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Sampit Airport (also known as H. Asan Airport (IATA: SMQ, ICAO: WAOS)),[1][2] is a public airport in Sampit, Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. It is located on the island of Kalimantan, also known as Borneo. It is able to accommodate Airbus A320 and Boeing 737-sized aircraft. The airport is located 6 km North East of the city center. Airlines and destinations Airlines Destinations NAM Air Banjarmasin, Jakarta–Soekarno–Hatta, Pangkalan Bun, Semarang, Surabaya[3] Sriwijaya Air Surabaya Wings Air Palangkaraya, Pangkalan Bun[4], Surabaya References Great Circle Mapper: SMQ / WAOS – Sampit, Borneo, Indonesia Airport information for WAOS – Hasan Airport at World Aero Data. Data current as of October 2006. https://agent.sriwijayaair.co.id/SJ-Eticket/login.php?action=in https://agent.lionair.co.id/LionAirAgentsPortal/Default.aspx External links Accident history for SMQ / WAOS – Sampit Airport, Indonesia at Aviation Safety Network Indonesia Airport Global Website
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Fakfak Torea Airport (Indonesian: Bandar Udara Torea Fakfak) (IATA: FKQ, ICAO: WASF), also known as Fak Fak Airport, is an airport serving Fakfak,[1] located in the province of West Papua in Indonesia. Facilities The airport resides at an elevation of 462 feet (141 m) above mean sea level. It has one runway designated 10/28 with an asphalt surface measuring 1,200 by 30 metres (3,937 ft × 98 ft). Airlines and destinations Airlines Destinations Xpress Air Sorong Nam Air Kaimana, Manokwari, Sorong[3] Wings Air Ambon, Kaimana, Manokwari, Nabire, Sorong References Airport information for WASF from DAFIF (effective October 2006) Airport information for FKQ / WASF at Great Circle Mapper. Source: DAFIF (effective October 2006). https://agent.sriwijayaair.co.id/SJ-Eticket/login.php?action=in External links Accident history for FKQ / WASF at Aviation Safety Network
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The front controller software design pattern is listed in several pattern catalogs and related to the design of web applications. It is "a controller that handles all requests for a website",[1] which is a useful structure for web application developers to achieve the flexibility and reuse without code redundancy. Instruction A typical front controller structure. Front controllers are often used in web applications to implement workflows. While not strictly required, it is much easier to control navigation across a set of related pages (for instance, multiple pages used in an online purchase) from a front controller than it is to make the individual pages responsible for navigation. The front controller may be implemented as a Java object, or as a script in a script language like PHP, Raku, Python or Ruby that is called on every request of a web session. This script, for example an index.php, would handle all tasks that are common to the application or the framework, such as session handling, caching, a
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Utarom Airport in 1962 Utarom Airport or Kaimana Airport (Indonesian: Bandar Udara Utarom) (IATA: KNG, ICAO: WASK) is an airport serving Kaimana,[1] located in the province of West Papua in Indonesia. Due to increasing passengers, the airport was heavily modernized. The airport development is done in several stages, which begin in 2012, followed in 2014, and was completed at the end of 2015. Currently, Utarom Airport has a modern passenger terminal design like that of Wamena Airport. Airport capacity also increased to be able to accommodate 102 passengers during peak hours. The passenger terminal is made more comfortable in order to improve service to passengers[3] In total, the construction of a passenger terminal covering an area of 1,800 square meters costs around Rp 75.5 billion.[4] The development of the airport was completed at the end of 2015 and was inaugurated by President Joko Widodo on 30 December 2016.[5] Kaimana Airport which is a third class airport now has a runway length of 2,000 m x 30 cm,
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Battle Nations was a freemium turn-based strategy multiplayer video game developed and published by Z2Live. On September 28, 2016, the game was officially shut down by Z2Live, along with many of their other titles. Gameplay The game puts players in control of land with limited resources where effective management of resources is vital to expansion and advancement. Building a productive nation allows players to form armies which are the basis for the game's core: PvP combat in turn-based strategy warfare. It is impossible to "lose" in Battle Nations: even if the player has no buildings to generate gold, the player will always have enough gold to build a supply drop, which generates 100 gold every hour as well as 25 of iron, wood, and stone. Most of the technology in game is based on that used by humans during WW2, although there are a few exceptions (e.g. velociraptors, mammoths, lasers, swords, plasma, railguns, etc.). There are 3 major aspects to the gameplay: Battling, Building, and Storyline. Battling
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Daugherty in 2013 CJ Daugherty, also known as Christi Daugherty, is a novelist best known for Night School, a series of bestselling young adult romantic thrillers set in a fictional boarding school called Cimmeria Academy.[1] She began her career as a journalist, writing for publications such as the Dallas Morning News,[2] Reuters[3] and Time Out.[4] After a brief period working for the British government,[5] she began writing novels in 2010.[6] Night School The first book in the Night School series was published by Little, Brown in the UK in 2012.[7] Endgame, the fifth book in the series, is due out in 2015.[8] The Night School series has been translated into 22 languages.[9] The series has been a bestseller in multiple countries.[10] Night School: Resistance, the fourth book in the series, reached number two on the Spiegel Bestseller list in Germany in May 2014.[11] It was also a number one bestseller in Poland.[12] Night School: Fracture, the third book in the series, was number one bestselling childre
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Sophie Meunier (born c. 1967 in France) is a Research Scholar in Public and International Affairs at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School and the Co-Director of the European Union Program at Princeton.[1] A Franco-American political scientist, she is an expert in European integration, the politics of European trade policy, and the politics of anti-Americanism.[2][3] Her first book, The French Challenge: Adapting to Globalization (Brookings Institution Press, 2001), co-written with Philip Gordon, won the 2002 France-Ameriques Book Award.[4][5] Paul Krugman called it "a terrific book, especially for those of us who were wondering how France manages to thrive in the very global economy it denounces".[6] Her second book, Trading Voices: The European Union in International Commercial Negotiations (Princeton University Press, 2005), has been praised by Pascal Lamy as "the first authoritative study of the trade policy of the European Union".[7] She has published many articles in academic journals, as well
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The ampersand is the logogram &, representing the conjunction "and". It originated as a ligature of the letters et—Latin for "and".[1] Etymology A page from an 1863 textbook displaying the alphabet. Note the & as the 27th character. The word ampersand is a corruption of the phrase "and per se & (and)", meaning "and by itself and (represented by the symbol &)".[2] Traditionally, when reciting the alphabet in English-speaking schools, any letter that could also be used as a word in itself ("A", "I", and, at one point, "O") was repeated with the Latin expression per se ("by itself").[3][4][5] This habit was useful in spelling where a word or syllable was repeated after spelling; e.g. "d, o, g—dog" would be clear but simply saying "a—a" would be confusing without the clarifying "per se" added. It was also common practice to add the "&" sign at the end of the alphabet as if it were the 27th letter, pronounced as the Latin et or later in English as and. As a result, the recitation of
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Rebecca Godfrey is a novelist and non-fiction writer. Early life She was born in Toronto, Ontario, to writers Dave Godfrey[1] and Ellen Godfrey. As a child she relocated with her family to Victoria, British Columbia. Godfrey attended the University of Toronto and Sarah Lawrence College, from which she received a MFA in Creative Writing. She worked in Toronto and New York as a journalist and editor before writing her first novel, The Torn Skirt. Her first book,The Torn Skirt (2001), a novel, was shortlisted for the 2002 Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize.[2] Described as an antidote to the sad boy lit of David Foster Wallace[3], it received a favorable review in the New York Times.[4] Her second book, Under the Bridge (2005), an investigation into the beating death of Reena Virk, received British Columbia's National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction in 2006.[5] The book was optioned for film adaptation by Reese Witherspoon's Type A Productions , with director Catherine Hardwicke attached to direct.[6] In 2017 Godfrey
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Ngurah Rai International Airport (Indonesian: Bandar Udara Internasional Ngurah Rai) (IATA: DPS, ICAO: WADD), officially known as I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport, is the main airport in Bali, located 13 km south of Denpasar. Ngurah Rai is the second busiest airport in Indonesia after Soekarno–Hatta International Airport. In 2018, the airport served 23,779,178 passengers.[1] The airport has category IX and is capable of serving wide-body aircraft including the Boeing 747-8 and Airbus A380.[2] Airport Council International has awarded Ngurah Rai International Airport as the world's third best airport (with 15-25 million passengers each year) in 2016 based on their services.[3] The airport is named after I Gusti Ngurah Rai, a Balinese hero who died on 20 November 1946 in a puputan (fight to the death) against the Dutch at Marga in Tabanan, where the Dutch defeated his company with air support, killing Ngurah Rai and 95 others during the Indonesian Revolution in 1946.[4] Location The airport is locat
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A classification of SQL injection attacking vector as of 2010. SQL injection is a code injection technique, used to attack data-driven applications, in which malicious SQL statements are inserted into an entry field for execution (e.g. to dump the database contents to the attacker).[1] SQL injection must exploit a security vulnerability in an application's software, for example, when user input is either incorrectly filtered for string literal escape characters embedded in SQL statements or user input is not strongly typed and unexpectedly executed. SQL injection is mostly known as an attack vector for websites but can be used to attack any type of SQL database. SQL injection attacks allow attackers to spoof identity, tamper with existing data, cause repudiation issues such as voiding transactions or changing balances, allow the complete disclosure of all data on the system, destroy the data or make it otherwise unavailable, and become administrators of the database server. In a 2012 study, it was observe
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The Sahel forms a belt up to 1000 km wide, spanning Africa from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea. A map of the Sénégal River drainage basin. The vegetation in the Sahel follows seasonal rainfall. In March, during the dry season, rainfall and lush vegetation don't extend north of the Gulf of Guinea. September brings rain and vegetation into the Sahel as far north as the northern edge of Lake Chad. Photographs from Senegal show the difference in vegetation between the dry (left) and wet (right) seasons. A large-scale, drought-induced famine occurred in Africa's Sahel region and many parts of the neighboring Sénégal River Area from February to August 2010. It is one of many famines to have hit the region in recent times.[3] The Sahel is the ecoclimatic and biogeographic zone of transition between the Sahara desert in the north of Africa and the Sudanian savannas in the south, covering an area of 3,053,200 square kilometers. It is a transitional ecoregion of semi-arid grasslands, savannas, steppes, and t
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Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller (July 8, 1908 – January 26, 1979) was an American businessman and politician who served as the 41st vice president of the United States from 1974 to 1977, and previously as the 49th governor of New York from 1959 to 1973. He also served as assistant secretary of State for American Republic Affairs for Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman (1944–1945) as well as under secretary of Health, Education and Welfare under Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1953 to 1954. A grandson of billionaire John D. Rockefeller and a member of the wealthy Rockefeller family, he was a noted art collector and served as administrator of Rockefeller Center in Manhattan, New York. Rockefeller was a Republican who was often considered to be liberal, progressive,[1] or moderate. In an agreement that was termed the Treaty of Fifth Avenue, Rockefeller persuaded Richard Nixon to alter the Republican Party platform just before the 1960 Republican Convention. In his time, liberals in the Republican Party we
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Music therapy is an evidence-based clinical use of musical interventions to improve clients' quality of life. Music therapists use music and its many facets— physical, emotional, mental, social, aesthetic, and spiritual— to help clients improve their health in cognitive, motor, emotional, communicative, social, sensory, and educational domains by using both active and receptive music experiences. These experiences include improvisation, re-creation, composition, receptive methods, and discussion of music. Some common music therapy practices include developmental work (communication, motor skills, etc.) with individuals with special needs, songwriting and listening in reminiscence, orientation work with the elderly, processing and relaxation work, and rhythmic entrainment for physical rehabilitation in stroke victims. Music therapy is used in some medical hospitals, cancer centers, schools, alcohol and drug recovery programs, psychiatric hospitals, and correctional facilities.[1] There is a wide qualitative
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