Search
1000 results for “Aix_in_pce”
-
#SNCF 🇫🇷 #CC6520 is seen here at Aix-les-Bains in the French Alps on a #TER service in August 2004. The train is composed of #USI, #UIC and #Corail stock. In the 1970s and 1980s Class #CC6500 locos used to work SNCF‘s most prestigious trains on DC lines. They finished their careers on regional duties.
-
@thomholwerda Although it's almost certainly not going to be a product you have any use of, I remember (unpleasantly) having to do manual developer testing of #IBM #CICS Transaction Gateway on Solaris, HP-UX, AIX (and more) in 2004.
So, at least one small part of IBM still cared :-)
-
@thomholwerda Although it's almost certainly not going to be a product you have any use of, I remember (unpleasantly) having to do manual developer testing of #IBM #CICS Transaction Gateway on Solaris, HP-UX, AIX (and more) in 2004.
So, at least one small part of IBM still cared :-)
-
@thomholwerda Although it's almost certainly not going to be a product you have any use of, I remember (unpleasantly) having to do manual developer testing of #IBM #CICS Transaction Gateway on Solaris, HP-UX, AIX (and more) in 2004.
So, at least one small part of IBM still cared :-)
-
@thomholwerda Although it's almost certainly not going to be a product you have any use of, I remember (unpleasantly) having to do manual developer testing of #IBM #CICS Transaction Gateway on Solaris, HP-UX, AIX (and more) in 2004.
So, at least one small part of IBM still cared :-)
-
Tallest ancient Roman arches still standing
Arco di Constantine in Rome – Source: thetrainline.comListed below are the tallest Roman arches that are still standing. As measured to the highest point of the remaining arch structure unless otherwise noted. The list includes triumphant arches, ceremonial arches, gates, and bridges with arched entries, but does not include arches that are part of Roman Aqueducts. If information is located on the 10 arches where height data is needed, they will be moved up into the list. Pax!
Arco di Titus in Rome – Source: classicist.org——-
- Arco di Septimius Severus (203 AD): Rome, Italy = 23 m/75 feet
2-3. Arco di Constantine (315 AD): Rome, Italy and Arch of Hadrian: Tyre, Lebanon = 21 m/68.9 feet
4. Triumphal Arch of Orange (27 AD): Orange. France = 19.21 m/63 feet
5. Arco di Trajan (113 AD): Ancona, Italy = 18.5 m/60.7 feet.
6. Arch of Hadrian (132 AD): Athens, Greece = 18 m/59 feet
7. Arco di Janus: Rome, Italy = 16 m/52.5 feet
8. Arco di Trajan (117 AD): Benevento, Italy = 15.6 m/51.2 feet
9. Arco di Titus (82 AD): Rome, Italy = 15.4 m/50.5 feet
10. Arch of Germanicus (19 AD): Saintes, France = 15 m/49.2 feet
11. South Gate: Anazarbus, Turkiye = 14 m/45.9 feet
12. Arco di Augustus (8 BC): Susa, Italy = 13.03 m/42.7 feet
13. Porte de Mars: Reims, France = 13 m/42.6 feet
14. Arco di Trajan (ca 109): Canosa di Puglia, Italy ~ 13 +/-m/42.6 feet
15, Arco di Gavi (ca 50 AD): Verona, Italy = 12.69 m/41.6 feet
16-17. Arch of Caracalla (216 AD): Djémila, Algeria and Arch of Galerius (299 AD): Thessaloniki, Greece = 12.5 m/41.5 feet
18. Arc de Berà (ca 13 BC): Roda de Berà, Spain = 12.3 m/40.3 feet
19. Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus (183 AD): Latakia, Syria = 12.2 m/40 feet
20-21. Arch of Trajan: Timgad, Algeria and Arco di Glanum (25 AD): Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France = 12 m/
22. Arco di Augustus (25 BC): Aosta, Italy ~ 11.4+ m/37.4 feet
23. Porte Noire (175 AD): Besançon, France = 11.2 m/36.7 feet
24. Arch of Hadrian (130 AD): Jerash, Jordan = 11 m/36.1 feet
25. Arch of Caracalla (211-214 AD): Tébessa, Algeria = 10.94 m/35.9 feet
26-27. Arco di Hadrian: Capua, Italy and Arch of Carpentras (19 AD): Carpentras, France = 10 m/32.8 feet
28. Arch of Campanus: Aix-les-Bains, France = 9.15 m/30 feet
29. Arco di Gallienus (262 AD): Roma, Italy = 8.8 m/28.9 feet
30. Roman Arch of Medinaceli: Medinaceli, Spain = 8.1 m/26.6 feet
31-33. Hadrian’s Gate: Antalya, Tukiye; Heidentor (361 AD): Petronell-Carnuntum, Austria; and Arch of the Sergii (27 BC): Pula, Crotia = 8 m/26.2 feet
34. Arco di Drusus (9 BC): Rome, Italy ~ 7.21+ m/23.7 feet
35. Arco di Riccardo (33 BC): Trieste, Italy ~ 7.2 m/23.6 feet
36. Pont Flavien (ca 12 BC): Saint-Chamas, France = 7 m/23 feet x 2 arches
37. Arch of Cabanes: Castellón de la Plana, Spain = 5.8 m/19 feet
Need More Information:
Arco di Drusus (Spoleto)
Arco di Marcus Aurelius
Arco di Mark Anthony
Triumphal Arco di Tiberius
Arch of Septimius Severus: Khoms, Libya
Arch of Marcus Aurelius: Tripoli, Libya
Arch of Caracalla: Morocco
Arch of Alexander Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Arch of Septimius Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Triumphal Arch of the Tetrarchy: Tunisia
SOURCES:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_triumphal_arches
- facebook.com
- gemini.google.ai
- https://aroundus.com/p/7393165-arch-of-carpentras
- https://aroundus.com/p/10435626-arch-of-glanum
- https://www.historyhit.com/locations/arch-of-germanicus/
- https://structurae.net/en/structures/arch-of-augustus-8-susa#:~:text=Table_title:%20Dimensions%20Table_content:%20header:%20%7C%20arch%20height,width%20%7C%2013.03%20m:%2011.93%20m%20%7C
- https://www.italyscapes.com/places/veneto/verona/ancient-monuments/arco-dei-gavi/#:~:text=ARCHITECTURE,resting%20on%20two%20Corinthian%20pillars.
- https://www.facebook.com/groups/547381242515105/posts/1612246909361861/
- https://www.catalunya.com/en/continguts/patrimoni-cultural/bera-arch-17-16003-11#:~:text=Ber%C3%A0%20arch,and%2012%20metres%20in%20length.
- https://makedonia-alexandros.blogspot.com/2020/03/triumphal-arch-south-of-cilician-gates.html#:~:text=The%20picture%20published%20recently%20by,)%20%E2%80%93%20an%20impressive%20landmark%20anyway.
#acros #ancient #arches #arcs #cities #conservations #design #geology #geometry #history #Italy #landUse #planning #preservation #RomanEmpire #Rome #travel
-
Tallest ancient Roman arches still standing
Arco di Constantine in Rome – Source: thetrainline.comListed below are the tallest Roman arches that are still standing. As measured to the highest point of the remaining arch structure unless otherwise noted. The list includes triumphant arches, ceremonial arches, gates, and bridges with arched entries, but does not include arches that are part of Roman Aqueducts. If information is located on the 10 arches where height data is needed, they will be moved up into the list. Pax!
Arco di Titus in Rome – Source: classicist.org——-
- Arco di Septimius Severus (203 AD): Rome, Italy = 23 m/75 feet
2-3. Arco di Constantine (315 AD): Rome, Italy and Arch of Hadrian: Tyre, Lebanon = 21 m/68.9 feet
4. Triumphal Arch of Orange (27 AD): Orange. France = 19.21 m/63 feet
5. Arco di Trajan (113 AD): Ancona, Italy = 18.5 m/60.7 feet.
6. Arch of Hadrian (132 AD): Athens, Greece = 18 m/59 feet
7. Arco di Janus: Rome, Italy = 16 m/52.5 feet
8. Arco di Trajan (117 AD): Benevento, Italy = 15.6 m/51.2 feet
9. Arco di Titus (82 AD): Rome, Italy = 15.4 m/50.5 feet
10. Arch of Germanicus (19 AD): Saintes, France = 15 m/49.2 feet
11. South Gate: Anazarbus, Turkiye = 14 m/45.9 feet
12. Arco di Augustus (8 BC): Susa, Italy = 13.03 m/42.7 feet
13. Porte de Mars: Reims, France = 13 m/42.6 feet
14. Arco di Trajan (ca 109): Canosa di Puglia, Italy ~ 13 +/-m/42.6 feet
15, Arco di Gavi (ca 50 AD): Verona, Italy = 12.69 m/41.6 feet
16-17. Arch of Caracalla (216 AD): Djémila, Algeria and Arch of Galerius (299 AD): Thessaloniki, Greece = 12.5 m/41.5 feet
18. Arc de Berà (ca 13 BC): Roda de Berà, Spain = 12.3 m/40.3 feet
19. Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus (183 AD): Latakia, Syria = 12.2 m/40 feet
20-21. Arch of Trajan: Timgad, Algeria and Arco di Glanum (25 AD): Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France = 12 m/
22. Arco di Augustus (25 BC): Aosta, Italy ~ 11.4+ m/37.4 feet
23. Porte Noire (175 AD): Besançon, France = 11.2 m/36.7 feet
24. Arch of Hadrian (130 AD): Jerash, Jordan = 11 m/36.1 feet
25. Arch of Caracalla (211-214 AD): Tébessa, Algeria = 10.94 m/35.9 feet
26-27. Arco di Hadrian: Capua, Italy and Arch of Carpentras (19 AD): Carpentras, France = 10 m/32.8 feet
28. Arch of Campanus: Aix-les-Bains, France = 9.15 m/30 feet
29. Arco di Gallienus (262 AD): Roma, Italy = 8.8 m/28.9 feet
30. Roman Arch of Medinaceli: Medinaceli, Spain = 8.1 m/26.6 feet
31-33. Hadrian’s Gate: Antalya, Tukiye; Heidentor (361 AD): Petronell-Carnuntum, Austria; and Arch of the Sergii (27 BC): Pula, Crotia = 8 m/26.2 feet
34. Arco di Drusus (9 BC): Rome, Italy ~ 7.21+ m/23.7 feet
35. Arco di Riccardo (33 BC): Trieste, Italy ~ 7.2 m/23.6 feet
36. Pont Flavien (ca 12 BC): Saint-Chamas, France = 7 m/23 feet x 2 arches
37. Arch of Cabanes: Castellón de la Plana, Spain = 5.8 m/19 feet
Need More Information:
Arco di Drusus (Spoleto)
Arco di Marcus Aurelius
Arco di Mark Anthony
Triumphal Arco di Tiberius
Arch of Septimius Severus: Khoms, Libya
Arch of Marcus Aurelius: Tripoli, Libya
Arch of Caracalla: Morocco
Arch of Alexander Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Arch of Septimius Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Triumphal Arch of the Tetrarchy: Tunisia
SOURCES:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_triumphal_arches
- facebook.com
- gemini.google.ai
- https://aroundus.com/p/7393165-arch-of-carpentras
- https://aroundus.com/p/10435626-arch-of-glanum
- https://www.historyhit.com/locations/arch-of-germanicus/
- https://structurae.net/en/structures/arch-of-augustus-8-susa#:~:text=Table_title:%20Dimensions%20Table_content:%20header:%20%7C%20arch%20height,width%20%7C%2013.03%20m:%2011.93%20m%20%7C
- https://www.italyscapes.com/places/veneto/verona/ancient-monuments/arco-dei-gavi/#:~:text=ARCHITECTURE,resting%20on%20two%20Corinthian%20pillars.
- https://www.facebook.com/groups/547381242515105/posts/1612246909361861/
- https://www.catalunya.com/en/continguts/patrimoni-cultural/bera-arch-17-16003-11#:~:text=Ber%C3%A0%20arch,and%2012%20metres%20in%20length.
- https://makedonia-alexandros.blogspot.com/2020/03/triumphal-arch-south-of-cilician-gates.html#:~:text=The%20picture%20published%20recently%20by,)%20%E2%80%93%20an%20impressive%20landmark%20anyway.
#acros #ancient #arches #arcs #cities #conservations #design #geology #geometry #history #Italy #landUse #planning #preservation #RomanEmpire #Rome #travel
-
Tallest ancient Roman arches still standing
Arco di Constantine in Rome – Source: thetrainline.comListed below are the tallest Roman arches that are still standing. As measured to the highest point of the remaining arch structure unless otherwise noted. The list includes triumphant arches, ceremonial arches, gates, and bridges with arched entries, but does not include arches that are part of Roman Aqueducts. If information is located on the 10 arches where height data is needed, they will be moved up into the list. Pax!
Arco di Titus in Rome – Source: classicist.org——-
- Arco di Septimius Severus (203 AD): Rome, Italy = 23 m/75 feet
2-3. Arco di Constantine (315 AD): Rome, Italy and Arch of Hadrian: Tyre, Lebanon = 21 m/68.9 feet
4. Triumphal Arch of Orange (27 AD): Orange. France = 19.21 m/63 feet
5. Arco di Trajan (113 AD): Ancona, Italy = 18.5 m/60.7 feet.
6. Arch of Hadrian (132 AD): Athens, Greece = 18 m/59 feet
7. Arco di Janus: Rome, Italy = 16 m/52.5 feet
8. Arco di Trajan (117 AD): Benevento, Italy = 15.6 m/51.2 feet
9. Arco di Titus (82 AD): Rome, Italy = 15.4 m/50.5 feet
10. Arch of Germanicus (19 AD): Saintes, France = 15 m/49.2 feet
11. South Gate: Anazarbus, Turkiye = 14 m/45.9 feet
12. Arco di Augustus (8 BC): Susa, Italy = 13.03 m/42.7 feet
13. Porte de Mars: Reims, France = 13 m/42.6 feet
14. Arco di Trajan (ca 109): Canosa di Puglia, Italy ~ 13 +/-m/42.6 feet
15, Arco di Gavi (ca 50 AD): Verona, Italy = 12.69 m/41.6 feet
16-17. Arch of Caracalla (216 AD): Djémila, Algeria and Arch of Galerius (299 AD): Thessaloniki, Greece = 12.5 m/41.5 feet
18. Arc de Berà (ca 13 BC): Roda de Berà, Spain = 12.3 m/40.3 feet
19. Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus (183 AD): Latakia, Syria = 12.2 m/40 feet
20-21. Arch of Trajan: Timgad, Algeria and Arco di Glanum (25 AD): Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France = 12 m/
22. Arco di Augustus (25 BC): Aosta, Italy ~ 11.4+ m/37.4 feet
23. Porte Noire (175 AD): Besançon, France = 11.2 m/36.7 feet
24. Arch of Hadrian (130 AD): Jerash, Jordan = 11 m/36.1 feet
25. Arch of Caracalla (211-214 AD): Tébessa, Algeria = 10.94 m/35.9 feet
26-27. Arco di Hadrian: Capua, Italy and Arch of Carpentras (19 AD): Carpentras, France = 10 m/32.8 feet
28. Arch of Campanus: Aix-les-Bains, France = 9.15 m/30 feet
29. Arco di Gallienus (262 AD): Roma, Italy = 8.8 m/28.9 feet
30. Roman Arch of Medinaceli: Medinaceli, Spain = 8.1 m/26.6 feet
31-33. Hadrian’s Gate: Antalya, Tukiye; Heidentor (361 AD): Petronell-Carnuntum, Austria; and Arch of the Sergii (27 BC): Pula, Crotia = 8 m/26.2 feet
34. Arco di Drusus (9 BC): Rome, Italy ~ 7.21+ m/23.7 feet
35. Arco di Riccardo (33 BC): Trieste, Italy ~ 7.2 m/23.6 feet
36. Pont Flavien (ca 12 BC): Saint-Chamas, France = 7 m/23 feet x 2 arches
37. Arch of Cabanes: Castellón de la Plana, Spain = 5.8 m/19 feet
Need More Information:
Arco di Drusus (Spoleto)
Arco di Marcus Aurelius
Arco di Mark Anthony
Triumphal Arco di Tiberius
Arch of Septimius Severus: Khoms, Libya
Arch of Marcus Aurelius: Tripoli, Libya
Arch of Caracalla: Morocco
Arch of Alexander Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Arch of Septimius Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Triumphal Arch of the Tetrarchy: Tunisia
SOURCES:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_triumphal_arches
- facebook.com
- gemini.google.ai
- https://aroundus.com/p/7393165-arch-of-carpentras
- https://aroundus.com/p/10435626-arch-of-glanum
- https://www.historyhit.com/locations/arch-of-germanicus/
- https://structurae.net/en/structures/arch-of-augustus-8-susa#:~:text=Table_title:%20Dimensions%20Table_content:%20header:%20%7C%20arch%20height,width%20%7C%2013.03%20m:%2011.93%20m%20%7C
- https://www.italyscapes.com/places/veneto/verona/ancient-monuments/arco-dei-gavi/#:~:text=ARCHITECTURE,resting%20on%20two%20Corinthian%20pillars.
- https://www.facebook.com/groups/547381242515105/posts/1612246909361861/
- https://www.catalunya.com/en/continguts/patrimoni-cultural/bera-arch-17-16003-11#:~:text=Ber%C3%A0%20arch,and%2012%20metres%20in%20length.
- https://makedonia-alexandros.blogspot.com/2020/03/triumphal-arch-south-of-cilician-gates.html#:~:text=The%20picture%20published%20recently%20by,)%20%E2%80%93%20an%20impressive%20landmark%20anyway.
#acros #ancient #arches #arcs #cities #conservations #design #geology #geometry #history #Italy #landUse #planning #preservation #RomanEmpire #Rome #travel
-
Tallest ancient Roman arches still standing
Arco di Constantine in Rome – Source: thetrainline.comListed below are the tallest Roman arches that are still standing. As measured to the highest point of the remaining arch structure unless otherwise noted. The list includes triumphant arches, ceremonial arches, gates, and bridges with arched entries, but does not include arches that are part of Roman Aqueducts. If information is located on the 10 arches where height data is needed, they will be moved up into the list. Pax!
Arco di Titus in Rome – Source: classicist.org——-
- Arco di Septimius Severus (203 AD): Rome, Italy = 23 m/75 feet
2-3. Arco di Constantine (315 AD): Rome, Italy and Arch of Hadrian: Tyre, Lebanon = 21 m/68.9 feet
4. Triumphal Arch of Orange (27 AD): Orange. France = 19.21 m/63 feet
5. Arco di Trajan (113 AD): Ancona, Italy = 18.5 m/60.7 feet.
6. Arch of Hadrian (132 AD): Athens, Greece = 18 m/59 feet
7. Arco di Janus: Rome, Italy = 16 m/52.5 feet
8. Arco di Trajan (117 AD): Benevento, Italy = 15.6 m/51.2 feet
9. Arco di Titus (82 AD): Rome, Italy = 15.4 m/50.5 feet
10. Arch of Germanicus (19 AD): Saintes, France = 15 m/49.2 feet
11. South Gate: Anazarbus, Turkiye = 14 m/45.9 feet
12. Arco di Augustus (8 BC): Susa, Italy = 13.03 m/42.7 feet
13. Porte de Mars: Reims, France = 13 m/42.6 feet
14. Arco di Trajan (ca 109): Canosa di Puglia, Italy ~ 13 +/-m/42.6 feet
15, Arco di Gavi (ca 50 AD): Verona, Italy = 12.69 m/41.6 feet
16-17. Arch of Caracalla (216 AD): Djémila, Algeria and Arch of Galerius (299 AD): Thessaloniki, Greece = 12.5 m/41.5 feet
18. Arc de Berà (ca 13 BC): Roda de Berà, Spain = 12.3 m/40.3 feet
19. Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus (183 AD): Latakia, Syria = 12.2 m/40 feet
20-21. Arch of Trajan: Timgad, Algeria and Arco di Glanum (25 AD): Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France = 12 m/
22. Arco di Augustus (25 BC): Aosta, Italy ~ 11.4+ m/37.4 feet
23. Porte Noire (175 AD): Besançon, France = 11.2 m/36.7 feet
24. Arch of Hadrian (130 AD): Jerash, Jordan = 11 m/36.1 feet
25. Arch of Caracalla (211-214 AD): Tébessa, Algeria = 10.94 m/35.9 feet
26-27. Arco di Hadrian: Capua, Italy and Arch of Carpentras (19 AD): Carpentras, France = 10 m/32.8 feet
28. Arch of Campanus: Aix-les-Bains, France = 9.15 m/30 feet
29. Arco di Gallienus (262 AD): Roma, Italy = 8.8 m/28.9 feet
30. Roman Arch of Medinaceli: Medinaceli, Spain = 8.1 m/26.6 feet
31-33. Hadrian’s Gate: Antalya, Tukiye; Heidentor (361 AD): Petronell-Carnuntum, Austria; and Arch of the Sergii (27 BC): Pula, Crotia = 8 m/26.2 feet
34. Arco di Drusus (9 BC): Rome, Italy ~ 7.21+ m/23.7 feet
35. Arco di Riccardo (33 BC): Trieste, Italy ~ 7.2 m/23.6 feet
36. Pont Flavien (ca 12 BC): Saint-Chamas, France = 7 m/23 feet x 2 arches
37. Arch of Cabanes: Castellón de la Plana, Spain = 5.8 m/19 feet
Need More Information:
Arco di Drusus (Spoleto)
Arco di Marcus Aurelius
Arco di Mark Anthony
Triumphal Arco di Tiberius
Arch of Septimius Severus: Khoms, Libya
Arch of Marcus Aurelius: Tripoli, Libya
Arch of Caracalla: Morocco
Arch of Alexander Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Arch of Septimius Severus: Dougga, Tunisia
Triumphal Arch of the Tetrarchy: Tunisia
SOURCES:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_triumphal_arches
- facebook.com
- gemini.google.ai
- https://aroundus.com/p/7393165-arch-of-carpentras
- https://aroundus.com/p/10435626-arch-of-glanum
- https://www.historyhit.com/locations/arch-of-germanicus/
- https://structurae.net/en/structures/arch-of-augustus-8-susa#:~:text=Table_title:%20Dimensions%20Table_content:%20header:%20%7C%20arch%20height,width%20%7C%2013.03%20m:%2011.93%20m%20%7C
- https://www.italyscapes.com/places/veneto/verona/ancient-monuments/arco-dei-gavi/#:~:text=ARCHITECTURE,resting%20on%20two%20Corinthian%20pillars.
- https://www.facebook.com/groups/547381242515105/posts/1612246909361861/
- https://www.catalunya.com/en/continguts/patrimoni-cultural/bera-arch-17-16003-11#:~:text=Ber%C3%A0%20arch,and%2012%20metres%20in%20length.
- https://makedonia-alexandros.blogspot.com/2020/03/triumphal-arch-south-of-cilician-gates.html#:~:text=The%20picture%20published%20recently%20by,)%20%E2%80%93%20an%20impressive%20landmark%20anyway.
#acros #ancient #arches #arcs #cities #conservations #design #geology #geometry #history #Italy #landUse #planning #preservation #RomanEmpire #Rome #travel
-
China's been cutting Taiwan's cables for 18 months.
France just sent a state-owned repair ship to fix them and staged it in Taiwanese waters in advance.
The ILE D'AIX has been on station 96 hours. Someone's keeping score.
#geopolitics #osint #security #maritime #technology #ship #taiwan
https://www.keystone-collective.org/western-cable-repair-vessel-on-station-off-taiwan-for-fourth-consecutive-day/ -
China's been cutting Taiwan's cables for 18 months.
France just sent a state-owned repair ship to fix them and staged it in Taiwanese waters in advance.
The ILE D'AIX has been on station 96 hours. Someone's keeping score.
#geopolitics #osint #security #maritime #technology #ship #taiwan
https://www.keystone-collective.org/western-cable-repair-vessel-on-station-off-taiwan-for-fourth-consecutive-day/ -
China's been cutting Taiwan's cables for 18 months.
France just sent a state-owned repair ship to fix them and staged it in Taiwanese waters in advance.
The ILE D'AIX has been on station 96 hours. Someone's keeping score.
#geopolitics #osint #security #maritime #technology #ship #taiwan
https://www.keystone-collective.org/western-cable-repair-vessel-on-station-off-taiwan-for-fourth-consecutive-day/ -
China's been cutting Taiwan's cables for 18 months.
France just sent a state-owned repair ship to fix them and staged it in Taiwanese waters in advance.
The ILE D'AIX has been on station 96 hours. Someone's keeping score.
#geopolitics #osint #security #maritime #technology #ship #taiwan
https://www.keystone-collective.org/western-cable-repair-vessel-on-station-off-taiwan-for-fourth-consecutive-day/ -
China's been cutting Taiwan's cables for 18 months.
France just sent a state-owned repair ship to fix them and staged it in Taiwanese waters in advance.
The ILE D'AIX has been on station 96 hours. Someone's keeping score.
#geopolitics #osint #security #maritime #technology #ship #taiwan
https://www.keystone-collective.org/western-cable-repair-vessel-on-station-off-taiwan-for-fourth-consecutive-day/ -
Pre-Conference Post: The First Academy of Management Annual Meeting in Europe
The first word I encountered right out of the Metro is, of course, “Hygge”.In previous years, I have only blogged after attending international conferences such as the Academy of Management Annual Meeting. However, to some degree, a pre-conference posting might be much more helpful for people who want to meet up. So, having already arrived in Copenhagen, let me briefly and chronologically list sessions and other occasions I will be involved in at this year’s Academy of Management Annual Meeting – the first ever to be hosted outside of North America:
- Friday, 25th at 9 am, “Career Development Workshop for Mid-Career Scholars”, organized by Carola Wolf (University of Liverpool), with fellow panelists Julia Balogun (University of Liverpool), Paul Spee (University of Queensland), Matt Statler (New York University) and Aino Tenhiälä (IE Business School).
- Friday, 25th, 6:30 pm, Offsite Dinner of the Strategizing Activities and Practices (SAP) Interest Group, co-organized by Benjamin Grossmann-Hensel (University of Zurich) and Susan Hilbollling (Aarhus University)
- Saturday, 26th, 10:45 am, Bridging Silos: Toward a Research Agenda for Open Social Innovation, co-organized by Hanna Fults (VU Amsterdam), Susan Hilbolling (Aarhus University) and Philipp Türtscher (VU Amsterdam) and sharing a panel with Anne-Laure Fayard (Nova School of Business and Economics), Lars Bo Jeppesen (CBS), Marion Poetz (CBS) and Ann-Kristin Zobel (University of St. Gallen).
- Saturday, 26th, 3:30 pm, The Future of Strategizing and Organizing as Practice: Extending to Under-Represented Contexts, co-organized by Renate Kratochvil and Yalan Wang (both University of Stockholm) and featuring as speakers David Seidl (University of Zürich), Linda Rouleau (HEC Montreal), Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), Eero Vaara (University of Oxford), Maria Andrea de Villa (EAFIT University) and Rebecca Bednarek (Victoria Management School).
- Sunday, 27th, 2pm, Unconferencing SAP and Beyond: An Open Space for Emerging Topics and Nascent Projects, co-organized with Madalina Pop (Aarhus University) and Maximilian Heimstädt (Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg). Given the BarCamp format of this session, the actual program will be created on the spot by the participants, which include facilitators such as Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), John Bryson (University of Minnesota), Julia Hautz (University of Innsbruck), Birgit Renzl (University of Stuttgart) and Richard Whittington (University of Oxford) among others.
- Monday, 28th, 10:15 am, “Forced to Open Up: A Comparative Analysis of Open Strategizing in Regulated Environments”, paper co-authored with Felix Schmid (University of Innsbruck) and Violetta Splitter (University of Oxford)
- Monday, 28th, 12 pm, Strategy and Organizationality: The More We Strategize, the More We are Organized?, showcase symposium co-organized with Monica Nadegger (LMU Munich), featuring as panelists David Seidl (University of Zurich), Dennis Schoeneborn (CBS), Ann Langley (HEC Montreal), Héloïse Berkowitz (Aix-Marseille University), Birte Asmuß (Aarhus University).
- Tuesday, 29th, “When Frustrations Turn Into a Firestorm: Communicative Constitution of a Collectively Forceful Voice”, paper co-authored with Aleksander Groth (MCI Innsbruck) and Ellen Nathues (University of Twente).
Of course, I also plan to attend several receptions, including Swiss, Oxford, VU Amsterdam as well as the Business Meeting and Social by the SAP Interest Group (Monday, 28th, 5 pm.) See you in Copenhagen!
#AOM2025 #AcademyOfManagement #AcademyOfManagementAnnualMeeting #AoM #Copenhagen
-
Pre-Conference Post: The First Academy of Management Annual Meeting in Europe
The first word I encountered right out of the Metro is, of course, “Hygge”.In previous years, I have only blogged after attending international conferences such as the Academy of Management Annual Meeting. However, to some degree, a pre-conference posting might be much more helpful for people who want to meet up. So, having already arrived in Copenhagen, let me briefly and chronologically list sessions and other occasions I will be involved in at this year’s Academy of Management Annual Meeting – the first ever to be hosted outside of North America:
- Friday, 25th at 9 am, “Career Development Workshop for Mid-Career Scholars”, organized by Carola Wolf (University of Liverpool), with fellow panelists Julia Balogun (University of Liverpool), Paul Spee (University of Queensland), Matt Statler (New York University) and Aino Tenhiälä (IE Business School).
- Friday, 25th, 6:30 pm, Offsite Dinner of the Strategizing Activities and Practices (SAP) Interest Group, co-organized by Benjamin Grossmann-Hensel (University of Zurich) and Susan Hilbollling (Aarhus University)
- Saturday, 26th, 10:45 am, Bridging Silos: Toward a Research Agenda for Open Social Innovation, co-organized by Hanna Fults (VU Amsterdam), Susan Hilbolling (Aarhus University) and Philipp Türtscher (VU Amsterdam) and sharing a panel with Anne-Laure Fayard (Nova School of Business and Economics), Lars Bo Jeppesen (CBS), Marion Poetz (CBS) and Ann-Kristin Zobel (University of St. Gallen).
- Saturday, 26th, 3:30 pm, The Future of Strategizing and Organizing as Practice: Extending to Under-Represented Contexts, co-organized by Renate Kratochvil and Yalan Wang (both University of Stockholm) and featuring as speakers David Seidl (University of Zürich), Linda Rouleau (HEC Montreal), Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), Eero Vaara (University of Oxford), Maria Andrea de Villa (EAFIT University) and Rebecca Bednarek (Victoria Management School).
- Sunday, 27th, 2pm, Unconferencing SAP and Beyond: An Open Space for Emerging Topics and Nascent Projects, co-organized with Madalina Pop (Aarhus University) and Maximilian Heimstädt (Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg). Given the BarCamp format of this session, the actual program will be created on the spot by the participants, which include facilitators such as Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), John Bryson (University of Minnesota), Julia Hautz (University of Innsbruck), Birgit Renzl (University of Stuttgart) and Richard Whittington (University of Oxford) among others.
- Monday, 28th, 10:15 am, “Forced to Open Up: A Comparative Analysis of Open Strategizing in Regulated Environments”, paper co-authored with Felix Schmid (University of Innsbruck) and Violetta Splitter (University of Oxford)
- Monday, 28th, 12 pm, Strategy and Organizationality: The More We Strategize, the More We are Organized?, showcase symposium co-organized with Monica Nadegger (LMU Munich), featuring as panelists David Seidl (University of Zurich), Dennis Schoeneborn (CBS), Ann Langley (HEC Montreal), Héloïse Berkowitz (Aix-Marseille University), Birte Asmuß (Aarhus University).
- Tuesday, 29th, “When Frustrations Turn Into a Firestorm: Communicative Constitution of a Collectively Forceful Voice”, paper co-authored with Aleksander Groth (MCI Innsbruck) and Ellen Nathues (University of Twente).
Of course, I also plan to attend several receptions, including Swiss, Oxford, VU Amsterdam as well as the Business Meeting and Social by the SAP Interest Group (Monday, 28th, 5 pm.) See you in Copenhagen!
#AOM2025 #AcademyOfManagement #AcademyOfManagementAnnualMeeting #AoM #Copenhagen
-
Pre-Conference Post: The First Academy of Management Annual Meeting in Europe
The first word I encountered right out of the Metro is, of course, “Hygge”.In previous years, I have only blogged after attending international conferences such as the Academy of Management Annual Meeting. However, to some degree, a pre-conference posting might be much more helpful for people who want to meet up. So, having already arrived in Copenhagen, let me briefly and chronologically list sessions and other occasions I will be involved in at this year’s Academy of Management Annual Meeting – the first ever to be hosted outside of North America:
- Friday, 25th at 9 am, “Career Development Workshop for Mid-Career Scholars”, organized by Carola Wolf (University of Liverpool), with fellow panelists Julia Balogun (University of Liverpool), Paul Spee (University of Queensland), Matt Statler (New York University) and Aino Tenhiälä (IE Business School).
- Friday, 25th, 6:30 pm, Offsite Dinner of the Strategizing Activities and Practices (SAP) Interest Group, co-organized by Benjamin Grossmann-Hensel (University of Zurich) and Susan Hilbollling (Aarhus University)
- Saturday, 26th, 10:45 am, Bridging Silos: Toward a Research Agenda for Open Social Innovation, co-organized by Hanna Fults (VU Amsterdam), Susan Hilbolling (Aarhus University) and Philipp Türtscher (VU Amsterdam) and sharing a panel with Anne-Laure Fayard (Nova School of Business and Economics), Lars Bo Jeppesen (CBS), Marion Poetz (CBS) and Ann-Kristin Zobel (University of St. Gallen).
- Saturday, 26th, 3:30 pm, The Future of Strategizing and Organizing as Practice: Extending to Under-Represented Contexts, co-organized by Renate Kratochvil and Yalan Wang (both University of Stockholm) and featuring as speakers David Seidl (University of Zürich), Linda Rouleau (HEC Montreal), Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), Eero Vaara (University of Oxford), Maria Andrea de Villa (EAFIT University) and Rebecca Bednarek (Victoria Management School).
- Sunday, 27th, 2pm, Unconferencing SAP and Beyond: An Open Space for Emerging Topics and Nascent Projects, co-organized with Madalina Pop (Aarhus University) and Maximilian Heimstädt (Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg). Given the BarCamp format of this session, the actual program will be created on the spot by the participants, which include facilitators such as Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), John Bryson (University of Minnesota), Julia Hautz (University of Innsbruck), Birgit Renzl (University of Stuttgart) and Richard Whittington (University of Oxford) among others.
- Monday, 28th, 10:15 am, “Forced to Open Up: A Comparative Analysis of Open Strategizing in Regulated Environments”, paper co-authored with Felix Schmid (University of Innsbruck) and Violetta Splitter (University of Oxford)
- Monday, 28th, 12 pm, Strategy and Organizationality: The More We Strategize, the More We are Organized?, showcase symposium co-organized with Monica Nadegger (LMU Munich), featuring as panelists David Seidl (University of Zurich), Dennis Schoeneborn (CBS), Ann Langley (HEC Montreal), Héloïse Berkowitz (Aix-Marseille University), Birte Asmuß (Aarhus University).
- Tuesday, 29th, “When Frustrations Turn Into a Firestorm: Communicative Constitution of a Collectively Forceful Voice”, paper co-authored with Aleksander Groth (MCI Innsbruck) and Ellen Nathues (University of Twente).
Of course, I also plan to attend several receptions, including Swiss, Oxford, VU Amsterdam as well as the Business Meeting and Social by the SAP Interest Group (Monday, 28th, 5 pm.) See you in Copenhagen!
#AOM2025 #AcademyOfManagement #AcademyOfManagementAnnualMeeting #AoM #Copenhagen
-
Pre-Conference Post: The First Academy of Management Annual Meeting in Europe
The first word I encountered right out of the Metro is, of course, “Hygge”.In previous years, I have only blogged after attending international conferences such as the Academy of Management Annual Meeting. However, to some degree, a pre-conference posting might be much more helpful for people who want to meet up. So, having already arrived in Copenhagen, let me briefly and chronologically list sessions and other occasions I will be involved in at this year’s Academy of Management Annual Meeting – the first ever to be hosted outside of North America:
- Friday, 25th at 9 am, “Career Development Workshop for Mid-Career Scholars”, organized by Carola Wolf (University of Liverpool), with fellow panelists Julia Balogun (University of Liverpool), Paul Spee (University of Queensland), Matt Statler (New York University) and Aino Tenhiälä (IE Business School).
- Friday, 25th, 6:30 pm, Offsite Dinner of the Strategizing Activities and Practices (SAP) Interest Group, co-organized by Benjamin Grossmann-Hensel (University of Zurich) and Susan Hilbollling (Aarhus University)
- Saturday, 26th, 10:45 am, Bridging Silos: Toward a Research Agenda for Open Social Innovation, co-organized by Hanna Fults (VU Amsterdam), Susan Hilbolling (Aarhus University) and Philipp Türtscher (VU Amsterdam) and sharing a panel with Anne-Laure Fayard (Nova School of Business and Economics), Lars Bo Jeppesen (CBS), Marion Poetz (CBS) and Ann-Kristin Zobel (University of St. Gallen).
- Saturday, 26th, 3:30 pm, The Future of Strategizing and Organizing as Practice: Extending to Under-Represented Contexts, co-organized by Renate Kratochvil and Yalan Wang (both University of Stockholm) and featuring as speakers David Seidl (University of Zürich), Linda Rouleau (HEC Montreal), Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), Eero Vaara (University of Oxford), Maria Andrea de Villa (EAFIT University) and Rebecca Bednarek (Victoria Management School).
- Sunday, 27th, 2pm, Unconferencing SAP and Beyond: An Open Space for Emerging Topics and Nascent Projects, co-organized with Madalina Pop (Aarhus University) and Maximilian Heimstädt (Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg). Given the BarCamp format of this session, the actual program will be created on the spot by the participants, which include facilitators such as Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), John Bryson (University of Minnesota), Julia Hautz (University of Innsbruck), Birgit Renzl (University of Stuttgart) and Richard Whittington (University of Oxford) among others.
- Monday, 28th, 10:15 am, “Forced to Open Up: A Comparative Analysis of Open Strategizing in Regulated Environments”, paper co-authored with Felix Schmid (University of Innsbruck) and Violetta Splitter (University of Oxford)
- Monday, 28th, 12 pm, Strategy and Organizationality: The More We Strategize, the More We are Organized?, showcase symposium co-organized with Monica Nadegger (LMU Munich), featuring as panelists David Seidl (University of Zurich), Dennis Schoeneborn (CBS), Ann Langley (HEC Montreal), Héloïse Berkowitz (Aix-Marseille University), Birte Asmuß (Aarhus University).
- Tuesday, 29th, “When Frustrations Turn Into a Firestorm: Communicative Constitution of a Collectively Forceful Voice”, paper co-authored with Aleksander Groth (MCI Innsbruck) and Ellen Nathues (University of Twente).
Of course, I also plan to attend several receptions, including Swiss, Oxford, VU Amsterdam as well as the Business Meeting and Social by the SAP Interest Group (Monday, 28th, 5 pm.) See you in Copenhagen!
#AOM2025 #AcademyOfManagement #AcademyOfManagementAnnualMeeting #AoM #Copenhagen
-
Pre-Conference Post: The First Academy of Management Annual Meeting in Europe
The first word I encountered right out of the Metro is, of course, “Hygge”.In previous years, I have only blogged after attending international conferences such as the Academy of Management Annual Meeting. However, to some degree, a pre-conference posting might be much more helpful for people who want to meet up. So, having already arrived in Copenhagen, let me briefly and chronologically list sessions and other occasions I will be involved in at this year’s Academy of Management Annual Meeting – the first ever to be hosted outside of North America:
- Friday, 25th at 9 am, “Career Development Workshop for Mid-Career Scholars”, organized by Carola Wolf (University of Liverpool), with fellow panelists Julia Balogun (University of Liverpool), Paul Spee (University of Queensland), Matt Statler (New York University) and Aino Tenhiälä (IE Business School).
- Friday, 25th, 6:30 pm, Offsite Dinner of the Strategizing Activities and Practices (SAP) Interest Group, co-organized by Benjamin Grossmann-Hensel (University of Zurich) and Susan Hilbollling (Aarhus University)
- Saturday, 26th, 10:45 am, Bridging Silos: Toward a Research Agenda for Open Social Innovation, co-organized by Hanna Fults (VU Amsterdam), Susan Hilbolling (Aarhus University) and Philipp Türtscher (VU Amsterdam) and sharing a panel with Anne-Laure Fayard (Nova School of Business and Economics), Lars Bo Jeppesen (CBS), Marion Poetz (CBS) and Ann-Kristin Zobel (University of St. Gallen).
- Saturday, 26th, 3:30 pm, The Future of Strategizing and Organizing as Practice: Extending to Under-Represented Contexts, co-organized by Renate Kratochvil and Yalan Wang (both University of Stockholm) and featuring as speakers David Seidl (University of Zürich), Linda Rouleau (HEC Montreal), Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), Eero Vaara (University of Oxford), Maria Andrea de Villa (EAFIT University) and Rebecca Bednarek (Victoria Management School).
- Sunday, 27th, 2pm, Unconferencing SAP and Beyond: An Open Space for Emerging Topics and Nascent Projects, co-organized with Madalina Pop (Aarhus University) and Maximilian Heimstädt (Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg). Given the BarCamp format of this session, the actual program will be created on the spot by the participants, which include facilitators such as Shenghui Ma (Fudan University), John Bryson (University of Minnesota), Julia Hautz (University of Innsbruck), Birgit Renzl (University of Stuttgart) and Richard Whittington (University of Oxford) among others.
- Monday, 28th, 10:15 am, “Forced to Open Up: A Comparative Analysis of Open Strategizing in Regulated Environments”, paper co-authored with Felix Schmid (University of Innsbruck) and Violetta Splitter (University of Oxford)
- Monday, 28th, 12 pm, Strategy and Organizationality: The More We Strategize, the More We are Organized?, showcase symposium co-organized with Monica Nadegger (LMU Munich), featuring as panelists David Seidl (University of Zurich), Dennis Schoeneborn (CBS), Ann Langley (HEC Montreal), Héloïse Berkowitz (Aix-Marseille University), Birte Asmuß (Aarhus University).
- Tuesday, 29th, “When Frustrations Turn Into a Firestorm: Communicative Constitution of a Collectively Forceful Voice”, paper co-authored with Aleksander Groth (MCI Innsbruck) and Ellen Nathues (University of Twente).
Of course, I also plan to attend several receptions, including Swiss, Oxford, VU Amsterdam as well as the Business Meeting and Social by the SAP Interest Group (Monday, 28th, 5 pm.) See you in Copenhagen!
#AOM2025 #AcademyOfManagement #AcademyOfManagementAnnualMeeting #AoM #Copenhagen
-
The story so far looks a little like this.
I'd be genuinely interested in chatting & comparing notes with anyone attempting to do this, anyone seasoned in MVS old-or-new, or vintage mainframes/minis/superminis in general. My own experience, 2 decades ago, was some ICL VME on a dual node S39L65 ("Estriel") and large Unix platforms up to the E10K/Starfire. Have never experienced DEC or IBM in these sectors, apart from AIX.
Any other retro weirdos out there?
-
En 1942, Jules Isaac écrivit un pamphlet sur la chute de la république en 404 et en 1940.
Christophe Chandezon parle de cet ouvrage : https://www.academia.edu/33264458/_Les_Oligarques_une_histoire_compar%C3%A9e_in_Les_engagements_de_Jules_Isaac_Actes_du_colloque_dAix_en_Provence_27_et_28_mars_1997_Aix_en_Provence_1998_p_97_106#oligarchie #extrêmeCentre #histoire #Pétain #Vichy #Athènes #ÉtatFrançais #GrèceAntique #Antiquité #histoire #démocratie #métèques #guerre #Péloponnèse #défaite #République #racialisation #racismeDEtat #France #antisémitisme
-
Do you use Eclipse #Temurin by @eclipseadoptium on #AIX or Linux on ppc64le/s390x architectures?
If so, there is a plan to look at moving them to be headless builds in the future.
See https://adoptium.net/en-GB/news/2026/05/headless-platform-changes for details and to provide any feedback on the proposal.
-
Having an early morning #AIX session reconfiguring storage paths on the OS due to changes in the backend and trying to make sure we end up with bootable systems at the end of it ...
I'm not good at early mornings at the best of times 😟 -
I'm getting pretty close to finishing my first video on the ubiquity of win16 APIs in 90s computing.
The main bit of research that I'm having a little trouble with is the exact pricing for the SDKs for #solaris, #aix, and #hpux from the mid 90s
Does anyone have a link, or receipts, of purchases, catalogues, etc of things like that?
-
This week has been the first time I've ever used #aix, also today I've had the literal worst headache I've ever had. Like being stabbed in the forehead.
Coincidence?
-
Abuse – a computer game developed by Crack dot Com and published by Origin Systems and Electronic Arts in 1996 for DOS and Linux. An improved port for Mac OS was created by Bungie Studios. After the game’s source code was released in 1998, an Amiga port was also created. https://archivegame.org/abuse/ #game #dos #osx #acorn #amigaos #ios #android #linux #bsd #aix
-
Turns out that #aix is also laffer utilities compatible!
Unlike #solaris and #hpux Wabi didn't quite "just work" and I had to relink it with X11R5 libraries. The README file included with AIX did point me in that direction tho (not about Wabi, that the R5 compat libraries were a thing at all)
Before that it wouldn't really work. I'm sure this knowledge will be super useful to the wider world. 😃
-
French mathematician and logician Joseph Diez Gergonne, who died OTD in 1859, had difficulty publishing his work so he founded his own journal publishing articles by him and other mathematicians https://cromwell-intl.com/travel/france/aix-en-provence/?s=mb #travel #France #logic
-
If you look around you should still be able to find Luke Mewburn's paper on #MewburnRC .
Similarly, what Linux people erroneously call "sysvinit" is actually van Smoorenburg init+rc created (by Miquel van Smoorenburg) for Minix in 1992.
It's not from #Unix System 5 at all, as that had obsoleted R3's init+rc system years before 1992 and gone on to the AIX SRC, and the SAF, SAC, ttymon, SMF, and stuff still in #Illumos today.