3,172 research outputs found
Ansible - IT automation engine for configuration management and cloud provisiong
Automatic provisioning of infrastructure as well as deployment is a cornerstone of
DevOps. It brings the benefits of version control, reproducibility, and a central place
to consolidate (executable) knowledge about infrastructure setups. Best known
provisioning systems are Chef and Puppet. A newcomer to this game is Ansible with
goal are foremost those of simplicity and maximum ease of use and with strong
focus on security and reliability, featuring a minimum of moving parts
Catalogue of the morphological features in the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies (SG)
A catalogue of the morphological features for the complete Spitzer Survey of
Stellar Structure in Galaxies (SG), including 2352 nearby galaxies, is
presented. The measurements are made using 3.6 m images, largely tracing
the old stellar population; at this wavelength the effects of dust are also
minimal. The measured features are the sizes, ellipticities, and orientations
of bars, rings, ringlenses, and lenses. Measured in a similar manner are also
barlenses (lens-like structures embedded in the bars), which are not lenses in
the usual sense, being rather the more face-on counterparts of the boxy/peanut
structures in the edge-on view. In addition, pitch angles of spiral arm
segments are measured for those galaxies where they can be reliably traced.
More than one pitch angle may appear for a single galaxy. All measurements are
made in a human-supervised manner so that attention is paid to each galaxy. We
used isophotal analysis, unsharp masking, and fitting ellipses to measured
structures. We find that the sizes of the inner rings and lenses normalized to
barlength correlate with the galaxy mass: the normalized sizes increase toward
the less massive galaxies; it has been suggested that this is related to the
larger dark matter content in the bar region in these systems. Bars in the low
mass galaxies are also less concentrated, likely to be connected to the mass
cut-off in the appearance of the nuclear rings and lenses. We also show
observational evidence that barlenses indeed form part of the bar, and that a
large fraction of the inner lenses in the non-barred galaxies could be former
barlenses in which the thin outer bar component has dissolved.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Exponential instability in the fractional Calder\'on problem
In this note we prove the exponential instability of the fractional
Calder\'on problem and thus prove the optimality of the logarithmic stability
estimate from \cite{RS17}. In order to infer this result, we follow the
strategy introduced by Mandache in \cite{M01} for the standard Calder\'on
problem. Here we exploit a close relation between the fractional Calder\'on
problem and the classical Poisson operator. Moreover, using the construction of
a suitable orthonormal basis, we also prove (almost) optimality of the Runge
approximation result for the fractional Laplacian, which was derived in
\cite{RS17}. Finally, in one dimension, we show a close relation between the
fractional Calder\'on problem and the truncated Hilbert transform.Comment: 17 page
Farm Deaths in North Karelia
This study examined the effect of farm size on the mortality and survival of EasternFinnish farms in the late 1990s. Three different dimensions of farm size (i.e. hectaresoperated, number of milk cows, and hectares of forest) were compared. Data wereextracted from administrative records and covered all 4,527 active farms in NorthKarelia from 1995 to 1998. Results did not support the disappearing middle sizehypothesis presented by Weiss (1999). Farm size distributions were not bimodal.No empirical evidence was found of a process of polarisation into two centres ofattraction. As a whole, the analysis provides some support for the conclusion thatthe size of forest holding as measured by hectares of forest owned by farm does nothave an independent effect on the likelihood of survival. Its contribution dependson the other variables in the model
You fooled me, so I\u27ll tell you about myself! personnel-related brand betrayal experiences and disclosure of personal information
Past research has extensively studied the negative effects of brand betrayals on consumer attitudes, but largely ignored their potential positive consequences. Also, while previous research has focused on betrayals made by the brand itself, it has paid less attention to betrayals by the brand\u27s personnel. This paper focuses on one potentially important positive consequence of brand personnel betrayal experiences (a consumer\u27s feeling of being betrayed by the brand staff members): the increased willingness of consumers to share personal insights and information with the brand after experiencing a brand personnel betrayal. A field data set and two online experiments show that consumers are more prepared to share personal information with the brand when experiencing brand personnel betrayals than when experiencing other types of service or brand failures. The effect is mediated by consumers’ social affirmation mindset and moderated by privacy concerns
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