- published: 02 Apr 2019
- views: 4136
.geo was a generic top-level domain proposed by SRI International to be used to associate Internet resources with geographical locations, via a system of "georegistrars" and "georegistries" with hierarchical addresses representing locations in a grid encircling the Earth. These addresses are not intended to be typed in directly by end-users (and hence are "messy" strings like acme.2e5n.10e30n.geo) but rather, would be used "behind the scenes" by software looking things up by location (possibly driven by GPS positioning in mobile devices).
A number of schemes have been proposed or implemented in an attempt to classify Internet sites geographically; many of them do not require anything special in DNS (e.g., the GeoURL initiative). The .geo proposal can, hence, be criticized as making unnecessary use of a top-level domain where it might have been implemented using subdomains elsewhere (perhaps within .arpa, the domain allocated for infrastructure lookups), or with non-DNS methods such as "meta" tags in Web sites.
GEO or Geo may refer to any of the following:
In computational & scientific use:
In commercial use:
People:
GEOS is a computer operating environment, graphical user interface, and suite of application software. Originally released as PC/GEOS, it runs on DOS-based, IBM PC compatible computers. The package later became GeoWorks Ensemble, then NewDeal Office, and is now Breadbox Ensemble. Versions for some handheld platforms were also released.
PC/GEOS was first created by Berkeley Softworks, who later became GeoWorks Corporation. Version 4.0 was developed in 2001 by Breadbox Computer Company, LLC, and named Breadbox Ensemble.
PC/GEOS should not be confused with the 8-bit GEOS product from the same company, which runs on the Commodore 64 and other computers using MOS 6502-compatible microprocessors.
In 1990, GeoWorks released GEOS for IBM PC compatible systems, PC/GEOS. Also called GeoWorks Ensemble, it was incompatible with the earlier 8-bit versions of GEOS for Commodore and Apple II computers, but provided numerous enhancements, including scalable fonts and multitasking even on XT and AT-class PC clones. GeoWorks saw a market opportunity to provide a graphical user interface for the 16 million older model PCs that were unable to run Microsoft Windows 2.x.
Can geomagnetics locate the foundations on the old airfield? Measurement parameters and derived material properties in geomagnetics, presentation of various measuring instruments and their mode of operation. A production of the Geophysical Institute (GPI) in collaboration with the Center for Technology-Enhanced Learning (ZML) at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). German version: https://youtu.be/sLAKH-GUOEg
This is the second trailer for PUS Theatre's Fall 2010 production FAILURE 2 COMMUNICATE by Valerie Fachman ans directed by Scott Baker. See it at The Garage, 975 Howard St, San Francisco, through Nov 14. ALSO, if you would like to help our small company mount this complex production, please consider visiting our Kickstarter page: http://kck.st/cArLA5 . Thank you!
How does a record from an obscure label in Baton Rouge, Louisiana wind up in Ypsilanti, Michigan? Well, I found this in the WQBR archives circa 1988 and played it -- and it instantly became one of my favourite tunes. "Girl From Another World" wasn't even the A-side of the record; that was a song called "Keep Away", which I don't even remember. Skratch Records only put out a handful of singles and LPs in the mid-80s, and this was apparently the only thing the group Geo ever released...but I love it!
Performers Under Stress (PUS) present Scamoramaland World Premiere, opening November 1, at Bindlestiff Studio, For more info visit pustheatre.com.
Turk Muller is a veteran stage and screen actor. His latest project is a portrait of Richard Hugo, poet of the Pacific Northwest, and particularly Missoula, Montana. Here Turk performs 3 of Hugo's poems: Letter to Logan from Milltown, In Your Young Dream, and December 24th and George McBride is Dead.
PUS Theatre's Fall 2010 production is the world premiere of FAILURE 2 COMMUNICATE, a new full-length work by Valerie Fachman, Directed by Scott Baker and opening at The Garage, 975 Howard St, San Francisco, CA, on October 29. If you would like to see the show, and help our small company mount this complex production, please consider visiting our Kickstarter page: http://kck.st/cArLA5 . Thank you!
.geo was a generic top-level domain proposed by SRI International to be used to associate Internet resources with geographical locations, via a system of "georegistrars" and "georegistries" with hierarchical addresses representing locations in a grid encircling the Earth. These addresses are not intended to be typed in directly by end-users (and hence are "messy" strings like acme.2e5n.10e30n.geo) but rather, would be used "behind the scenes" by software looking things up by location (possibly driven by GPS positioning in mobile devices).
A number of schemes have been proposed or implemented in an attempt to classify Internet sites geographically; many of them do not require anything special in DNS (e.g., the GeoURL initiative). The .geo proposal can, hence, be criticized as making unnecessary use of a top-level domain where it might have been implemented using subdomains elsewhere (perhaps within .arpa, the domain allocated for infrastructure lookups), or with non-DNS methods such as "meta" tags in Web sites.