03379nam a2200433Ii 4500991003257399707536m d cr cn|||||||||070806s2004 maua sf 001 0 eng d97819318363951931836396b13656338-39ule_inst108076:108118Elsevier Science & Technologyhttp://www.sciencedirect.comOPELSOPELSTEFA005.26822Allen, David.373746Windows to Linux migration toolkit[electronic resource] /David Allen ... [et al.] ; Christian Lahti, technical editor.Windows Linux migration toolkitWindows to LinuxRockland, MA :Syngress Pub. ;[Sebastopol, CA] :Distributed by O'Reilly Media in the United States and Canada,c2004.xxxi, 490 p. :ill. ;24 cm. +1 computer optical disc (4 3/4 in.)Includes index.This book will teach people how to migrate systems from Windows to Linux. It provides migration process planning, automated migration scripts, anti-virus / anti-spam solutions, and specific migration and deployment details for all relevant technologies. IT professionals who wish to maximize the value of their Windows to Linux migration services will find this book valuable. The book will help them fine-tune their migration services to make them more efficient, thorough, feature-enhanced, and cost-effective by utilizing migration scripts and best practices gleaned from the author's many years of real-world migrations in large and small companies. * The book and fully functioning scripts on the CD-ROM work for migrations from Windows NT or Windows 2000 to any Linux distribution. * David Allen has done over 25,000 user migrations from Windows to Linux. * Microsoft will stop supporting Windows NT in December 2004 forcing over 2 million enterprise customers to migrate from Windows NT to a new sever operating system. Both IBM and Dell are offering enterprise servers running Linux which will allow customers to realize a 50% reduction in TCO. In 2003 Linux servers represented the largest growth segment in the Server market, and all the major research groups indicate this trend will continue through t least 2007.Electronic reproduction.Amsterdam :Elsevier Science & Technology,2007.Mode of access: World Wide Web.System requirements: Web browser.Title from title screen (viewed on Aug. 2, 2007).Access may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.LinuxHandbooks, manuals, etc.Microsoft Windows (Computer file)Handbooks, manuals, etc.Systems migrationHandbooks, manuals, etc.Operating systems (Computers)Handbooks, manuals, etc.Electronic books.localLahti, Christian.Original19318363969781931836395(OCoLC)57143796Referexhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/book/9781931836395An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information.b1365633824-02-2224-01-08991003257399707536C0TEFWindows to Linux migration toolkit1213161UNISALENTOle02924-01-08mm -engmau0004896nam 2200925 450 991079296720332120170621115446.010.1515/9781785334542(CKB)3710000001386853(MiAaPQ)EBC4677007(DE-B1597)636670(DE-B1597)9781785334542(EXLCZ)99371000000138685320170705h20172017 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierCollaborative intimacies in music and dance anthropologies of sound and movement /edited by Evangelos Chrysagis and Panas KarampampasNew York ;Oxford, [England] :Berghahn Books,2017.©20171 online resource (272 pages) illustrationsDance and Performance Studies1-78533-453-0 1-78533-454-9 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Frontmatter -- Contents -- Illustrations and Table -- Preface -- Introduction: Collaborative Intimacies -- PART I Sound, Meaning and Self-Awareness -- Chapter 1 Being in Sound: Reflections on Recording while Practising Aikido and Shakuhachi -- Chapter 2 Performing and Narrating Selves in and through Classical Music: Being ‘Japanese’ and Being a Professional Musician in London -- PART II Pedagogies of Bodily Movement -- Chapter 3 Kinaesthetic Intimacy in a Choreographic Practice -- Chapter 4 The Presentation of Self in Participatory Dance Settings: Data Collecting with Erving Goffman -- PART III Music Practices and Ethical Selfhood -- Chapter 5 The Animador as Ethical Mediator: Stage Talk and Subject Formation at Peruvian Huayno Music Spectacles -- Chapter 6 A Sense of Togetherness: Music Promotion and Ethics in Glasgow -- PART IV Bodies Dancing in Time and across Space -- Chapter 7 Rumba: Heritage, Tourism and the ‘Authentic’ Afro-Cuban Experience Heritage, Tourism and the ‘Authentic’ Afro-Cuban Experience -- Chapter 8 Cinematic Dance as a Local Critical Commentary on the ‘Economic Crisis’ in Greece Exploring Dance in Korydallos, Attica, Greece -- PART V Motion, Irony and the Making of Lifeworlds -- Chapter 9 Performing Irony on the Dance Floor: in the Athenian Goth Scene The Many Faces of Goth Irony in the Athenian Goth Scene -- Chapter 10 The Intoxicating Intimacy of Drum Strokes, Sung Verses and Dancing Steps in the All-Night Ceremonies of Ambonwari (Papua New Guinea) -- IndexAcross spatial, bodily, and ethical domains, music and dance both emerge from and give rise to intimate collaboration. This theoretically rich collection takes an ethnographic approach to understanding the collective dimension of sound and movement in everyday life, drawing on genres and practices in contexts as diverse as Japanese shakuhachi playing, Peruvian huayno, and the Greek goth scene. Highlighting the sheer physicality of the ethnographic encounter, as well as the forms of sociality that gradually emerge between self and other, each contribution demonstrates how dance and music open up pathways and give shape to life trajectories that are neither predetermined nor teleological, but generative.Dance and performance studies.Music and danceMusicSocial aspectsDanceAnthropological aspectsanthropology.artistic.audience.ballet.bands.case studies.cultural attitudes.cultural studies.culture.dance studies.dance.dancers.drama.education.engaging.ethnographic approach.ethnographic writing.greek goth scene.japanese shakuhachi.live entertainment.movement.music.musical philosophy.musicality.musicians.performance studies.performing arts.peruvian huayno.sociology.sound.theater.theatre.theatrical.world music.Music and dance.MusicSocial aspects.DanceAnthropological aspects.306.4/84Chrysagis EvangelosKarampampas PanasMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910792967203321Collaborative intimacies in music and dance3848464UNINA