Digital rights management standards

Coral Consortium

The Coral Consortium was founded in 2004 by Hewlett-Packard Corporation, InterTrust Technologies, Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V., Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. (Panasonic), Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd, Sony Corporation and Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. The Coral Consortium has been dissolved in December 2012. Its last specification was available until April 1, 2013. Coral proposes an architecture whereby devices using different DRM technologies are able to join a Domain that allows them to exchange protected content securely. A device used by a family member wishing to play a music file that is stored on another family-owned device can use Coral to obtain a new copy (or license) in the correct format, with the Coral infrastructure managing the necessary permissions and translation of rights to the new device. In theory this should greatly ease the portability of protected media files between devices. (Wikipedia).

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Phylum Cnidaria Part 6: Coral Reefs

We just learned about class Anthozoa, which is the class of Cnidaria that contains all the corals. But there is much more to talk about with corals, as the massive coral reefs that they form act as entire ecosystems unto themselves. Let's get a closer look at these incredible structures!

From playlist Zoology

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Coral Reefs 101 | National Geographic

What are coral reefs? Coral can be found in tropical ocean waters around the world. But how much do you know about reefs and the tiny animals—polyps—that build them? Learn all about coral and why warming waters threaten the future of the reef ecosystem. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSub

From playlist News | National Geographic

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Explore One of the Most Pristine Coral Reefs in the World | National Geographic

This is one of the world's most pristine reefs—and one of the most biodiverse. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe About National Geographic: National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photo

From playlist News | National Geographic

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Largest Coral Sperm Bank May Save Our Reefs | National Geographic

The vaults of the largest coral sperm bank in the the work may one day hold the key to saving ocean life. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe About National Geographic: National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their wor

From playlist News | National Geographic

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Coral close-ups

An underwater microscope is letting scientists bring their lab into the ocean. The new technology is revealing previously unseen behaviours from the tiny polyps that make up vast coral reefs. Read the paper here: http://nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/ncomms12093 12th July 2016

From playlist Eco

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Science Bulletins: Warm Forecast for Coral Reefs

Watch how satellites monitor the risks posed to coral reefs by ocean warming, and see where reefs might be more resilient to change in the coming decades. #climatechange #globalwarming #coralreefs #coralbleaching #oceans #oceanwarming #satellites #AMNHScience Bulletins For a Google+ Han

From playlist Science Bulletins

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Discovering Ancient Forests of the Deep: Submersible Adventures in the Pacific with Rob Dunbar

What lies at the bottom of the ocean? In this lecture Professor Rob Dunbar explores the ocean floor and shares what it tells us about the environment. Rob Dunbar is the W.M. Keck Professor of Earth Science and a professor of earth system science. Professor Dunbar heads a research group wo

From playlist STANFORD+CONNECTS

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Coral Reef Ocean Explorer - Meet the Expert | National Geographic

National Geographic Explorer Dr. Erika Woolsey has traveled around the world to study one of our planet's most diverse habitats, coral reefs. Join our host Lizzie Daly to hear her stories, from witnessing annual mass coral spawnings to diving with manta rays. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/Nat

From playlist Newest Clips | National Geographic

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Preserving the Dry Coral Collection

More than 4,000 dry coral specimens are housed in the collections of the American Museum of Natural History, including specimens that date back to the 1870s! This collection is not only beautiful but essential for scientists studying our oceans because it lets them peer back in time. Dive

From playlist Corals and Coral Reefs

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200 years, WWI & WWII, Communism: The Story of Berlin's Natural History Museum

The Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin exists as a witness to history. For 200+ years its scientists have pursued research in the face of WWI and bombings in WWII, political turmoil, and an ever-changing planet. We were invited to share the Museum's past, as they look toward the future. ↓↓↓

From playlist Museum Field Trips

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Egypt Built a Supertall Skyscraper in the Desert

Africa has its first supertall skyscraper. For more by The B1M subscribe now - https://bit.ly/the-b1m Full story here - https://theb1m.com/video/egypt-iconic-tower-new-administrative-capital Additional footage and imagery courtesy of Neom, City of Telosa, Foster + Partners, Disney, Öko

From playlist Skyscrapers - The B1M

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Werner Eberhardt, SAP - Stanford Medicine Big Data | Precision Health 2016

Bringing together thought leaders in large-scale data analysis and technology to transform the way we diagnose, treat and prevent disease. Visit our website at http://bigdata.stanford.edu/.

From playlist Big Data in Biomedicine: Enabling Precision Health Conference 2016

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Signal and Sound Processing

Giulio Alessandrini To learn more about the Wolfram Technologies, visit http://www.wolfram.com The European Wolfram Technology Conference featured both introductory and expert sessions on all major technologies and many applications made possible with Wolfram technology. Learn to achiev

From playlist European Wolfram Technology Conference 2015

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2012 Visualization Challenge: Observing the Coral Symbiome Using Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy

Christine E. Farrar and colleagues' honorable mention video from the 2012 International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge, hosted by Science Magazine and the U.S. National Science Foundation, uses confocal microscopy to demonstrate the dynamic lives of corals. [Credit: Chris

From playlist Science & Engineering Visualization Challenge 2012

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Ask A Cephalopod Scientist With Squid Biologist Sarah McAnulty (SciFri Live Zoom Call-in)

Because of the pandemic, our show is currently pre-recorded, so the #SciFri team have not able to take our audience's calls. We miss having listeners' voices on our radio program. We still want to hear from folks on our VoxPop app, but we're also experimenting with something new—we’re invi

From playlist SciFri Zoom Call-in Shows

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Tree Based Energy Machine Learning

Teacher: Dr. Michael Pyrcz

From playlist daytum Free Webinar Series

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Deep learning enables rapid identification of potent DDR1 kinase inhibitors | AISC

For slides and more information on the paper, visit https://aisc.ai.science/events/2019-10-23 Discussion lead: Alex Zhebrak Motivation: We have developed a deep generative model, generative tensorial reinforcement learning (GENTRL), for de novo small-molecule design. GENTRL optimizes

From playlist Machine Learning for Scientific Discovery

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Behind The Book: “NOMAD CENTURY: How Climate Migration Will Reshape Our World,” Gaia Vince -11/15/22

Learn more about this event: https://events.caltech.edu/series/behind_the_book/Gaia_Vince ©2022 California Institute of Technology

From playlist Sustainability

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Alien Inhabitants Of Our Coral Reefs (Ocean Documentary) | Real Wild

Coral reefs are some of the richest hotspots of biodiversity on the planet. The warm water reefs of the Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea are well know, but they don't only occur in warm waters. In some of the oceans coldest, darkest depths they are thriving. The deep water reefs are formed

From playlist The Science Of Nature | Spark X Earth Stories X Real Wild X Pets & Vets

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D2I - Joel Saltz: Integrated Biological Informatics

Abstract: Development of biomarkers that predict response to treatment and models that can direct development of new therapies requires integration of many complementary types of biomedical information captured at multiple scales. In the context of our caBIG(tm) In Silico Brain Tumor Rese

From playlist Data to Insight Center (D2I)

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