58,228 research outputs found
Online Defamation: Bringing the Communications Decency Act of 1996 in Line With Sound Public Policy
According to the Communications Decency Act of 1996, a provider of an interactive computer service cannot be held liable for publishing a defamatory statement made by another party. In addition, the service provider cannot be held liable for refusing to remove the statement from its service. This article postulates that such immunity from producer and distributor liability is a suspect public policy, and argues that the statute should be amended to include a broad definition of development and a take-down and put-back provision
Gregorian all-reflective optical system
An optical heterodyne receiver comprises a system of reflectors forming a folded Gregorian configuration for collecting a signal beam, and an optical detector located at the focus of the system. A paraboloidal primary reflector and an elipsoidal secondary reflector face each other on an optical axis with the focus of the secondary reflector coinciding with the focus of the primary reflector. An auxiliary laser generates a local oscillator beam that is combined with the signal beam after the signal beam emerges from the exit pupil (which is also the aperture stop) of the system, and the resultant is impinged on the detector. A pair of image motion compensators is located as close to the exit pupil as possible for aligning off-axis inputs to the detector
Relationships of Job and Family Involvement, Family Social Support, and Work–Family Conflict with Job and Life Satisfaction
A model of the relationship between work and family that incorporates variables from both the work-family conflict and social support literatures was developed and empirically tested. This model related bidirectional work-family conflict, family instrumental and emotional social support, and job and family involvement to job and life satisfaction. Data came from 163 workers who were living with at least 1 family member. Results suggested that relationships between work and family can have an important effect on job and life satisfaction and that the level of involvement the worker assigns to work and family roles is associated with this relationship. The results also suggested that the relationship between work and family can be simultaneously characterized by conflict and support. Higher levels of work interfering with family predicted lower levels of family emotional and instrumental support. Higher levels of family emotional and instrumental support were associated with lower levels of family interfering with work. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved)
Method and apparatus for making a heat insulating and ablative structure Patent
Method and apparatus for fabrication of heat insulating and ablative reentry structur
Using Probability to Reason about Soft Deadlines
Soft deadlines are significant in systems in which a bound on the response time is important, but the failure to meet the response time is not a disaster. Soft deadlines occur, for example, in telephony and switching networks. We investigate how to put probabilistic bounds on the time-complexity of a concurrent logic program by combining (on-line) profiling with an (off-line) probabilistic complexity analysis. The profiling collects information on the likelihood of case selection and the analysis uses this information to infer the probability of an agent terminating within k steps. Although the approach does not reason about synchronization, we believe that its simplicity and good (essentially quadratic) complexity mean that it is a promising first step in reasoning about soft deadlines
Extended Hylleraas three-electron integral
A closed form expression for the three-electron Hylleraas integral involving
the inverse quadratic power of one inter-particle coordinate is obtained, and
recursion relations are derived for positive powers of other coordinates. This
result is suited for high precision calculations of relativistic effects in
lithium and light lithium-like ions.Comment: Submited to Phys. Rev.
Development and fabrication of high strength alloy fibers for use in metal-metal matrix composites
Metal fiber reinforced superalloys are being considered for construction of critical components in turbine engines that operate at high temperature. The problems involved in fabricating refractory metal alloys into wire form in such a manner as to maximize their strength properties without developing excessive structural defects are described. The fundamental principles underlying the development of such alloy fibers are also briefly discussed. The progress made to date in developing tungsten, tantalum and columbium base alloys for fiber reinforcement is reported and future prospects for alloy fiber development considered
Theoretical and Experimental Investigations of Antennas and Waves in Plasma Semiannual Status Report, Mar. 1 - Aug. 31, 1966
Experimental studies of antennas and acoustic waves in plasm
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