Google Voice – A How to Guide

Benefits of Google Voice

Google Voice is a service that allows users to make free domestic calls from their computers or mobile devices to other computers, mobile devices or landlines. With Google Voice, you are able to use one phone number to manage all of your phones and send and receive domestic calls at no cost. Below are additional benefits of using Google Voice

  • Users can be assigned a free Google Voice number.
  • You can assign all of your phones the same number for incoming calls (cell, work and mobile).
  • You can use with your Android, iPhone and iPad devices.
  • You can send and receive unlimited free text messages.
  • You are able to search your texts.
  • Converts voicemail to text that be viewed through SMS texts or email.
  • You can records calls that you receive.

Transition to Google Voice

For Women with Diabetes – Your Guide to Pregnancy

Taking Care of Your Baby and Yourself

Keeping your blood glucose as close to normal as possible before you get pregnant and during your pregnancy is the most important thing you can do to stay healthy and have a healthy baby. Your health care team can help you learn how to use meal planning, physical activity, and medications to reach your blood glucose goals. Together, you’ll create a plan for taking care of yourself and your diabetes.

Pregnancy causes a number of changes in your body, so you might need to make changes in the ways you manage your diabetes. Even if you’ve had diabetes for years, you may need changes in your meal plan, physical activity routine, and medications. In addition, your needs might change as you get closer to your delivery date.

How Diabetes Can Affect You and Your Baby

High blood glucose levels before and during pregnancy can

Motorola Droid X User Guide

DROID by Motorola gives you a premium browsing and messaging experience with the very latest from Google™, all in a thin touch QWERTY slider.

  • Browsing. Get more from the Web, with a huge screen and full HTML. Search, browse, everything you want to do, all made easier.
  • Maps, entertainment, and more. The latest technology and apps. Google Maps™ to find your way. YouTube™ to stay entertained. Easy access to Google and thousands of Android applications to expand your world.

Caution: Before assembling, charging or using your phone for the first time, please read the important legal and safety information packaged with your phone. Once your phone is up and running, touch Menu > Settings > About phone > Safety information to read the full information.

Let’s go
let’s get you up and running

Assemble & charge

  1. MicroSD in (may already be inserted)
  2. Battery in

Home Landscaping Guide for Lake Tahoe and Vicinity

For the 2008 and 2009 field seasons, the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) and the Lake Tahoe Basin fire chiefs have agreed to make some changes to Best Management Practices (BMPs) recommendations to make it easier for homeowners to implement effective defensible space practices. These are described in the “Living With Fire—A Guide for the Homeowner, Lake Tahoe Basin” (Second Edition). Please make note of the following changes to specific pages in the “Home Landscaping Guide for Lake Tahoe and Vicinity,” University of Nevada Cooperative Extension (UNCE) publication EB 06-01.

Defensible Space Zones

The area from 0 – 5 feet from structures should be a noncombustible zone. In this zone, you should remove flammable shrubs and trees, dead branches and dried grass, flowers and weeds. Do not use pine needles, bark or wood mulches in this zone. This zone includes both the drip lines and gable ends of structures. It can be covered with gravel, rock, brick, concrete, or low-growing, irrigated herbaceous plants such as lawn, erosion control grasses, clover, forbs and succulents. Firewood, flammable construction materials and dead plant materials should be removed from this zone. Do not cross this zone with wood landscape timbers or boards.

Apache Ant User Manual Guide

Contents At A Glance

  1. Apache Ant User Manual Authors (p.9)
  2. Feedback and Troubleshooting (p.10)
  3. Introduction (p.11)
  4. Installing Ant (p.12)
  5. Running Ant (p.18)
  6. Using Ant (p.23)
  7. Concepts (p.30)
  8. Listeners & Loggers (p.86)
  9. Ant in Anger (Using Apache Ant in a Production Development System) (p.90)
  10. Apache Ant Task Design Guidelines (p.102)
  11. Writing Your Own Task (p.108)
  12. Tasks Designed for Extension (p.114)
  13. InputHandler (p.115)
  14. Using Ant Tasks Outside of Ant (p.116)
  15. Tutorial: Writing Tasks (p.118)
  16. License (p.130)


Introduction

This is the manual for version 1.6.0 of Apache Ant. If your version of Ant (as verified with ant -version) is older or newer than this version then this is not the correct manual set. Please use the documentation appropriate to your current version. Also, if you are using a version older than the most recent release, we recommend an upgrade to fix bugs as well as provide new functionality.

A Self-Learning Worm Using Importance Scanning

INTRODUCTION
A worm attacks vulnerable computer systems and employs self-propagating method to flood the Internet rapidly Worms, such as Code Red [10], Slammer [9], and Witty [17], have infected hundreds of thousands of hosts and become a significant threat to network security and management. It is therefore of great importance for defenders to characterize the spread of worms that employ distinct scanning methods and to study countermeasures accordingly.

Different scanning methods have been employed by previous worms. For instance, Morris worm used topological scanning that relies on the information contained in the victim
host to find new targets. Code Red v2 and Slammer worms employed random scanning that selects targets randomly. Code Red II and Nimda worms exercised localized scanning that preferentially searches for targets on the “local” address space.