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Chat entre dos personas

Diana:Hi,my name's Diana.What's your name? Steve:Hi,I'm steve.Nice to meet you Diana:How old are you.Steve.And.where do you come from? Steve:i'm 14,and I come from canada Diana:What do you like doing in your free time? Steve:I always do sport or visit my friends.And you? Diana:I often do sport too, and always chat on the internet with people from all over the world

Pgina web
Ejemplo de una pgina web.

Una pgina web (o pgina electrnica, segn el trmino recomendado por la R.A.E.) es el nombre de un documento o informacin electrnica adaptada para la World Wide Web y que puede ser accedida mediante un navegador . Esta informacin se encuentra generalmente en formato HTML o XHTML, y puede proporcionar navegacin a otras pginas web mediante enlaces dehipertexto. Las pginas web frecuentemente incluyen otros recursos como hojas de estilo en cascada, guiones (scripts) e imgenes digitales, entre otros. Las pginas web pueden estar almacenadas en un equipo local o un servidor web remoto. El servidor web puede restringir el acceso nicamente para redes privadas, p. ej., en una intranetcorporativa, o puede publicar las pginas en la World Wide Web. El acceso a las pginas web es realizado mediante su transferencia desde servidores utilizando el protocolo de transferencia de hipertexto (HTTP).

Caractersticas
Una pgina web est compuesta principalmente por informacin (slo texto y/o mdulos multimedia) as como por hiperenlaces; adems puede contener o asociar Hoja de estilo, datos de estilo para especificar cmo debe visualizarse, y tambin Aplicacin informtica aplicaciones embebidas para as hacerla interactiva. Las pginas web son escritas en un lenguaje de marcado que provee la capacidad de manejar e insertar hiperenlaces, generalmente HTML. El contenido de la pgina puede ser predeterminado pgina web esttica o generado al momento de visualizarla o solicitarla a un servidor web pgina web dinmica. Las pginas dinmicas que se generan al momento de la visualizacin, se especifican a travs de algn lenguaje interpretado, generalmente JavaScript, y la aplicacin encargada de visualizar el contenido es la que realmente

debe generarlo. Las pginas dinmicas que se generan, al ser solicitadas, son creadas por una aplicacin en el servidor web que alberga las mismas. Respecto a la estructura de las pginas web, algunos organismos, en especial el W3C, suelen establecer directivas con la intencin de normalizar el diseo, y para as facilitar y simplificar la visualizacin e interpretacin del contenido. Una pgina web es en esencia una tarjeta de presentacin digital, ya sea para empresas, organizaciones, o personas, as como una tarjeta de presentacin de ideas y de informaciones. As mismo, la nueva tendencia orienta a que las pginas web no sean slo atractivas para los internautas, sino tambin optimizadas (preparadas) para los buscadores a travs del cdigo fuente. Forzar esta doble funcin puede, sin embargo, crear conflictos respecto de la calidad del contenido. Si hablamos de posicionamiento web, una pgina web es la base para optimizar todo un sitio web el cual es un conjunto de pginas web.

Foot and diets

INGREDIENTS: Wheat flour,tomato puree, mozzarella 10%, water, salami 5.4%(pork, pork fat, salt, dextrose, maltodextrin, spices, spice extract, smoke, antioxidants: E300, E301, preservative: E250), cultivate field mushrooms, (Agaricus campetris) 4.3%, tomato pulp,ham 3.5% (pork, water, salt, milk protein, dextrose, sugar, wheat starch, aromas, stabiliser: E450, antioxidant: E301, preservative: E250), sunflower seed oil, vegetable fats, yeast, sweet peppers 1.9%, fried onion 1.9% (onion, vegetable oil), corn 1.9%, salt, sugar, dextrose, modified starch, chilli pepper, parsley, emulsifier: E471. NUTRITIONAL INFORMATIONS (average values for 100 g of product)

Energy

kcal
250

1052

kJ

protein carbohydrates
9,2 32,0

fats
9,5

PREPARATION: . Defrosted Pizza - pre-heated oven: Remove the pizza from its box and to leave it to defrost for at least 15 minutes. In the meantime switch the oven on and bring it up to 220C. Place the pizza in the centre of the oven and to cook for around 15 minutes if the oven is fan-assisted or for 17 minutes in a normal oven, and anyway until the cheese melts. . Deep-Frozen Pizza non pre-heated oven: Switch the oven on and set it to 220C; place the still deep-frozen pizza in the centre of the oven and to cook for around 19 minutes and anyway until the cheese melts. In both cases the cooking time may vary the type depending on the kind of oven used and how you like pizza cooked. STORAGE: at 18C (****): Until the expiring date. at 12C (***): 1 month. at 6C (*) 1 week. In the fridge: 48 hous. In a cool place: 24 hours.

ONCE DEFROSTED, THE PRODUCT MUST NOT BE FROZEN AGAIN AND MUST BE EATEN WITHIN 24 HOURS OF DEFROSTING

Job interview
Preguntas sobre ti (Questions about you) Tell me about yourself? How do/would your friends describe you? What is the most interesting thing youve done in the past three years? What do you want me to know about you that isnt on your rsum? Tell me about an interesting article you recently read in the newspaper. Whats the last non-school related book you read? What did you learn from this book? What kinds of tasks and responsibilities motivate you the most? Why should I hire you and not the next candidate who walks in the door? Do you prefer to work with others or on your own? What is your greatest strength? Weakness?

Preguntas sobre tus capacidades (Questions about your qualifications)

Why do you want to work here? Why should I hire you? Do you have the skills to work in this position/company? What specific skills have you acquired or used in previous jobs that related to this position? Tell me about what you learned from your previous jobs and internships. What did you like/dislike about your last job? What is your biggest accomplishment? Describe your leadership/communication/coordinating/etc style?

Preguntas sobre tu formacin (Questions about your education)

Why did you choose to study ___? Describe the course that has had the greatest impact on your thinking. What courses did you enjoy the most? Least? Tell me about your extracurricular activities during school. What do you believe you have gained from these experiences?

Preguntas sobre la empresa (Questions about your understanding of the job/company)

What do you know about our company? Position? Why did you apply to our organization? What interests/impresses you about this organization? What criteria are you using to evaluate the organization for which you hope to work? What can you tell us about our company? What do you think of our organizational structure? Who else are you interviewing with? What do you think of those organizations? Are you seeking employment in a company of a certain size? Why? Do you have a geographic preference?

Otras preguntas (Other questions)

What are your salary expectations for this position? Where do you see yourself in ___ years?

Top 10 Security Rules

Jon-Louis Heimerl | February 04, 2011 Keeping your information safe can be hard, but it does not have to be. At least, it does not always have to be. So, to help simplify the world of security, here is my favorite top 10 list for information security.

1. Remember the KISS principle Keep Information Security Simple.Security should not interfere or overcomplicate work. The intent of security is to ensure that you protect your staff, your important information, and the important information of your clients. Security should help you get your work done in a safe manner. Without good security, your people and information are at risk, and no one wants that. 85% of security is good old common sense. Dont leave that sensitive client data in your car in the hotel parking garage. Dont work on that client project on the airplane you know that guy in the seat next to you is not really reading the in-flight magazine a second time. No one wants to hear the words upset customer and lawsuit in the same sentence. 2. Password is not a good password. Use good, strong, passwords. Use eight lower and upper case characters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), and special characters (!@#$%*_-.,). Dont use a version of your user ID, and dont just use words out of the dictionary - make it harder than that, but dont make it too complicated to actually remember (refer back to rule #1). Combine words and add extra characters. Fuzz3!ball is actually a pretty good password (dont use it!), and so is OAK1rdrs* (dont use that one either!). And dont ever, ever, share your passwords with any coworkers. (Ever.) 3. Hate viruses, worms, and spyware. You all have anti-virus software on your computers, or should. Even recent surveys say this is still not universal. When you have it, this software was set-up by IT to update itself to make sure you have the latest software, and your systems are being scanned regularly, or as deemed appropriate. If you want to scan more often, schedule more scanning, but if you dont know what youre doing, dont muck with it! Anti-virus software is one of your best lines of defense against the steady stream of viruses and worms with which we are faced. If your antivirus package does not have a good anti-spyware capability, use a third-party anti-spyware software as well.

Besides that, know what you are doing in the real-world. Dont open that random email, and dont just download stuff without absolutely knowing exactly what you are downloading. 4. Encryption is NOT a dirty word. Encryption technology is designed to help keep sensitive information safe, and we all want that. If that lost laptop had been protected by strong encryption, would insert bank of the month name here bank have lost 300,000 records? Use system and/or disk encryption to protect your cool stuff. Products are available to protect your data, especially mobile systems, and do so in an operationally practical (think easy see rule #1 above) manner. 5. Lock your screen. That screen saver doesnt just protect your screen from burn-in. It helps keep someone else from messing with your computer when youre not around. Was that you who hit some nasty site or was it someone else while you were in a meeting? Did you pull the new ultra top secret product design down to your system? Did you copy that credit card or healthcare data to a thumb drive? Or were you down the hall getting a new cup of coffee? Lock your workstation. Do you trust your coworkers? Youd like to think so. But would you stake your job on it? On all of them? Even that weasely looking guy who sits down by the copier? 6. Be responsibly mobile. We are all using mobile devices, and data is everywhere. We get email on our smart phone, keep client lists, and view/edit attachments. We mix corporate data into our private devices. Keep an eye on your mobile device it is hard for someone to steal information from the iPhone that is in your pocket. Lock the portable device so someone cant just pick it up and easily use it. If you have important data on the mobile device, back it up. And otherwise, just make conscious decisions about what you make mobile and how you protect the device. If you use your smart phone for work, chances are that the device is worth more than just the value of the hardware, so treat it accordingly. 7. Pretend the police are watching. Dont download the pirated software, or copy software from work for your home computer. Dont download the pirated mp3 or video files. Dont borrow that laptop. Some of these things are illegal, and some are questionable, but all open you to criminal prosecution and litigation. 8. Pretend your supervisor is watching. Do you really have time to balance your stock portfolio or manage your fantasy sports league at work? How long did it take you to book that trip to Cancun (airfare, car rental, resort, excursions)? In most work environments there is such a thing as acceptable personal use, but before you spend the afternoon of stress management, perhaps you should consider doing that at home, using your own ISP. 9. Pretend your mother is watching. Or maybe your mother-in-law. We all use the Internet on a daily basis. We all know what is really appropriate for the work place, and appropriate probably doesnt include porn sites, gambling, or online dating sites (well, at least if youre married it probably doesnt). Would you do it if Mom was sitting next to you?

10. Watch what you are doing. Everybody makes mistakes, and everything breaks. How long before even the best security program meets its nemesis? Do enough logging and monitoring of your environment that when something breaks, you can figure out what happened, recover while minimizing any damage, and make dang sure it never happens again. Ever. This doesnt mean you have to be monitoring the world (think back to rule #1 in this list), but appropriate application of logging, log monitoring, host and network intrusion can literally save your skin.

Working mail

"Good afternoon, Mr. Smith, Attached you will find my CV where you will find all my experience and ability to develop in the post that is vacant. I am very interested to work in this reputable company. I await your instructions to introduce myself to you and tell you more about my interest in labor at his side. Receive a greeting,

Maria Sharapova
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maria Sharapova

Country

Russia

Residence

Bradenton, Florida, United States

Born

April 19, 1987 (age 26) Nyagan, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union

Height

1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)[1]

Turned pro

April 19, 2001[1]

Plays

Right-handed (two-handed backhand)[1]

Prize money

US$25,689,034[2]

3rd in all-time rankings

Singles

Career record

502119 (80.75%)[1]

Career titles

29 WTA, 4 ITF[1]

Highest ranking

No. 1 (August 22, 2005)[1]

Current ranking

No. 2 (May 27, 2013)[3]

Grand Slam Singles results

Australian Open

W (2008)

French Open

W (2012)

Wimbledon

W (2004)

US Open

W (2006)

Other tournaments

Championships

W (2004)

Olympic Games

Silver medal (2012)

Doubles

Career record

2317[1]

Career titles

3 WTA[1]

Highest ranking

No. 41 (June 14, 2004)[1]

Grand Slam Doubles results

Australian Open

2R (2003, 2004)

US Open

2R (2003)

Last updated on: May 27, 2013.

Maria Yuryevna Sharapova (

(helpinfo);

born April 19, 1987) is a

Russian professional tennis player who as of May 27, 2013 is ranked World No. 2 by theWomen's Tennis Association (WTA) and is the top Russian player and the only one in the top 10. A United States resident since 1994,[4] Sharapova has won twenty-nine WTA singles titles, including four Grand Slam singles titles. She has also won the year-end WTA Tour Championships in 2004. The WTA has ranked Sharapova World No. 1 in singles on five separate occasions, for a total of 21 weeks. She became the world no. 1 for the first time on August 22, 2005, and last held the ranking for the fifth time for four weeks from June 11, 2012 to July 8, 2012.[5][6] She has been in seven Grand Slam finals with a record of 43. Sharapova made her professional breakthrough in 2004 at age 17, when she defeated two-time defending champion and top seed Serena Williams in the 2004 Wimbledon final for her first Grand Slam singles title. She entered the top 10 of the WTA Rankings with the win. The world no. 1 ranking followed in 2005, along with subsequent major titles at the 2006 US Open and2008 Australian Open, before she was forced out of the game for ten months by a recurring shoulder injury, which ultimately required surgery in October 2008. Sharapova returned to the game in May 2009, returning to the top 10 in March 2011 and capturing her fourth Grand Slam title at the 2012 French Open. By doing so, she became the sixth woman in the Open Era to complete the career Grand Slam in singles. In the same year, she won an Olympic silver medal in the London 2012 Olympics. Sharapova has been featured in a number of modeling assignments, including a feature in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue. She has been featured in many advertisements, including for Nike, Prince, and Canon, and is the face of several fashion houses, most notably Cole Haan. Since February 2007, she has been a United Nations Development Programme Goodwill Ambassador, concerned specifically with the Chernobyl Recovery and Development Programme. In June 2011, she was named one of the "30 Legends of Women's Tennis: Past, Present and Future" by Time,[7] and in March 2012 was named one of the "100 Greatest of All Time" by Tennis Channel.
Contents
[hide]

1 Early life 2 Tennis career

o o o o o o o

2.1 Juniors and early career 2.2 2003: First tournament titles 2.3 2004: Winning Wimbledon 2.4 2005: World no. 1 2.5 2006: US Open champion 2.6 2007: Shoulder injury and fall out of the top 5 2.7 2008: Australian Open champion and recurrence of shoulder injury

o o o o o

2.8 2009: Shoulder surgery and rehabilitation 2.9 2010: Struggles with form 2.10 2011: Return to top 10 2.11 2012: Return to no. 1, Career Grand Slam and Olympic silver medal 2.12 2013

3 Fed Cup participation 4 Playing style

o o

4.1 Serve 4.2 Surfaces

5 Personal life 6 Endorsements 7 Career statistics

7.1 Grand Slam tournaments

7.1.1 Performance timeline 7.1.2 Finals: 7 (4 titles, 3 runners-up)

7.2 Year-End Championships


8 Awards 9 References

7.2.1 Performance timeline 7.2.2 Finals: 3 (1 title, 2 runners-up)

10 External links

Early life
Maria Sharapova was born on April 19, 1987 in Nyagan, Soviet Union. Her parents, Yuri and Elena, are from Gomel, Belarus. Concerned about the regional effects of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident, they left their homeland shortly before Sharapova was born.[8] When Sharapova was two, the family moved to Sochi. There her father befriended Aleksandr Kafelnikov, whose son Yevgeny would go on to win two Grand Slam singles titles and become Russia's first world no. 1 ranked tennis player. Aleksandr gave Sharapova her first tennis racquet at the age of four, whereupon she began practicing regularly with her father at a local park.[9] She took her first tennis lessons with veteran Russian coach Yuri Yutkin, who was instantly impressed when he saw her play, noting her "exceptional hand-eye coordination."[10] At the age of six, Sharapova attended a tennis clinic in Moscow run by Martina Navratilova, who recommended professional training at the Nick Bollettieri Tennis Academy in Florida, which had previously trained players such as Andre Agassi, Monica Seles, and Anna Kournikova.[9] With money tight, Yuri borrowed the sum that would enable him and his daughter, neither of whom could speak

English, to travel to the United States, which they finally did in 1994.[10] Visa restrictions prevented Sharapova's mother from joining them for two years.[8] Arriving in Florida with savings of US$700,[10] Sharapova's father took various low-paying jobs, including dishwashing, to fund her lessons until she was old enough to be admitted to the academy. In 1995, she was signed by IMG, who agreed to pay the annual tuition fee of $35,000 for Sharapova to stay at the academy, allowing her to finally enroll at the age of 9.[9]

Tennis career
Juniors and early career
Sharapova first hit the tennis scene in November 2000, when she won the Eddie Herr International Junior Tennis Championships in the girls' 16 division at the age of just 13.[11] She was then given a special distinction, the Rising Star Award, which is awarded only to players of exceptional promise.[12] Sharapova made her professional debut in 2001 on her 14th birthday on April 19, and played her first WTA tournament at the Pacific Life Open in 2002, winning a match before losing to Monica Seles. Due to restrictions on how many professional events she could play, Sharapova went to hone her game in junior tournaments, where she reached the finals of the girls' singles events at the Australian Open and Wimbledon in 2002. She was the youngest girl ever to reach the final of the Australian Open junior championship at 14 years and 9 months.[13] Sharapova reached no. 6 in the ITF junior world singles ranking on October 21, 2002. In all, she won three junior singles tournaments and was runner-up at five, including two junior Grand Slam events. Her win-loss record in junior competition was 479.[14] Junior Grand Slam results: Australian Open: F (2002) French Open: 3R (2002) Wimbledon: F (2002) US Open: 2R (2001)

parts of a human body

parts of a machine

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