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René Corneille Deboeck (1913-1985), son of Guillaume Deboeck and Joanne Nobels, married Marie Louise Girardin (1918-2001), daughter of Jean Girardin and Josephina De Maseneer. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Belgium. Deboeck is also spelled de Boeck and de Bock. Includes De Zutter and related families.
Franz Hilgart, son of Katharina Hilgart, was born in 1811 in Markt Eisentein, Bohemia (Czechoslovakia). He married Katharina Hilgart, daughter of Katharina Hilgart. Katharina was born in 1827. Katharina and two of the children immigrated to America, settling in Wisconsin in 1888-1889. Franz did not immigrate and his death date is unknown. Katharina died in 1899 in Fifield, Price County, Wisconsin. Their descendants have lived in Czechoslavakia, Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, California, and other areas in the United States.
We live in a digital Media Society, in which pictures are becoming more and more important. So, human communication is increasingly becoming a visual communication. That is not a new finding. But the new question is: What does this development mean for the law? Up to now the law is the part of the society which is most sceptical towards images. Law has still resisted the visual temptation. This will not last for ever. The rush of pictures in everyday life and in every part of the society is much too strong - and it is even getting stronger. The invasion of images will change the character of modern law deeply. Modern law will become a Pictorial Law.What are the chances and the risks of Pictorial Law and visual law communication? This is the topic of the book.
Networking is seldom understood, and its potential to advance careers and to open doors to vast opportunities is often underrated. All successful business people, regardless of their background or skill set, have one thing in common: they understand the importance of having a strong network. For the small business owner, networking is a low-cost and highly effective way to grow your business and make sure it thrives, even in a turbulent market. While in the past, networking had been considered a commodity, something nice but superfluous to have in order to become successful-it's now turned into a must have in today's competitive, fast-paced business environment. In Get Connected: Making the Right Connections, learn how to build a strong, functioning network that will empower you and further your career. Find out how to unlock the potential of those around you, and discover why the most valuable skill to have in the twenty-first century's competitive world is the ability to network successfully.
In The Digital, a Continent?, the author argues in favor of a way of thinking about digital technology that draws on the new materialism. She uses photosynthesis and nuclear fission as examples of processes that are as artificial as they are natural to explain how digital technology can be viewed within the paradigm of a "communicative physics" in which poetics interacts with mathematical thinking. The author concludes that we can better understand ourselves and digital technology by developing notions of the multifaceted ways energy, form, and intellect interact in global architectonics. Theoretical consideration of digital technology Visual language and science New volume in the Applied Virtuality Book Series
Monograph questioning What if research, science and architecture were merged? LAVA is an architecture studio founded by Tobias Wallisser, Chris Bosse, and Alexander Rieck with offices in Germany, Vietnam, and Australia. The German Pavilion for Expo 20 is an example of the eloquence with which LAVA responds to issues of the day. The three core themes of the book – Cities of the Future, Biodiversity, as well as Energy and Sustainability – are complemented by the subjects “Connecting Minds,” meaning social and political architecture, “Digital Processes and Technologies,” and “New Work” and explored together throughout the six chapters of this book. In addition to projects and their derivation, architectural and sociological thinkers elaborate on their ideas on these topics – creatively, speculatively, and thoughtfully. Themes: City – Energy – Biodiversity – Connecting – Work – Digital Processes Selected projects as case studies With contributions by Amy Frearson, Georg Vrachliotis, Giovanna Carnevali, Maria Aiolova, Gilles Retsin, André Wilkens, Marjan Colletti, and Raoul Bunschoten