The unconscious conscience, Dr.Hani Al-Qadhihumanitiesoman
A talk organized by the humanities and medicine interest group and SCOME in SQU college of medicine, given by Dr.Hani A-lQadhi a very well renowned teacher and mentor in our college.
A glimpse about the speaker:
-A senior consultant trauma surgeon at Sultan Qaboos University Hospital
-Deputy Head of Department of Surgery at College of Medicine and health sciences, SQU
-Program director of General Surgery Training program at the Oman Medical Specialty board
-Certified from the Royal College of Surgeons, Canada. Finished his residency training in general surgery at the University of British Columbia, Canada.
In this very enlightening presentation he speaks about how politics can influence ethical practice and how doctors should be humans and not political propaganda tools.
Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani is an Indian business magnate and the chairman and managing director of Reliance Industries Limited, India's most valuable company by market value. He was born in 1957 and received a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering. As the chairman of Reliance Industries, he has established it as one of the largest conglomerates in India and one of the world's largest private sector companies. He is currently ranked among the richest people in the world.
Over 10 years’ experience driving strategic business growth for leading multinational manufacturing corporations and audit firms. Highly competitive, passionate, persuasive , articulate, able to achieve value adding results alone or as team member, adapt to change management and ability to work under pressure. Experienced in general accounting, auditing, standard costing and reporting.
The document discusses the use of the present simple tense in English. It provides examples for using the present simple tense to talk about opinions and feelings, facts and truths, and habits and routines. Specifically, it gives example sentences using the present simple tense with different subjects (I, you, we, they) and questions. It also provides adverbs of frequency to describe how often something occurs when discussing habits and routines.
GPS devices use satellites to pinpoint a user's location by syncing the device's chip with the atomic clocks on the satellites. GPS has been used since the 1960s when the US Navy tested the first satellite constellation, and it has since become integrated into many technologies from portable GPS units to apps that allow users to geotag social media posts. Programmers can access GPS data through APIs to build location-aware applications.
The unconscious conscience, Dr.Hani Al-Qadhihumanitiesoman
A talk organized by the humanities and medicine interest group and SCOME in SQU college of medicine, given by Dr.Hani A-lQadhi a very well renowned teacher and mentor in our college.
A glimpse about the speaker:
-A senior consultant trauma surgeon at Sultan Qaboos University Hospital
-Deputy Head of Department of Surgery at College of Medicine and health sciences, SQU
-Program director of General Surgery Training program at the Oman Medical Specialty board
-Certified from the Royal College of Surgeons, Canada. Finished his residency training in general surgery at the University of British Columbia, Canada.
In this very enlightening presentation he speaks about how politics can influence ethical practice and how doctors should be humans and not political propaganda tools.
Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani is an Indian business magnate and the chairman and managing director of Reliance Industries Limited, India's most valuable company by market value. He was born in 1957 and received a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering. As the chairman of Reliance Industries, he has established it as one of the largest conglomerates in India and one of the world's largest private sector companies. He is currently ranked among the richest people in the world.
Over 10 years’ experience driving strategic business growth for leading multinational manufacturing corporations and audit firms. Highly competitive, passionate, persuasive , articulate, able to achieve value adding results alone or as team member, adapt to change management and ability to work under pressure. Experienced in general accounting, auditing, standard costing and reporting.
The document discusses the use of the present simple tense in English. It provides examples for using the present simple tense to talk about opinions and feelings, facts and truths, and habits and routines. Specifically, it gives example sentences using the present simple tense with different subjects (I, you, we, they) and questions. It also provides adverbs of frequency to describe how often something occurs when discussing habits and routines.
GPS devices use satellites to pinpoint a user's location by syncing the device's chip with the atomic clocks on the satellites. GPS has been used since the 1960s when the US Navy tested the first satellite constellation, and it has since become integrated into many technologies from portable GPS units to apps that allow users to geotag social media posts. Programmers can access GPS data through APIs to build location-aware applications.
This document discusses factors that influence teachers' use of information and communication technology (ICT) in the classroom. It identifies both non-manipulative factors, such as teachers' characteristics and experience, as well as manipulative factors under the control of schools, such as the availability of ICT support and training. The document concludes that successful ICT integration depends on understanding how these interrelated factors can either facilitate or impede teachers' adoption of new technologies for instruction.
The document discusses the simple past tense and how it is used to describe actions that are completed or finished in the past. It notes several time markers that are used with the simple past tense, such as "yesterday", "last week", and "in 1984". It then provides examples of using the simple past tense with regular verbs like "play", "watch", and "open", and irregular verbs like "go", "eat", and "see". It also discusses forming questions and negative statements with the simple past tense.
The enterprise architecture group responded to business pressures by proposing a new technology-enabled business platform. However, initial plans focused too much on technology and lacked business alignment. This led to confusion and rising costs. The greatest IT problem was determined to be managing people's expectations. A new strategic approach was developed that focused on the business problem of enabling innovation. This included crafting a mission, vision, and goals and performing a gap analysis to better understand requirements.
The document provides an overview of the Android operating system. It discusses that Android is an open source software platform based on the Linux kernel and allows developers to write managed code using Java. It is developed by Google and other companies part of the Open Handset Alliance. The document then describes Android's history and architecture, including its use of the Linux kernel, Binder for inter-process communication, Dalvik virtual machine, core libraries, and application framework. It also covers the application lifecycle and how the Android system starts up.
This document appears to be about an individual named Jorge Zalszupin from Curitiba. However, it provides very little contextual information, containing only a name, location and date. No other details are given about the topic or purpose of the document.
This document provides an overview of how to use the present perfect tense in English. It discusses using the present perfect to describe actions that began in the past and continue to the present, talk about general past experiences without specifying times, and describe past actions with present consequences. Examples are given for the positive, negative, and interrogative forms. The present perfect continuous tense is also introduced with examples. Discussion questions are included to practice using the tenses.
The document describes the Scale-invariant feature transform (SIFT) algorithm. It outlines the key steps: 1) constructing scale space by generating blurred images at different scales, 2) calculating difference of Gaussian images to find keypoints, 3) assigning orientations to keypoints, and 4) generating 128-element feature vectors for each keypoint to uniquely describe local image features in a way that is invariant to scale, rotation, and illumination changes. The SIFT algorithm allows for reliable object recognition and image stitching.
The earliest language learning programs followed a linear approach with standardized tasks adapted from textbooks. Later programs incorporated simulations allowing learners to explore multiple paths and see consequences of different actions. Multimedia programs are capable of creating realistic learning situations through images, audio, and video that present real world contexts with greater interactivity. Research led to developments like videodiscs that provided rapid access to video/images and CD-ROMs with less capacity than videodiscs but in a smaller format. Examples of early programs included one using a commercial video adapted for Spanish learning with branching choices, and programs using hypertext capabilities to create customized CALL applications.
This document discusses factors that influence teachers' use of information and communication technology (ICT) in the classroom. It identifies both non-manipulative factors, such as teachers' characteristics and experience, as well as manipulative factors under the control of schools, such as the availability of ICT support and training. The document concludes that successful ICT integration depends on understanding how these interrelated factors can either facilitate or impede teachers' adoption of new technologies for instruction.
The document discusses the simple past tense and how it is used to describe actions that are completed or finished in the past. It notes several time markers that are used with the simple past tense, such as "yesterday", "last week", and "in 1984". It then provides examples of using the simple past tense with regular verbs like "play", "watch", and "open", and irregular verbs like "go", "eat", and "see". It also discusses forming questions and negative statements with the simple past tense.
The enterprise architecture group responded to business pressures by proposing a new technology-enabled business platform. However, initial plans focused too much on technology and lacked business alignment. This led to confusion and rising costs. The greatest IT problem was determined to be managing people's expectations. A new strategic approach was developed that focused on the business problem of enabling innovation. This included crafting a mission, vision, and goals and performing a gap analysis to better understand requirements.
The document provides an overview of the Android operating system. It discusses that Android is an open source software platform based on the Linux kernel and allows developers to write managed code using Java. It is developed by Google and other companies part of the Open Handset Alliance. The document then describes Android's history and architecture, including its use of the Linux kernel, Binder for inter-process communication, Dalvik virtual machine, core libraries, and application framework. It also covers the application lifecycle and how the Android system starts up.
This document appears to be about an individual named Jorge Zalszupin from Curitiba. However, it provides very little contextual information, containing only a name, location and date. No other details are given about the topic or purpose of the document.
This document provides an overview of how to use the present perfect tense in English. It discusses using the present perfect to describe actions that began in the past and continue to the present, talk about general past experiences without specifying times, and describe past actions with present consequences. Examples are given for the positive, negative, and interrogative forms. The present perfect continuous tense is also introduced with examples. Discussion questions are included to practice using the tenses.
The document describes the Scale-invariant feature transform (SIFT) algorithm. It outlines the key steps: 1) constructing scale space by generating blurred images at different scales, 2) calculating difference of Gaussian images to find keypoints, 3) assigning orientations to keypoints, and 4) generating 128-element feature vectors for each keypoint to uniquely describe local image features in a way that is invariant to scale, rotation, and illumination changes. The SIFT algorithm allows for reliable object recognition and image stitching.
The earliest language learning programs followed a linear approach with standardized tasks adapted from textbooks. Later programs incorporated simulations allowing learners to explore multiple paths and see consequences of different actions. Multimedia programs are capable of creating realistic learning situations through images, audio, and video that present real world contexts with greater interactivity. Research led to developments like videodiscs that provided rapid access to video/images and CD-ROMs with less capacity than videodiscs but in a smaller format. Examples of early programs included one using a commercial video adapted for Spanish learning with branching choices, and programs using hypertext capabilities to create customized CALL applications.