Search

Search results

PDF Ebook Virtual Reality For Social Phobia and Agoraphobia Treatment

... typing command. For example, when users want to delete a file, they have to type the delete command and the file name. When GUI is ... 7. Reference Abbreviations Download PDF Ebook Virtual Reality For Social Phobia and Agoraphobia Treatment ...

Story - antoq - 10/23/2010 - 05:45 - 0 comments - 0 attachments


Ebook Financing Frictions and the Substitution Between Internal and External Funds

Submitted by puput on Tue, 10/18/2011 - 08:54

Corporate managers in the US and Europe claim that maintaining "financial flexibility" is the primary objective of their firms' financial policies (see Graham and Harvey (2001) and Banceland Mittoo (2002)). Their stated policies are consistent with the goal of ensuring funding for present and future investment undertakings in a world where financing frictions force fir ms to pas sup profitable opportunities. In spite of those assertions, empirical work on capital structure often ignores much of the interplay between corporate investment and financing decisions.


Posted in :

Ebook Global Financial Safety Nets: Where Do We Go from Here?

Submitted by puput on Fri, 07/01/2011 - 06:22

In the aftermath of the crisis, there seems to be a case for improving the menu of instruments and institutions to protect against global liquidity crunches in a preventive way: multilateral coordination proved that it could respond to the shocks but only belatedly—as a “safety belt” that saves passengers? lives but does not prevent the car crash. Moreover, the recent strengthening of IMF resources and redesigning of instruments, while a move in the right direction, met the demand of only a few countries, and its effectiveness as a protective safety belt remains largely untested. And a new and enhanced menu of facilities offering more complete after-crash protection which the Fund is actively working on—may still face important political obstacles.


Posted in :

Ebook Spider documentation for Tier 2

Submitted by antoq on Sun, 07/12/2009 - 02:18

Spider is an application written at Cornell University for the specific purpose of searching computers for sensitive data (see official website at: http://www.cit.cornell.edu/computer/security/tools/ ). Cornell has created versions for Windows (works under Windows 2000, XP, and Server 2003), Mac OS X and Linux, but this documentation focuses on the Windows version.

Spider searches through the content of all files looking for matches to the regular expressions it is given (see http://en.wikipedia.org wiki/Regular_expressions for more information on regular expressions). This can be a very time, disk and CPU intensive activity (i.e. it might consume your computers resources for several hours), so configuring Spider to be most efficient is important.


Posted in :