Oracle International Corporation - , US Harris Kravatz - Danville CA, US Daniel Schwartz - San Francisco CA, US Aylin Uysal - San Francisco CA, US Roy Selig - Princeton NJ, US Katie Candland - San Francisco CA, US Allison Farrell - Revere MA, US Sally Stratton Baggett - Healdsburgh CA, US Samuel Ting - Cupertino CA, US Jeremy Ashley - San Francisco CA, US
Assignee:
Oracle International Corporation - Redwood Shores CA
International Classification:
G06F 3/0482 G06F 3/0481
US Classification:
715838
Abstract:
Embodiments described herein provide various features for a unified and simplified user experience. A first feature (or set of features) provides icons for launching or accessing applications and business flows. A second feature provides a unified menu system including an icon bar with thumbnails of a selected icon arranged adjacent to the icon bar. A third feature provides a framework for a menu that can expose application objects from diverse sources.
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Samuel Ting
Samuel Ting
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Samuel Ting
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Samuel C.C. Ting
Samuel C.C. Ting is the Thomas Dudley Cabot professor of physics at MI...
Duration:
1h 36m 53s
Lessons from the International Space Station ...
Samuel Ting presents "The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer Experiment on th...
Duration:
1h 21m 19s
6th Jlich Lecture: Das AMS-Experiment auf der...
In this lecture, Nobel Prize Laureate Prof. Dr. Samuel C. C. Ting (MIT...
Duration:
1h 10m 44s
Lecture by Samuel Ting from Massachusetts Ins...
11/04/2016 2016 Series of Lectures on Astrophysics and Cosmology: scie...
Duration:
1h 6m 19s
Encounters with Modern Physics - Samuel C. C....
Experimental physics results are a major driving force for the advance...
Duration:
1h 20m 20s
BTC 2019 | Plenary keynote: Samuel C. C. Ting
Samuel C. C. Ting, Nobel Laureate and Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of...
Led by Nobel laureate physicist Samuel Ting, the AMS was constructed, tested and is operated by an international team of 56 institutes from 16 countries organized under a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science sponsorship. For the past 8 years on orbit, the AMS has been capturing high-ener
The $2 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a project led by Nobel laureate Samuel Ting, was designed to detect high energy cosmic rays and measure any antimatter that might be present to learn more about dark matter, dark energy and by extension, the evolution of the cosmos. The instrument was carr
very difficult to detect. According to Samuel Ting, who is the AMS teams project leader as well as being a Nobel Laureate from MIT, despite the fact that dark matter has never been seen, the data that the AMS has collected will likely prove useful to scientists in learning more about the substance. T
Date: Sep 22, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
AMS Experiment Sheds Light on the Flux of Cosmic Rays and Possibly on the ...
"This is the first experimental observation of the positron fraction maximum after half a century of cosmic rays experiments," said Samuel Ting, AMS spokesperson, the experiment focused on mapping cosmic rays, in a news release. "Measurements are underway by the AMS team to determine the rate of dec
Date: Sep 22, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
ISS Particle Detector Reveals Clues About Dark Matter
Samuel Ting, project leader of the AMS team and also a Nobel Laureate from MIT, said the team hasn't found any concrete evidence that suggests dark matter but data can further help them decipher dark matter in a more fitting manner.
Date: Sep 21, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Hints of Mysterious Dark Matter Revealed by Cosmic Rays
They include 50 percent more data, and have revealed new insights into the origin of the particles found in cosmic rays, Samuel Ting, a professor of physics at MIT and an AMS spokesman, said during a live webcast at the CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) lab in Switzerland yesterd
Date: Sep 19, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Dark matter? NASA to unveil results of $2b space physics experiment
seek out signs of antimatter and elusive dark matter from its perch on the backbone-like main truss of the International Space Station. More than 200 scientists representing 16 countries and 56 institutions are part of the science team, which is led by Nobel laureate Samuel Ting, a physicist at MIT.
Date: Apr 03, 2013
Source: Google
Dark matter may be source of exotic space particles, physicist says
We, of course, have a feeling what is happening, said Nobel-winning physicist Samuel Ting of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, speaking in a packed auditorium at CERN, the Geneva-based European particle physics laboratory. But Ting, pressed by audience members to reveal more of his data a