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Telecommunications is a major global industry, and this unique book chronicles the development of this complex technology from the electric telegraph to the Internet in a simple, accessible, and entertaining way. The book opens with the early years of the electric telegraph. The reader will learn how the Morse telegraph evolved into an international network that spanned the globe, starting with the development of international undersea cables, and the heroic attempts to lay a trans-Atlantic cable. The book describes the events that led to the invention of the telephone, and the subsequent disputes over who had really invented it. It takes a look at some of the most important applications that have appeared on the Internet, the mobile revolution, and ends with a discussion of future key developments in the telecommunications industry.
Analogue Switch-off : A signal change in television, second report of session 2005-06, Vol. 2: Oral and written Evidence
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The Baby Whisperer gives new parents everything they need to tackle the challenges of sleep, eating habits, tantrums, growth issues, and more! The Baby Whisperer Solves All Your Problems is an in-depth look at the most challenging issues faced by parents of babies and young children today. The book goes beyond the basics introduced in her first two books, becoming a compendium of specific and targeted parenting strategies. Each chapter tackles a different topic, from teaching babies to sleep, feeding techniques, potty training, and much more. Hogg will also discuss her two new Baby Whispering concepts, which are being patient and conscious and learning to detect “prime times”—windows o...
This book examines therapeutic failures in psychotherapy. Despite the consistent positive outcome findings and psychotherapists’ best intentions in their efforts to help their clients, psychotherapy simply does not work in all cases. In fact, 5-10% of adult clients deteriorate during psychotherapy. Although not exclusively due to treatment failures per se, almost a fifth of clients terminate their therapy prematurely and findings suggest that that between 20 and 30% of clients do not return after the first session with half terminating after just two sessions. Therapeutic failures could include a range of negative therapy outcomes, such as harm, deterioration, client non-response, prematur...
This book is about the turbulent trek of one woman, as a toddler, teen and a tormented adult, who wrote her blueprint and lived her life in order to ultimately, learn her lessons-but did she? Having been brought up in a strict Catholic environment where physical affection was not shown, Lee looked for love in all the wrong places. At sixteen and a virgin, her boyfriend's brother raped her. Was this the reason she went on to having three marriages, two of which could be described as disastrous, and four children by four different fathers? At twenty years of age she fell in love with a married man, and longed for him for almost half her lifetime. Lee blames no one but herself for the traumas that transpired over her lifetime and thanks God for her life today.
Life at Ryder Ranch has returned to normal until the day three men enter the Stonewall Mercantile while Hannah and Maria are shopping for fabric with Ester. One of the men, called Knox, grabs Maria’s arm and won’t let go. Hannah reacts, slugging Knox in the face and busting his nose. Then she grabs a stove shovel and knocks him out. The other men back away, but as they drag their friend out of the store, they threaten Hannah, Maria, and Ester. This is how things begin, but it isn’t the end. Hannah’s life is now in danger, and she finds herself the target of men with murderous egos who will stop at nothing to see her humiliated and even killed.
In the fall of 1831, Mrs McIndoe and her children left Scotland to join her husband, William, a labourer on the Rideau Canal. When they arrived they discovered that William had already moved on, forcing Mrs McIndoe to appeal to the public to help reunite her family. As Elizabeth Jane Errington illustrates, the nineteenth-century world of emigration was hazardous. Emigrant Worlds and Transatlantic Communities gives voice to the Irish, Scottish, English, and Welsh women and men who negotiated the complex and often dangerous world of emigration between 1815 and 1845. Using "information wanted" notices that appeared in colonial newspapers as well as emigrants' own accounts, Errington illustrates...