unreferenced date February 2012 Guide was a hypertext system originally developed by Peter J. Brown at the University of Kent in 1982. The original Guide implementation was for Three Rivers PERQ workstation s running Unix . The Guide system was also the third hypertext system to be sold commercially, after it was taken over by Office Workstations Ltd . OWL in 1984. Unlike most hypertext systems, the main link mechanism in Guide is based on replacement , meaning that when following a link, the current node breaks open, making room for the destination node. The anchor of the link is replaced by the contents of the destination node. One can close the destination node, which means that it is once again replaced by the text of the anchor. Thus, the basic method of navigation using Guide was the expansion button , in which a section was replaced when selected and in which an expansion would provide additional levels of detail. This allowed the user, whether they were a document author or a reader, to expand and contract a document, viewing the desired level at any time, not unlike viewing methods used in Adobe Acrobat files. Using this method means that the structure of the document must be strictly hierarchical. Guide supported pop ups for small annotations, and so called jumps, which behave like the follow link operation in most hypertexts as in van Dam s FRESS system . The jumps allow for the creation of non hierarchical links. In September 1986, Guide was ported by OWL to the Apple Macintosh , and in July 1987, a Microsoft Windows version was made available. External links http www.cs.kent.ac.uk pubs 1992 106 University of Kent Computer Science Showing the destination of hypertext links a new approach for Guide Category Hypertext Category University of Kent da OWL Guide ... more details
features and terminology were later integrated into the Web. GuidehypertextGuide was the first significant ...Hypertext is text displayed on a computer or other electronic device with references hyperlinks to other ... Early precursors to hypertext Recorders of information have long looked for ways to categorize and compile ... dictionaries, encyclopedias also developed a precursor to hypertext the setting of certain words ... . Janet Murray has referenced Jorge Luis Borges The Garden of Forking Paths as a precursor to the hypertext ... book and maze of Ts ui Pen is that of a novel that can be read in multiple ways, a hypertext novel ... digital computer. Borges also mentions how hypertext has similarities to a labyrinth ... did he invent the hypertext novel Borges went on to describe a theory of the universe based upon the structure ... proto hypertext systems predating electronic computer technology. For example, in the early 20th ... intensive, Brute force search brute force methods. Paul Otlet proposed a proto hypertext concept based ... record without including the link model which distinguishes the modern concept of hypertext ... histories of what we now call hypertext start in 1945, when Vannevar Bush wrote an article in The Atlantic ... of 1945 technology microfilm recording and retrieval in this case. However, the modern story of hypertext ... men generally credited with the invention of hypertext, Ted Nelson and Douglas Engelbart . The invention of hypertext Starting in 1963, Ted Nelson developed a model for creating and using linked content he called hypertext and hypermedia first published reference 1965 ref http faculty.vassar.edu mijoyce Ted sed.html Did Ted Nelson first use the word hypertext at Vassar College? ref . He later worked with Andries van Dam to develop the Hypertext Editing System in 1967 at Brown University . Douglas ... features were not completed until 1968. In December of that year, Engelbart demonstrated a hypertext ... PARC and ZOG hypertext ZOG at Carnegie Mellon . ZOG started in 1972 as an artificial intelligence ... more details
Hypertext fiction is a genre of electronic literature , characterized by the use of hypertext links which provide a new context for non linearity in literature and reader interaction. ref Bishop, J. 2009 . Enhancing the understanding of genres of web based communities The role of the ecological cognition framework. International Journal of Web Based Communities, 5 1 , 4 17. Available http www.jonathanbishop.com ... and Julio Cort zar s Rayuela 1963 translated as Hopscotch are early examples predating the word Hypertext History hypertext , while a common pop culture example is the Choose Your Own Adventure series in young adult fiction and other similar gamebook s. The Garden of Forking Paths is both a hypertext story and a description of a fictional hypertext work. History The first hypertext fictions were ... by Eastgate Systems in 1991, is generally considered one of the first hypertext fictions. Afternoon was followed by a series of other Storyspace hypertext fictions from Eastgate Systems , including ... s Quibbling , Shelley Jackson s Patchwork Girl hypertext Patchwork Girl and Deena Larsen s Marble ... for the 2000 Whitney Biennial ref Some other web examples of hypertext fiction include Adrienne ... also Interactive novel Cybertext Hypertext poetry Storyspace References references Cite journal last ... Cite journal last Allen first Michael title This Is Not a Hypertext, But... A Set of Lexias on Textuality ... page1.html The hypertext Tristram Shandy page , David R. Hammontree s page http www3.iath.virginia.edu ... Hypertext Explorations and Constructions . London Continuum. External links External links date ... RYOH &mdash Roll Your Own Hypertext. http www.cisenet.com cisenet writing essays hypernarrative.htm ... Organization for more on hypertext literature http www.dichtung digital.com Dichtung Digital. Journal ... catalog Fiction.html Eastgate catalog catalog of historically significant Hypertext fiction, nonfiction and poetry Fiction writing DEFAULTSORT Hypertext Fiction Category Hypertext Category Narrative ... more details
refimprove date April 2012 ZOG was an early hypertext system developed at Carnegie Mellon University during the 1970s by Donald McCracken and Robert Akscyn. ZOG was first developed by Allen Newell and George Robertson to serve as the front end for AI and Cognitive Science programs brought together at CMU for a summer workshop. The ZOG project was as an outgrowth of long term artificial intelligence research led by Allen Newell and funded by the Office of Naval Research . ZOG consisted of frames that contained a title, a description, a line containing ZOG system commands, and selections menu items that led to other frames. ZOG pioneered the frame or card model of hypertext later popularized by HyperCard . In such systems, the frames or cards cannot scroll to show content that is part of the same document but held offscreen. Instead, text that exceeds the capacity of one screen must be placed in another which then constitutes a separate frame or card . The ZOG database became fully functional around 1977. Beginning in 1980, ZOG was ported from DEC VAX version written in an experimental language called L to the Pascal programming language Pascal based PERQ Three Rivers PERQ workstation and was used for a shipwide local area network on the American aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson . In 1981, Rob Akscyn and Donald McCracken, two principals from the ZOG project, founded Knowledge Systems to develop and market a commercial follow on to ZOG called KMS hypertext KMS Knowledge Management System . References cite book coauthors Robertson, C. K., D. L. McCracken and A. Newell title The ZOG approach to man machine communication, Technical Report CMU CS 79 148 publisher Carnegie Mellon University, Department of Computer Science location Pittsburgh, PA, USA year 1979 Category Hypertext pl ZOG ... more details
Intermedia was the third notable hypertext project to emerge from Brown University , after Hypertext Editing System HES 1967 and FRESS 1969 . Intermedia was started in 1985 by Norman Meyrowitz , who had been associated with earlier hypertext research at Brown. The Intermedia project coincided with the establishment of the Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship IRIS . Intermedia ran on A UX version 1.1. Intermedia was programmed using an object oriented toolkit and standard DBMS functions. Intermedia supported bi directional, dual anchor hyperlink links for both text and graphics. Small icons are used as anchor markers. Intermedia properties include author, creation date, title, and keywords. Link information is stored by the system apart from the source text. More than one such set of data can be kept, which allows each user to have their own web of information. Intermedia has complete multi user support, with three levels of access rights read, write, and annotate, which is similar to Unix permissions. As promising as Intermedia was, it used a lot of resources for its time it required 4 MB of Random access memory RAM and 80 MB of hard drive space in 1989 . It was also highly tied to A UX, a less popular Unix like operating system that ran on Apple Macintosh computers thus, it wasn t very portable. In 1991, changes in A UX and lack of funding ended the Intermedia project. References Nicole Yankelovich, Karen E. Smith, L. Nancy Garrett and Norman Meyrowitz. Issues in Designing a Hypermedia Document System The Intermedia Case Study in Learning Tomorrow Journal of the Apple Education Advisory Council, n3 p35 87 Spring 1987. Karen E. Smith and Stanley B. Zdonik. Intermedia A case study of the differences between relational and object oriented database systems . ACM SIGPLAN Notices, Volume 22 , Issue 12 December 1987 Pages 452 465. Paul Kahn. Linking Together ... Category Hypertext pl Intermedia ... more details
by users, and more especially agents, as part of the hierarchical structure of the hypertext ... 31 issue 7 year 1988 pages 820 835 doi 10.1145 48511.48513 Category Hypertext ... more details
This article presents a Chronology timeline of hypertext technology , including hypermedia and related human computer interaction projects and developments from 1945 on. The term hypertext is credited to the author and philosopher Ted Nelson . See also Graphical user interface , Multimedia also Paul Otlet and Henri La Fontaine s Mundaneum , a massively cross referenced card index system established in 1910. 1940s 1945 Memex concept 1960s 1960 Project Xanadu concept 1967 Hypertext Editing System HES 1968 File Retrieval and Editing System FRESS File Retrieval and Editing System, successor to HES NLS computer system NLS oN Line System 1970s 1972 ZOG hypertext ZOG 1973 Xerox Alto Xerox Alto desktop 1976 Problem Oriented Medical Information System PROMIS 1978 Aspen Movie Map 1979 PERQ 1980s 1980 ENQUIRE not released 1981 Electronic Document System EDS, aka Document Presentation System Wes Kussmaul Kussmaul Encyclopedia Xerox Star Xerox Star desktop 1982 GuidehypertextGuide 1983 KMS hypertext Knowledge Management System KMS, successor to ZOG The Interactive Encyclopedia System TIES The Interactive Encyclopedia System, later HyperTies 1984 NoteCards 1985 Intermedia hypertext Intermedia successor to FRESS and EDS Symbolics Document Examiner Symbolics workstation s 1986 TEXTNET TextNet a network based approach to text handling Neptune hypertext Neptune a hypertext system for CAD applications 1987 Macromedia Authorware Canon Cat Leap function, interface HyperCard 1989 Macromedia Director The Sun Link Service http www.w3.org History 1989 proposal.html Information Management a proposal , Tim Berners Lee , CERN 1990s 1990 World Wide Web 1991 Gopher protocol Gopher 1995 Wiki 1998 Everything2 XML 2000s 2001 Wikipedia DEFAULTSORT Timeline Of Hypertext Technology Category Computing timelines Hypertext Category Hypertext Category History of the Internet de Chronologie der Hypertext Technologien pt Anexo Cronologia da tecnologia hipertexto ... more details
left and Josef Frey right , 19th century A guide is a person who leads anyone through unknown or unmapped country. This includes a guide of the real world such as someone who conducts travellers and tourists ... such as to knowledge or wisdom . Guide meanings related to travel and recreational pursuits There are many ... of the guide. br These days guides will normally possess an area and field specific qualification usually issued and or recognised by the appropriate Guide s Association or licensing authority. However ... the guide s qualifications beforehand. br Explorers in the past venturing into territory unknown by their own .... Travel companies organising tours of large groups often have a guide or tour leader accompany the group ... operator to conduct these tours or the travel agency selling them. br Here are some examples of guide professions Tourist guide Main Tour guide Image tourguide2.jpg thumb right A tour guide at the Centre ... of its importance and vulnerability. EN 13809 2003 Mountain guide Main Mountain guide Mountain guides ... Wilderness guide A wilderness guide is a person who takes a number of individuals to visit some part ... while leading them through the wilderness which the guide has knowledge of. The first priority .... The guide is also expected to have a deep understanding of the nature of the place he is guiding ... luonto oppaan at 28international wilderness guide 29.html title International Wilderness Guide program author Tampere College accessdate 2011 10 13 ref Hunting guide See also Outfitter Guides employed ... today there are also native African hunters or hunting guides. Safari guide Guides employed on safari , usually for photographic safaris , although the term can also refer to a hunting guide or White ... organization of military resources led in various countries to the special training of guide ... s Own Corps of Guides Cavalry Frontier Force . In drill, a guide is an officer or non commissioned officer who regulates the direction and pace of movements. Guide metaphysical meanings Trip sitter ... more details
. Raju guides her as he is a guide and she s back to square one dancing. Marco doesn t approve of Rosie ... guide . Reluctantly, as he does not want to return in disgrace to Malgudi , he stays in an abandoned ... with Raju. Film, TV or theatrical adaptations main Guide film The film Guide was released in 1965 ...&scp 6&sq 22Narayan 22 22The 20Guide 22&st cse title Theater Reluctant Guru Mohyeddin Excels in The Guide ... A Study Guide to The Guide http www.literature study online.com essays narayan guide.html An Analysis ... about Bollywood R. K. Narayan DEFAULTSORT Guide, The Category 1958 novels Category Novels by R. K ... more details
ref improve date April 2012 The Collaborative Hypertext of Radiology or CHORUS is a free medical reference database. It is based upon a system originally developed at the University of Chicago , but is currently maintained at the Medical College of Wisconsin . External links http chorus.rad.mcw.edu CHORUS Collaborative Hypertext of Radiology homepage Category Medical databases med org stub ... more details
This article is about the computer technology. See HES disambiguation for other uses. The Hypertext Editing System , or HES , was an early hypertext research project conducted at Brown University in 1967 by Andries van Dam , Ted Nelson , and several Brown students. HES was a pioneering hypertext system that organized data into two main types links and branching text. The branching text could automatically be arranged into menus and a point within a given area could also have an assigned name, called a label, and be accessed later by that name from the screen. Image HypertextEditingSystemConsoleBrownUniv1969.jpg thumb right Hypertext Editing System HES IBM 2250 Display console  Brown University 1969 HES ran on an IBM System 360 50 mainframe computer , which was inefficient for the task of running such a revolutionary system. Although HES pioneered many modern hypertext concepts, its emphasis was on text formatting and printing. HES research was funded by International Business Machines IBM but the program was stopped around 1969. The program was used by NASA s Houston Manned Spacecraft Center for documentation on the Apollo program Apollo space program van Dam, 1988 . HES was discontinued and replaced by the FRESS File Retrieval and Editing System project. Hypertext Editing System ... for acting on various features of a hypertext, and for adding new features to this hypertext editing ... will be added to provide automatic steering or routing through a hypertext on the screen, or automatic ... area to another, with both in view. p p Since it is rather easy to get lost in a complex hypertext ... Dam, Andries 1969, April A Hypertext Editing System for the 360 , Center for Computer & Information ... Hypertext 87 keynote address . Communications of the ACM , 31, 887&ndash 895. Category Hypertext Category Brown University Category History of human computer interaction da Hypertext Editing System ja Hypertext Editing System ... more details
Unicode HTTP Secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol S HTTP is a little used alternative to the HTTP Secure HTTPS URI scheme for encryption encrypting World Wide Web web communications carried over Hypertext Transfer Protocol HTTP . S HTTP is defined in RFC 2660. It was developed by Eric Rescorla and Allan M. Schiffman. ref Link to authoritative technical reference RFC 2660 ref Web browser s typically use HTTP to communicate with web server s, sending and receiving information without encrypting it. For sensitive transactions, such as Internet electronic commerce e commerce or online access to financial accounts, the browser and server must encrypt this information. HTTPS and S HTTP were both defined in the mid 1990s to address this need. Netscape Communications Corporation Netscape and Microsoft supported HTTPS rather than S HTTP, leading to HTTPS becoming the de facto standard mechanism for securing web communications. Differences with HTTPS S HTTP encrypted only the page data, and data such as POST fields, leaving the initiation of the protocol unchanged. Because of this, S HTTP could be used concurrently with HTTP unsecured on the same port, as the unencrypted header would determine whether the rest of the transmission would be encrypted. In contrast, HTTPS wraps the entire communication within Secure Sockets Layer SSL , so the encryption starts before any protocol data is sent. This also means that it requires a separate port usually 443 vs. HTTP s standard 80 ref http www.linktionary.com s shttp.html Overview of S HTTP ref and unambiguous usage treated in most browsers as a separate URI protocol, https . In S HTTP, the desired URL is not transmitted in the cleartext headers, but left blank another set of headers is present inside the encrypted payload. In HTTPS, all headers are inside the encrypted payload. See also HTTP 1.1 Upgrade header References Reflist External ... Hypertext Transfer Protocol ko S HTTP pl S HTTP zh ... more details
be viewed as a feminist hypertext project &mdash If you want to see the whole, one passage reads ... Systems ref Furthermore, Jackson s use of hypertext enables us to recognize the degree to which the qualities ... to its non linearity . The work reflects the hypertext labyrinth originally expressed in Borges Garden ... Hayles Category Hypertext Category Electronic literature ... more details
IPstack HTTP The Hypertext Transfer Protocol HTTP is an application protocol for distributed, collaborative ... title RFC 2616 Hypertext Transfer Protocol HTTP 1.1 first1 Roy T. last1 Fielding first2 James last2 ... of data communication for the World Wide Web . Hypertext is a multi linear set of objects, building ... . HTTP is the protocol to exchange or transfer hypertext. The standards development of HTTP was coordinated ..., Uniform Resource Locator s URLs using the tt http tt or tt https tt URI scheme s. URIs and the Hypertext Markup Language HTML , form a system of inter linked resources, called hypertext documents ... thumb 190px Tim Berners Lee The term HyperText was coined by Ted Nelson who in turn was inspired ... would request a page from a server. ref cite web last Berners Lee first Tim title HyperText Transfer Protocol url http www.w3.org History 19921103 hypertexthypertext WWW Protocols HTTP.html publisher ... 2010 ref ref cite web last Raggett first Dave title Hypertext Transfer Protocol Working Group url ... , Secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol and the HTTP 1.1 Upgrade header . Browser support for the latter ... currently being worked on by the IETF s Hypertext Transfer Protocol Bis httpbis working group. ref cite web url https datatracker.ietf.org wg httpbis charter title Hypertext Transfer Protocol Bis httpbis ... bg HTTP bs Hypertext Transfer Protocol ca Protocol de transfer ncia d hipertext cs Hypertext Transfer Protocol cy HTTP da HTTP de Hypertext Transfer Protocol et H perteksti edastusprotokoll el es Hypertext Transfer Protocol eo Hiperteksto Transiga Protokolo eu HTTP fa fr Hypertext Transfer Protocol ga Pr tacal Aistrithe Hipirt acs gl HTTP ko HTTP hr HTTP id Protokol Transfer Hiperteks is Hypertext Transfer Protocol it Hypertext Transfer Protocol he Hypertext Transfer Protocol kk HTTP lv HTTP lb Hypertext Transfer Protocol lt HTTP hu HTTP ... nl Hypertext Transfer Protocol new ja Hypertext Transfer Protocol no HTTP nn Hypertext ... more details
Other people Cathy Marshall Infobox person name Cathy Marshall image image size caption birth name birth date birth place death date death place death cause resting place resting place coordinates residence Mountain View, California nationality ethnicity Caucasian citizenship other names known for education alma mater employer Microsoft s Silicon Valley Lab occupation Principal Researcher home town title Principal Researcher salary networth height weight term predecessor successor party boards religion spouse partner children parents relations signature website http research.microsoft.com en us people cathymar http www.csdl.tamu.edu marshall footnotes Cathy Marshall is a Principal Researcher in Microsoft Research s Silicon Valley Lab. She is currently working on Community Information Management applications and issues associated with personal digital archiving. ref http research.microsoft.com en us people cathymar ref She has led a series of projects investigating analytical work practices and collaborative hypertext, including two system development projects, Aquanet named after the hairspray and VIKI. ref Forward Anywhere. Eastgate Serious Hypertext. Web. 26 Oct. 2009. http www.eastgate.com catalog ForwardAnywhere.html . ref Marshall is mainly interested in studying human interaction when mediated by technology. From her early experiences with hypertext , Marshall discovered the negative effects of having analysts work with formal representation. Marshall learned that information which does not fit in formal representation gets lost as people try to force it into this area. ref http delivery.acm.org 10.1145 1460000 1457509 a2 atzenbeck.pdf?key1 1457509&key2 4154176521&coll GUIDE&dl GUIDE&CFID 59972593&CFTOKEN 41390311 Cathy Marshall Interview ref She worked at the Fuji Xerox Palo Alto lab for 20 years. ref http www.nytimes.com 1999 07 22 technology i link therefore i am a web intellectual s diary.html ref Between 1993 and 1996, while working with PARC company PARC ... more details
Unreferenced date May 2009 HTTP Hypertext Caching Protocol abbreviated to HTCP is used for discovering HTTP caches and cached data, managing sets of HTTP caches and monitoring cache activity. It permits full request and response headers to be used in cache management and expands the domain of cache management to include monitoring a remote cache s additions and deletions, requesting immediate deletions and sending hints about web objects such as the third party locations of cacheable objects or unavailability of web objects. Features All multi octet computing octet HTCP protocol elements are transmitted in network byte order . All reserved fields should be set to binary zero by senders and left unexamined by receivers. Headers must be presented with the CRLF line termination, as in HTTP. Any hostname s specified should be compatible between sender and receiver, such that if a private naming scheme such as HOSTS.TXT or NIS is in use, names depending on such schemes will only be sent to HTCP neighbors who are known to participate in said schemes. Raw addresses dotted quad IPv4 , or colon format IPv6 are universal, as are public Domain Name System DNS names. Use of private names or addresses will require special operational care. User Datagram Protocol UDP must be supported. HTCP agents must not be isolated from network failures and delays. An HTCP agent should be prepared to act in useful ways when no response is forthcoming, or when responses are delayed or reordered or damaged. Transmission Control Protocol TCP is optional and is expected to be used only for protocol debugging. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA has assigned port 4827 as the standard Transmission Control Protocol TCP and Domain Name System UDP port number for HTCP. An HTCP Message has the following general format HEADER tells message length and protocol versions DATA HTCP message varies per major ver. number AUTH optional authentication for transaction See also Internet Cache Protocol External ... more details
Image Appleguidecoachmark.png thumb 250px Apple Guide, with a coachmark Apple Guide was Apple Computer s online help and documentation system, added to the Mac OS in System 7 Macintosh System 7.5 and intended to work alongside Balloon Help . In addition to hypertext , indexing and searching of the text, Apple Guide also offered a system for teaching users how to accomplish tasks in an interactive manner. However, the process of creating guides was more complicated than non interactive help and few developers took full advantage of its power. Apple enhanced the help system with HTML based help in Mac OS 8.5 which worked in conjunction with Apple Guide providing links to Apple Guide sequences. Apple Guide was not carried over into Mac OS X , which uses an HTML based help system. Apple Guide made use of the AppleEvent Object Model AEOM , allowing the system to examine the state of the application as it ran, and change the help in response. Help content was created in individual steps, and each step could have assigned to it conditions to determine if the step should be skipped, or if the step was needed. For instance, if the user had already completed several steps of an operation and needed help to complete it, Apple Guide could see where they were, and skip forward to the proper section of the documentation. Additionally AEOM allowed Apple Guide to drive the interface, completing tasks for the user if they clicked on the Do it for me buttons or hypertext . A distinctive feature of the system was support for Coaching . Using the AEOM, AppleGuide could find UI elements on the screen, and circle them using a red marker effect to draw the user s eye to it. Apple Guide was also somewhat integrated with Balloon Help , optionally adding hypertext to balloons that would open the right portion of the documentation based on what object the user was currently pointing at with the mouse. External links http www.mactech.com articles mactech Vol.11 11.03 AppleGuideIntro Apple Guide ... more details
wiktionarypar guideGuide or The Guide may refer to A source of useful information Guide literary Literary guide , encyclopaedia , compendium or Owners manual manual , for information , reference or Education instruction purposes Knowledge management database Guide book , for tourists Course catalog , e.g. an academic course guide Price guide , a reference work containing prices of e.g. coins, collectibles, computers Electronic program guide , an on screen guide to scheduled broadcast television programs Guide Plus , an interactive electronic programme guide system People Guide , a person with specialized knowledge of an area who leads or conducts others, such as a tourist guide, mountain guide, wilderness guide, hunting guide, military guide, etc. Sighted guide , a person who guides a person who is blind or partially sighted. Docent , a guide at a museum, university or heritage place Tracker ... movement A Guide is a member of a Girl Guides Guiding or Scouting organization. There are thousands ... Movement List of non aligned Scouting organizations Places Guide County , in Qinghai, China Guide, Lancashire , a village in England Guide, Mirandela , a village in Portugal Publications Guide Adventist magazine Guide Adventist magazine , a weekly publication for 10 to 14 year olds Other Guide ship Guide ship , a convict ship that transported six convicts from Calcutta, India to Fremantle, Western Australia in 1855 USC&GS Guide USC&GS Guide , the name of two ships of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey The Guide , a novel by R. K. Narayan, an Indian author Guide film Guide film was also the name of a Hindi film based on the above novel GUIDE, a defunct IBM computer user group similar to SHARE computing Guidehypertext , the first commercially sold hypertext system, now unused Guide dog , assistance dogs trained to lead blind and vision impaired people around obstacles. In mechanical ... 539 , officially named the Guide Meridian Road, commonly known as The Guide Deleted until someone ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Orphan date December 2009 Luigi Cinque Tarantula Hypertext Orchestra are an avant garde Italian music group prominent in world music . The Orchestra has recorded since 1974. The leader, Luigi Cinque, has also written about Italian folk and popular music. Category Italian musical groups Italy band stub ... more details
Queen s Guide may refer to Queen s Guide Girlguiding UK , highest award Queen s Guide to the Sands , sand pilot over Morecambe Bay, England dab ... more details
USS Guide is the name of the following ships of the U.S. Navy USS Guide AMc 83 , was a coastal minesweeper launched 20 September 1941 USS Guide AM 447 . was a minesweeper launched 17 April 1954 Shipindex DEFAULTSORT Guide Category United States Navy ship names pl USS Guide ... more details
USC&GS Guide was the name of two United States Coast and Geodetic Survey ships, and may refer to USC&GS Guide 1918 USC&GS Guide 1918 , a survey ship in service from 1923 to 1941 USC&GS Guide 1929 USC&GS Guide 1929 , a survey ship in service from 1941 to 1942 shipindex Guide Category Ships of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Guide ... more details
Orphan date October 2008 The Campaign Guide is produced by the Conservative Party UK British Conservative Party and is an encyclopedia of political facts designed to help Conservative candidates in elections. The Guide was first published in 1892 by a group of Scottish Conservatives who were unhappy with the material provided by Conservative Central Office in London. In 1914 control of the Guide was wrested from the Scottish Conservative Party and since 1950 it has been produced by the Conservative Research Department . It is known by some journalists as the blue bible and no other British political party produces a campaign guide. External links http www.bodley.ox.ac.uk dept scwmss wmss online modern cpa library pub.html pub.H.1 List of Guide s http www.margaretthatcher.org archive displaydocument.asp?docid 110799 Campaign Guide 1977 http www.margaretthatcher.org archive displaydocument.asp?docid 110797 Campaign Guide Supplement 1978 http www.margaretthatcher.org archive displaydocument.asp?docid 110800 Campaign Guide 1983 http www.margaretthatcher.org archive displaydocument.asp?docid 110801 Campaign Guide 1987 http www.margaretthatcher.org archive displaydocument.asp?docid 110802 Campaign Guide 1989 Category Conservative Party UK Campaign Guide ... more details
Honey guide may refer to Honeyguide s, birds in the family Indicatoridae , of which some species will lead humans to bee colonies. Nectar guides , otherwise known as Floral guides markings that guide pollinators visiting flowers to pollen, nectar, or other incentives. disambig ... more details
unreferenced date May 2008 The Green Guide was a bi monthly publication produced by the National Geographic Society as an information resource on eco conscious and healthy living. Founded in 1994, it ceased publication in 2009, and now exists as a website only. The guide first was cut down with its March 4, 2008 issue to a quarterly publication. It was printed sustainably on Verso Paper with FSC Mixed Source Label, meaning the wood comes from Forest Stewardship Council certified, well managed forests, sources controlled in accordance with FSC standards, and or recycled material. In addition to the traditional printed publication, The National Geographic Green Guide was available as a digital subscription using Texterity s Web publishing format. The quarterly National Geographic Green Guide magazine was an evolution of the pre existing Green Guide Web site and newsletter, founded in 1994 by former Natural Resources Defense Council staff scientist Wendy Gordon. National Geographic acquired the original Green Guide in March 2007. References reflist External links http www.thegreenguide.com The Green Guide DEFAULTSORT Green Guide, The Category Environmental magazines ... more details