seful information, and the means of extracting it, has always been a challenge to researchers and technicians of complex systems. With the purchase of your Data Dolphin Data Logger and Data Dolphin software, you have taken a giant step toward effortless and powerful data collection. Built in graphing and data export allows one to make sense of their data visually, or let you easily import into other platforms.

No programming knowledge is required to set your Data Dolphin Data Logger up for use. Use a simple GUI to select your inputs you wish to data log, and use drop down menus to let your logger know what is connected. Input sensor coefficients if necessary and set your data logging period and you're ready to go.


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I am trying to find the .GCI file for the GameCube game Pokmon XD: Gale of Darkness on Dolphin. When I right click on the file on the Dolphin homescreen and click on 'Open Gamecube Save Folder', I get the error 'no game save data found', which is odd because when I boot up the game it says 'memory card in slot A has been read!' and loads the correct save data just fine:

The game save is supposedly on memory card A. And yet, when I visit \Users\[user]\Documents\Dolphin Emulator\GC\USA\Card A, all I get is an empty folder. The other regions are empty as well but this is a USA region ISO so I didn't really expect it to be save there. There is a .SAV file in the same folder as the Dolphin executable that I don't remember saving, but I was under the impression that Dolphin 5 uses .GCI files to read and write save data, not .SAV files. Pic:

Bottlenose dolphin are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972. The take reduction plans were developed to reduce incidental mortality and serious injury of strategic stocks of bottlenose dolphins from commercial fisheries in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Gear restricted under the BDTRP includes small, medium, and large mesh gillnets and pound nets.

These maps and corresponding Geographic Information Systems (GIS) shapefile data represent BDTRP management areas in the NOAA Fisheries in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. The Federal Register (see FR link below) should be consulted for the precise legal definition of the management areas and geographic coordinates. Esri's ArcGIS software or Google Earth can be used to open GIS shapefiles. Google Earth can also be used to open zipped KML (KMZ) files to view the designated management areas. Click here to download Google Earth. Metadata (information about the GIS shapefile data) is available in XML or an easy-to-read HTML format.

Please fill in the form below.If this is the first time to download data, a passcode will be sent to you to verify your email address, which you need to enter in this form.

When you are finished filling in the form, please click [Next] button to move to the Download Options Panel.

Dolphin support forum is for Dolphin users only to get latest software upgrade, new user manuals, case studies, data recovery solutions and tips on how to use Dolphin data recovery tools properly and for maximum data recovery.

Both individuals and organizations that work with arXivLabs have embraced and accepted our values of openness, community, excellence, and user data privacy. arXiv is committed to these values and only works with partners that adhere to them.

Dolphins may seem like unlikely visitors to the Potomac River, an urban waterway running from West Virginia through Washington, D.C. and into the Chesapeake Bay. But since 2015, researchers have identified over 2,000 individual dolphins swimming in these waters.

Since 2015, scientists have started observing bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops erebennus) in the Potomac once again. But whether these marine mammals have been in the Potomac River all along, or are suddenly returning to the area after a long period away, is not yet known. Scientists at Georgetown University and Duke University aim to answer this question through the Potomac-Chesapeake Dolphin Project (PCDP), which seeks to understand the behavior, population dynamics, and distribution of bottlenose dolphins and inform protection efforts. The researchers track how many dolphins visit the Potomac River and middle Chesapeake Bay, how often they come, and how long they stay.

One possible reason for the scarcity of dolphin data in the past century is that scientists may have missed what was in front of them due to misconceptions about the dolphins. Unlike a typical residential bottlenose dolphin population that stays in one place, these dolphins change their location depending on the season, and are only observed in the Potomac and middle Chesapeake between April and October. This atypical pattern in presence may have led researchers to miss the dolphin populations in previous years.

While these historical questions are still up in the air, the knowledge that dolphins currently visit the Potomac can already inform protection efforts. In fact, with the knowledge of dolphins in the region, nearby military facilities have begun including bottlenose dolphins in their environmental impact statements.

College of Charleston graduate students worked with NCCOS scientists to understand this concerning behavior. Using unoccupied aerial systems (UASs) researchers are able to determine the distribution patterns of these dolphins across varying salinities, and collect samples through a non-invasive procedure.

Through UAS technology from land observations in the Cooper River, the team determined dolphins utilized low-salinity (< 15 ppt) habitat during months with warmer water temperatures (May-September). Dolphins are adapted to high saline waters and prolonged exposure to low salinity can lead to negative health effects. Their presence in the low-salinity habitat of the Cooper River may be in response to following prey resources, specifically mullet. As water temperatures continue to rise as a result of climate change, dolphins may start to utilize these areas more frequently, ultimately exposing dolphins to different stressors that may have adverse health implications. This research was recently published in the Special Issue Advances of Drones in Wildlife Research in the Drones journal.

This research has great potential in regularly monitoring dolphin respiratory health for estuarine dolphins that otherwise can only be monitored through expensive and invasive short-term capture-release programs. The next phase of this research is to sequence the microbiome of the existing samples to test for pathogen DNA that affects respiratory health, the leading cause of morbidity/mortality in dolphins. In addition, the team will sample dolphins that enter low-salinity habitat to analyze and compare to the previously collected samples.

For example, I have four USB sticks lying on my desk at the moment, none of which are formatted FAT. I need to retain ownership/permissions without resorting to archiving, these provide a convenient method of exchanging data with colleagues.

Again, baloo is not in any way deeper embedded within KDE than Nepomuk has been. You even can uninstall the indexer parts which was not possible with Nepomuk.

The issue this thread is about (no metadata shown for not-indexed files) is a bug that I hope will be fixed soon. (and this same bug already was there in the beginning of Nepomuk)

Regarding your other, all very valid points; this emphasises the point I was making, we all have diverse uses. Personally I too would want meta data related to the actual file I had (knowingly) attached it to, and yes, I would expect it to remain if the file was moved, but not so on copy.

You cannot uninstall kfilemetadata and libbaloowidgets4 anyway, as they are required by dolphin.

But again (a last time ), this was exactly the same with Nepomuk. NepomukV1 has that widget in libkde4 and used strigi for indexing and metadata extraction. NepomukV2 (which Dolphin uses in 4.10?, 4.11 and 4.12) had it in nepomuk-widgets and the metadata extractors, i.e. what is now kfilemetadata4, has been in nepomuk-core.

Dolphin morbillivirus (DMV) was isolated in striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba from the Mediterranean Sea stranded along the coast of Spain during a lethal epidemic that killed thousands of individuals in 1990-1992. Though some of these isolates (MUC, 16A and the reference strain) have been extensively characterised, details on their origin were not reported in the literature, and records for these isolates are often difficult to trace and are, sometimes, erroneous. Here, we provide unpublished biological and histopathological data for these isolates, summarize the literature on their characterization and make suggestions for future studies.

Curious how researchers collect scientific data that helps protect marine mammals and the ocean? Although methods vary depending on the species and type of info we seek, here are some examples of how our OCS research team gathers field data on dolphins:

Many hours are spent collecting data on dolphins, whales, and other marine species during every single day of our on-the-water research. Our OCS team invests even MORE time back in the lab, analyzing the information and then publishing the results of our studies.

All this work is key not only to learn more about these animals but also to protect them and the environment in which they like. But we also need your support. Your tax-deductible contribution helps us continue this important data collection now ongoing for over two decades! 17dc91bb1f

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