8 research outputs found

    Wireless printing from PC to printer

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    The world is going into a wireless era where appliances are revolutionized to give man convenience at his fingertips. Remote controls, beepers, and cellular phones have reached a level of acceptance and use that a lot of advantages from their usage are enjoyed. Limitations brought about by time and space are slowly being eliminated by the use of wireless technology.Radio frequency technology is applied in this study to formulate the means to print from one location to another without physical means. This project consists of two devices, a transmitter and receiver module, each connected at the output port of the computer and the printer.Implementation resulted in wireless transfer of data from the computer to the printer though large distance printing was not met.The prototype, which printed without any physical link between computer and printer, is one of its first regarding devices used for wireless printing using radio frequency. It is intended to verify the effectivity of employing RF technology, via frequency modulation, in PCs during the printing process

    Straight Outta IMSA

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    Students enrolled in this Intersession learned how to storyboard, direct live video, compose a story, and write and record an original song as well as the accompanying beat. By the end of the course, they had written, composed, and recorded their own song about IMSA and produced a music video to convey to friends, family and even outreach to the IMSA community

    Silent Bodies in Religion and Work: Migrant Filipinas and the Construction of Relational Power

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    The present article explores the relationship of silences, as vocal and non-vocal bodily practices, to forms of power in religion and work. More specifically, it focuses on Filipina domestic workers in Greece who are members of Iglesia ni Cristo, an independent Filipino church. In the hierarchical contexts of the church and paid domestic work, where the church expands its influence, silence is a dominant embodied religious ethos, an ideal behavior for female workers and an expression of obedience. This silence enhances women’s subordination resulting in strict power relationships. Silencing the body, however, is also an agential practice of Filipina immigrants themselves, a tool to transform power relationships into more reciprocal ones. By reflective and unreflective practices of bodily silence, migrant Filipinas reverse subjection, transform the power relationships in which they are involved and attribute to them a more relational character

    Bibliography

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