Constantí

Constantí is a town in the province of Tarragona and autonomous community of Catalonia, Spain.

History

Archaeological remains can determine that it was inhabited during the time of the Romans.

The medieval village was established in 1153, after the conquest of Siurana. Was granted a town charter in 1159. Archbishop Espàrec de la Barca (1215) boosted its population, ordering build the castle, the first church and the city wall. The castle became the summer residence of the Archbishops of Tarragona.

Had suffered several attacks during the Catalan Revolt. On January 12, 1641 the town was attacked by the troops of Josep Margarit. In 1642 was attacked by Marshal La Mothe that turned the people as a base of operations. In 1649, after a siege of two days, the city fell to the troops of Juan de Garay. The church and castle were destroyed.

During the Independence War, General Louis-Gabriel Suchet had managed from Constantí the siege of Tarragona in 1811.

References

External links

  • Town Hall of Constantí
  • Constant (computer programming)

    In computer programming, a constant is an identifier with an associated value which cannot be altered by the program during normal execution – the value is constant. This is contrasted with a variable, which is an identifier with a value that can be changed during normal execution – the value is variable. Constants are useful for both programmers and compilers: for programmers they are a form of self-documenting code and allow reasoning about correctness; while for compilers they allow compile-time and run-time checks that constancy assumptions are not violated, and allow or simplify some compiler optimizations.

    There are various specific realizations of the general notion of a constant, with subtle distinctions that are often overlooked. The most significant are: compile-time (statically-valued) constants, run-time (dynamically-valued) constants, immutable objects, and constant types (const).

    Typical examples of compile-time constants include mathematical constants, values from standards (here maximum transmission unit), or internal configuration values (here characters per line), such as these C examples:

    Constant Nieuwenhuys

    Constant Anton Nieuwenhuys (21 July 1920 – 1 August 2005), better known as Constant, was a Dutch painter, sculptor, graphic artist, author and musician.

    Early period

    Constant was born in Amsterdam on 21 July 1920 as the first son of Pieter Nieuwenhuijs and Maria Cornelissen. Their second son Jan Nieuwenhuys was born a year later. Both sons became artists although their parents had no apparent interest in art.

    As a young child Constant drew passionately and showed great talent. He read literature with a special preference for poetry and played musical instruments. During his teenage years he learned to sing and to read music while in the church choir at a Jesuit school. In his later years, greatly inspired by gypsy music, he only played improvised music. He played guitar, violin and at 45 years of age also mastered playing the cimbalon.

    Constant painted his first oil painting, De Emmaüsgangers, at age sixteen. It depicted the revelation of Jesus to two of his followers in Emmaus. With no money to buy materials he painted this painting on a jute sugar bag with pigments he had bought from a house painter. Many of Constant’s early drawings and paintings are religiously inspired, due to his Jesuit schooling. Yet at the age of twenty Constant turned his back on Catholicism.

    IP address

    An Internet Protocol address (IP address) is a numerical label assigned to each device (e.g., computer, printer) participating in a computer network that uses the Internet Protocol for communication. An IP address serves two principal functions: host or network interface identification and location addressing. Its role has been characterized as follows: "A name indicates what we seek. An address indicates where it is. A route indicates how to get there."

    The designers of the Internet Protocol defined an IP address as a 32-bit number and this system, known as Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4), is still in use today. However, because of the growth of the Internet and the predicted depletion of available addresses, a new version of IP (IPv6), using 128 bits for the address, was developed in 1995. IPv6 was standardized as RFC 2460 in 1998, and its deployment has been ongoing since the mid-2000s.

    IP addresses are usually written and displayed in human-readable notations, such as 172.16.254.1 (IPv4), and 2001:db8:0:1234:0:567:8:1 (IPv6).

    I3P

    Founded in 1999 I3P, the Innovative Entreprise Incubator of the Polytechnic University of Turin (Politecnico di Torino) promotes science based businesses in relation with university researchers or entrepreneurs.

    I3P is one of the best University Business Incubator and has been ranked 4th in Europe and 11th in 2013 world UBI (University Business Incubator) ranking.

    In 2011 I3P launched a new incubator: Treatabit. This incubator is especially dedicated to digital businesses such as e-commerce, social web networking or web and mobile application.

    Activity

    I3P provides consulting services and open spaces to entrepreneurs and introduces the companies to investors, venture capitals and a large network of entrepreneurs and managers.

    Key figures

    156 start-ups launched

    10-15 new start-ups per year

    Owned prices

    2013

    Winners of the IX edition - Start CUP Piemonte Valle D'Aosta 2013

    1st: 20.000€ Intoino

    4th ex-equo (will take part in national Final): Scloby

    2012

    Winners of the VIII edition - Start CUP Piemonte Valle D'Aosta 2013

    List of Intel chipsets

    This article provides a list of motherboard chipsets made by Intel, divided into three main categories: those that use the PCI bus for interconnection (the 4xx series), those that connect using specialized "hub links" (the 8xx series), and those that connect using PCI Express (the 9xx series). The chipsets are listed in chronological order.

    Pre-chipset situation

    Early IBM XT-compatible mainboards did not have have chipset yet, but relied instead on a collection of discrete TTL chips by Intel:

  • the 8284 clock generator
  • the 8288 bus controller
  • the 8254 Programmable Interval Timer
  • the 8255 parallel I/O interface
  • the 8259 Programmable Interrupt Controller
  • the 8237 DMA controller
  • Early chipsets

    To integrate the functions needed on a mainboard into a smaller amount of ICs, Intel licensed the ZyMOS POACH chipset for its Intel 80286 and Intel 80386SX processors (the 82230/82231 High Integration AT-Compatible Chip Set). This chipset can be used with an 82335 High-integration Interface Device to provide support for the Intel 386SX.

    Shogun (Stormwitch album)

    Shogun was the seventh album by the German heavy metal band Stormwitch, released in 1994. It is probably the most controversial of Stormwitch's albums and poorly received by fans due to its almost entirely different sound, with progressive elements and very little of their classic heavy metal styles. It also marked the end of their original span which has lasted from 1982-1994. The album was the first to feature only one guitarist, making a four member band.

    The album is a concept album, based on James Clavell's novel; Shōgun. The lyrics all revolve around parts from the novel referring to both names and places. It is the second album in a row released by Stormwitch to feature a novel based concept, the first being War Of The Wizards.

    Track listing

  • "Stranded" - 7:10
  • "Liar" - 6:21
  • "Garden of Pain" - 5:54
  • "Seven Faces (And Two Hearts)" - 6:45
  • "Forbidden" - 4:16
  • "Victory Is Mine" - 4:41
  • "Let Lessons Begin" - 6:29
  • "The King of Winds" - 4:35
  • "She's the Sun" - 5:07
  • "Good Times - Bad Times" - 9:39
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×