Introduction In this course you will be introduced to a variety of Delacroix’s work and see how his paintings relate to the cultural transition from Enlightenment to Romanticism. You will study Delacroix’s early career, his classical background, the development of Romantic ideas and their incorporation into his work. You will have the opportunity to study some of his most important paintings and compare them to works favouring a Neoclassical approach. You will also be able to see how his themes,
Keep on learning   There are more than 800 courses on OpenLearn for you to 1.1 A note about terminology We begin with a ‘health warning’ about terminology, this time about the use of the word ‘risk’ in finance. The difference between the everyday and the specialised meanings of ‘risk’ is less technical and more radical than in the case of ‘return’. In everyday usage, ‘risk’ is negative – the risk of having a car accident or the risk of losing one's job. If we use ‘risk’ in a positive sense at all, it is only as a result of adopting a consciously ironic tone: ‘T Krazy Kat goes Wooing LR - Converting Images to Black and White References Introduction The underlying premise of this course is that we are all experts in different ways, and that our different experiences and understandings are of value. Inclusive education is presented and discussed as under construction, both in educational settings and as a concept. The materials to be found in this course are largely rooted in the social model of disability and human/disability rights frameworks. This OpenLearn course provides a sample of Level 2 study in Author(s): 2.4.1 From Heidegger to knowledge technologies Because each transformation from one ‘knowledge state’ to another (Figure 2) is an act of interpretation, there is no such thing as objective knowledge representation, or indeed objective classification or codification of any sort (in software or any other medium): there is always a viewpoint. This leads to the view that information and communication systems cannot be thought of as neutral; in their formal structures and operations they embody the goals and perspectives of their developer 1.2 Connecting human and non-human nature Environmental responsibility – caring and generating accountability – requires interaction between human and non-human nature. For example, from a caring perspective what matters in climate change might constitute, say, the continued existence and protection of an arctic wilderness (Figure 3). But this necessarily involves a conne Téléinformatique. Tome 2, Logiciels de communication Introduction This unit is aimed at geography teachers, or those with an interest in studying or teaching geography. This unit looks at the contribution that geography can make in the education of young people and the characteristics and purpose of geography as a subject. 1.4 Molecular substances Chlorine, bromine and iodine belong to a family of elements called the halogens. At room temperature, chlorine (Figure 2e) is a gas, bromine (Figure 2d) is a liquid and iodin 1 What to expect In this unit you will look at how sport can be understood from a scientific perspective. This is a large topic with many possible approaches. We will try to focus on specific details while maintaining a broad overview of the subject using examples from many different sports such as running, athletics, cycling and swimming to illustrate the different ways in which sport and science interact. You will see that even a brief introduction to the science of the human body is enough to answer Modelling for Virtual Reality in Architecture Balloon crash CVS01_01_031 Tales of balloon flight. A hand-coloured engraving showing a maritime rescue that took place on 1st September 1874. French balloonists Jules and Caroline Durouf were rescued by English fishermen Oxley and Buscone, after their balloon 'Le Tricolore' ditched in the North Sea. From the Cecil Victor Shadbolt collection of lantern slides dating from 1882-1892. Find Your Impact: Student creates app for orangutans Religion in history: conflict, conversion and coexistence A Capitalism for the People [Audio] Strategieën voor optellen en aftrekken : Onthoudblad Dit onthoudblad sluit aan bij de methode Rekensprong 4. Op het blad vinden leerlingen een overzicht van de aangeleerde strategieën voor optellen en aftrekken tot en met sprong 5. Naast de oplossingsstrategieën en de voorbeeldoefeningen, … References
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Krazy Kat's serenade outside the window of Ignatz Mouse meets with a barrage of bricks. This video is based on the comic published in the Hearst newspaper in 1916. It was originally filmed on 1 reel of 1 (ca. 70 ft.) : si., b&w ; 16 mm. ref print. This demonstrates film history, silent movies, as well as history of animation.
Convert images to black and white, as well as add tonal overlays, edge effects, and film grain textures.
Sommaire : Couche 3 / OSI : service réseau avec connexion - Accès à un réseau en commutation de paquet depuis un ETTD caractère : protocole X28 X29 X3 - Couche 3 / OSI : sans connexion - Couche 4 / OSI : Service transport - Couche 5 / OSI : service session - Couche 6 / OSI : service présentation - Couche 6 - 7 / OSI : syntaxe abstraite ASN.1 - Couche 7 / OSI : application - Couche 7 / OSI : services communs d'application - Messagerie X400 ( courrier électronique ) - Couche 7 / OSI : tr
CAAD systems are using object modelling methods for building databases to make information available. Object data must then be made useful for many different purposes in the design process. Even if the capacity of the computer will allow an almost unlimited amount of information to be transformed, the eye does not make the transformations in the same ?simple? mathematical way. Trained architects have to involve in an inventive process of finding ways to ?harmonize? this new medium with the human
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A coding hobby led Vanderbilt HOD and economics double major Ben Scheer on a wild immersion, building an app for orangutans at Zoo Atlanta.
The coexistence of multiple religious communities has been a source of both opposition and diversity since the very foundation of human civilization. This album explores the interaction of competing communities in compelling depth, highlighting periods and cities that experienced turbulence, and occasionally harmony, from such an intermingling of beliefs and ideas. A huge historical range, from the very beginnings of early Christianity to modern-day Africa, is rigorously examined in cultural, so
Speaker(s): Professor Luigi Zingales | When the Italian-born economist Luigi Zingales first arrived in the United States in the 1980s, he embraced the American dream: the belief that what brings you success is hard work, not luck or who you know. But the economic events of the past decade, combined with the actions of politicians from both sides, have undermined capitalism's reputation. In A Capitalism for the People, which he will discuss in this lecture, Zingales warns that the US economy risk