Handler 135
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The Handler
''The Handler'' is the third CD from American singer Har Mar Superstar. It festures guest appearances from Karen O of The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Nick Zinner, Pete Thomas, Michael Bland and Northern State
Tracklist
# ''Transit'' (3:36)
# ''Body Request'' (3:30)
# ''DUI'' (3:14)
# ''Cut Me Up'' (3:11)
# ''Sugar Pie'' (2:51)
# ''As (Seasons)'' (3:49)
# ''Save The Strip'' (3:49)
# ''O'' (3:09)
# ''Back The Camel Up'' (3:09)
# ''Bird In The Hand'' (3:18)
# ''Back In The Day'' (3:04)
# ''Alone Again (Naturally)'' (3:35)
'' Har Mar Superstar and You Can Feel Me''
Handler The word handler may refer to:
a subroutine in computing -- especially an event handler subroutine
a manager or controller of an animal, of a player of sports such as a boxer, or of a spy
A20 Handler The A20 handler is IBM PC memory manager software controlling access to the High Memory Area. Extended memory managers usually provide this functionality. A20 handlers are named after the 21st address line of the microprocessor, the A20 line.
The Intel 8088 CPU used in the original IBM PC was capable of addressing memory using 20 binary digits ("bits"). But the internal registers in the 8088 were only 16 bits wide. A 20 bit address was created by tacking four zero bits onto the end of a 16 bit Segment Address and adding the 16 bit address to it yielding a 20 bit result. In reality, the result can be 21 bits wide since the total of the two registers can be more than FFFFF hexadecimal. It is possible to generate references to slightly more than 65000 bytes that are outside the addressing range of the 8088. When the 80286 CPU which had more than 20 address lines was developed, it became necessary to deal with code that referenced the 64K addressable by ordinary addressing but not present in the 8088. As it turned out, it was sometimes desirable to set the 21st address line, and sometimes desirable not to. A logic gate was added on the motherboard to control the 21st Address line therefore.
Controlling the A20 line was an important feature at one stage in the growth of the IBM PC architecture, as it added access to an additional 65520 bytes of memory in real mode without dramatic software changes.
Computer storage
Software
References
http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/kbd/A20.html A20 - a pain from the past
Category:Computer storage
Daniel Handler Daniel Handler a.k.a. Lemony Snicket (born February 28, 1970 in San Francisco, California) is an American author, screenwriter, and accordionist. He graduated from Wesleyan University in 1992.
His novels are ''The Basic Eight'' and ''Watch Your Mouth''; they are comedies with a Gothic mood and rather adult subject matter. His screenplays were produced as the 2003 films ''Rick'' (based on the Verdi opera ''Rigoletto'') and ''Kill the Poor'' (based on the novel by Joel Rose). His accordion playing can be heard most notably on The Magnetic Fields' album, ''69 Love Songs''. He lives in a 1907 Victorian house on a steep hill in San Francisco, California. He is married to Lisa Brown, a graphic artist he met at university.
Under the pen name Lemony Snicket, Handler has written a series of children's novels, A Series of Unfortunate Events. Handler has also developed Snicket the narrator as a character, referring to him in the third person, ascribing character traits to him, and even writing a book entitled ''Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Autobiography''. (The U.S. hardcover edition of this book has a reversible dust jacket so that it can be "disguised" as ''The Luckiest Kids in the World Book 1!: The Pony Party'' by "Loney M. Setnick," which is an anagram of "Lemony Snicket.")
The first non-Unfortunate-Events-related work by Lemony Snicket was the opening story of ''It Was a Dark and Silly Night'', a volume of Art Spiegelman and Françoise Mouly's Little Lit series. The story begings "In this case, SILLY stands for Slightly Intelligent, Largely Laconic Yeti..." The second was a short story published in the USA Weekend magazine (a US newspaper supplement), dated December 10-12, 2004. This was a holiday story entitled "The Lump of Coal," and included two full-color illustrations by Brett Helquist (who has also illustrated all of the books in the Series of Unfortunate Events to date).
Handler originally came up with "Lemony Snicket" as a pseudonym to use
Daniel Handler This page ought to redirect the other way around due to name recognition, c.f. Lewis Carroll. A''shii''baka tlk 06:44, 14 Nov 2004 (UTC)
:I think there should be articles for both Lemony Snicket ''and'' Daniel Handler, since Snicket is a fictional character as well as a pseudonym. Lee M 17:54, 30 Nov 2004 (UTC)
::I concur. While Lemony Snicket the pseudonym may play the accordion I hope only Lemony Snicket the fictional character has walked up corridors made from skulls, raced volcanoes and had unfortunate things happen to the loves of his life. And I've only read up to the Miserable Mill!
::: I also Agree, The only reason Handler used the pseudonym was because he was creating a fictional character, he planned to use his own name, until the writer of the Baudilere books took on a life of his own.
::Oh, and apparently Mr. Handler has worked in the band the 6ths too (along with half the indie pantheon of the mid-nineties and before, it would seem). sheridan 20:52, 2004 Dec 21 (UTC)
Isn't Daniel Handler also a screenplay writer?
:The name appears on the Lemony Snicket film credits - if you have information about other films that'd be of interestsheridan 18:50, 2005 Jan 2 (UTC)
When is a vandal not a vandal?
A recent vandal remarked "He is married to Lisa Brown." This actually appears to be true. Perhaps the vandal was trying to make amends? He (DH) met Brown, a graphic artist, at university, it would appear. Rich Farmbrough 21:34, 2 Feb 2005 (UTC)
: Should've checked on that. The same vandal wrote similar stuff in the Sex and the City article, so I assumed it was some schoolgirls trying to be cute saying one of them was married to this guy. – 22:07, Feb 2, 2005 (UTC)
University
''He is married to Lisa Brown, a graphic artist he met at university''
What university did they meet?
Mona ~ Royalfriend2@hotmail.com
Ruth Handler Ruth Handler (November 4, 1916 - April 27, 2002) was an American businesswoman, the president of the toy manufacturer Mattel, Inc., and is remembered primarily for her role in marketing the Barbie doll.
She was born Ruth Mosko in Denver, Colorado, the youngest daughter of Polish Jewish immigrants Jacob Joseph Mosko and his wife, née Ida Rubenstein. In 1938 she married Elliot Handler.
Handler and his business partner, Harold "Matt" Matson, formed a small company to manufacture picture frames, calling it "Mattel" by combining their names ("Matt" + "El"liot). Later, they began using scraps from the manufacturing process to make dollhouse furniture. The furniture was more profitable than the picture frames and it was decided to concentrate on toy manufacturing. The company's first big-seller was the "Uka-a-doodle", a toy ukulele.
Ruth Handler had noted that her daughter Barbara preferred playing with paper dolls that looked like adults rather than like children. When in Europe, she noticed a German doll named ''Lilli'' (which was not meant for children at all; rather a gag gift for men) and bought it for Barbara.
Ruth Handler says that when she bought ''Lilli'' for her daughter, she was ignorant of its adult nature. Mattel bought the rights to market ''Lilli'': with a hair color change from blonde to brunette, and a name change to ''Barbie'' (after Ruth's daughter Barbara) she was sold in the United States starting in 1959.
Ruth Handler had stated that she thought it "was important to a girl's esteem that she play with a doll with breasts," and Barbie was certainly qualified to be that doll. If the doll originally marketed were human-sized, her measurements would have been 39"-18"-33". These measurements were based on male fantasy rather than actual human metrics, and the unrealistic size of Barbie has been controversial, with many suggesting that playing with Barbie decreases rather than enhances a girl's self-esteem. In response to criticism,
Event Handler An event handler is a part of a computer program created to tell the program how to act in response to a specific event (e.g. the clicking of a mouse or the dragging of a scrollbar or pressing a button). The programmer's custom event handling functions will be executed by the event dispatcher. The event dispatcher is part of the operating system that detects graphical user interface (GUI) events, and calls functions in the executing program to handle those events.
Without event handlers nothing would happen when you interacted with an event driven program, as most GUI programs are.
How event handlers function is highly dependent on the operating system, programming language, and GUI framework used. A programmer will need to consult the documentation provided with the language used to get the exact syntax and usage of event handling. A user only needs to know how their operating system functions. Users do not need to have any knowledge of the underlying event handler code.
Event listener
Observer pattern
Event-driven programming
http://hikwww2.fzk.de/hik/orga/verdi/rs/Dokumentation/Cpp/Cpp/ioc/tasks/t90us014.htm Write an Event Handler
http://atddoc.cern.ch/Atlas/Notes/061/Note061-1.html A High Level Design of the Sub-Farm Event Handler
http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-events/Overview.html#section-eventhandlers An Events Syntax for XML
http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/guide/plugin/dom/org/w3c/dom/events/Event.html Interface Event
http://www.jini.org/nonav/standards/davis/doc/specs/html/event-spec.html Distributed Events and Notifications
http://www.quirksmode.org/js/events_order.html Event order
http://developer.apple.com/internet/webcontent/eventmodels.html Supporting Three Event Models at Once
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/cis?q=event+handler Citations from CiteSeer
Article "http://doc.trolltech.com/qq/qq11-events.html Another Look at Events" by Jasmin Blanchette
Article "http://w3future.com/html/stories/callbacks.xml
Interrupt Handler An Interrupt Handler is the modern progression of an interrupt service routine, a routine whose execution is triggered by an interrupt.
In modern systems Interrupt Handlers are split into two parts: the First-Level Interrupt Handler (FLIH) and the Second-Level Interrupt Handlers (SLIH).
The FLIH operates in the same way as the old ''interrupt routines'' did. In response to an interrupt there is a context switch and the code for the interrupt is loaded and executed. The job of the FLIH, however, is not to process the interrupt, but to schedule the execution of the SLIH, while recording any critical information which is only available at the time of the interrupt.
The SLIH sits on the run queue of the operating system until it can be executed to perform the processing for the interrupt when processor time is available.
It is worth noting that in many systems the FLIH and SLIH are referred to as ''upper halves'' and ''lower halves'', or a derivation of those names.
Category:Operating system technology
de:Unterbrechungsroutine
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Handler 135
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Handler 135
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