955 resultados para Solid,Blockchain,Web decentralizzato,BCSolid,Trust Access
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Publication ceased with v. 32, no. 14 ; continued by electronic version, on the World Wide Web : http://www.cch-lis.com/
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Mode of access: Internet.
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[V.1.] Proceedings on Master's sale -- [v.2.] Decree of forclosure and sale -- [v.3.] Ancillary decree of foreclosure and sale.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Issued 1953/54- as its Publication and 1953/54-1956/57 as its International organization and conference series III, 103, 111, 120 and 126; issued 1957/58-1983/84 as its International organization and conference series. [New series, 2,9, etc.; issued 1984/85- as its Publication.
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Shipping list no.: 94-0216-P.
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"The research was conducted by the Propellants Division of Amoco Chemicals Corporation of Seymour, Indiana, under Contract no. AF 33 (657)-11120."
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"September 1990."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Prepared for the use of the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare and the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
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" December 20, 1995"--P. 2.
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"January 1961."
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The Swinfen Charitable Trust (SCT) provided two kinds of telemedical support to Iraq during 2004. Starting in January 2004, the Al-Yarmouk Teaching Hospital in Baghdad was able to refer cases into the well established global e-health network that the SCT has operated for the last five years. (In the first quarter of 2004, the SCT dealt with a total of 57 referrals from 15 hospitals in eight countries.) Two cases were referred from Baghdad in March 2004, both gynaecological, which were dealt with by consultants from the UK and Australia. The SCT administrators visited Basrah during April 2004 and met Iraqi doctors at the Shaibah Hospital as part of the international initiatives to improve health care there. Following this visit, the SCT network expanded to include another four hospitals in Iraq (Table 1). In addition, the SCT provided an electronic health records (EHR) system to support the rebuilding of maternity services, which has been led by the British Royal Colleges. The maternity records system is a Web-based EHR system, running on a secure server, which allows integrated access from antenatal clinics, from hospitals and from postnatal clinics in Iraq. Patients can view their own notes, thus promoting ownership of medical information, and doctors can view the notes of their own patients, from any Internet-connected PC. No special software is required by the user.