02555nam 2200613 a 450 991046251580332120200520144314.01-61300-908-91-61300-090-1(CKB)2670000000187580(EBL)3116758(SSID)ssj0000611599(PQKBManifestationID)11379543(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000611599(PQKBWorkID)10666347(PQKB)11012972(MiAaPQ)EBC3116758(Au-PeEL)EBL3116758(CaPaEBR)ebr10533538(OCoLC)922966860(EXLCZ)99267000000018758020090113d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCorrosion control for buried water mains[electronic resource] pocket field guide /Andrew E. Romer and Bayard Bosserman, IIDenver, Colo. American Water Works Associationc20091 online resource (43 p.)AWWA pocket field guide seriesReviewed by the AWWA Corrosion Committee, including Graham Bell and others.1-58321-725-8 Includes bibliographical references (p. 31).""Copyright""; ""What is Corrosion?""; ""Mechanism of Corrosion""; ""Materials Susceptible to Corrosion""; ""Corrosion of the Exterior of Buried Water Mains""; ""What is a Corrosive Soil?""; ""Other Factorsâ€?Itâ€?s Not Just the Soil""; ""Protecting the Exterior of Buried Water Mains""; ""Good Practices""; ""Corrosion of the Interior of Water Mains""; ""What is Corrosive Water?""; ""Means of Protecting the Interior of Water Mains""; ""References""; ""Glossary of Corrosion Terms""Water-pipesCorrosionPreventionHandbooks, manuals, etcCorrosion and anti-corrosivesHandbooks, manuals, etcUnderground pipelinesProtectionHandbooks, manuals, etcElectronic books.Water-pipesCorrosionPreventionCorrosion and anti-corrosivesUnderground pipelinesProtection628.1/5Romer Andrew E976502Bosserman Bayard E889632Bell Graham E. C976503AWWA Corrosion Committee.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910462515803321Corrosion control for buried water mains2224505UNINA02604nam 2200517 4 450 991086090100332120240703114541.0978383947176010.1515/9783839471760(CKB)32269739600041(DE-B1597)672712(DE-B1597)9783839471760(ScCtBLL)5a3e97f0-8bd9-49cb-be44-f7b1597f6c51(EXLCZ)993226973960004120240703h20242024 fg engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierWebfare A Manifesto for Digital Well-Being /Maurizio Ferraris1st ed.Bielefeld : transcript Verlag, [2024]©20241 online resource (112 p.)Technosophy ;1Frontmatter -- Contents -- Growth or Degrowth? Maurizio Ferraris's Economy of Digital Waste Recycling -- Prologue: Why Webfare? -- Acknowledgments -- 1. From The Tyranny of Merit to The Democracy of Need -- 2. From Analog to Digital -- 3. From Artificial Intelligence to Natural Intelligence -- 4. From Human Capital to Human Heritage -- 5. From Homo Faber to Homo Sapiens -- 6. From Welfare to Webfare -- Epilogue: From Being to Being-Together -- BibliographyFrom time immemorial, humans have been making deals, consuming goods, cultivating interests, thereby manifesting specific forms of life. Now, these forms of life solidify automatically by transforming into data. Webfare, a form of digital welfare, seeks to initiate a Copernican revolution that places need instead of merit at the center of society. In 21st-century welfare, consumption and production will be considered as the two faces of the same reality. The possibility to create new value is precisely what sets Webfare apart from traditional welfare: it recognizes the new value created by the Web, and aims to use it for everyone's well-being.PHILOSOPHY / SocialbisacshArtificial Intelligence.Business Ethics.Digital Media.Digitalization.Economy.Justice.Media Philosophy.Philosophy.Social Philosophy.Web Revolution.PHILOSOPHY / Social.Ferraris Maurizio, authttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut10751DE-B1597DE-B15979910860901003321Webfare4199724UNINA