, New York] : Do The Right Films Entertainment, [2017] Full Article
ia Ash is purest white (2018) / directed by Jia Zhangke [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.S.A.] : Cohen Media Group, [2019] Full Article
ia The Asian cinema experience : styles, spaces, theory / Stephen Teo By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Teo, Stephen, author Full Article
ia Theatre, social media, and meaning making / Bree Hadley By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Hadley, Bree, author Full Article
ia Australian theatre after the New Wave : policy, subsidy and the alternative artist / by Julian Meyrick By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Meyrick, Julian, author Full Article
ia Ivo van Hove : from Shakespeare to David Bowie / edited by Susan Bennett and Sonia Massai By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ia Musical theater : an appreciation / Alyson McLamore By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: McLamore, Alyson, 1960- author Full Article
ia Roadies : the secret history of Australian rock 'n' roll / Stuart Coupe By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Coupe, Stuart, 1956- author Full Article
ia Australia's singing West [music] : a folk history of Western Australia in ballad and song / tales collected and retold by the Westerner By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Westerner Full Article
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ia Thinking through theatre and performance / edited by Maaike Bleeker, Adrian Kear, Joe Kelleher and Heike Roms By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ia The film and media creators' guide to music / Vasco Hexel (Royal College of Music, London) By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Hexel, Vasco, 1980- author Full Article
ia The big beat : rock music in Australia 1978-83, through the pages of Roadrunner magazine / Donald Robertson By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Robertson, Donald, author Full Article
ia A social and economic history of the theatre to 300 BC By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
ia Graziano Krätli Reviews Fabiano Alborghetti’s “Directory of the Vulnerable” By news.guernicaeditions.com Published On :: Tue, 16 Feb 2016 20:26:23 +0000 In a recent article for Rain Taxi, Graziano Krätli reviews Fabiano Alborghetti’s Directory of the Vulnerable, translated by Marco Sonzogni. He begins by stating, “Fabiano Alborghetti’s two fine collections to date, L’opposta riva (The Opposite Shore, 2006 and 2013) and Registro dei fragile. 43 canti (2009; Directory of the Vulnerable) represent almost an anomaly, if […] Full Article Commentaries News Poetry Reviews Directory of the Vulnerable Fabiano Alborghetti Graziano Kratli Rain Taxi
ia An Essential Tool for Capturing Your Career Accomplishments By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-08-08T13:45:20+00:00 Imagine you’re ready to apply for your next job. Like most busy professionals, you probably haven’t updated your résumé or your portfolio since you looked for your current job. Now you need to update both, and you can’t remember what work you’ve done over the past few years. (In fact, you can barely remember what you’ve done over the past few months!) So you scramble to update your résumé with new content. Then you spend all weekend scraping together a new portfolio using screenshots of whatever work evidence you can find on your laptop. You submit the résumé and portfolio with your application, hoping you didn’t forget to include any major career milestones you achieved over the last few years. This is the process most of us use to approach our job search. We wait until we’re ready to find a job, panic at our lack of résumé and portfolio, and pull together a “good enough” version of each for the job application. (Trust me, I’ve done this many times myself.) This is a stressful and ineffective way to approach a job search. There’s a much better approach you can take—and you can start working on it now, even if you’re not on the job market. The Career Management Document A Career Management Document (CMD) is a comprehensive collection of your résumé and portfolio content. It’s a document you update regularly, over time, with all the work you’ve done. When you’re ready to apply for your next job, you’ll have all the résumé and portfolio pieces available in your CMD. All you need to do is assemble those pieces into résumé and portfolio documents, then send the documents off with your job application. I update my CMD about once a week. I start by reviewing evidence of my recent work. I review Slack messages, Basecamp posts, emails, and any other current work-related content. I write my accomplishments in the format of résumé bullets, using the framework of responsibilities and accomplishments from this Manager Tools podcast. Then I add those bullets to the CMD. Here are some examples from my CMD: Coached a student on writing a stronger portfolio story to showcase their advanced UX skills, resulting in the student getting a job interview.Facilitated an end-of-study analysis in under 90 minutes to help the team synthesize user research data from 12 participants.Led a remote retrospective with teams in two offices, developed actionable takeaways, and ended on time despite a delayed start. My CMD has several hundred résumé bullets, and it continues to grow. I organize content by year and by project. Within each project are responsibilities and accomplishments. I add any content to the CMD that might go into my résumé someday. I include everything I can think of, even if it seems insignificant or trivial at the time. For example, I sometimes help with social media marketing at Center Centre, the UX design school where I’m a faculty member. I include it in my CMD. I don’t plan to pursue social media marketing as a career, but it may be relevant to a future job. Who knows—I may apply to work for an organization that makes social media marketing software someday. In that case, my social media experience could be relevant. Include portfolio artifacts with your CMD In addition to capturing bullets for my résumé, I capture content for my portfolio. Each week, I gather screenshots of my work, photos of me working with the team, and any other artifacts I can find. I store them in an organized system I can reference later. I also take brief notes about the work I did and store them with the artifacts. That way, if I look back at these materials a year from now, I’ll have notes about what I did during the project, reminding me of the details. For example, after I facilitated a user research analysis session late last year, I captured evidence of it for my portfolio. I included photos of the whiteboard where I recorded public notes during the session. I also captured brief notes about who attended the session, the date, and when it took place during the project. You can use whatever tools you’d like to gather evidence of your work. I use Google Docs for the résumé portion of my CMD. I use Dropbox to store my portfolio artifacts. I create Dropbox folders with dates and project names that correspond to the contents of my CMD. Résumé content from my CMD. I wrote about coaching a student on crafting a presentation for her job interview. The highlighted areas are where I left comments reminding me of the details of the work. Note that some of the résumé bullets seem redundant, which is OK. When I create my next résumé, I’ll choose the most appropriate bullets. I took notes on a whiteboard while coaching the student. I stored a photo of the whiteboard in Dropbox in a folder named with the date of the work and a description of what I did. The key is to collect the evidence regularly and store it in an accessible, organized way that works for you. To know if you’re storing work evidence effectively, ask yourself, “Will I understand this CMD content a year from now based on how I’m capturing and storing it today?” If the answer is “yes,” you’re in good shape. Update your CMD regularly For the CMD to work when you need it, it needs to be comprehensive and up-to-date. As I mentioned before, I update my CMD once a week. I schedule thirty minutes on my calendar each week so I remember to do it. Sometimes I have a busy week, and I can’t spend thirty minutes on my CMD. So I spend whatever amount of time I have. Some weeks, I only spend ten minutes. Ten minutes per week is better than zero minutes per week. Occasionally, I don’t get a chance to update it because my week is so hectic. That’s OK because I’ll probably get to it the following week. I recommend updating your CMD once a week and not once a month or once a quarter. If you wait even a month, you’ll have trouble remembering what you did three and a half weeks ago. Even worse, if you schedule a CMD update once a month and then miss it, you won’t get to it until the next month. That means you have to think back and remember two months of work, which is hard to do. Updating your CMD every week, while the work is fresh in your mind, gets the best results. The CMD benefits you in additional ways The CMD can help you prepare for your job search beyond your résumé and your portfolio. You can use it to prepare for a job interview. Since you’re capturing work evidence from each stage of the process in your CMD, you can use that evidence to remember what you did throughout a project. Then, you can craft a story about your role on that project. Hiring managers love to hear stories about your work during job interviews. For instance, if you’re a designer, they want to know the journey you took during your design process, from the start of a project to the end. A detailed CMD will help you remember this process so you can share it in an interview. I’ve even used my CMD to write blog posts. I’ve been blogging regularly for the past two years, and I often refer to my CMD to remember work experience I had that’s relevant to what I’m writing. When I wrote the article “How to Tell Compelling Stories During a UX Job Interview,” I used my CMD to remember interview preparation exercises I did with students. The CMD can also help you track work accomplishments for your quarterly or annual performance reviews. Additionally, you can use it to write job ads when hiring for related roles on your team. Lastly, I find it rewarding to peruse my CMD now and then, especially when I look back at work I did over a year ago. The CMD serves as a record of all my professional accomplishments. This record helps me appreciate my professional growth because I see how far my skills have come over time. Learn more about the CMD from Manager Tools At Center Centre, we originally learned about the Career Management Document through the Manager Tools podcast series. Manager Tools’ podcasts explain how to use a CMD for your résumé. We expanded their approach to include portfolio work as well. I recommend listening to their podcasts about creating and maintaining your CMD: Systematic Career Documentation (Part 1)Systematic Career Documentation (Part 2) Prepare for your next job search now We tell our students at Center Centre that preparing for your next job search is a process that starts early. It’s like saving for retirement—the sooner you start saving money, the more likely you are to be prepared when the time comes. Similarly, collecting résumé and portfolio content ahead of time will prepare you to find your next job whenever you’re ready to do so. It also prepares you for a sudden job termination like an unexpected layoff. If you lose your job without warning, you’ll likely be under a lot of stress to find a new position. Having a CMD ready will relieve the additional stress of building a résumé and portfolio from scratch. If you don’t have a CMD yet, now is a great time to start one. Schedule 30 minutes this week to begin crafting your repository of work accomplishments. You’ll be glad you did when you seek your next job. Full Article
ia Making Room for Variation By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-12-12T14:30:03+00:00 Making a brand feel unified, cohesive, and harmonious while also leaving room for experimentation is a tough balancing act. It’s one of the most challenging aspects of a design system. Graphic designer and Pentagram partner Paula Scher faced this challenge with the visual identity for the Public Theater in New York. As she explained in a talk at Beyond Tellerrand: I began to realize that if you made everything the same, it was boring after the first year. If you changed it individually for each play, the theater lost recognizability. The thing to do, which I totally got for the first time after working there at this point for 17 years, is what they needed to have were seasons. You could take the typography and the color system for the summer festival, the Shakespeare in the Park Festival, and you could begin to translate it into posters by flopping the colors, but using some of the same motifs, and you could create entire seasons out of the graphics. That would become its own standards manual where I have about six different people making these all year (http://bkaprt.com/eds/04-01/). Scher’s strategy was to retain the Public Theater’s visual language every year, but to vary some of its elements (Fig 4.1–2). Colors would be swapped. Text would skew in different directions. New visual motifs would be introduced. The result is that each season coheres in its own way, but so does the identity of the Public Theater as a whole. Fig 4.1: The posters for the 2014/15 season featured the wood type style the Public Theater is known for, but the typography was skewed. The color palette was restrained to yellow, black, and white, which led to a dynamic look when coupled with the skewed type (http://bkaprt.com/eds/04-02/). Fig 4.2: For the 2018 season, the wood type letterforms were extended on a field of gradated color. The grayscale cut-out photos we saw in the 2014/15 season persisted, but this time in lower contrast to fit better with the softer color tones (http://bkaprt.com/eds/04-03/). Even the most robust or thoroughly planned systems will need to account for variation at some point. As soon as you release a design system, people will ask you how to deviate from it, and you’ll want to be armed with persuasive answers. In this chapter, I’m going to talk about what variation means for a design system, how to know when you need it, and how to manage it in a scalable way. What Is Variation? We’ve spent most of this book talking about the importance of unity, cohesion, and harmony in a design system. So why are we talking about variation? Isn’t that at odds with all of the goals we’ve set until now? Variation is a deviation from established patterns, and it can exist at every level of the system. At the component level, for instance, a team may discover that they need a component to behave in a slightly different way; maybe this particular component needs to appear without a photo, for example. At a design-language level, you may have a team that has a different audience, so they want to adjust their brand identity to serve that audience better. You can even have variation at the level of design principles: if a team is working on a product that is functionally different from your core product, they may need to adjust their principles to suit that context. There are three kinds of deviations that come up in a design system: Unintentional divergence typically happens when designers can’t find the information they’re looking for. They may not know that a certain solution exists within a system, so they create their own style. Clear, easy-to-find documentation and usage guidelines can help your team avoid unintentional variation.Intentional but unnecessary divergence usually results from designers not wanting to feel constrained by the system, or believing they have a better solution. Making sure your team knows how to push back on and contribute to the system can help mitigate this kind of variation. Intentional, meaningful divergence is the goal of an expressive design system. In this case, the divergence is meaningful because it solves a very specific user problem that no existing pattern solves. We want to enable intentional, meaningful variation. To do this, we need to understand the needs and contexts for variation. Contexts for Variation Every variation we add makes our design system more complicated. Therefore, we need to take care to find the right moments for variation. Three big contextual changes are served by variation: brand, audience, and environment. Brand If you’re creating a system for multiple brands, each with its own brand language, then your system needs to support variations to reflect those brands. The key here is to find the common core elements and then set some criteria for how you should deviate. When we were creating the design system for our websites at Vox Media, we constantly debated which elements should feel more expressive. Should a footer be standardized, or should we allow for tons of customization? We went back to our core goals: our users were ultimately visiting our websites to consume editorial content. So the variations should be in service of the content, writing style, and tone of voice for each brand. The newsletter modules across Vox Media brands were an example of unnecessary variation. They were consistent in functionality and layout, but had variations in type, color, and visual treatments like borders (Fig 4.3). There was quite a bit of custom design within a very small area: Curbed’s newsletter component had a skewed background, for example, while Eater’s had a background image. Because these modules were so consistent in their user goals, we decided to unify their design and create less variation (Fig 4.4). Fig 4.3: Older versions of Vox Media’s newsletter modules contained lots of unnecessary visual variation. Fig 4.4: The new, unified newsletter modules. The unified design cleaned up some technical debt. In the previous design, each newsletter module had CSS overrides to achieve distinct styling. Some modules even had overrides on the primary button color so it would work better with the background color. Little CSS overrides like this add up over time. Whenever we released a new change, we’d have to manually update the spots containing CSS overrides. The streamlined design also placed a more appropriate emphasis on the newsletter module. While important, this module isn’t the star of the page. It doesn’t need loud backgrounds or fancy shapes to command attention, especially since it’s placed around article content. Variation in this module wasn’t necessary for expressing the brands. On the other hand, consider the variation in Vox Media’s global header components. When we were redesigning the Verge, its editorial teams were vocal about wanting more latitude to art-direct the page, guide attention toward big features, and showcase custom illustrations. We addressed this by creating a masthead component (Fig 4.5) that sits on top of the global header on homepages. It contains a logo, tagline, date, and customizable background image. Though at the time this was a one-off component, we felt that the variation was valuable because it would strengthen the Verge’s brand voice. Fig 4.5: Examples of the Verge's masthead component The Verge team commissions or makes original art that changes throughout the day. The most exciting part is that they can use the masthead and a one-up hero when they drop a big feature and use these flexible components to art-direct the page (Fig 4.6). Soon after launch, the Verge masthead even got a Twitter fan account (@VergeTaglines) that tweets every time the image changes. Fig 4.6: The Verge uses two generic components, the masthead and one-up hero, to art-direct its homepages. Though this component was built specifically for the Verge, it soon gained broader application with other brands that share Vox’s publishing platform, Chorus. The McElroy Family website, for example, needed to convey its sense of humor and Appalachian roots; the masthead component shines with an original illustration featuring an adorable squirrel (Fig 4.7). Fig 4.7: The McElroy Family site uses the same masthead component as the Verge to display a custom illustration. Fig 4.8: The same masthead component on the Chicago Sun-Times site. The Chicago Sun-Times—another Chorus platform site—is very different in content, tone, and audience from The McElroy Family, but the masthead component is just as valuable in conveying the tone of the organization’s high-quality investigative journalism and breaking news coverage (Fig 4.8). Why did the masthead variation work well while the newsletter variation didn’t? The variations on the newsletter design were purely visual. When we created them, we didn’t have a strategy for how variation should work; instead, we were looking for any opportunity to make the brands feel distinct. The masthead variation, by contrast, tied directly into the brand strategy. Even though it began as a one-off for the Verge, it was flexible and purposeful enough to migrate to other brands. Audience The next contextual variation comes from audience. If your products serve different audiences who all need different things, then your system may need to adapt to fit those needs. A good example of this is Airbnb’s listing pages. In addition to their standard listings, they also have Airbnb Plus—one-of-a-kind, high quality rentals at higher price points. Audiences booking a Plus listing are probably looking for exceptional quality and attention to detail. Both Airbnb’s standard listing page and Plus listing page are immediately recognizable as belonging to the same family because they use many consistent elements (Fig 4.9). They both use Airbnb’s custom font, Cereal. They both highlight photography. They both use many of the same components, like the date picker. The iconography is the same. Fig 4.9: The same brand elements in Airbnb’s standard listings (above) are used in their Plus listings (below), but with variations that make the listing styles distinct. However, some of the design choices convey a different attitude. Airbnb Plus uses larger typography, airier vertical space, and a lighter weight of Cereal. It has a more understated color palette, with a deeper color on the call to action. These choices make Airbnb Plus feel like a more premium experience. You can see they’ve adjusted the density, weight, and scale levers to achieve a more elegant and sophisticated aesthetic. The standard listing page, on the other hand, is more functional, with the booking module front and center. The Plus design pulls the density and weight levers in a lighter, airier direction. The standard listing page has less size contrast between elements, making it feel more functional. Because they use the same core building blocks—the same typography, iconography, and components—both experiences feel like Airbnb. However, the variations in spacing, typographic weights, and color help distinguish the standard listing from the premium listing. Environment I’ve mainly been talking about adding variation to a system to allow for a range of content tones, but you may also need your system to scale based on environmental contexts. “Environment” in this context asks: Where will your products be used? Will that have an impact on the experience? Environments are the various constraints and pressures that surround and inform an experience. That can include lighting, ambient noise, passive or active engagement, expected focus level, or devices. Shopify’s Polaris design system initially grew out of Shopify’s Store Management product. When the Shopify Retail team kicked off a project to design the next generation point-of-sale (POS) system, they realized that the patterns in Polaris didn’t exactly fit their needs. The POS system needed to work well in a retail space, often under bright lighting. The app needed to be used at arm’s length, twenty-four to thirty-six inches away from the merchant. And unlike the core admin, where the primary interaction is between the merchant and the UI, merchants using the POS system needed to prioritize their interactions with their customers instead of the UI. The Retail team wanted merchants to achieve an “eyes-closed” level of mastery over the UI so they could maintain eye contact with their customers. The Retail team decided that the existing color palette, which only worked on a light background, would not be clear enough under the bright lights of a retail shop. The type scale was also too small to be used at arm’s length. And in order for merchants to use the POS system without breaking eye contact with customers, the buttons and other UI elements would need to be much larger. The Retail team recognized that the current design system didn’t support a variety of environmental scenarios. But after talking with the Polaris team, they realized that other teams would benefit from the solutions they created. The Warehouse team, for example, was also developing an app that needed to be used at arm’s length under bright lights. This work inspired the Polaris team to create a dark mode for the system (Fig 4.10). Fig 4.10: Polaris light mode (left) and dark mode (right). This feedback loop between product team and design system team is a great example of how to build the right variation into your system. Build your system around helping your users navigate your product more clearly and serving content needs and you’ll unlock scalable expression. Full Article
ia India will not win in Australia if they cant dismiss Smith, Warner early By Published On :: India will not win in Australia if they cant dismiss Smith, Warner early Full Article
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ia Raman spectroscopy in the undergraduate curriculum / Matthew D. Sonntag, editor, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Albright College, Reading, Pennsylvania ; sponsored by the ACS Division of Chemical Education. By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: Washington, DC : American Chemical Society, [2018] Full Article
ia Contrast agents III [electronic resource] : radiopharmaceuticals from diagnostics to therapeutics / volume editor, Werner Krause ; with contributions by R. Alberto [and others] By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: Berlin ; New York : Springer-Verlag, [2005] Full Article
ia Over 1,000 return to India aboard six flights By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 02:15:15 +0530 Six flights flew in from five countries on Friday. Passengers returned from Singapore, Dhaka, Bahrain, Riyadh and Dubai to Delhi, Srinagar, Kochi, Kozhikode and Chennai Full Article National
ia Sanofi to enroll thousands for its coronavirus vaccine trials By timesofindia.indiatimes.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 15:10:07 IST French drugmaker Sanofi SA said it plans to enroll thousands of subjects globally for trials of an experimental vaccine for the coronavirus it is developing with GlaxoSmithKline Plc, and that it has started to discuss advanced purchases with several countries. Sanofi teamed with British rival GSK to come up with a candidate it hopes will be ready next year. Full Article
ia The Ian Landles Archive By www.scran.ac.uk Published On :: Wed, 29 Jul 2015 23:00:00 GMT Oral Histories of the Scottish Borders Full Article
ia Rough diamond import may be curtailed as pandemic stalls trade By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-30T11:29:28+05:30 India’s gross import of rough diamonds had declined by 13.43% to $12.39 billion between April 2019 and February 2020 from a year earlier. Full Article
ia Surat may lose cutting edge in diamond trade By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T01:07:38+05:30 Diamond trade has come to a halt because of the lockdown. Many workers have also left. Full Article
ia Global fashion brands tap India for face masks By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T04:38:28+05:30 International brands have begun sharing prototypes of fashion masks in cotton and blends with Indian suppliers who are awaiting a nod from the Centre to export non-surgical masks. Full Article
ia Covid-19 Impact: Stylish face mask is the new focal accessory of India’s top fashion brands By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-08T20:43:46+05:30 Several apparel makers and fast-moving consumer goods companies had earlier stepped up to produce medical-grade masks as a philanthropic act when Covid-19 struck but now it is apparent that the pandemic is set to alter lifestyles for at least some time to come. Full Article
ia Senco Gold & Diamonds to reopen stores in West Bengal, Odisha, Assam and Karnataka By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T17:08:17+05:30 The brand has started operating its 11 stores in these four sates after getting clearance from the government. The brand will continue to follow the safety instructions suggested by Government authorities across all locations. Senco Gold and Diamonds plans to start operations across all locations in a phased manner following clearance by the concerned government authorities. Full Article
ia Formulating poorly water soluble drugs / Robert O. Williams III, Alan B. Watts, Dave A. Miller, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 29 Jan 2017 06:57:56 EST Online Resource Full Article
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