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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

"Fixed" was the sixth episode of Series 26, and the 787th episode of Casualty overall.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Fixed
rdfs:comment
  • "Fixed" was the sixth episode of Series 26, and the 787th episode of Casualty overall.
  • At first, the joint seems somewhat useless, but SketchyPhysics 3 (SP3) gave it two purposes. First of all, it allows for emitters and thrusters to be attached to the main object without having to use two movable joints. Second, and just as important, the breakable joint also allows for things to be able to "snap" when they are hit hard enough.
  • Fixed is a synonym for any form of erosion-proofing, and is generally used as such to refer to items when wishing for them (because the game uses only one bit for erodeproofing or fixedness, they are all internally equivalent). The term fooproof is also used, but the game does not recognize this. Originally, fixed referred to crysknives; a fixed crysknife will revert to a worm tooth when dropped only 10% of the time.
  • McCoy and Southerlyn prosecute a defendant in the murder of a parolee.
  • Focus on complete structure, foundations and direction. Keeps that which it is involved in running, it is the middle of the run. Taking a full understanding of the given situation and deciding what is best for the whole situation to have continued vitality according to given parameters back to astroology back to home
  • Under Section 101 of the 1976 Copyright Act, Congress provided considerable room for technological advances in the area of fixation by noting that the method of fixation in copies or phonorecords may be "now known or later developed." According to the House Report accompanying the 1976 Copyright Act, Congress intended the terms "copies" and "phonorecords" to "comprise all of the material objects in which copyrightable works are capable of being fixed."
sameAs
Season
  • 15(xsd:integer)
dcterms:subject
aPrevReleasedInSeries
  • Enemy
sAirdateMonth
  • December
wsWrittenBy
wsDirectedBy
aSelf
  • Fixed
sSeries
  • L&O
nEpisode
  • 11(xsd:integer)
sProductionSerialNumber
  • E53
nSeason
  • 15(xsd:integer)
nAirdateYear
  • 2004(xsd:integer)
nAirdateDay
  • 8(xsd:integer)
aNextReleasedInSeries
  • Mammon
dbkwik:casualty/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:lawandorder...iPageUsesTemplate
Number
Previous
sTitle
  • Fixed
Series
  • Law & Order
Airdate
  • 2011-09-24(xsd:date)
dbkwik:itlaw/prope...iPageUsesTemplate
Title
  • Fixed
Serieslink
  • L&O
NEXT
Writer
  • Matthew Broughton
Director
  • Declan Eames
abstract
  • "Fixed" was the sixth episode of Series 26, and the 787th episode of Casualty overall.
  • At first, the joint seems somewhat useless, but SketchyPhysics 3 (SP3) gave it two purposes. First of all, it allows for emitters and thrusters to be attached to the main object without having to use two movable joints. Second, and just as important, the breakable joint also allows for things to be able to "snap" when they are hit hard enough.
  • Fixed is a synonym for any form of erosion-proofing, and is generally used as such to refer to items when wishing for them (because the game uses only one bit for erodeproofing or fixedness, they are all internally equivalent). The term fooproof is also used, but the game does not recognize this. Originally, fixed referred to crysknives; a fixed crysknife will revert to a worm tooth when dropped only 10% of the time.
  • Under Section 101 of the 1976 Copyright Act, Congress provided considerable room for technological advances in the area of fixation by noting that the method of fixation in copies or phonorecords may be "now known or later developed." According to the House Report accompanying the 1976 Copyright Act, Congress intended the terms "copies" and "phonorecords" to "comprise all of the material objects in which copyrightable works are capable of being fixed." The form of the fixation and the manner, method or medium used are virtually unlimited. A work may be fixed in "words, numbers, notes, sounds, pictures, or any other graphic or symbolic indicia"; may be embodied in a physical object in "written, printed, photographic, sculptural, punched, magnetic, or any other stable form"; and may be capable of perception either "directly or by means of any machine or device 'now known or later developed.'" In digital form, a work is generally recorded (fixed) as a sequence of binary digits (zeros and ones) using media specific encoding. This fits within the House Report's list of permissible manners of fixation. Virtually all works also will be fixed in acceptable material objects — i.e., copies or phonorecords. For instance, floppy disks, compact discs (CDs), CD-ROMs, optical disks, compact discs-interactive (CD-Is), digital tape, and other digital storage devices are all stable forms in which works may be fixed and from which works may be perceived, reproduced or communicated by means of a machine or device. The question of whether interactive works are fixed (given the user's ability to constantly alter the sequence of the "action") has been resolved by the courts in the context of videogames and should not present a new issue in the context of the Internet. Such works are generally considered sufficiently fixed to qualify for protection. A transmission, in and of itself, is not a fixation. While a transmission may result in a fixation, a work is not fixed by virtue of the transmission alone. Therefore, "live" transmissions via the Internet will not meet the fixation requirement, and will be unprotected by copyright law, unless the work is being fixed at the same time as it is being transmitted. The Copyright Act provides that a work "consisting of sounds, images, or both, that are being transmitted" meets the fixation requirement "if a fixation of the work is being made simultaneously with its transmission." To obtain protection for a work under this "simultaneous fixation" provision, the simultaneous fixation of the transmitted work must itself qualify as a sufficient fixation. A simultaneous fixation (or any other fixation) meets the requirements if its embodiment in a copy or phonorecord is "sufficiently permanent or stable to permit it to be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated for a period of more than transitory duration." Works are not sufficiently fixed if they are "purely evanescent or transient" in nature, "such as those projected briefly on a screen, shown electronically on a television or cathode ray tube, or captured momentarily in the 'memory' of a computer." Electronic network transmissions from one computer to another, such as e-mail, may only reside on each computer in RAM (random access memory), but that has been found to be sufficient fixation.
  • McCoy and Southerlyn prosecute a defendant in the murder of a parolee.
  • Focus on complete structure, foundations and direction. Keeps that which it is involved in running, it is the middle of the run. Taking a full understanding of the given situation and deciding what is best for the whole situation to have continued vitality according to given parameters back to astroology back to home
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is Serieslink of
is NEXT of
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