HP ATP Server Solutions Official Certification Study Guide (Exam HP0-S40)

HP ATP Server Solutions Official Certification Study Guide (Exam HP0-S40)

Author: Renata Golden

Publisher: Epac Technologies

Published: 2014-12-09

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781942741237

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The certification exam for HP ATP - Server Solutions has been updated. Candidates can use this guide to study for the new exam: Building HP Server Solutions (HP0-S41) when preparing for the HP ATPServer Solutions V2 certification. The guide also supports the HP2-T29 exam for students upgrading from the HP ATP Server Solutions V1 certification to V2. It provides a technical introduction to HP's server portfolio, including Rack and Tower, Enterprise (BladeSystem), Moonshot and Density Optimized server solutions. Once you have achieved certification, this guide will serve as a useful reference tool to recommend an HP server solution and perform basic installation and support tasks on HP server products.


Dictionary of Acronyms and Technical Abbreviations

Dictionary of Acronyms and Technical Abbreviations

Author: Jakob Vlietstra

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 703

ISBN-13: 1447102630

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This Dictionary covers information and communication technology (ICT), including hardware and software; information networks, including the Internet and the World Wide Web; automatic control; and ICT-related computer-aided fields. The Dictionary also lists abbreviated names of relevant organizations, conferences, symposia and workshops. This reference is important for all practitioners and users in the areas mentioned above, and those who consult or write technical material. This Second Edition contains 10,000 new entries, for a total of 33,000.


Cell Neurobiology Techniques

Cell Neurobiology Techniques

Author: Alan A. Boulton

Publisher: Neuromethods

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 416

ISBN-13:

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The cutting-edge techniques detailed here include those that are particularly popular in multidisciplinary neuroscience research. There are readily reproducible methods for establishing neural cell cultures, measuring enzymes and their inhibitors, and using quantitative autoradiography to study monoamine uptake sites and receptors in the brain. Additional methods cover the use of flow cytometry to study developmental neurobiology, applications of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) to human brain metabolism, and the study of drug metabolism. Together with its companion volumes, In Vivo Neuromethods and In Vitro Neurochemical Techniques, all three cutting-edge works will prove exceptionally useful to those basic and clinical neuroscientists who want to expand the range of their current research or develop competence in complementary methods.


Regulation of Alternative Splicing

Regulation of Alternative Splicing

Author: Philippe Jeanteur

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2002-10-21

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 9783540438335

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The discovery in 1977 that genes are split into exons and introns has done away with the one gene - one protein dogma. Indeed, the removal of introns from the primary RNA transcript is not necessarily straightforward since there may be optional pathways leading to different messenger RNAs and consequently to different proteins. Examples of such an alternative splicing mechanism cover all fields of biology. Moreover, there are plenty of occurrences where deviant splicing can have pathological effects. Despite the high number of specific cases of alternative splicing, it was not until recently that the generality and extent of this phenomenon was fully appreciated. A superficial reading of the preliminary sequence of the human genome published in 2001 led to the surprising, and even deceiving to many scientists, low number of genes (around 32,000) which contrasted with the much higher figure around 150,000 which was previously envisioned. Attempts to make a global assessment of the use of alternative splicing are recent and rely essentially on the comparison of genomic mRNA and EST sequences as reviewed by Thanaraj and Stamm in the first chapter of this volume. Most recent estimates suggest that 40-60% of human genes might be alternatively spliced, as opposed to about 22% for C. elegans.