solution thoroughly for 15 mins. Next‚ the magnetic stirrer was turned off and the solution was put to rest‚ where most solid contents were at the bottle of the beaker; temperature of the solution was then measured using a digital thermometer. A piece of filter paper was folded
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In order to create a hypothetical utopian society‚ Aldous Huxley projects the future progression of technology and bases the direction of his novel Brave New World on those predictions. He shows how social standards and beliefs can be changed‚ and how a few upgrades over a few decades can cause society to be nearly unrecognizable‚ vastly dissimilar‚ and frankly quite strange from an outside perspective. Huxley predicts that technological advances can lead to views on birth‚ sex‚ and relationships
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My story starts with a grapple and a frantic air. That is how most of us were taken. Grabbed from our homes and lined up to be taken to concentration camps. Most of us were taken without a glance‚ but as the SS officers came in the door‚ one of them turned to stare at me eyes. I did not resist. The train ride to the camps was long and quite eventful‚ it took weeks. The very first day‚ a young man discovered an unlocked roof hatch. He decided he was going to jump off‚ an idea most people met with
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Chapman et.al (2009) studied the local impact of hoisted point sources on late spring aerosol driving and cloud-aerosol cooperations‚ in northeastern North America‚ was studied by utilizing the WRF-Chem community model. The immediate impacts of mist concentrates on approaching sun powered radiation were recreated utilizing existing modules to relate aerosol sizes and chemical composition to airborne optical properties. Direct impacts were reenacted by including a prognostic treatment of cloud bead
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Vanessa Riveron ENC 1102 Professor Warman 01/30/13 Rhetorical Essay Draft In the Ted Talk “The Filter Bubble”‚ the speaker Eli Pariser talks about the negative effects of personalizing the web and how it destroys the sense of unity that the web was based on. “Your filter bubble is your own personal‚ unique universe of information that you live in online. What’s in your filter bubble depends on who you are‚ and it depends on what you do. But you don’t decide what gets in — and more importantly
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This compare and contrast essay on Aldous Huxley and George Orwell’s philosophies and prose. Both authors created fictional worlds; Orwell’s focuses on government oppression‚ and Huxley’s focuses on controlling people by flooding society with pleasurable things. Both authors describe a society that is futuristic‚ however‚ they both have descriptions that mirror our world today. Huxley created a world where people were trained to love certain things. Huxley feared that there would be no reason to ban a book because there would be no one
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used to think of the internet as a huge library‚ with services like Google providing universal map‚ but that is not true‚ websites like Facebook‚ Google‚ Yahoo news‚ and the New York times are personalized‚ based in your web history‚ these website filter information to show you stuff they think you want to see. they can be very different from what everyone else sees‚ and what you are looking for. These websites take your personal information like your location‚ the language your speaking‚ the pages
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1980s Sports In the 1980s‚ the world of sports was increasing quickly and several games and events were occurring that made it a very unforgettable decade. Countless historical events also occurred in this decade. For instance‚ the Berlin wall was torn down‚ which also shredded many tensions between nations. The miracle on ice and sports icons Wayne Gretzky‚ and Bo Jackson‚ were three elements that made sports in the decade quite popular. To emphasize‚ it could be argued that both Wayne Gretzky
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who needs information from the World Wide Web‚ uses search engines like Google or Yahoo! to find the specific information he or she is looking for. These engines help us to filter all the information given by the internet with the help of invisible algorithms. Without them we would sit many hours in front of the screen and filter the information by ourselves. For example the search of a brownie recipe has an output of over forty billion search results. For this reason it is good to have these algorithms
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This reading response argues that Pariser’s theory of the filter bubble is flawed because it fails to explain a wide range of political reality. First‚ this reading response summarizes Pariser’s theory of the “filter bubble”. Next‚ this reading response debates that Pariser’s theory of the “filter bubble” is incorrect because it too broadly describes political reality. Then‚ this reading response justifies that Pariser’s theory of the “filter bubble” explains a small portion of politics in the media
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