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There’s no merge without a conflict. Once again, meet Leo Larsson—a software developer and a mental breakdown survivor. When Leo traded the UK for Swedish serenity, it seemed like the perfect reboot. But the dream is rapidly heading for an abrupt shutdown. After the company announces a surprise merger, the existence of Leo's underperforming team is thrown into jeopardy as the threat of office closure looms like an unchecked exception. With the team's fate hanging by a thread, Leo faces the horrifying possibility of another breakdown, personal bankruptcy, and the end to the weekly visits to the technophobic therapist, Ulrik. Leo must save the office, no matter the cost. The solution seems simple: Game the performance metrics, bedazzle the new CEO with flash-fashion programming, and do the impossible: a Great Merge. But there's a catch. Leo's grip on reality is slipping, and the seemingly brilliant ideas could easily backfire.
Collecting all the results on the particular types of inequalities, the coverage of this book is unique among textbooks in the literature. The book focuses on the historical development of the Carlson inequalities and their many generalizations and variations. As well as almost all known results concerning these inequalities and all known proof techniques, a number of open questions suitable for further research are considered. Two chapters are devoted to clarifying the close connection between interpolation theory and this type of inequality. Other applications are also included, in addition to a historical note on Fritz Carlson himself.
It's the hottest summer the UK has ever seen, and a lazy sub-par developer is suffering from an existential crisis. Leo has been told that all developers must help with customer support, barring architects. But Leo has a plan. Impress with a quick fix to a big problem, and consequently be promoted to God of Code, an architect. What Leo didn't plan on was making the code public and becoming an overnight sensation. What could possibly go wrong? Will Leo make it, or break it?
This book contains the proceedings of the special session in honor of Leonard Gross held at the annual Joint Mathematics Meetings in New Orleans (LA). The speakers were specialists in a variety of fields, and many were Professor Gross's former Ph.D. students and their descendants. Papers in this volume present results from several areas of mathematics. They illustrate applications of powerful ideas that originated in Gross's work and permeate diverse fields. Topics include stochastic partial differential equations, white noise analysis, Brownian motion, Segal-Bargmann analysis, heat kernels, and some applications. The volume should be useful to graduate students and researchers. It provides perspective on current activity and on central ideas and techniques in the topics covered.
a piece of work that is filled with anticipation, hope, poetic inspirations, and world peace interpretations. it is an excellent book for all to read, ponder, and rethink of love, happiness, and inner peace importance.