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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

ebook - GIS (Geographic Information System) for Dummies

GIS for Dummies | Michael N. DeMers | Wiley Publishing, Inc. | 2009 | English | 388 p | pdf | 8.46 MB | ISBN : 978-0-470-23682-6 | Learn to : Use GIS technology as it applies to your business; Retrieve, analyze, and interpret geographic data; Recognize gographic patterns and distributions; Design and Implement a GIS.
ebook - GIS for Dummies
Book Title
:
GIS for Dummies
Authors
:
Michael N. DeMers
Publisher
:
Wiley Publishing, Inc.
Year
:
2009
Language
:
English
Pages
:
388 p
File Format
:
pdf
File Size
:
8.46 MB
Learn to :
  • Use GIS technology as it applies to your business,
  • Retrieve, analyze, and interpret geographic data,
  • Recognize gographic patterns and distributions,
  • Design and Implement a GIS
  • .
Introduction
Do you plan to purchase a geographic information system (GIS) in the near future? Are you curious about what it can do for you and how you can get the most out of it? Do you need to use the software, or do you need to supervise others who use it? Do you have concerns about how GIS might change the way your organization functions?
If you answered yes to any of these questions, GIS For Dummies is the right book for you. GIS is some of the most exciting software to come along in ages, and I want to get you as excited about the possibilities GIS offers as I am. This book can help you start thinking about how you can use maps and harness the awesome power of this new technology.
About This Book
Unlike many books on GIS, this one isn’t meant to keep you spellbound for days or weeks. Instead, you can use this book when you need to answer basic questions or figure out what questions to ask your GIS-specialist friends. Think of this book as a reference you can use to find what you need when you need it.
Tools are essential to the completion of almost every task. I have tried to assemble, in as concise a form as possible, the tools necessary to the pursuit of a good design. From the extensive library of experimental efforts, I have selected representative works and demonstrated how both strength and deformation limit states might be predicted. Next, I review alternative design approaches and, in the process, simplify and adapt them to specific types of bracing systems. Finally I describe how designs might be comprehensively reviewed.
Contents at a Glance

Introduction

Part I: GIS: Geography on Steroids

Chapter 1:
Seeing the Scope of GIS
Chapter 2:
Recognizing How Maps Show Information
Chapter 3:
Reading, Analyzing, and Interpreting Maps

Part II: Geography Goes Digital

Chapter 4:
Creating a Conceptual Model
Chapter 5:
Understanding the GIS Data Models
Chapter 6:
Keeping Track of Data Descriptions
Chapter 7:
Managing Multiple Maps
Chapter 8:
Gathering and Digitizing Geographic Data

Part III: Retrieving, Counting, and Characterizing Geography

Chapter 9:
Finding Information in Raster Systems
Chapter 10:
Finding Features in Vector Systems
Chapter 11:
Searching for Geographic Objects, Distributions, and Groups

Part IV: Analyzing Geographic Patterns

Chapter 12:
Measuring Distance
Chapter 13:
Working with Statistical Surfaces
Chapter 14:
Exploring Topographical Surfaces
Chapter 15:
Working with Networks
Chapter 16:
Comparing Multiple Maps
Chapter 17:
Map Algebra and Model Building

Part V: GIS Output and Application

Chapter 18:
Producing Cartographic Output
Chapter 19:
Generating Non-Cartographic Output
Chapter 20:
GIS in Organizations

Part VI: The Part of Tens

Chapter 21:
Ten GIS Software Vendors
Chapter 22:
Ten Questions to Ask Potential Vendors
Chapter 23:
Ten GIS Data Sources

Index

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

ebook - Seismic Design of Reinforced and Precast Concrete Buildings

Seismic Design of Reinforced and Precast Concrete Buildings | ROBERT E. ENGLEKIRK | JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC. | 2003 | English | 853 p | pdf | 16.57 MB | ISBN : 0-471-08122-1 | Knowledge and imagination are essential components of the design process. Imagination without knowledge will quite often produce designs that are dangerous. Knowledge absent imagination can only produce designs of limited scope. The development and integration of these themes is the objective of this book.
ebook - Seismic Design of Reinforced and Precast Concrete Buildings
Book Title
:
Seismic Design of Reinforced and Precast
Concrete Buildings
Authors
:
ROBERT E. ENGLEKIRK
Publisher
:
JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC.
Year
:
2003
Language
:
English
Pages
:
853 p
File Format
:
pdf
File Size
:
16.57 MB
PREFACE
Knowledge and imagination are essential components of the design process. Imagination without knowledge will quite often produce designs that are dangerous. Knowledge absent imagination can only produce designs of limited scope. The development and integration of these themes is the objective of this book.
My hope is to advance the reader’s ability to design by reducing existing experimentally developed conclusions to design-relevant relationships and limit states. The reduction of experimental data to a usable form is essential to the design process because an engineer, faced with a design decision, cannot confidently develop a design approach from experiment data or basic principles as a part of each design, especially if the basic principle is not a part of his or her working vocabulary. Behavior models must also be available to and accepted by the designer.
INTRODUCTION
This book is primarily about design, which, as I use the term, is the creative process that seeks the proper blend of essential ingredients—specifically function, aesthetics, economy, and, in the context of this book, seismic behavior. There exists no single formula for creating a good design, for the design process involves making a set of decisions on issues for which no absolutely right answer exists. Thus the designer is continually seeking a comfortable rationally based design solution, and two identical solutions are not likely to be produced even successively by the same constructive designer.
Tools are essential to the completion of almost every task. I have tried to assemble, in as concise a form as possible, the tools necessary to the pursuit of a good design. From the extensive library of experimental efforts, I have selected representative works and demonstrated how both strength and deformation limit states might be predicted. Next, I review alternative design approaches and, in the process, simplify and adapt them to specific types of bracing systems. Finally I describe how designs might be comprehensively reviewed.
The focus of the book is concrete and the emphasis is on precast concrete. I have limited the scope to the satisfaction of seismic behavior objectives because the topic is complex and, though extensively studied and codified, not necessarily well understood by the structural design profession. The fact that seismic design can be reduced to an understandable level that can be creatively introduced into a building program makes it an ideal vehicle to study the design process.
Table of Contents

PREFACE

NOMENCLATURE

INTRODUCTION

1. BASIC CONCEPTS

1.1
Ductility—A System Behavior Enhancer
1.2
Confinement—A Component Behavior Enhancement
1.3
Shear
Selected References

2. COMPONENT BEHAVIOR AND DESIGN

2.1
Beams
2.2
The Beam Column
2.3
Beam-Column Joints
2.4
Shear Dominated Systems
Selected References

3. SYSTEM DESI

3.1
Shear Wall Braced Buildings
3.2
Frame Braced Buildings
3.3
Diaphragms
3.4
Design Process Overview
Selected References

4. DESIGN CONFIRMATION

4.1
Response of Shear Wall Braced Buildings to Ground Motion
4.2
Frame Braced Buildings
4.3
Behavior Imponderables
Selected References

INDEX

 

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