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 | | Most of the presentation on remote conferencing indicated a need for some degree of multicast functionality, ranging from the 1-to-n, with conference membership completely known, to conferences for which Chimiak [Page 3] RFC 1453 Comments on Video Conferencing April 1993 existence of a group is known, but exact membership is not. |  | | Latency and intramedia synchronization and intermedia synchronization (lip-sync) are critical for the interactive voice and video streams Chimiak [Page 2] RFC 1453 Comments on Video Conferencing April 1993 of remote conferencing. |  | | A session-scheduling mechanism for joining and leaving a Chimiak [Page 5] RFC 1453 Comments on Video Conferencing April 1993 multicast conference exists. |
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http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1453.txt
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| | washingtonpost.com: Constantinople: City of the World's Desire, 1453-1924 |
 | | For after 1453 Jews were encouraged to immigrate from Europe. |  | | Accordingly, so the historian Kritovoulos wrote, after 1453 the Sultan gathered people in Constantinople `from all parts of Asia and Europe, and he transferred them with all possible care and speed, people of all nations, but more especially of Christians. |  | | Born in Edirne, the Ottoman capital zoo miles north-west of Constantinople, he had, according to a chronicle which he himself commissioned, been possessed since his childhood with the idea of conquering Constantinople, and constantly insisted on the necessity of taking the city without delay. |
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/books/chap1/constantinople.htm
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| | Constantinople in 1453 |
 | | For the last 1100 of these, it had been the capital of the Byzantine Empire, crown of the Eastern Christian world and an international center of wealth, beauty, power and commerce. |  | | Also by 1453, Constantinople had been besieged many times -- by Persians, Avars, Arabs (twice), Bulgars, Russians (three times) and Pechenegs. |  | | According to an ancient belief popular with the inhabitants of the city, Constantinople would fall only when the moon gave a sign. |
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http://www.tughranet.f2s.com/kuwae.htm
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| | Fall of Constantinople, 1453 |
 | | As a matter of fact, in the middle of May of 1453 the Venetian Senate was still deliberating about sending a fleet to Constantinople. |  | | The rest of the population, Greek and foreigner, fought until the bitter end. |  | | Of the men, 400 were recruited in Genoa and 300 on the Genoese held island of Chios. |
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http://www.greece.org/Romiosini/fall.html
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| | 1453 |
 | | further support, and during the first half of 1453 troops and loans of money were feverishly... |  | | According to EnviroSystems, EcoTru(R) 1453 is a revolutionary, non-corrosive, hospital-gra... |  | | Readings in World Christian History, Volume I: Earliest Christianity to 1453.(Book Review) |
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http://enciclopedia.cc/1453
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| | eBay - Book: 1453 (ISBN: 1401301916) |
 | | Constantinople, the "city of the world's desire," was a wealthy, imperial, intimidating, and Christian city, influencing world opinion for a thousand years. |  | | Thereafter, two worlds would rise -- that of the West and that of the Middle East. |  | | Impeccably researched and told as a real-life adventure, the book explores the issues that led up to and resulted from the fall of Constantinople in a way that is easily grasped and jumps from the pages into the headlines of world news. |
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http://product.ebay.com/1453_ISBN_1401301916_W0QQfvcsZ1388QQsoprZ44891600
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| | I.B.E.W. Local 1453 |
 | | Citations should be as follows: Identification of the item, box and folder number, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 1453, Ozarks Labor Union Archives, Southwest Missouri State University. |  | | Provenance: The records of IBEW, Local 1453 were transferred from the IBEW, Local 1453 office to the Ozarks Labor Union Archives in 1996. |  | | Contains by-laws and proposed by-laws for Local 1453 and the constitution of the International and other locals. |
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http://library.smsu.edu/meyer/specColl/olua7.htm
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| | The Fall of Constantinople in 1453 |
 | | What made the majority of people in Constantinople believe in prophecies saying that the city would not last forever and that they are doomed? |  | | One of the major explanations for the fall of Constantinople in the fatal 1453 is viewing it from the angle of the political consequences of the Latin Conquest and fall of the city in 1204. |  | | The might of his army consisted of a large fleet of war vessels, an army of about 150 000 men, including 12 000 janissaries--soldiers taken as little children from their families (even from families of infidels) and specially trained in military skills to serve as the élite army of the sultan. |
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http://www.geocities.com/Paris/5972/Constantinople.html
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| | Light Millennium: Project 1453 - An Australian Story |
 | | At last some people from the other end of the world have found the courage to ask themselves the following question: "After 550 years, hasn't the time to get over the "celebration-mourning" and "conquest- fall" antitheses come?" Why should 1453 still be used as an instrument of hatred, enmity and to keep alive suffering? |  | | The stated objectives of Project 1453 remained unchanged to the conclusion of the Symposium and were largely achieved: |  | | The project brought together a series of lectures, presentations, displays and innovative performances exploring the rich cultural, historical, political, religious, artistic, military and social legacies of these two extraordinary empires and their faiths - Christianity and Islam. |
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http://www.lightmillennium.org/2003_summer/project1453.html
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| | Amazon.ca: Books: The Balkans Since 1453 |
 | | It provides readers with a view of time and space from a Balkan perspective but also with a vision of how to look at other regions of the world, and how to perceive the world itself as a unit composed of diverse spatial, temporal, and cultural components." |  | | The Balkans Since 1453 represents an itinerary in world history. |  | | Long out of print, Stavrianos' opus both synthesizes the existing literature of Balkan studies since World War I and demonstrates the centrality of the Balkans to both European and world history, a centrality painfully apparent in recent years. |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0814797660
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| | GUUG bug report logs - #1453, boring messages |
 | | Subject: bug#1453: Hello This is a National Survey, Not Spam, No Virus, just a survey. |  | | It has been forwarded to the developer(s) and to the developers mailing list to accompany the original report. |  | | This is an automatically generated reply, to let you know your message has been received. |
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http://bugs.guug.de/db/14/1453-b.html
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| | Fall of Constantinople - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In 1453 the "empire" consisted of little more than the city of Constantinople itself and a portion of the Peloponnese (centered on the fortress of Mystras); the Empire of Trebizond, a completely independent successor state formed in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade also survived on the coast of the Black Sea. |  | | Mehmed planned to attack the Theodosian Walls, the intricate series of walls and ditches protecting Constantinople from an attack from the west, the only part of the city not surrounded by water. |  | | His army encamped outside the city on Easter Monday, April 2, 1453. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_of_Constantinople
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| | Battle of Castillon (1453) |
 | | The only prior examples would be in the Hussite Wars (1420-33), the battles of which were very much like Castillon (1453). |  | | They had believed that the English expedition was going to be sent to Normandy. |  | | Charles Oman's The Art of War in the Middle Ages. |
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http://www.xenophongroup.com/montjoie/castilon.htm
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| | The Siege of Constantinople in 1453 |
 | | Several accounts of this battle exist and we will attempt to republish as many different accounts as possible. |  | | In 1453, Mehmed II (1451-1481), the Ottoman Sultan historically known as Mehmed the Conqueror, led an army of 150,000 Turks which besieged Constantinople from April 5th to May 29th, 1453. |  | | The Siege of Constantinople (1453), according to Nicolo Barbaro - added September 2, 2003 |
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http://www.deremilitari.org/resources/sources/siegeofconstantinople.htm
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| | Church History: The Middle Ages: 476-1453 |
 | | The decline of the East began with the first Muslim invasions in 622. |  | | During this era, there were "wars and rumors of war" and a lot of suffering including the bubonic plague. |  | | Finally Constantinople fell in 1453, the end of the Middle Ages, and was renamed Istanbul. |
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http://gbgm-umc.org/umw/bible/ma.stm
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| | Osprey Publishing - The Walls of Constantinople AD 324—1453 |
 | | This book examines the main defensive system protecting the landward side of the city, which consisted of three parallel walls about 5 miles long. |  | | The book is very well illustrated, with numerous modern colour photographs of all parts of the walls, a good map. |  | | The walls of Constantinople are the greatest surviving example of European medieval military architecture in the world. |
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http://www.ospreypublishing.com/title_detail.php?title=S759X
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| | The Battle of Heworth Moor 1453 |
 | | Of the skirmishes in which many men of both parties were"beten, slayne and hurte"there were violent incidents at Topcliffe, Gargrave, Aughton and Catton in 1453 and in 1454 the Percies terrorised the Mayor and Recorder in York plus a battle at Stamford Bridge*. |  | | The Chamberlain's Account Books for 1453 has similar entries to the Rolls and include the payments to messengers but no trace of the 'battle'. |  | | By July 1453 the Percies and Nevilles had mustered 5000 armed men between them. |
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http://uk.geocities.com/jakdoor/heworth/heworth.htm
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| | Comments for: First Post! - ja.zz |
 | | #1453, One of the only men in hollywood I'd trust to do a video gam... |  | | #1453, A Fall of Reach movie would rock. |  | | I think all game movies should exist wit... |
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http://www.shacknews.com/ja.zz?id=9056061
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| | Hundred Years' War, Final Phase (1422-1453) Web Page |
 | | This battle led to the recovery of Guyenne and was the last major battle of the long war. |  | | This battle led to the recovery of Normandy by the French crown. |  | | At Castillon (1453) the French destroyed the last English army with cannon, handguns, and heavy cavalry. |
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http://xenophongroup.com/montjoie/hyw_fp.htm
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| | Solutions to make ANY MONITOR work on a PC or MAC |
 | | You may be able use your current video card to run the GOLDSTAR 1453. |  | | Software Integrators' video cards can run any monitor (fixed frequency or multisync), including the GOLDSTAR 1453. |  | | You may only need the right adapter and cable - call us at 1-800-547-2349. |
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http://www.si87.com/MonitorSolutions/goldstar/1453.html
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| | The Bible: Reformations: 1453-1800 |
 | | External web sites offer us diverse perspectives; afford us an opportunity to compare them to United Methodist positions; and, encourage us to critically analyze the issues raised by The Bible: the Book that Bridges the Millennia web pages. |  | | The Reformation began in 1453, the year that the Turks captured Constantinople. |
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http://gbgm-umc.org/umw/bible/ref.stm
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| | Article by JD |
 | | They ended on May 29th, 1453 (a Tuesday in that year, as in this one), when Mehmed the Second, “the Conqueror”, entered Constantinople after a seige of fifty-three days, bringing an end to the Eastern Empire. |  | | To refresh your memory: the Middle Ages began on Saturday, September 4th, A.D. 476, when the last Emperor of Rome, the boy Romulus Augustulus, was dismissed by Odoacer, a rude German, who thereby made himself the first barbarian king of Italy. |  | | From the first hour of the memorable twenty-ninth of May, disorder and rapine prevailed in Constantinople till the eighth hour of the same day, when the sultan himself passed in triumph through the gate of St. Romanus. |
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http://www.olimu.com/WebJournalism/Texts/Commentary/Constantinople.htm
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| | US CODE: Title 29,1453. Election of plan status |
 | | LII has no control over and does not endorse any external Internet site that contains links to or references LII. |  | | TITLE 29 > CHAPTER 18 > SUBCHAPTER III > Subtitle E > part 6 > § 1453 |
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http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/29/1453.html
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