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found 32 articles for 0.303 sec
New job listing at http://jobs.phds.org Title: Postdoctoral position in Machine Learning Department: Sketch Recognition Lab Employer: Texas A & M University Location: College Station, TX, United States Posted: Mar 20 We are searching for a postdoc in machine learning to help develop sketch recognition algorithms that can recognize freehand sketches. The postdoc should be fluent in (among     

Group: sci.research.postdoc · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in sci.research.postdoc
Author: PhDs.org
Date: Mar 20, 2008 03:00

In article <fmr2fp$ojf$1@fred.mathworks.com>, John Dickson <j_dickson@hotmail.co.uk> wrote: Nothing as complicated as that! I have a 3D MRI dataset to which I want to fit: q(1)+q(2)*x+q(3)*y+q(4)*z + cross and quadratic terms Where q's are parameters to be found and x, y, and z are the coordinates of the MRI voxels. You mention cross and quadratic terms. How many unknowns are there
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"William Elliot" <marsh@hevanet.remove.com> wrote in message news:Pine.BSI.4.58.0711270316200.14600@vista.hevanet.com... > On Tue, 27 Nov 2007, Richard wrote: > >> Im starting again from the top, from the original equation. >> >> The original equation is: >> >> (1) a + (b * c) = d + (e * (f - g)) >> >> b and e are real numbers. In fact usually a fraction. a, c, d, f, and g >> represent     

Group: comp.softsys.matlab · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in comp.softsys.matlab
Author: Walter Roberson
Date: Jan 18, 2008 13:12

On Tue, 27 Nov 2007, Richard wrote: Im starting again from the top, from the original equation. The original equation is: (1) a + (b * c) = d + (e * (f - g)) b and e are real numbers. In fact usually a fraction. a, c, d, f, and g represent a pair of ordered coordinates, so there is an x and a y coordinate associated with these terms. The equation is solved when we find
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On Thu, 25 Oct 2007, NamelessHacker wrote: > Can someone please explain how to factor this equation: > > 6x^2 - 13x + 6 > That is not an equation. Equations have an equal sign in them. That is not a quadrilateral. Quadrilaterals are four sided polygons. Do you know what a polygon is? An equation like 5x^2 - 13x + 6 = 0 is call a quadradic equation while the expression 5x^2 - 13x     

Group: alt.math · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in alt.math
Author: Richard
Date: Nov 27, 2007 05:36

I have a sample SAS program to calculate the distance and bearing between to points. There are two completely different distance formulas (Law of Cosines and Haversine); also, I included several definitions for the Earth Radius constant. I derived this after reading a whole lot of web sites, little of which I truly understand. My "production" code distills all of this into a single formula
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> From: "Gattman" <g...@damnnearwiley00.com> > News flash: Fire burns things up. Not entirely true. Some things burn: - Some hydrocarbons such as gasoline directly vaporize then burn. - Other hydrocarbons such as cellulose decompose into volatile hydrocarbons and carbon residue, then the volatile hydrocarbons vaporize and burn as above, while the carbon burns in situ, except for     

Group: alt.math · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in alt.math
Author: William Elliot
Date: Nov 27, 2007 03:43

> From: "Gattman" <g...@damnnearwiley00.com> News flash: Fire burns things up. Not entirely true. Some things burn: - Some hydrocarbons such as gasoline directly vaporize then burn. - Other hydrocarbons such as cellulose decompose into volatile hydrocarbons and carbon residue, then the volatile hydrocarbons vaporize and burn as above, while the carbon burns in situ, except for
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On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 04:30:42 -0700, "Peter@quadrad.eu" <Peter@quadrad.eu> wrote: >On Jul 7, 12:50 am, #davidb1...@sbcglobal.net (DavidB) wrote: >> I am searching for a natural gas 14+ KW generator on wheels for >> back-up power to my house. Does anyone know where I can find one or if >> one is even available? > >mmmm. 14 kW is a bit too much for me? I am thinking though about a >stationary     

Group: alt.math · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in alt.math
Author: William Elliot
Date: Oct 24, 2007 20:06

It is intuitively obvious to me that the same Latex glove fits both the right and the left. That is, from my perspective, Powelson has all the credentials to be the prophetic Beast, and from Powelson's perspective, I fit all the requirements to be the Beast. Powelson is amidst a vast wasteland of darkness smoldering in black ash, like the aftermath of a forest fire that burned down ten
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Group: comp.softsys.sas · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in comp.softsys.sas
Author: "Duell, Bob"
Date: Oct 18, 2007 12:31

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Group: sci.skeptic · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in sci.skeptic
Author: Robert Maas, see http://tinyurl.com/uh3t
Date: Aug 25, 2007 12:10

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Group: alt.conspiracy · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in alt.conspiracy
Author: Robert Maas, see http://tinyurl.com/uh3t
Date: Aug 25, 2007 12:10

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Group: alt.energy.homepower · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in alt.energy.homepower
Author: Neon John
Date: Jul 10, 2007 12:58

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Group: soc.religion.quaker · Group Profile · Search for Quadrad in soc.religion.quaker
Author: Jon G.
Date: Jun 6, 2007 09:02

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