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Fixing the carnage on our roadways requires a change in mindset and a dramatic transformation of transportation. This goes for traffic engineers in particular because they are still the ones in charge of our streets. In Killed by a Traffic Engineer, civil engineering professor Wes Marshall shines a spotlight on how little science there is behind the way that our streets are engineered, which leaves safety as an afterthought. While traffic engineers are not trying to cause deliberate harm to anyone, he explains, they are guilty of creating a transportation system whose designs remain largely based on plausible, but unproven, conjecture. Killed by a Traffic Engineer is ultimately hopeful about what is possible once we shift our thinking and demand streets engineered for the safety of people, both outside and inside of cars. It will make you look at your city and streets--and traffic engineers--in a new light and inspire you to take action.
This uproarious book takes you where conventional dining guides dare not go, from the "best restaurant" in an Idaho town to a Chinese eatery on New York's Lower East Side that erupts into food fights. Readers will discover more exotic culinary experiences, too, as travel writers and scientific explorers share their experiences feasting on lorikeets in Indonesia and sauteed termintes in Borneo, not to mention pan-friend piranha and grilled anteater on the banks of the Amazon and champagne and caviar on the Trans-Siberian Railroad. The ultimate in fusion cuisine, this book is a must for every gourmet armchair adventurer.
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"David Storey is a writer who genuinely extends the territory of drama" (Guardian) The Contractor: "A subtle and poetic parable about the nature and joy of skilled work, the meaning of community and the effect of its loss" (Observer); Home: "about the solitude and dislocation of madness and...the decline of Britain itself...part of the play's appeal is that Storey leaves it to us to draw our own conclusions...a play that contains within itself the still, sad music of humanity." (Guardian); Stages: "...an elegy for lost times and places, an obituary that has been free-associated by the corpse-to-be...Storey once said that a play 'lives almost in the measure that it escapes and refuses definition'. He has always been a writer who hints rather than states, let alone hectors." (The Times); Caring, a companion piece to Stages, reflects a reassessment and renegotiation of the conflict between life and art.
Even before the deep learning revolution, the landscape of artificial intelligence (AI) was already changing drastically in the 90s. Embodied intelligence, it was proposed, must play a crucial role in the design of intelligent machines. This new wave was inspired by what is today known as Embodied and Enactive Cognitive Science or E-Cognition, which considers that cognitive activity does not reduce to the intellectual capacities of agents being able to represent their environments. E-cognition set AI and robotics in a new direction, in which intelligent machines are required to interact with the environment, and where this interaction does not reduce to explicit representations or prespecifi...
Roger Mills was born in Connecticut in 1747. He married three times to Mary Webster, Abigail Griswold, and Elizabeth Fitch. He was the father of twelve children. He later moved into New York state. Information on his descendants is included in this volume. Descendants continue to reside in New York, Colorado, Florida, Kansas and elsewhere. Some descendants may be members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.