Results 291 to 300 of about 473,538 (324)

Meniscus-climbing insects

Nature, 2005
Water-walking insects and spiders rely on surface tension for static weight support and use a variety of means to propel themselves along the surface. To pass from the water surface to land, they must contend with the slippery slopes of the menisci that border the water's edge.
David L, Hu, John W M, Bush
openaire   +2 more sources

CliMB

Proceedings of the 2016 workshop on Hot topics in Middleboxes and Network Function Virtualization, 2016
Click has significant advantages for middlebox development, including modularity, extensibility, and reprogrammability. Despite these features, Click still has no native TCP support and only uses nonblocking I/O, preventing its applicability to middleboxes that require access to application data and blocking I/O.
Rafael Laufer   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

ON CLIMBING TRIES

Probability in the Engineering and Informational Sciences, 2007
To sample a typical key in a “trie,” an appropriate climbing might consider generating random edges in the same manner as the data are generated. In the absence of the probability generating the keys, an uninformed random choice among the children still provides an alternative.
Christophi, Costas, Mahmoud, Hosam
openaire   +2 more sources

Climbing

2018
This chapter examines the social aspect of the interwar arts. It demonstrates that the genuinely innovative were almost all dependent on personal patronage to support the early stages of their career. The necessity of clientage relationships influenced what was achieved, since the patrons’ interests could not be discounted.
openaire   +2 more sources

Rock Climbing Injuries

Sports Medicine, 1997
Three-quarters of elite and recreational sport climbers will suffer upper extremity injuries. Approximately 60% of these injuries will involve the hand and wrist, the other 40% will be equally divided between the elbow and the shoulder. Most injuries will be tendonopathies secondary to strains, microtrauma or flexor retinacular irritation.
openaire   +2 more sources

Rock Climbing Injuries

Sports Medicine, 1995
Rock climbing has become increasingly popular in the past decade. However, the increased participation exposes a greater number of climbers to potential injury. The risks involved with climbing increase in proportion to the skill-level of the climber: the higher the skill-level, the more hours are required for training and on more difficult routes. The
J C, Haas, M C, Meyers
openaire   +2 more sources

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