988 resultados para James Bond tema musik förändring analys 007


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"It could easily provide the back-drop for a James Bond movie. Deep inside a mountain near the North Pole, down a fortified tunnel, and behind airlocked doors in a vault frozen to -18 degrees Celsius, scientists are squirreling away millions of seed samples. The samples constitute the very foundation of agriculture, the biological diversity needed so the world's major food crops can adapt to the next pest or disease, or to climate change. It's little wonder that the Svalbard Global Seed Vault has captured the public's imagination more than almost any agricultural topic in recent years. Popular press reports about the ‘Doomsday Vault,’ however, typically mask the complexity of the endeavor and, if anything, underestimate its practical utility." Cary Fowler This chapter considers the use of seed banks to address concerns about intellectual property, climate change and food security. It has a number of themes. First of all, it is interested in the use of ‘Big Science’ projects to address pressing global scientific concerns and Millennium Development Goals. Second, it highlights the increasing use of banks as a means of managing both property and intellectual property across a wide range of fields of agriculture and biotechnology. Third, it considers the linkage of intellectual property, access to genetic resources and benefit sharing. There are a variety of positions in this debate. Some see requirements in respect of access to genetic resources and benefit sharing as an inconvenient burden for science and commerce. Others defend access to genetic resources and benefit sharing as meaningful and productive. Those inclined to somewhat more conspiratorial views suggest that access to genetic resources and benefit sharing are a ruse to facilitate biopiracy. This chapter has a number of components. Section I focuses upon the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) network – often raised as a model for Climate Innovation Centres. Section II considers the Svalbard Global Seed Vault – the so-called Doomsday Vault. After a consideration of the World Summit on Food Security in 2009, it is concluded in this chapter that any future international agreement on climate change needs to address intellectual property, plant genetic resources and food security.

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In just one of the many extraordinary moments during the spectacular Opening Ceremony of the 2012 London Olympic Games, thirty Mary Poppinses floated into the stadium on their umbrellas to battle a 40 foot-long inflatable Lord Voldemort. This multi-million pound extravaganza was telecast to a global audience of over one billion people, highlighting in an extremely effective manner the grandeur and eccentricities of the host nation, and featuring uniquely British icons such as Mr Bean, James Bond, The Beatles and Harry Potter, as well as those quintessential icons of Englishness, the Royal Family, double-decker red buses and the National Health Service.

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It is a central premise of the advertising campaigns for nearly all digital communication devices that buying them augments the user: they give us a larger, better memory; make us more “creative” and “productive”; and/or empower us to access whatever information we desire from wherever we happen to be. This study is about how recent popular cinema represents the failure of these technological devices to inspire the enchantment that they once did and opens the question of what is causing this failure. Using examples from the James Bond films, the essay analyzes the ways in which human users are frequently represented as the media connecting and augmenting digital devices and NOT the reverse. It makes use of the debates about the ways in which our subjectivity is itself a networked phenomenon and the extended mind debate from the philosophy of mind. It will prove (1) that this represents an important counter-narrative to the technophilic optimism about augmentation that pervades contemporary advertising, consumer culture, and educational debates; and (2) that this particular discourse of augmentation is really about technological advances and not advances in human capacity.

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In der neueren Designtheorie wird zur Zeit – auch in Bezug auf die Rhetorik – vermehrt der Aspekt der Wirkungsintention diskutiert; in Abgrenzung zur Analyse von 'Bedeutung' stehen in diesem Modell Produktion und Analyse in einem wirkungsgeleiteten Verhältnis. Ausgehend von der These, dass sich die beabsichtigten Nutzungen eines Gebäudes anhand des in und an ihm wirkenden Designs beschreiben lassen, wird am Beispiel des Berner Hauptbahnhofs ("SBB RailCity Bern") gezeigt, wie sich dessen 'design for shopping' zum 'design for transport' verhält. Die Architektur des Bahnhofs wird in diesem Setting weniger als 'gebauter Raum' verstanden als vielmehr als Träger und Auslöser von Informationsumgebungen, Blick- und Gangführungen, Stimmungsinszenierungen und Reizen – mit dem Ziel, Reisende und potentielle Konsument in ihrer jeweiligen Erlebniskette zu führen.

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in Musik gesetzt von Joseph Haydn. [Text] nach Thomson

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Back Row: Ross H. Smith, Herschel C. Smith, Charles M. Smith, Charles Barton, Ellwood Griest, Withred H. Cook, James Bond, Lorenzo Lapsley

3rd Row: Ath. Dir. Bartelme, E. M. White, David H. Cohn, Charles. S. White, David Wiggins, Harry E. Brown, John Otte, Isaac Van Kammen, st. mngr Harold Williamson

2nd Row: Warren Sargent, James Craig, Raymond Haimbaugh, Edmond Hanavan, captain Hugh Gamble, Carroll Haff, Benjamin Reck, Arthur Kohler

Front Row: Frederick(?) Beardsley, Kenneth Young, Roger Waring, Louis Baier, Raymond Blake, Howard Seward

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Top Row: Lorenzo Lapsley, Edward Green, st. mngr. Donald Denison, Harry C. Carver, Wilfred Cook

3rd Row: Coach Stephen Farrell, Roger Le Baron Waring, Herschel C. Smith, Howard Seward, Warren Sargent, Harry E. Brown, Charles S. White, Ath Dir. Phil Bartelme

2nd Row: Arthur Kohler, James Bond, Charles M. Smith, Carroll Haff, Raymond Haimbaugh, Philip Jansen, James Craig

Front Row: John Ferris, Arthur Lamey, Louis Baier, Edward Daskam

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Top Row: Lorenzo Lapsley, Edward Green, st. mngr. Donald Denison, Harry C. Carver, Wilfred Cook

3rd Row: Coach Stephen Farrell, Roger Le Baron Waring, Herschel C. Smith, Howard Seward, Warren Sargent, Harry E. Brown, Charles S. White, Ath Dir. Phil Bartelme

2nd Row: Arthur Kohler, James Bond, Charles M. Smith, Carroll Haff, Raymond Haimbaugh, Philip Jansen, James Craig

Front Row: John Ferris, Arthur Lamey, Louis Baier, Edward Daskam

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FULL TEXT: Like many people one of my favourite pastimes over the holiday season is to watch the great movies that are offered on the television channels and new releases in the movie theatres or catching up on those DVDs that you have been wanting to watch all year. Recently we had the new ‘Star Wars’ movie, ‘The Force Awakens’, which is reckoned to become the highest grossing movie of all time, and the latest offering from James Bond, ‘Spectre’ (which included, for the car aficionados amongst you, the gorgeous new Aston Martin DB10). It is always amusing to see how vision correction or eye injury is dealt with by movie makers. Spy movies and science fiction movies have a freehand to design aliens with multiples eyes on stalks or retina scanning door locks or goggles that can see through walls. Eye surgery is usually shown in some kind of day case simplified laser treatment that gives instant results, apart from the great scene in the original ‘Terminator’ movie where Arnold Schwarzenegger's android character encounters an injury to one eye and then proceeds to remove the humanoid covering to this mechanical eye over a bathroom sink. I suppose it is much more difficult to try and include contact lenses in such movies. Although you may recall the film ‘Charlie's Angels’, which did have a scene where one of the Angels wore a contact lens that had a retinal image imprinted on it so she could by-pass a retinal scan door lock and an Eddy Murphy spy movie ‘I-Spy’, where he wore contact lenses that had electronic gadgetry that allowed whatever he was looking at to be beamed back to someone else, a kind of remote video camera device. Maybe we aren’t quite there in terms of devices available but these things are probably not the behest of science fiction anymore as the technology does exist to put these things together. The technology to incorporate electronics into contact lenses is being developed and I am sure we will be reporting on it in the near future. In the meantime we can continue to enjoy the unrealistic scenes of eye swapping as in the film ‘Minority Report’ (with Tom Cruise). Much more closely to home, than in a galaxy far far away, in this issue you can find articles on topics much nearer to the closer future. More and more optometrists in the UK are becoming registered for therapeutic work as independent prescribers and the number is likely to rise in the near future. These practitioners will be interested in the review paper by Michael Doughty, who is a member of the CLAE editorial panel (soon to be renamed the Jedi Council!), on prescribing drugs as part of the management of chronic meibomian gland dysfunction. Contact lenses play an active role in myopia control and orthokeratology has been used not only to help provide refractive correction but also in the retardation of myopia. In this issue there are three articles related to this topic. Firstly, an excellent paper looking at the link between higher spherical equivalent refractive errors and the association with slower axial elongation. Secondly, a paper that discusses the effectiveness and safety of overnight orthokeratology with high-permeability lens material. Finally, a paper that looks at the stabilisation of early adult-onset myopia. Whilst we are always eager for new and exciting developments in contact lenses and related instrumentation in this issue of CLAE there is a demonstration of a novel and practical use of a smartphone to assisted anterior segment imaging and suggestions of this may be used in telemedicine. It is not hard to imagine someone taking an image remotely and transmitting that back to a central diagnostic centre with the relevant expertise housed in one place where the information can be interpreted and instruction given back to the remote site. Back to ‘Star Wars’ and you will recall in the film ‘The Phantom Menace’ when Qui-Gon Jinn first meets Anakin Skywalker on Tatooine he takes a sample of his blood and sends a scan of it back to Obi-Wan Kenobi to send for analysis and they find that the boy has the highest midichlorian count ever seen. On behalf of the CLAE Editorial board (or Jedi Council) and the BCLA Council (the Senate of the Republic) we wish for you a great 2016 and ‘may the contact lens force be with you’. Or let me put that another way ‘the CLAE Editorial Board and BCLA Council, on behalf of, a great 2016, we wish for you!’

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Bond signed by William Buckley, justice of the peace for Bucks County, Pennsylvania.