The broad range of material included in these volumes suggests to the newcomer the nature of the field of artificial intelligence, while those with some background in AI will appreciate the detailed coverage of the work being done at MIT. The results presented are related to the underlying methodology. Each chapter is introduced by a short note outlining the scope of the problem begin taken up or placing it in its historical context. Contents, Volume II:Understanding Vision: Representing and Computing Visual Information; Visual Detection of Light Sources; Representing and Analyzing Surface Orientation; Registering Real Images Using Synthetic Images; Analyzing Curved Surfaces Using Reflectance Map Techniques; Analysis of Scenes from a Moving Viewpoint; Manipulation and Productivity Technology: Force Feedback in Precise Assembly Tasks; A Language for Automatic Mechanical Assembly; Kinematics, Statics, and Dynamics of Two-Dimensional Manipulators; Understanding Manipulator Control by Synthesizing Human Handwriting; Computer Design and Symbol Manipulation: The LISP Machine; Shallow Binding in LISP 1.5; Optimizing Allocation and Garbage Collection of Spaces; Compiler Optimization Based on Viewing LAMBDA as RENAME Plus GOTO; Control Structure as Patterns of Passing Messages.
The corporal gasped. "I don't know what's going on here boy," the sergeant said gruffly, "but I'm going to have to lock you up. No!...No!," said Joshua frantically. " Don't lock me up. I have come to see Major Pennington. He wouldn't let me come here so...so I had to sneak in."In John Donahue's, An Island Far from Home, Joshua, a 12-year-old boy from the north in the Civil War writes to a rebel and travels in an adventure. The rebel, John Meadows, was caught in Fredericksburg and was taken to George's Island, a prison. Joshua's uncle, Major Pennington, was the in charge of the prison. He asked Joshua to write to John. At first Joshua didn't want to write a letter to a rebel but on his uncle's behalf he wrote one letter to John and he was eager to write more. While writing together they began a friendship. As their friendship grew stronger they were yearning to meet each other. Joshua was not allowed in the prison. So Joshua sneaks in.Anyone who likes historical fiction books will love this one. For fourth graders it will be a review of the Civil War. It will also be a good book for people who are interested about the Civil War. John Donahue has won medals for other books he wrote.
A Great Book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
This book was a great book. It told what it was like through war when you are a kid. Josh didn't go to war but he was a friend of a Conferdate Soldier. Read this book. It is great
A book to read!!!!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
This book was like a book taking you back into the time of Civil War Times. But you weren't where the fighting was you were at the prison were captives of the south were.
A Sunshine State Young Reader Award winner
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
A wonderful retelling of the Civil War from the veiw of a Union boy, this story gets down to the real grit of the matter and covers a less-acknowledged part of the War Between the States: the prisons. Joshua Loring and his frined Tom Hogan are truly believeable characters, the first step to keeping a reader engaged. But when you add the drama of the war as well as the conflict Josh faces in writing to a Confederate soldier and actually learning to like the other boy, the text is just addictive.
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