1,086 research outputs found
WILLIAM ANDREWS NESFIELD [1794-1881] ARTIST AND LANDSCAPE GARDENER
Contrary to past opinions William Andrews Nesfield's garden layouts were not
solely designed to provide appropriate accompaniments to the Elizabethan and Jacobean
revival architecture of his brother-in-law Anthony Salvin (1799-1881). Nor were they
conceived chiefly to provide his wealthy patrons with a variation on the French
seventeenth-century parterre-de-broderie. Undoubtedly, this device helped to forge a
sympathetic bond between Nesfield and his patrons, for it had been a symbol of power and
status in seventeenth-century France when it was associated with the upper echelons of
French society. It therefore represented to the aristocracy and upper gentry of nineteenth-century
Britain, during the time Nesfield was engaged in landscape design, a symbol of
their continuing power and influence.
The above factors were a means to an end for Nesfield, and helped him to become
firmly established as a successful landscape designer. But the most crucial element to be
considered. when attempting to reach an understanding of Nesfield's garden design
philosophy, is his spacial awareness which demanded that both the strictly formal area in
the environs of the house and the more naturalistic landscape beyond be adapted and
integrated into a cohesive whole. He did this by assimilating the individual parts through
visual assessment, transferring his findings to his drawing board and then applying these
findings to the ground. As an experienced professional landscape painter, skilled in the arts
of observation and perspective, he was able to adapt the classical concept of the unity of all
the parts for his own use and then incorporate within the two divergent areas of his overall
designs the fundamental elements of variety, consistency, simplicity, breadth and repose
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E-learning and over 65s: designing for accessibility and digital inclusion
In this presentation in the track 'Aging and Disability', we will discuss the physical and non-physical characteristics of over 65s alongside the concepts of accessibility and digital inclusion and the implications for designing e-learning
Transcript of the Interview with Tick Evans
A transcript of an oral history with Tick Evans, conducted by Shirley Gish, about his recollection of Dr. Louise Caudill and the community of Morehead, Kentucky during the early half of the 20th century
MUSTANG 3.3 Millimeter Continuum Observations of Class 0 Protostars
We present observations of six Class 0 protostars at 3.3 mm (90 GHz) using
the 64-pixel MUSTANG bolometer camera on the 100-m Green Bank Telescope. The
3.3 mm photometry is analyzed along with shorter wavelength observations to
derive spectral indices (S_nu ~ nu^alpha) of the measured emission. We utilize
previously published dust continuum radiative transfer models to estimate the
characteristic dust temperature within the central beam of our observations. We
present constraints on the millimeter dust opacity index, beta, between 0.862
mm, 1.25 mm, and 3.3 mm. Beta_mm typically ranges from 1.0 to 2.4 for Class 0
sources. The relative contributions from disk emission and envelope emission
are estimated at 3.3 mm. L483 is found to have negligible disk emission at 3.3
mm while L1527 is dominated by disk emission within the central beam. The
beta_mm^disk <= 0.8 - 1.4 for L1527 indicates that grain growth is likely
occurring in the disk. The photometry presented in this paper may be combined
with future interferometric observations of Class 0 envelopes and disks.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, AJ accepted, in pres
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Imparting digital skills to people aged 55 years and over in the UK
This research has been conducted by The Open University, UK and has been inspired by the authors’ association with Age UK Milton Keynes. Our aim has been to present a case for imparting digital skills to people aged over 55 years of age, and to present strategies, which partnerships of academic institutions, businesses, and organisations in the voluntary sector (e.g. Age UK, Carers UK) could take forward.
Some of our recommendations include:
•the need for more robust evidence for the efficiency and effectiveness of digital inclusion initiatives for their sustainability, cost-effectiveness, and their impact;
•design of evidence-based training initiatives for digital inclusion of older people;
•highlighting the significance of digital skills training of the ageing workforce;
•aiming for digital competence in training initiatives so that people develop skills along with knowledge and attitudes – so that they can apply what they have learned to other emerging technologies, contexts, devices and platforms;
•inter-generational digital inclusion initiatives;
•improving and extending partnership working with the voluntary sector such as Age UK and Carers UK;
•Continuing Professional Development (CPD) programme(s) for senior managers on provding support to the older workforce (including carers and disabled people);
•online learning programmes and/or certification for designers/content developers - training them on the accessible (inclusive) design of online services (including websites, smart phones or mobile interfaces) and smart spaces for an ageing society
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