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Brace Yourself—Your New Trainer is Your Boss

 

The numbers prove it—in 2012 it cost U.S. employers $227 billion for employee absenteeism due to illness. And just hoping our employees will take care of themselves is no longer an option. How is digital health transforming “old school” corporate wellness into cutting-edge, lifestyle and fitness programs? Speakers include: Kristin Van Busum, Manager, Health Advisory Services, RAND Corporation, Derek Newell , CEO, Jiff, Chris Boyce, CEO, Virgin Pulse, Paul Lockington, Global Sales Manager, Dynastream Innovations Inc./ANT+, and Christine Robins, General Manager of BodyMedia, VP of Business Development, Health and Wellness, Jawbone.

 

Moderator: Kristin Van Busum, Manager, Health Advisory Services, RAND Corporation, @RANDCorporation

WEBSITE: bit.ly/J3S4cP

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/19YZFQK

 

PANELISTS:

Derek Newell, @dereknewell, CEO, Jiff, @JiffInc

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1ftB6PU

 

Chris Boyce, @iamchrisboyce, CEO, Virgin Pulse, @VirginPulse

WEBSITE: bit.ly/J3Spw4

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bh3TCO

 

Paul Lockington, Global Sales Manager, Dynastream Innovations Inc./ANT+, @ANTPlus

WEBSITE: bit.ly/AntPlus

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/18E6U5r

 

Christine Robins, General Manager of BodyMedia, VP of Business Development, Health and Wellness, Jawbone, @Jawbone

WEBSITE: bit.ly/JMRgJw

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bh4Rz2

  

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Chase Untermeyer

 

On November 15, 2022, the LBJ Library co-hosted an event with Humanities Texas and the Tom Lea Institute about the remarkable career and even more remarkable strategic vision of Homer Lea. Lea was barred from joining the U.S. Army due to a physical disability yet lent his energy and brainpower to Sun Yat-sen in overthrowing the Manchu Dynasty in China in 1911.

 

Chase Untermeyer, former United States Ambassador to Qatar and Assistant Secretary of the Navy, spoke about Homer Lea. Adair Margo, founder of the Tom Lea Institute, discussed the interactions of Tom and Sarah Lea with Lady Bird Johnson and President Johnson.

  

LBJ Library photo by Jay Godwin

11/15/2022

Me sitting on a trampoline doing course work with two ther clasmates, one took the pic of me here :D

One photo of the serie from a shoot that I did for his new album "Determination" (out next week)

The empowered patient is not a new concept, but now more than ever, patient and physician influencers are armed to advocate for better care, and to impact decision-making on a broader scale. Join a leading journalist, a social analyst and two of the loudest mouth patients we know for an explosive conversation, as they make huge strides in advocating for all of us. Speakers include: Neil Versel, Freelance Journalist / Contributor, Uni-Versel Media Inc. / MobiHealthNews, Hugo Campos, ePatient Advisor, Stanford Medicine X, Donna Cryer, CEO, Global Liver Institute, and Greg Matthews, Managing Director, WCG.

 

Moderator: Neil Versel, @nversel, Freelance Journalist / Contributor, Uni-Versel Media Inc. / MobiHealthNews

WEBSITE: bit.ly/193gJYA

 

PANELISTS:

Hugo Campos, @HugoOC, ePatient Advisor, Stanford Medicine X

WEBSITE: stanford.io/1bWTQCS

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1l2n9cR

 

Donna Cryer, @DCPatient, CEO, Global Liver Institute

 

Greg Matthews, @chimoose, Managing Director, WCG, @WCGWorld

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1ciH5sE

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bVZ1ql

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®. bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

Official Hashtag: #DHCES

News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress

CES Hashtag: #CES2014

Website: bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite

Twitter: bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter

YouTube Videos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube

Flickr Photos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr

Linkedin: bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn

Facebook: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB

Google+: bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus

Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

In the background, you can see a very young woman sitting at the foot of Emperor Franz Joseph I and looking down on the old photographer.

 

The Borodaykewycz Affair 1965

1946-1966

In 1965, the year of the 600th anniversary of the University, Taras Borodajkewycz's openly anti-Semitism, Professor of Economic History at the College of World Trade, attracted international public attention. On the occasion of this case - with which the first political fatality of the Second Republic is connected - a broader social discussion arose in Austria about the taboo Nazi past of the universities.

By 1965, the anti-Semitic and German-national utterances of the professor of economic history for several years already had been known. Taras Borodajkewycz, 1937-1943 lecturer at the University of Vienna, was classified as a former member of the NSDAP in 1946 as a "less burdened" and thus denazified. Due to good relations with Minister of Education Heinrich Drimmel and the later Federal Chancellor Josef Klaus, Borodajkewycz 1955 as Ordinarius for economic history at the former College of World Trade (now Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration) was appointed. In his lectures he made no secret of his unbroken National Socialist convictions and received applause from the right-wing students with anti-Semitic statements.

Socialist students repeatedly had called in vain attention to the worldview of the university teacher, said the later Finance Minister Ferdinand Lacina (SPÖ), who in 1961 recorded the comments in a lecture. In the following year, today's Federal President Heinz Fischer (since 2016 out of office his successor being Alexander van der Bellen) published some of the statements, so as not to endanger Lacina's graduation, but he kept the source secret, whereupon Borodajkewycz Fischer reported for violation of honour and this was sentenced to a fine.

In 1965, the cabaret artist Gerhard Bronner processed the coded anti-Semitic statements Borodajkewycz' (including Hans Kelsen) in his satirical TV show "Zeitventil (time valve)" (18 March 1965) in the form of a fictional interview with the professor. His pertinent statements thus gained greater public attention and also resulted in a parliamentary inquiry by the SPÖ. When Borodajkewycz held a press conference at the university a few days later and not only confirmed his comments but also proudly declared that he had voluntarily joined the NSDAP at the time, the affair escalated.

In the following days there were demonstrations of supporters (mostly from the ranks of the FPÖ close student representation ring liberal students ") and opponents (mainly supporters of SPÖ and KPÖ and members of anti-fascist organizations) of Borodajkewycz'. In the course of the major demonstrations, the concentration camp survivor and former communist resistance fighter Ernst Kirchweger was crushed by the convicted right-wing extremist student and member of the RFS (Ring Liberal Students) Günther Kümel on March 31, 1965, and died of his injuries two days later. At the following silent march, expressing the confession of the official Austria to the anti-fascism, took about 25,000 people and politicians of all parties part. Kümel was sentenced to ten months in October 1965.

The internationally known death - the first political death of the Second Republic - brought Hans Kelsen, the already emigrated from Austria in 1930, author of the democratic constitution of Austria in 1920, to reject the official invitation of the University of Vienna to the celebrations for the 600th anniversary of the university.

After completing his studies at the University of World Trade, Ferdinand Lacina was able to testify personally against Borodajkewycz and the verdict against Heinz Fischer was subsequently overturned in April 1965. Taras Borodajkewycz was finally compulsorily retired in 1966 at full pay.

The "Borodajkewycz affair" led to a first clear examination of the history of higher education institutions under National Socialism in the Austrian public and was thus a major turning point in the university policy.

 

Die Borodajkewycz-Affäre 1965

1946–1966

1965, im Jahr des 600. Universitätsjubiläums, erregte die Affäre um den offenen Antisemitismus von Taras Borodajkewycz, Professor für Wirtschaftsgeschichte an der Hochschule für Welthandel, internationale öffentliche Aufmerksamkeit. Anlässlich dieses Falls – mit dem das erste politische Todesopfer der Zweiten Republik verbunden ist – entstand in Österreich allmählich eine breitere gesellschaftliche Diskussion um die tabuisierte NS-Vergangenheit der Hochschulen.

1965 waren die waren die antisemitischen und deutschnationalen Äußerungen des Professors für Wirtschaftsgeschichte schon seit einigen Jahren bekannt gewesen. Taras Borodajkewycz, 1937 bis 1943 Dozent an der Universität Wien, war als ehemaliges Mitglied der NSDAP 1946 als „Minderbelasteter“ eingestuft und somit entnazifiziert worden. Durch gute Beziehungen zu Unterrichtsminister Heinrich Drimmel und dem späteren Bundeskanzler Josef Klaus, war Borodajkewycz 1955 als Ordinarius für Wirtschaftsgeschichte an die damalige Hochschule für Welthandel (heute Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) berufen worden. In seinen Vorlesungen machte er aus seiner ungebrochenen nationalsozialistischen Gesinnung keinen Hehl und erntete mit antisemitischen Aussagen Beifall der rechten Studierenden.

Sozialistische Studierende hatten immer wieder vergeblich auf die Weltanschauung des Hochschullehrers aufmerksam gemacht, so der spätere Finanzminister Ferdinand Lacina (SPÖ), der 1961 die Kommentare in einer Vorlesung protokollierte. Im Folgejahr publizierte der heutige Bundespräsident Heinz Fischer einige der Aussagen, um Lacinas Studienabschluss nicht zu gefährden, hielt er die Quelle jedoch geheim, woraufhin Borodajkewycz Fischer wegen Ehrenbeleidigung anzeigte und dieser zu einer Geldstrafe verurteilt wurde.

1965 verarbeitete der Kabarettist Gerhard Bronner die mitgeschriebenen antisemitischen Aussagen Borodajkewycz‘ (u.a. über Hans Kelsen) in seiner satirischen TV-Sendung „Zeitventil“ (18. März 1965) in Form eines fiktiven Interviews mit dem Professor. Seine einschlägigen Äußerungen erlangten damit eine größere öffentliche Aufmerksamkeit und hatten auch eine parlamentarische Anfrage der SPÖ zur Folge. Als Borodajkewycz wenige Tage später in der Universität eine Pressekonferenz abhielt und dort unter Beifall versammelter Burschenschaftler nicht nur seine Äusserungen bestätigte, sondern auch stolz erklärte, er sei damals freiwillig in die NSDAP eingetreten, eskalierte die Affäre.

In den folgenden Tagen kam es zu Demonstrationen von AnhängerInnen (meist aus den Reihen des FPÖ nahen Studentenvertretung Ring freiheitlicher Studenten“) und GegnerInnen (vorwiegend Anhängern von SPÖ und KPÖ sowie Mitglieder antifaschistischer Organisationen) Borodajkewycz'. Im Zuge der großen Demonstrationen wurde der KZ-Überlebende und ehemalige kommunistische Widerstandskämpfer Ernst Kirchweger am 31. März 1965 von dem vorbestraften rechtsextremistischen Studierenden und Mitglied des RFS (Ring Freiheitlicher Studenten) Günther Kümel, niedergeschlagen und starb zwei Tage später an seinen Verletzungen. Am folgenden Schweigemarsch, der als Bekenntnis des offiziellen Österreich zum Antifaschismus ausdrückte, nahmen ca. 25.000 Menschen und PolitikerInnen aller Parteien teil. Kümel wurde im Oktober 1965 zu zehn Monaten Haft verurteilt.

Der international bekannt gewordene Todesfall – das erste politische Todesopfer der Zweiten Republik – brachte Hans Kelsen, den bereits 1930 aus Österreich emigrierten Autor der demokratischen Verfassung Österreichs 1920, dazu, die offizielle Einladung der Universität Wien zu den Feierlichkeiten zum 600. Universitätsjubiläum nachträglich zurückzuweisen.

Nachdem Ferdinand Lacina sein Studium an der Hochschule für Welthandel abgeschlossen hatte, konnte er nun persönlich gegen Borodajkewycz aussagen und das Urteil gegen Heinz Fischer wurde im April 1965 nachträglich aufgehoben. Taras Borodajkewycz wurde schließlich 1966 bei vollen Bezügen zwangspensioniert.

Die „Borodajkewycz-Affäre" führte in der österreichischen Öffentlichkeit zu einer ersten deutlichen Auseinandersetzung mit der Geschichte der Hochschulen im Nationalsozialismus und war damit eine hochschulpolitisch eine wichtige Zäsur.

geschichte.univie.ac.at/de/artikel/die-borodajkewycz-affa...

When you look at this image, what do you see? What stands out for you immediately and what do you notice afterwards? Where does your eye linger the longest? Make a mental note of these things. Maybe even write them down. It might help to look at the larger size of this image.

 

There are many ways we could study what just happened with your perceptions. The creation of photographs, including composition, is all about influencing how people view an image, so we might make some good guesses about your perceptions based on how this particular picture was constructed. However, regardless of how intentional the composition, people differ in how they explore an image, especially when it’s complex or ambiguous, such as this one. The eye-tracking equipment often used in research on vision could give us some objective data about where you looked and for how long, but it couldn’t tell us exactly what you were responding to in that area. We would need you to tell us that.

 

Here’s where the classic inkblot test known as the Rorschach might be helpful to us. Contrary to popular opinion, the modern technique for using this test doesn’t rely on some arcane or mysterious interpretation by psychologists, as if they can peer into your psyche based on some particular thing you see. Instead, the test is all about “response styles” – i.e., the different tendencies in how people notice and react to various aspects of the inkblot. Even though some people nowadays are very skeptical of the Rorschach’s validity as a psychological test, research shows that different response styles are associated with particular personality characteristics.

 

Some responses to an image may be unconscious: you don’t realize that you are focusing on some aspect of it - or if you do, you can’t exactly say why. These unconscious dimensions of response style could say something about you. However, interpreting the results of the Rorschach relies more on what you can verbalize about what you see. When you reflect upon your reaction to an image, can you put into words what it is that you noticed? Psychologists consider this ability to articulate your perceptions to be an important dimension of your psychological resources.

 

So let’s try applying some of the insights from the Rorschach to photography. Ideas about this test can help us understand how our personality styles are reflected in the way we create images as well as in how we react to them – because the things you tend to notice about photos tend to be the things you strive to create in your own. What’s also helpful about these insights is that they make intuitive sense. As I mentioned earlier, they’re not based on some kind of obscure psychobabble theory that only professionals understand. In fact, many artists and visual designers will intuitively understand them.

  

Location

 

When you look at an inkblot, or any image, you might take notice of large or obvious elements of it, small or unusual details, or the whole thing in its entirety.

 

In this image, if you focused on what looks like the shadow of a hand or the curly shapes in the background, a Rorschach psychologist would call that a “large detail response.” When people notice large or obvious elements of an image, they are seeing what many other people will probably see. It’s practical, realistic thinking, the ability to see the obvious and conventional, and “sticking to the facts.”

 

Sometimes people will notice much smaller or unusual details. In the image above, did you see the flower shapes embedded in the swirls, or the tiny inkblot near the lower right corner (which I just had to include, to tip my hat to the Rorschach!). These “small detail responses” suggest vigilance, attentiveness to detail, the ability to see the unusual - or, if this perceptual tendency becomes too extreme, it might indicate a preoccupation with trivia, obsessive thinking, and sometimes paranoia.

 

Getting the big picture of what an image is about, or at least trying to, can be a sophisticated psychological endeavor. For many photographs you might not find it too difficult to determine what the entire scene is about. But when looking at complex, abstract, or ambiguous images, formulating the “big meaning” requires some brainpower. Taking into consideration all its various features, did you try to come up with some idea or story to make sense out of the image above? Multiple exposure and composite photos really challenge us in this way. Some people try to determine the relationship among the various elements of the image in order to figure out the big picture; some don’t. Rorschach psychologists say that “whole responses” reflect the ability to plan, see relationships, and synthesize things. The whole response might indicate creativity, abstract thinking, and efforts to achieve.

  

Form (shape)

 

In most photographs it’s easy to identify the objects in them. There’s a car, tree, dog, person. No big deal. It’s when the elements of an image become more indistinct that things start to get interesting. What exactly is that blurry area, that thing hidden in the shadows, or that unusually shaped object?

 

The Rorschach test consists of inkblots that aren’t anything in particular. They’re just inkblots. But the various shapes in the inkblots might look like something. If what you see is what most people see, that’s called a “good form response.” You react to that particular shape like lots of people do. That’s a sign of healthy reality testing. You’re able to resonate with how most people react to the world. You recognize the normal and conventional.

 

On the other hand, if you see a particular shape as being something that people usually don’t see, that’s a “poor form response.” In small doses it might be a positive sign, perhaps indicating creativity and individual uniqueness in perception. But if a person persistently sees things that others usually don’t, it might suggest eccentricity, stubbornness, rebelliousness, poor reality testing, and even psychosis.

 

In the image above, did you perceive that shadowy shape as a hand? Many people probably do. That’s good reality testing. If you saw it as legs, cow utters, or a sideways crown, maybe you’re a creative or idiosyncratic thinker. If someone perceived it as Elvis riding a golf cart, we might worry about his reality testing. It just doesn’t look like that.

  

Movement

 

An inkblot and a photo are static images. Unlike a movie, there’s really nothing moving in them. But if you perceive motion, that’s a rather sophisticated projection of what you create in your imagination into what you see in front of you. Psychologists say that perceiving humans moving in an inkblot is a sign of mature thinking, intelligence, and creativity (as long as it’s a good form response). Perceiving animals in motion indicates underlying needs and drives, while perceiving the movement of inanimate things reveals stress and anxiety.

 

I’m not sure how well all of these principles translate into photography. Sensing motion in realistic photos that clearly portray the movement of people, animals, and things requires some imagistic knowledge of how action looks, but not the same kind of cognitive versatility as seeing movement in inkblots. Perhaps these principles might apply to abstract pictures, ambiguous images, or photos in which people, animals, and things are not obviously in motion but one might perceive them that way.

 

A skilled photographer knows how to use compositional techniques to create the sensation of movement – for example, receding lines and visual rhythms created by repeating patterns. We might question whether focusing on these elements of composition indicates underlying anxiety and stress, as a Rorschach psychologist would conclude about perceiving inanimate movement in an inkblot. But I don’t think we would question the idea that photographers who create or notice such motion in an image are operating at a higher or at least unique level of cognitive sophistication than those who do not. Surely, it’s a sign of visual creativity and intelligence, as well as an indicator of subtle kinesthetic sensitivities.

 

If you take any of these ideas about movement that make sense to you, how would you apply them to what you noticed about the image above? Did you perceive motion in the shadowy hand, the fabric surfaces, or the flowers and curly abstract shapes?

  

Color

 

It probably comes as no surprise to anyone interested in the visual arts that we humans associate colors with emotions. So too Rorschach psychologists suggest that reacting to the colors of an inkblot indicates a tendency to be aware of and express emotion. We might notice the same tendencies in people who respond to color when examining photos or who focus on it when creating their images.

 

Psychologists also suggest the importance of how people combine color and form responses during the Rorschach test. When people emphasize the shape of an inkblot and then mention its colors, that’s a good sign. They have a clear picture of reality, into which they appropriately infuse emotion. If they react to the colors first and then mention shape, or they talk about colors without mentioning shape at all, perhaps emotions dominate over rational thinking in their lives. If they never mention color, they might suppress their awareness or expression of emotion.

 

How might these ideas apply to photography? Are colors clearly bounded within shapes, or do they run past those boundaries? What’s the difference between pictures that are all about color with very little or ambiguous shapes (as in some abstracts) and pictures that contain no color at all? Think about how you reacted to the image above, whether the shapes and/or colors stood out in your mind.

 

These ideas might be useful when thinking about the differences between color and black-and-white photography, and people’s preferences concerning them. Although some enthusiasts will argue strongly for the emotional superiority of black-and-white photography, color photos do tend to express more emotion for many people, whereas black-and-white images tend to emphasize shape while creating a more serious and rational atmosphere.

  

Shading

 

When you looked at the image above, did its shading stand out for you?

 

While responding to the Rorschach, some people focus on shading. In both colorless and colored areas, shading is the change in lightness and darkness of the inkblots. It’s related to what photographers call “grayscale” or “tonal range.” These shading responses, as well as dwelling on the “blackness” of the inkblots, tend to associated with stress, anxiety, or depression.

 

Here we need to be cautious about over-generalizing this conclusion as it applies to photography. People who notice tonal range and shading aren’t necessarily stressed out, anxious, or depressed people. However, these states of mind might be important for people who focus intensely on shading or blackness when they create and react to images. If you want to construct an image that conveys a depressive or anxious mood, you might consider emphasizing its shading and blackness.

  

Texture

 

One particularly interesting type of shading response on the Rorschach is the texture response. It’s when people look at a shaded area of the inkblot and use tactile sensations to describe its surface – such as smooth, rough, grainy, sharp, furry, and bumpy. Research suggests that such perceptions correspond to the particular type of stress associated with loneliness and a lack of contact comfort. People separated from their loved ones tend to show an increase in texture responses on the Rorschach. When people focus on texture in photography, might they have a sensitivity to tactile stimulation, contact comfort, and moods related to isolation?

  

White Space

 

A person taking the Rorschach is asked to look at the inkblots and say what it might be. Sometimes people instead focus on the white space between or around the areas of the inkblot and tell you what it looks like. It’s a very subtle and usually unconscious way of defying the instructions for the test, which is why a white space response might indicate oppositional, passive-aggressive, or rebellious tendencies. It also might also reflect an ability to notice the unusual.

 

In photography the correlate of white space is “negative space” – the seemingly unimportant or empty areas around and between the main elements of the image. What does it say about people who concentrate on white space in creating and viewing photos? I’d be cautious about saying they are oppositional or passive-aggressive, unless they make a habit of focusing on negative space while paying little attention to the subjects of the image - or, when friends show them a picture of their baby, they immediately start talking about how they find the blurry shrubbery in the background interesting.

 

Photographers and artists will tell you that the ability to see and work with negative space is crucial to good composition, but it’s an advanced skill. Indeed, it requires cognitive dexterity in noticing the unusual, in focusing on that which is not supposed to be the focus but which intrinsically shapes the intended focus.

  

Orientation

 

During the Rorschach test the psychologist hands the inkblot card to the person in the standard upright position. Many people keep the card in that orientation when they give their responses. However, some people, after offering their perceptions of the card in the upright position, then turn it sideways or upside to see what it looks like in those orientations. Such people like to experiment with different perspectives on viewing the world. Some photographers also enjoy rotating their photos vertically or horizontally to create a unique and often unusual perspective on the scene.

  

Symmetry

 

Because inkblots are created by splattering ink on paper and then folding the paper in half, they are symmetrical. Most people don’t explicitly comment on this symmetry, but those who do tend to be self-reflective and introspective. Might this also be true of people who enjoy creating symmetry in their photos or who focus on it when viewing the images created by others? Photos containing symmetry do tend to convey an introspective feeling, especially images of reflections in water, glass, and other surfaces.

  

Blends

 

I’ve talked about each of these aspects of the Rorschach individually, but what does it mean when people incorporate many of them into a single photo they created, or when they notice all of them in a photo taken by someone else? When a single perception of an inkblot includes form, movement, color, and shading, psychologists call it a “blend.” They consider blends a sign of complex, sophisticated thinking. The person has the ability to draw on a variety of perceptual resources. This might also be true in photography.

  

Extensions and Limits of the Insights

 

The Rorschach is considerably more complex than the few ideas I mention in this article. An accurate interpretation of the test results involves a sophisticated process of analyzing patterns and trends across the whole set of responses a person gives to all the inkblots. Any one response to any particular inkblot may not mean anything. This conclusion probably holds true for photography as well. Patterns and trends will tell us more about a photographer than any one image they create or to which they react.

 

These patterns and trends are not easily controlled by conscious effort. They’re intrinsic to one’s unique perceptual and personality style. For this reason, understanding some aspects of the Rorschach will probably not make a big difference in how you would respond if you actually took the test. You can only see what you see. In photography as well we tend to react to images the way our lives and psyche have conditioned us to see them. To improve our skills in photography, we become more aware of that conditioning. We learn how to expand the range of our perceptual repertoire. By doing so, we probably change as people too.

 

The Rorschach is designed to explore an individual’s perceptual and personality style. In this article I’ve suggested that we can use photographs for the same purpose. I’d also like to emphasize how these insights from the Rorschach can be applied in shaping the experience that a photo might create in its viewers. We can produce a limitless range of moods and sensations in images by the wide variety of ways we might combine form, movement, color, shading, texture, negative space, and symmetry. That’s what photography is all about.

 

Of course, we don’t want to be too authoritative about these insights from the Rorschach. They aren’t facts carved in stone that are true for everyone. People are just too complex for any such rigid rules. But there’s no doubt in my mind that these ideas provide some interesting and useful points of departure to explore photography, and ourselves.

 

* This image and essay are part of a book on Photographic Psychology that I’m writing within Flickr. Another more easy to navigate version of the book is located at this web site

 

Join exceptional leaders in healthcare for a candid conversation about the healthcare industry and how technology is playing a crucial role. You won’t want to miss the opportunity to be a fly on the wall during this very unique session with moderator Jeff Arnold, Chairman & CEO, Sharecare, @SharecareNow, and panelists Dr. Otis Brawley, @OtisBrawley, Chief Medical and Scientific Officer, EVP, American Cancer Society, @AmericanCancer, Ashley Koff, RD, Registered Dietician, Ashley Koff RD LLC, @ashleykoff, Dr. Mehmet Oz, The Dr. Oz Show, and Simon Whitfield, @simonwhitfield, Olympic Medalist.

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2013 International CES®

bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

 

Learn about games that reinforce healthy behaviors, body sensors that let people take more responsibility for their own health, affordable gene sequencing, real-time medicine monitoring, and more. You'll gain an understanding of the digital health infrastructure and how your organization can capitalize on this hot market.

 

Official Hashtag: #DigiHealthCES News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress CES Hashtag: #2013CES

 

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Thank you! AARP bit.ly/AARP_DHS for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

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Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Still stuck at home sick, but taking crappy pictures doesn't exactly require a lot of brainpower.

 

These landmasses are actually work from last week, I just haven't been able to photograph them yet.

 

Composite. Shouldn't be hard to tell where they stitch together.

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

“I sing the body electric” takes on new meaning in our brave new digital world, where devices let us monitor everything from our stress levels to our genetic sequences, and devices with 100 real-time biosensors loom on the horizon. Join moderator Arianna Huffington, @ariannahuff, as she leads Deepak Chopra, MD, @DeepakChopra, Founder of The Chopra Foundation and Chopra Center, Deepak Chopra LLC, David Daly, Head of Oncology, Life Technologies, @LIFECorporation, Andrew Thompson, President & CEO, Proteus Digital, @Proteusdh, Reed V. Tuckson, @DrReedTuckson, MD, FACP, Executive Vice President and Chief of Medical Affairs, UnitedHealth Group, @CEShealth, and Sonny Vu, Co-Founder & CEO, Misfit Wearables, @MisfitWearables, in conversation on the latest innovations in the field, how those innovations have the potential to change lives, and what the digital revolution means for the body, mind, and soul.

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2013 International CES®

bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

 

Learn about games that reinforce healthy behaviors, body sensors that let people take more responsibility for their own health, affordable gene sequencing, real-time medicine monitoring, and more. You'll gain an understanding of the digital health infrastructure and how your organization can capitalize on this hot market.

 

Official Hashtag: #DigiHealthCES News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress CES Hashtag: #2013CES

 

Website: bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite

Twitter: bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter

YouTube Videos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube

Flickr Photos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr

Linkedin: bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn

Facebook: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB

Google+: bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus

Pinterest: bit.ly/DigitalHealthPinterest

Instagram: bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram

Foursquare: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFourSquare

 

Thank you! AARP bit.ly/AARP_DHS for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

Social Media Team: www.newmediasynergy.com

 

Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Freezepop played at AnimeUSA!

 

Oh wow! Someone actually threw underwear on the stage when the lyrics said "now throw your undies on the stage... no wait.... you're underage"! Someone must have been planning this! I was surprised enough that they played Super-Sprode, as I thought people didn't know that song. But they played what I consider to be their 4 "main" video game songs: Science Genius Girl from FreQuency, Super-Sprode from Amplitude, Get Ready 2 Rokk from Guitar Hero 1, and More Talk Less Rokk from Guitar Hero 2.

 

musician: Liz Enthusiasm, musician: Sean T. Drinkwater.

playing keytars, singing, throwing underwear.

Super-Sprode song.

music: Amplitude.

 

Hyatt Regency, hotel, Arlington, Virginia.

 

October 10, 2008.

  

... I used to have a list of every concert I've ever been to at www.acm.vt.edu/~clint/media/concerts.htm ... but a jerk named John Edstrom (from Virginia Tech) decided to delete everyone's shell accounts, even those who had been using our Virginia Tech ACM accounts for 15 years.

  

BACKSTORY: Kasson Crooker was not available and was replaced for this show, but Liz Enthusiasm and The Other Sean T. Drinkwater played, and some members of the (horrible) opening "band" sometimes played some backup instruments as well. Freezepop played the following songs: Boys On Film, Parlez Vous Freezepop, Science Genius Girl (diff mix than the FreQuency or Freezepop Forever versions), Bike Thief, Get Ready 2 Rokk, Frontload, Super-Sprode, Brainpower, Plastic Stars, Stakeout, Less Talk More Rokk, The Final Countdown (by Europe). The only disappointing thing was that they did not play Freezepop Forever or the Jem & The Holograms theme - the two most-requested songs by the auidence.

 

...View video of Freezepop playing Super-Sprode (complete with someone throwing their undies on the stage as the lyrics instruct) at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=zv80ZETMaTs

 

...View video of Freezepop playing Less Talk More Rokk at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3P1hepuerM

 

...View video of Freezepop playing Europe's The Final Countdown at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZHb84HbneQ

     

...Read my blog review of the entire Freezepop show at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/journal-concert-freezepop/

An electric wired Country,

A cosmic, lavish land..

All who have not loved her,

May never understand.

 

The earth holds many splendours,

But to wherever I may someday die,

I know to what Country

My homing thoughts will fly.

 

flickr today

Canada Victoria May Day Long Weekend

 

Country Walk Series

pic 5 of 5

 

.

The empowered patient is not a new concept, but now more than ever, patient and physician influencers are armed to advocate for better care, and to impact decision-making on a broader scale. Join a leading journalist, a social analyst and two of the loudest mouth patients we know for an explosive conversation, as they make huge strides in advocating for all of us. Speakers include: Neil Versel, Freelance Journalist / Contributor, Uni-Versel Media Inc. / MobiHealthNews, Hugo Campos, ePatient Advisor, Stanford Medicine X, Donna Cryer, CEO, Global Liver Institute, and Greg Matthews, Managing Director, WCG.

 

Moderator: Neil Versel, @nversel, Freelance Journalist / Contributor, Uni-Versel Media Inc. / MobiHealthNews

WEBSITE: bit.ly/193gJYA

 

PANELISTS:

Hugo Campos, @HugoOC, ePatient Advisor, Stanford Medicine X

WEBSITE: stanford.io/1bWTQCS

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1l2n9cR

 

Donna Cryer, @DCPatient, CEO, Global Liver Institute

 

Greg Matthews, @chimoose, Managing Director, WCG, @WCGWorld

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1ciH5sE

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bVZ1ql

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®. bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

Official Hashtag: #DHCES

News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress

CES Hashtag: #CES2014

Website: bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite

Twitter: bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter

YouTube Videos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube

Flickr Photos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr

Linkedin: bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn

Facebook: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB

Google+: bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus

Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

The Radical Hospital

 

Cutting-edge surgical spider robots, augmented reality guided clinical applications, RFID biometric-tracked patients, physiological monitoring, artificial intelligence—just a few of the radical technologies making their way into our hospitals. Hear first-hand how these innovations are changing the way medicine is practiced and how they are saving money and saving lives. Speakers include: Shiv Gaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, Jason Mendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, Stephen Pierce, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, and Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health.

 

Moderator: Shiv Gaglani, @ShivGaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, @Medgadget

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1cH4wGX

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bgQsTk

 

PANELISTS:

Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, @MasimoInnovates

WEBSITE: bit.ly/MasimoCorp

 

Jason Mendenhall, @jasonmendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, @SUPERNAP

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1jraXa4

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1dY9OQv

 

Stephen Pierce, @spierceibm, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, @IBM

WEBSITE: ibm.co/1bgRkr3

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/JR1Obi

 

Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health, @glassomics

WEBSITE: bit.ly/193ppyh

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1krpnoA

  

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Hollywood starlets aren’t always famed for their academic prowess. Which makes Kay Panabaker a welcome exception. The pixie-faced actress, who co-stars in director Kevin Tancharoen’s glitzy remake of the 1980 high school musical Fame (in theatres on September 25) boasts the poise, brainpower and inveterate seriousness of a young Susan Sarandon. At 19, she’s even packing a bachelor’s in history from UCLA: The diminutive Texas native earned the degree at age 17 while balancing television roles on ER, 7th Heaven and Summerland.

 

Exhausted from the Fame promotional swirl, Panabaker’s sweet demeanor never divined an ounce of irritation during a recent Style Section L.A. photo shoot at the Palihouse in West Hollywood — even when we asked her to don leather pants on a sweltering August day.

 

Read the rest and see what she's wearing at Style Section L.A.

 

www.stylesectionla.com/the-shoot/2009/09/04/special-kay

Track-a-holism: A Disorder Worth Having?

 

What do the quantified selfers and the obsessive compulsives have in common? We have learned that diligent tracking produces positive results, yet there are extreme barriers to growing this movement. How can we duplicate the behaviors of the track-a-holic and catapult the digital health industry to new heights? Speakers include: Leslie Ziegler, Entrepreneur, Designer and Health Advocate, Leslie Ziegler Consulting, Dr. Daniel Kraft, Faculty Chair / Founder, Singularity University / Bioniq Health, Jin Lee, Chief Technology Office and Senior VP of Engineering, Salutron, Robert Rhinehart, CEO, Soylent, and Kristian Tarnhed, Product Planner, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications.

 

Moderator: Leslie Ziegler, Entrepreneur, Designer and Health Advocate, Leslie Ziegler Consulting, @lesliejz

WEBSITE: bit.ly/19YNhjC

 

PANELISTS:

Dr. Daniel Kraft, @daniel_kraft, Faculty Chair / Founder, Singularity University / Bioniq Health, @BioniqHealth

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1cH8iA7

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1cXCf2v

 

Jin Lee, Chief Technology Office and Senior VP of Engineering, Salutron, @MyLifeTrak

WEBSITE: bit.ly/JR6mhU

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/Jc6kjd

 

Robert Rhinehart, @robrhinehart, CEO, Soylent, @soylent

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1c8UUIt

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bgTUgJ

 

Kristian Tarnhed, Product Planner, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications, @SonyXperiaUS

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1eujKpn

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bX6RfY

  

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

“I sing the body electric” takes on new meaning in our brave new digital world, where devices let us monitor everything from our stress levels to our genetic sequences, and devices with 100 real-time biosensors loom on the horizon. Join moderator Arianna Huffington, @ariannahuff, as she leads Deepak Chopra, MD, @DeepakChopra, Founder of The Chopra Foundation and Chopra Center, Deepak Chopra LLC, David Daly, Head of Oncology, Life Technologies, @LIFECorporation, Andrew Thompson, President & CEO, Proteus Digital, @Proteusdh, Reed V. Tuckson, @DrReedTuckson, MD, FACP, Executive Vice President and Chief of Medical Affairs, UnitedHealth Group, @CEShealth, and Sonny Vu, Co-Founder & CEO, Misfit Wearables, @MisfitWearables, in conversation on the latest innovations in the field, how those innovations have the potential to change lives, and what the digital revolution means for the body, mind, and soul.

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2013 International CES®

bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

 

Learn about games that reinforce healthy behaviors, body sensors that let people take more responsibility for their own health, affordable gene sequencing, real-time medicine monitoring, and more. You'll gain an understanding of the digital health infrastructure and how your organization can capitalize on this hot market.

 

Official Hashtag: #DigiHealthCES News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress CES Hashtag: #2013CES

 

Website: bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite

Twitter: bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter

YouTube Videos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube

Flickr Photos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr

Linkedin: bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn

Facebook: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB

Google+: bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus

Pinterest: bit.ly/DigitalHealthPinterest

Instagram: bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram

Foursquare: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFourSquare

 

Thank you! AARP bit.ly/AARP_DHS for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

Social Media Team: www.newmediasynergy.com

 

Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Cutting-edge digital health is setting new standards for our eyes and ears. Learn directly from the trailblazers who stand behind these innovations – how they are not only being used to manage care and improve fitness, but also in new methods for diagnosis and prevention, creating consumer-directed healthcare cost controls. Join moderator William Boyles, Publisher, Digital Health Journal, and panelist Michelle Ahlman, President, Clearsounds, @clearsounds, Dr. Justin Bazan, @JustinBazan, Optometrist and Medical Advisor to The Vision Council, Dr. Steven Le Boeuf, President & CEO, Valencell, @Valencell_Inc, and Lisa Tseng, MD, CEO, hi HealthInnovations, @hi_health, as they discuss the new standards for our eyes and ears.

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2013 International CES®

bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

 

Learn about games that reinforce healthy behaviors, body sensors that let people take more responsibility for their own health, affordable gene sequencing, real-time medicine monitoring, and more. You'll gain an understanding of the digital health infrastructure and how your organization can capitalize on this hot market.

 

Official Hashtag: #DigiHealthCES News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress CES Hashtag: #2013CES

 

Website: bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite

Twitter: bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter

YouTube Videos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube

Flickr Photos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr

Linkedin: bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn

Facebook: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB

Google+: bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus

Pinterest: bit.ly/DigitalHealthPinterest

Instagram: bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram

Foursquare: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFourSquare

 

Thank you! AARP bit.ly/AARP_DHS for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

Social Media Team: www.newmediasynergy.com

 

Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Mother was also briefly interested in woodcarving for a time in the late 50s and early 60s.

 

She conceived and carved the designs on the two top drawers of her table-linen bureau. She also inlaid the decoration, which consists of antique mother-of-pearl buttons and, I think, strips of bone.

 

The piece is in the Mid-Century-Modern style. The top, sides and drawer fronts are of thick Venezuelan mahogany.

 

What Mother never knew, thank heavens, is that 25 or so years after she finished the piece I would adopt a cat who loved to get on top of the bureau.

 

As I kid - a very small and shrimpy kid at that - I used to summit the bureau by pulling out the drawers just far enough that they made a set of steps, which I would then climb to reach the top. I must have weighed about as much as a bird to have pulled that off.

 

The cat? Unable to emulate my method for lack of opposable thumbs and, I hope, brainpower, she just sprang straight up from the floor in front of the dresser and hoped for the best.

 

If you look closely, you'll see the cat played according to horseshoe rules, where close does count.

 

That beautiful and irreplaceable old mahogany shows claw marks - way too many claw marks - where old Princess Kitty had to use her back feet to - shudder - claw her way to the top.

 

Time heals all, and I've forgiven Princess, who long ago entered the clearing at the end of the path. In another half century or so, those scratches will all just be accepted as patina, right?

 

I took this photo on August 22, 2009, but I backdated it in flickr to 1958 so it would fit in reasonable chronological order into my set on our life abroad.

Big data is the hot topic of the year! Understanding how it fits into a our world is as important as ever. How we analyze and utilize this data has opportunity for profound impact if delivered effectively. Join moderator Colin Hill, CEO & Chairman, GNS Healthcare, @gnshealthcare, and panelists Arnab Gupta, Founder & CEO, Opera Solutions, @operasolutions, Sridhar Iyengar, @SridIyengar, Founder and CTO, AgaMatrix, @AgaMatrix, Alistair Jacques, CIO, Medicare & Retirement, UnitedHealth Group, @UHGinnovates, and Derek Newell, @dereknewell, CEO, Jiff, @JiffInc, as they discuss big data.

 

The Digital Health Summit at the 2013 International CES®

bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure.

 

Learn about games that reinforce healthy behaviors, body sensors that let people take more responsibility for their own health, affordable gene sequencing, real-time medicine monitoring, and more. You'll gain an understanding of the digital health infrastructure and how your organization can capitalize on this hot market.

 

Official Hashtag: #DigiHealthCES News & Press Articles: #DigiHealthCESPress CES Hashtag: #2013CES

 

Website: bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite

Twitter: bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter

YouTube Videos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube

Flickr Photos: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr

Linkedin: bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn

Facebook: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB

Google+: bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus

Pinterest: bit.ly/DigitalHealthPinterest

Instagram: bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram

Foursquare: bit.ly/DigitalHealthFourSquare

 

Thank you! AARP bit.ly/AARP_DHS for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live.

 

Social Media Team: www.newmediasynergy.com

 

Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and information you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

So far, June 24, 2007 is still looking like the date where everything changed. 2007 was meh in a lot of ways. It is the wisdom of time that tells me that for $300, some asshole thief taught me an important life lesson.

 

Had I tried to keep going on the course I had been taking, I would, sooner or later, end up a failure. It was not a sustainable path. It was a spiral downward. Spending the time between winter of 2007 and spring of 2008 without a bike, moping about it, taught me a valuable lesson. One that I didn't need to hit rock bottom to learn.

 

It turns out that I can't legally drive at the moment. It's a silly DMV thing. My license expired on my birthday. I think I remembered that and assumed I'd get some paperwork in the mail from the DMV, but I never did. So I looked at my license when I was picking up a package from the UPS depot and realized it was expired. And, you know what, I'm a shitty liar. I couldn't feign surprise when pulled over. I'd get slapped with a ticket for driving without a license for sure.

 

And, you know what? It's not critically important. It's one of those "Gee, I should get this done fairly soon" sort of things. Priorities have been rearranged. I could likely go for quite some time without a car or even without use of a car.

 

Ursula might add that she got a little bit of life-changing events on the bicycle some years ago. As in, got hit by a car while cycling and her pelvic bone hasn't been the same since. And, somehow, I realize that I'd have spiraled down into suicidal depression in due course on the old path, so even if I do get hit, I'll have lived a better, longer, and more complete life than I had were I to have never ridden a bike.

 

Mostly, I worry about getting hit but not finding justice. I'm taking all of the reasonable rational precautions to avoid getting hit and the statistics show that, once you discard stupidity, cycling is actually fairly safe. It's just that there are a number of hit-and-run accidents that have gone without at-fault drivers being brought to justice.

 

Just because you didn't realize you made a choice doesn't mean that you ended up making one. I'm not entirely pleased with the photos I took in 2009. I didn't give them quite enough time and care. But I didn't waste my year. Cycling time came somewhat at the expense of photo time. So, instead, I biked 3811 miles. I went from somebody who avoided long hills because I'd end up walking part of the way to somebody who has been shaving minutes off his hill climbs. I biked over the mountain to the Pacific ocean and back.

 

This year is when people started asking me where all the fat went. I have a new minion overseas and he was expecting a chubby nerd based on the picture in the corporate phonebook and was then surprised to see a much better proportioned nerd instead. Everybody tells me I look much healthier... and I am... but I was actually doing really well when I was only at the 5-10% weight loss point and still bulged out of a form-fitting cycling jersey. You don't need to be skinny to be healthy, but you do need to be active.

 

One of my co-workers referred to my present lifestyle as a "health kick" and wondered why I was skipping out on my usual giant salad for a few slices of greasy pizza. It's not a health kick, it's the way things have to be from now on. And the nice part about my diet is that I get to eat exactly what I love to eat... it's just that I really like having a giant salad around lunchtime, so everybody assumes that's what I'm eating... which completely ignores the lamb and potatoes that's waiting in the fridge for when I get hungry in a few hours.

 

There's some research out that suggests that cardio health leads to improved brain functioning. I believe it. There's at least one substantial raise to be credited almost directly to the improved brainpower that cycling brings.

 

We, as a people, have been too stupid to realize that we've been making decisions. The people on the right trumpet how somebody hacked into a server and found some emails that suggest that there might be some back-room infighting going on in the climate change thing. The people on the left think that if we just make biodiesel and windmills, somehow this will magically solve problems. Oh, and my favorite, carbon sequesterization. When we have a good containment leak from a carbon sequesterization facility, it's going to make Chernobyl look like a walk in the park. Ever hear about Lake Nyos? It let off a cloud of CO2 that killed 1700 people and that was a drop in the bucket compared to what they are proposing to store underground.

 

I might have listed leaving a job that wasn't working out anymore as the important date. Or going on some magical medication that would make me effective and content member of society. Or maybe even a really good drug trip or a soap-making alter ego pouring lye on my forearm. But the real change was a decision that changed the flow of my life, where I was able to make a giant decision without realizing what I had just decided that pulled me away from a downward spiral.

 

The funny thing about finishing a jigsaw is that when you try to jam a bunch of random pieces together, you won't get anywhere. Only when you fit the pieces properly together will you see the beautiful picture. And you may not want to hear this, but with the CO2 levels ever increasing and traffic gridlock getting worse and worse until there's literally nothing that you can do in many places to improve throughput, a lot of you people are jamming a bunch of jumbled puzzle pieces together. It's only until you start making connections that you realize that everything fits together quite well and the car, the piece you thought was most important, is actually a tiny insignificant piece off in the corner.

 

I think it's unfair to all of the progress we did make in 2000-2009 to call it a "lost decade". It might be a prelude to a great decade. Or it might be the beginning of the end. It's a choice that we collectively can make.

 

I did go on a nice hike with Mrs. Wirehead this afternoon through the forest. Then we had sushi and then we watched Avatar. I think Avatar was even more mindblowing when watched shortly after a nice jaunt through the forest. I watched it in 2D on a normal screen because I've got a lazy eye and therefore do not benefit from the 3D glasses... and think that IMAX should only cover films that have been shot on 70mm x 15 perf film (or, to be fair, an equivalent resolution digital sensor) and displayed with a 70mm x 15 perf projector. Not a film delivered in 2k or 35mm film and upscaled.

The Radical Hospital

 

Cutting-edge surgical spider robots, augmented reality guided clinical applications, RFID biometric-tracked patients, physiological monitoring, artificial intelligence—just a few of the radical technologies making their way into our hospitals. Hear first-hand how these innovations are changing the way medicine is practiced and how they are saving money and saving lives. Speakers include: Shiv Gaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, Jason Mendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, Stephen Pierce, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, and Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health.

 

Moderator: Shiv Gaglani, @ShivGaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, @Medgadget

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1cH4wGX

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bgQsTk

 

PANELISTS:

Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, @MasimoInnovates

WEBSITE: bit.ly/MasimoCorp

 

Jason Mendenhall, @jasonmendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, @SUPERNAP

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1jraXa4

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1dY9OQv

 

Stephen Pierce, @spierceibm, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, @IBM

WEBSITE: ibm.co/1bgRkr3

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/JR1Obi

 

Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health, @glassomics

WEBSITE: bit.ly/193ppyh

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1krpnoA

  

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

Hollywood starlets aren’t always famed for their academic prowess. Which makes Kay Panabaker a welcome exception. The pixie-faced actress, who co-stars in director Kevin Tancharoen’s glitzy remake of the 1980 high school musical Fame (in theatres on September 25) boasts the poise, brainpower and inveterate seriousness of a young Susan Sarandon. At 19, she’s even packing a bachelor’s in history from UCLA: The diminutive Texas native earned the degree at age 17 while balancing television roles on ER, 7th Heaven and Summerland.

 

Exhausted from the Fame promotional swirl, Panabaker’s sweet demeanor never divined an ounce of irritation during a recent Style Section L.A. photo shoot at the Palihouse in West Hollywood — even when we asked her to don leather pants on a sweltering August day.

 

Read the rest and see what she's wearing at Style Section L.A.

 

www.stylesectionla.com/the-shoot/2009/09/04/special-kay

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and information you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Universität Wien, la Università di Vienna, la Universidad de Viena, l'Université de Vienne, the University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking and -cultural area, and both the largest university in Austria as well as in German-speaking countries.

History

(further pictures and informations you can see by clicking on the link at the end of page!)

The founding document of the University was signed on 12th March in 1365 by Duke Rudolph IV and his brothers Albert III and Leopold III. signed and the university therefore is also called "Alma Mater Rudolphina". It is after the University of Prague, then part of the Holy Roman Empire, the second oldest university in Central Europe. The present main building was built in 1877-1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel on the Vienna ring road (Ringstraße), previously the main building was near the office door (Stubentor), at Ignaz- Seipel-Platz, where the old University Church and the Austrian Academy of Sciences are located. In 1897, women were first admitted as regular listeners, even if at first only in the philosophical faculty. The remaining faculties partly followed at a considerable distance: 1900 the medical, the juridical 1919, 1923, Evangelical theological and in 1946 finally allowed the Catholic theological faculty women as ordinary listeners. With the romanist ​​Elise Richter succeeded eight years after the start of the women studying at the University of Vienna the first woman to habilitate (1905), she was 1921 also the first extraordinary professor. Only after the Second World War, the physicist Berta Karlik was appointed to the first full professor of the University of Vienna.

Research and teaching

Currently are around 63,000 students in about 130 disciplines at the University of Vienna enrolled, of which 22 are bachelor and 27 master's programs. The research activity of the University is carried in total of approximately 6,100 researchers and scientists. Of these 6,100 persons are approximately 3,200 people staff of the University of Vienna, about 900 people are active in projects that are financed by external funds. Among the 6,100 scientists and academics are also about 2,000 lecturers, many of whom also contribute to the research at the University of Vienna.

Location

The scientific institutions of the University of Vienna are spread over 60 locations in Vienna. The center is the historic main building on the Ringstrasse (Universitätsring). Here is the seat of the university management and the administration of most organizations. Another spatial center constitutes the nearby situated university campus, where the majority of scientific institutions has settled and the new auditorium center was built.

See also :

* Building of the University of Vienna

* General plan of the buildings of the University of Vienna

* 360 ° x180 ° panoramic photo of the campus overlooking the Auditorium Center

Structure

Rector of the University of Vienna is currently Georg Winckler. The University of Vienna is divided into several departments and centers. Under the new law, the University Medical School in 2004 spun off into the Medical University of Vienna, as well as before the economic studies were released into independence. Other faculties were also restructured, so the natural science faculty was divided into a number of small but specialized units.

Faculties and Centers

* Faculty of Catholic Theology

* Faculty of Protestant Theology

* Faculty of Law

* Department of Economics

* Faculty of computer science

* Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

* Faculty of Philosophy and Education

* Department of Psychology

* School of Social Sciences

* Department of Mathematics

* Department of Physics

* Faculty of Chemistry

* Department of Geosciences, Geography and Astronomy

* Faculty of Life Sciences

* Centre for Translation Studies

* Centre for Sports Sciences and University Sports

 

Famous people

The following Nobel Laureates have taught at the university:

Robert Bárány, Ludwig Boltzmann, Josef Stefan, Victor Franz Hess, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz, Friedrich August von Hayek

Other famous scientists who have taught at the University of Vienna:

Theodor Billroth, Viktor Frankl, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Palisa, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Joseph Skoda, Joseph von Sonnefels

Famous alumni of the University of Vienna:

Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Feyerabend, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Karl Kautsky, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Karl Kraus, Jörg Haider, Lise Meitner, Alois Mock, Pius III. (Pope), Peter Porsch, Manfred Rumpl, Adalbert Stifter, Kurt Waldheim

See also: Austrian universities, colleges and polytechnics

In the "new institution building " (NIG ) of the University is one of the last still operating paternoster lifts in Austria.

Web Links

* Official Website

* History of the University of Vienna

* Online newspaper of the University of Vienna

Famous People

Erwin Schrödinger monument in the courtyard of the University

The University at the back of the 1000-shilling bank note (1983)

See also: Category: High school teacher (University of Vienna)

Nobel Prize

Robert Bárány (Medicine 1913)

Julius Wagner-Jauregg (Medicine 1927)

Hans Fischer (Chemistry 1930)

Karl Landsteiner (Medicine 1930)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics 1933)

Victor Franz Hess ( Physics 1936)

Otto Loewi (Medicine 1936)

Konrad Lorenz ( Medicine 1973)

Friedrich August von Hayek (Economics 1974)

Other important scientists

Theodor Billroth, Marietta Blue, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Charlotte Bühler, Karl Bühler, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtis, Viktor Frankl, Freud, Kurt Gödel, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Berthold Hatschek, Marian Heitger, Moriz Hoernes, Marie Jahoda, Moritz Kaposi, Berta Karlik, Hans Kelsen, Alfred Kohler, Helmut Koziol, Florian Kratschmer von Forstburg, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Lise Meitner, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Richard Pittioni, Pius II, Elise Richter, Karl Freiherr von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Wendelin Schmidt-Dengler, Klaus Schönbach, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Nikolai S. Trubeckoj, Carl Auer von Welsbach, Johann Puluj

Significant students

Franz Alt, Peter Apian, Franz Ballner, Bruno Bettelheim, Nicetas Budka, Paul Ehrenfest, Janko Ferko, Paul Feyerabend, Hertha Firnberg, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Kurt Gödel, Jörg Haider, Theodor Herzl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Husserl, Heinrich Freiherr von Huyssen, Elfriede Jelinek, Karl Kautsky, Edith Kneifl, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Hans Kudlich, Hryhory Lakota, Paul Lazarsfeld, Käthe Leichter, Peter Luder, Ernst Mach, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Alois Mock, Pope Pius III., Paul Pella, Peter Porsch, Henning Röhl, Manfred Rumpl, Wolfgang Schüssel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Hilde Spiel, Adalbert Stifter, Mutius of Tommasini, Kurt Waldheim, Stefan Zweig, Ulrich Zwingli, Joseph von Sonnenfels

See also: Faculty plaques, University of Vienna

www.wien-konkret.at/sehenswuerdigkeiten/universitaet-wien/

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universit%C3%A4t_Wien

Finally was able to find the puzzle I love! Not easy. . . Sorting the piles of books’ pieces, I thought, what if we never had books or they were destroyed as in Fahrenheit 451? How lonely our lives would be. That would be half death for me! I'm so thankful to all the writers who dedicate so much of their time & brainpower to something that brightens up lives.

Please see DSC_0485 for the pre-photoshop image in "Before/After Photoshop."

Track-a-holism: A Disorder Worth Having?

 

What do the quantified selfers and the obsessive compulsives have in common? We have learned that diligent tracking produces positive results, yet there are extreme barriers to growing this movement. How can we duplicate the behaviors of the track-a-holic and catapult the digital health industry to new heights? Speakers include: Leslie Ziegler, Entrepreneur, Designer and Health Advocate, Leslie Ziegler Consulting, Dr. Daniel Kraft, Faculty Chair / Founder, Singularity University / Bioniq Health, Jin Lee, Chief Technology Office and Senior VP of Engineering, Salutron, Robert Rhinehart, CEO, Soylent, and Kristian Tarnhed, Product Planner, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications.

 

Moderator: Leslie Ziegler, Entrepreneur, Designer and Health Advocate, Leslie Ziegler Consulting, @lesliejz

WEBSITE: bit.ly/19YNhjC

 

PANELISTS:

Dr. Daniel Kraft, @daniel_kraft, Faculty Chair / Founder, Singularity University / Bioniq Health, @BioniqHealth

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1cH8iA7

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1cXCf2v

 

Jin Lee, Chief Technology Office and Senior VP of Engineering, Salutron, @MyLifeTrak

WEBSITE: bit.ly/JR6mhU

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/Jc6kjd

 

Robert Rhinehart, @robrhinehart, CEO, Soylent, @soylent

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1c8UUIt

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bgTUgJ

 

Kristian Tarnhed, Product Planner, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications, @SonyXperiaUS

WEBSITE: bit.ly/1eujKpn

FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bX6RfY

  

The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com

I'm surround by the smartest brain cells and about to burst from all this contained knowledge. Proud to be apart of Sabrina Beil's capstone project on The Bee Crisis. This graduating environmentalist is #makingadifference

 

A special thanks to our favorite Bee Keeper and friend, David Clark for your words of wisdom.

 

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