Can't stand your job, your boss, or your coworkers? Now, when you need to blow off some steam, you can do just that with this offbeat, quirky journal. Sure to be a great conversation piece and gift for friends and family.
The new edition of this bestselling textbook covers Macroeconomics today, balancing short-run and long-run issues in a way that emphasises the relevance of Keynesian and classical ideas to current practice. Featuring the latest data and extensive coverage of the current financial crisis, it is the ideal textbook for uncertain economic times. Additional Supplementary products are also available: Macroeconomics Study Guide ISBN: 9781429233729 Macroeconomics Instructor's Resource Manual ISBN: 9781429239363 Macroeconomics Instructor's Solution Manual ISBN: 9781429239424 Macroeconomics Computerized Test Bank (CD ROM) ISBN: 9781429239349 Macroeconomics Printed Test Bank ISBN: 9781429239356 Macroeconomics WebCT ISBN: 9781429239370
A young woman born as her father goes missing during the 1947 uprising in Taipei describes his homecoming a decade later and how he unwittingly drew her into the uneasy and dangerous political atmosphere of the times.
A major goal of operating systems is to process jobs while making the best use of system resources. Thus, one way of viewing operating systems is as resource managers. Before job processing, operating systems reserve input and output resources for jobs. During job processing, operating systems manage resources such as processors and storage. After job processing, operating systems free all resources used by the completed jobs, making the resources available to other jobs. This process is called resource management. There is more to the processing of jobs than the managing of resources needed by the jobs. At any instant, a number of jobs can be in various stages of preparation, processing, and post-processing activity. To use resources efficiently, operating systems divide jobs into parts. They distribute the parts of jobs to queues to wait for needed resources. Keeping track of where things are and routing work from queue to queue is called workflow management, and is a major function of any operating system. JES3 considers job priorities, device and processor alternatives, and installation-specified preferences in preparing jobs for processing job output. This IBM® Redbooks® publication describes a JES3 environment that includes the following: - Single-system image - Workload balancing - Availability - Control flexibility - Physical planning flexibility.