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Shannon marie woodward

advertisement. Overview. Date of Birth: 17 December 1984, Phoenix, Arizona, USA more. Contact: View agent and manager contact info on IMDbPro. STARmeter:


Shannon marie woodward Thu, 07 May 2009 07:46:00 GMT,
Shannon woodward fan

Emergency Room Role: Kelly Taggart Network: NBC Info: imdb:: official. The Shortcut Role: Lisa Release: 2009 Info: imdb:: official . The Haunting of Molly Hartley


Shannon woodward fan Wed, 29 Apr 2009 04:21:00 GMT,
Shannon woodward: christian writer, teacher and speaker

Shannon Woodward: Christian author and speaker. Shannon's strength as a communicator is her ability to see God moving in the midst of ordinary circumstances.


Shannon woodward: christian writer, teacher and speaker Mon, 04 May 2009 22:45:00 GMT,
Shannon marie woodward - wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shannon Marie Woodward (born December 17, 1984) is an American actress. She played the role of Di Di Malloy on the recently canceled The Riches, and her past credits include Man of ...


Shannon marie woodward - wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Sun, 03 May 2009 05:42:00 GMT,
Shannon woodward - photos, bio and news for shannon woodward

Shannon Woodward Photos, Bio, News and Shannon Woodward Message Board on TVGuide.com


Shannon woodward - photos, bio and news for shannon woodward Mon, 04 May 2009 10:28:00 GMT,
Shannon woodward - pictures, rumors shannon woodward from the riches ...

Free Shannon Woodward photos, pictures, bio, wallpaper, interview. Shannon Woodward uncensored gossip, quotes. #1 site on Shannon Woodward from The Riches updated.


Shannon woodward - pictures, rumors shannon woodward from the riches ... Wed, 06 May 2009 11:30:00 GMT,
Shannon woodward - seattle, wa | facebook

Sign up for Facebook to connect with Shannon Woodward.


Shannon woodward - seattle, wa | facebook Thu, 07 May 2009 15:25:00 GMT,
Amazon.com: inconceivable: shannon woodward: books

Amazon.com: Inconceivable: Shannon Woodward: Books ... Buy this book and get an extra 50% off your next parenting and family magazine purchase--that's half off our already low ...


Amazon.com: inconceivable: shannon woodward: books Mon, 27 Apr 2009 00:20:00 GMT,
Shannon marie woodward - askmen.com

Shannon Marie Woodward Women Celebrities Profile – Biography, Latest Photos, Pics, News, Gossip, Comments, Success and Sexiness Rating! Check out Shannon Marie Woodward on AskMen ...


Shannon marie woodward - askmen.com Sun, 03 May 2009 20:44:00 GMT,
Shannon woodward

This site requires a frames capable browser. If you don't have a frames capable browser, you may be able to


Shannon woodward Thu, 16 Apr 2009 00:05:00 GMT,
Watergate "deep throat" mark felt dead at 95

Hugh Pickens writes "W. Mark Felt Sr., 95, associate director of the FBI during the Watergate scandal, better known as 'Deep Throat,' the most famous anonymous source in American history, died at his home in Santa Rosa, California. Felt secretly guided Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein to pursue the story of the 1972 break-in of the Democratic National Committee's headquarters at the Watergate office buildings, and later of the Nixon administration's campaign of spying and sabotage against its perceived political enemies. 'It's impossible to exaggerate how high the stakes were in Watergate,' wrote Felt in his 2006 book A G-Man's Life. 'We faced no simple burglary, but an assault on government institutions, an attack on the FBI's integrity, and unrelenting pressure to unravel one of the greatest political scandals in our nation's history.' No one knows exactly what prompted Felt to leak the information from the Watergate probe to the press. He was passed over for the post of FBI director after Hoover's death in 1972, a crushing career disappointment. 'People will debate for a long time whether I did the right thing by helping Woodward. The bottom line is that we did get the whole truth out, and isn't that what the FBI is supposed to do?'"


Watergate "deep throat" mark felt dead at 95 ,
New iphone apps help drivers beat speed traps

Ponca City, We love you writes "Two mobile applications, NMobile and Trapster, are providing drivers with up-to-date maps of speed-enforcement zones with live police traps, speed cameras or red-light cameras. Each application pulls up a map pinpointing the locations of speed traps within driving distance and an audio alert will sound as vehicles approach an area tagged as harboring a speed trap. Both applications rely on the wisdom of the crowds for their data with users reporting camera-rigged stop lights and areas heavily populated with radar-toting police officers via the iPhone or their web-based application, creating the ultimate speed trap repository available to you when you need it most — while you're driving. To thwart false alarms and eliminate inaccuracies, Trapster enlists its community of nearly 200,000 members to rank speed traps on their accuracy. NMobile founder Shannon Atkinson declined to provide detailed data, though he did estimate that 'well over 1,000' users had downloaded the application since it became available last week. The company insists they've received only positive feedback from law enforcement officials and police officers regarding their products. 'If the application gets people to slow down, I think it's generally considered to be a good thing,' said Atkinson."


New iphone apps help drivers beat speed traps ,
Researchers calculate capacity of a steganographic channel

KentuckyFC writes "Steganography is the art of hiding a message in such a way that only the sender and receiver realize it is there. (By contrast, cryptography disguises the content of a message but makes no attempt to hide it.) The central problem for steganographers is how much data can be hidden without being detected. But the complexity of this problem has meant it has been largely ignored. Now two computer scientists (one working for Google) have made a major theoretical breakthrough by tackling the problem in the same way that the electrical engineer Claude Shannon calculated the capacity of an ordinary communications channel in the 1940s. In Shannon's theory, a transmission is considered successful if the decoder properly determines which message the encoder has sent. In the stego-channel, a transmission is successful if the decoder properly determines the sent message without anybody else detecting its presence (abstract). Studying a stego-channel in this way leads to some counter-intuitive results: for example, in certain circumstances, doubling the number of algorithms looking for hidden data can increase the capacity of the steganographic channel"


Researchers calculate capacity of a steganographic channel ,
Advanced surveillance tech for unmanned drones credited in iraq

mathoda writes "Investigative reporter Bob Woodward states that America has developed secret capabilities 'to locate, target and kill key individuals in groups such as al-Qaeda in Iraq, the Sunni insurgency and renegade Shia militias, or so-called special groups. The operations incorporated some of the most highly classified techniques and information in the US government.' The LA Times now reports, 'As part of an escalating offensive against extremist targets in Pakistan, the United States is deploying Predator aircraft equipped with sophisticated new surveillance systems that were instrumental in crippling the insurgency in Iraq, according to US military and intelligence officials.' Part of the capabilities appear to be that the unmanned flying drones can track targets even inside of buildings." Update by J : Bruce Schneier's readers have some thoughts.


Advanced surveillance tech for unmanned drones credited in iraq ,
Theorists make quantum communications breakthrough

KentuckyFC writes "One of the cornerstones of modern physics is Claude Shannon's theory of communication, which he published in 1948. If you've ever made a phone call, watched TV, or used a computer, you've got Shannon to thank for describing how information can be moved from one place in the universe to another using an idea called the channel capacity. But nobody has been able to develop a quantum version of this theory. So physicists have no idea how much quantum information can be sent from one point to another. Now two American physicists have made an important breakthrough by proving that two quantum channels with zero capacity can carry information when used together. That's interesting because it indicates that physicists may have been barking up the wrong tree with this problem: it implies that the quantum capacity of a channel does not uniquely specify its ability for transmitting quantum information (abstract). And that could be the idea that breaks the logjam in this area."


Theorists make quantum communications breakthrough ,
Grid computing saves cancer researchers decades

Stony Stevenson writes "Canadian researchers have promised to squeeze "decades" of cancer research into just two years by harnessing the power of a global PC grid. The scientists are the first from Canada to use IBM's World Community Grid network of PCs and laptops with the power equivalent to one of the globe's top five fastest supercomputers. The team will use the grid to analyze the results of experiments on proteins using data collected by scientists at the Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute in Buffalo, New York. The researchers estimate that this analysis would take conventional computer systems 162 years to complete."


Grid computing saves cancer researchers decades ,
Gouge found on shuttle endeavour's underside

SonicSpike writes " NASA has discovered a chunk missing from the underside of the space shuttle Endeavour. It was discovered after the shuttle docked with the ISS earlier today. Technicians theorize it may have been caused by ice ripping free of a fuel take during takeoff. From the article:'The gouge — about 3 inches square — was spotted in zoom-in photography taken by the space station crew shortly before Endeavour delivered teacher-astronaut Barbara Morgan and her six crewmates to the orbiting outpost ... On Sunday, the astronauts will inspect the area, using Endeavour's 100-foot robot arm and extension beam. Lasers on the end of the beam will gauge the exact size and depth of the gouge, Shannon said, and then engineering analyses will determine whether the damage is severe enough to warrant repairs. Radar images show a white spray or streak coming off Endeavour 58 seconds after liftoff. Engineers theorize that if the debris was ice, it pierced the tile and then broke up, scraping the area downwind. Pictures from Friday's photo inspection show downwind scrapes."


Gouge found on shuttle endeavour's underside ,
Text compressor 1% away from ai threshold

Baldrson writes "Alexander Ratushnyak compressed the first 100,000,000 bytes of Wikipedia to a record-small 16,481,655 bytes (including decompression program), thereby not only winning the second payout of The Hutter Prize for Compression of Human Knowledge, but also bringing text compression within 1% of the threshold for artificial intelligence. Achieving 1.319 bits per character, this makes the next winner of the Hutter Prize likely to reach the threshold of human performance (between 0.6 and 1.3 bits per character) estimated by the founder of information theory, Claude Shannon and confirmed by Cover and King in 1978 using text prediction gambling. When the Hutter Prize started, less than a year ago, the best performance was 1.466 bits per character. Alexander Ratushnyak's open-sourced GPL program is called paq8hp12 [rar file]."


Text compressor 1% away from ai threshold ,
Female astronaut sets space record

Raver32 writes to tell us that U.S. astronaut Sunita 'Suni' Williams has set a record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman. Breaking the previous record of 188 days set by astronaut Shannon Lucid in '96, Williams has lived aboard the space station since last December. "'It's just that I'm in the right place at the right time,' Williams, 41, said when Mission Control in Houston congratulated her on the record. 'Even when the station has little problems, it's just a beautiful, wonderful place to live.'"


Female astronaut sets space record ,
Behind the game with the god of war ii team

N'Gai Croal's LevelUp column continues to impress, with a new feature called 'Team Assault'. Instead of the usual interview about a game with one featured speaker, Croal has gone after the people that pieced the game together: the development team. The first targets for this approach are the makers of God of War II. So far he has conversations up with Executive Producer Shannon Studstill, Lead Programmer Tim Moss, and Game Director Cory Barlog. From the first interview with Barlog: "Making these games is freaking hard work, and it can drain every ounce of life you have in you to make the 2-3 year haul, but it is worth it. It sounds weird to me to say this, but right now I am doing exactly what I want to be doing. How many people can say that? Until I started working on the original God of War, I absolutely couldn't say that. I was actually thinking about getting out of games at the time. Not sure what I was going to do, maybe become an archaeologist or something like that. But then I would more than likely be slapped in the face by the cold hard reality that I wouldn't get to carry a gun, or a whip, or fight bad guys that wear eye patches and expensive suits. So I would probably just end up coming back to games or making movies."


Behind the game with the god of war ii team ,
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