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This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
“In this image, I’m removing pieces of charcoal from a wall foundation, which I found while taking the foundation apart in order to see how it was built.”
About the project: “With generous support from a Concordia Foundation Fellowship for excavation and research, I was able to return last summer for a fourth season of participation in Oberlin College’s regional archaeological project in the Sangro Valley, located in the Abruzzo region of Italy. As a full staff member, I was primarily in charge of database administration and field recording.
“Last summer, the Sangro Valley Project (SVP) transitioned to its third phase while at the same time moving to a new site toward the base of Monte Pallano in the town of San Giovanni, an area that had never been excavated, but appeared very promising in earlier field surveys. As a part of this third phase, the directors and I decided that it was the perfect time to transition to a more modern form of archaeological recording. Following the success of the University of Cincinnati’s Pompeii Archaeological Research Project: Porta Stabia in using the Apple iPad for paperless recording in 2010, I began developing an integrated excavation database in FileMaker Pro for use on both computers and iPads. The team at the University of Cincinnati, particularly Dr. Steven Ellis and John Wallrodt, were very helpful while I was developing our database, and we were able to exchange some ideas for future avenues of exploration and experimentation.
“During the previous sixteen years, the SVP had employed paper records, Microsoft Access databases, fillable PDFs, Microsoft Excel spreadsheets, and numerous other data formats, with no direct relationships between any sets of data. This meant that it was very difficult to see all of the relevant information about any object, sample, or context (stratigraphic unit). My prior experience as a field school student and trench supervisor allowed me to approach database development from the viewpoint of end users (i.e., the excavators), and I also understood what the strengths and weaknesses of the previous recording methods were. Therefore, three of my primary goals with the project were to improve communication between the labs and the field, cut down on human error, and put much more data at the fingertips of excavators and specialists.”
-Christopher Motz, classical archaeology graduate student
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
Affordable Prices for Online Training Courses Computer training course. Quality rich content online book store. Download Free Trial CD software for Driving test and Microsoft Office.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
With a Brady Mobile App, you can use your Android device to: design a label from scratch, leverage the label types built into the app, edit an existing label, create and edit label templates and print to the BMP®53 Label Printer using Bluetooth technology.
You can also import Data from Microsoft Excel, save label files to your mobile device, use built-in symbols, pictograms and barcodes and receive automatic updates (no software upgrade costs!).
The app can be found in iTunes by searching for "Brady app."
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
Certificación de los cursos ejecutados durante el primer semestre del presente año: "Higiene y Manipulación de Alimentos", "Cuidado y Atención del Adulto Mayor" y "Microsoft Excel Nivel Básico".
El alcalde Mauricio Viñambres Adasme felicita a cada uno de los participantes
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
“Another photo (from a different angle) of me removing pieces of charcoal from a wall foundation.”
About the project: “With generous support from a Concordia Foundation Fellowship for excavation and research, I was able to return last summer for a fourth season of participation in Oberlin College’s regional archaeological project in the Sangro Valley, located in the Abruzzo region of Italy. As a full staff member, I was primarily in charge of database administration and field recording.
“Last summer, the Sangro Valley Project (SVP) transitioned to its third phase while at the same time moving to a new site toward the base of Monte Pallano in the town of San Giovanni, an area that had never been excavated, but appeared very promising in earlier field surveys. As a part of this third phase, the directors and I decided that it was the perfect time to transition to a more modern form of archaeological recording. Following the success of the University of Cincinnati’s Pompeii Archaeological Research Project: Porta Stabia in using the Apple iPad for paperless recording in 2010, I began developing an integrated excavation database in FileMaker Pro for use on both computers and iPads. The team at the University of Cincinnati, particularly Dr. Steven Ellis and John Wallrodt, were very helpful while I was developing our database, and we were able to exchange some ideas for future avenues of exploration and experimentation.
“During the previous sixteen years, the SVP had employed paper records, Microsoft Access databases, fillable PDFs, Microsoft Excel spreadsheets, and numerous other data formats, with no direct relationships between any sets of data. This meant that it was very difficult to see all of the relevant information about any object, sample, or context (stratigraphic unit). My prior experience as a field school student and trench supervisor allowed me to approach database development from the viewpoint of end users (i.e., the excavators), and I also understood what the strengths and weaknesses of the previous recording methods were. Therefore, three of my primary goals with the project were to improve communication between the labs and the field, cut down on human error, and put much more data at the fingertips of excavators and specialists.”
-Christopher Motz, classical archaeology graduate student
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
We provide best microsoft excel training course - www.creativementor.com.au/microsoft-excel-training.html - Learning the basic in a microsoft excel training course is needed to get you in the right direction.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk