Andy Bedwell was a 50 year old ex-cricketer. Andrew David Bedwell was born in the village of Hanney, Oxfordshire. He played cricket for Nottinghamshire in the early 90's making a few appearances for the club. Bedwell took his first wicket against the county of Durham this success was short lived as he later ruptured the ligaments in his knee during the game. It was believed his landing forward foot twisted awkwardly in the ground, spectators described the scene as "distressing" and "painfully in-humain". Andrew Bedwell was a late comer in the professional game but coaches and scouts believed he had a good future in the game.
He is currently a Maintenance Engineer in the farming industry is his home county Oxfordshire. He failed to make a return to the Nottinghamshire side, but could take heart from his final performance despite the horrific injury.
In total Andrew Bedwell made 8 appearances for the Nottinghamshire county taking one wicket in the process.
Andrew now follows football on a regular basis, often seen supporting his goalkeeper son who plays in Swindon Town's U18s. He is well known on the local league circuit, however, for giving officials a very hard time from the touch line.
He is currently a Maintenance Engineer in the farming industry is his home county Oxfordshire. He failed to make a return to the Nottinghamshire side, but could take heart from his final performance despite the horrific injury.
In total Andrew Bedwell made 8 appearances for the Nottinghamshire county taking one wicket in the process.
Andrew now follows football on a regular basis, often seen supporting his goalkeeper son who plays in Swindon Town's U18s. He is well known on the local league circuit, however, for giving officials a very hard time from the touch line.
So far the cloud computing industry has been driven by physical implementations, while the development life cycle process and the design aspect of clouds have not been widely explored. New emerging technologies and propositions have emerged to widen the scope of cloud computing to enable a standardized life cycle development. The cloud computing modeling paradigm then focuses on three different perspectives: infrastructure as a service modeling (IaaSM), software as a service modeling (SaaSM), and platform as as service modeling (PaaSM).
About the Cloud Computing Notation (CCMN)
The Cloud Computing Modeling Notation (CCMN), among other cloud computing modeling languages, has emerged as an organizational architectural necessity in the space of software as a service modeling (SaaSM), a modeling language for designing cloud computing environments and their offered underpinning services. Furthermore, the CCMN notation facilitates the creation of a cloud reference landscape, in which various services, categorized by their capabilities, devised to offer business or technological solutions to subscribed consumers. The term “categorized” pertains to the traditional classification of cloud offerings, cloud delivery models such as Software as a Service (SaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS), Infrstructure as a Service (IaaS), Data Storage as a Service (DSaaS), and more.
The Chief Promise of CCMN
CCMN is a natural extension of the whose different abstraction levels help illustrate a service ecosystem for enterprise architecture, application architecture, and service-oriented architecture projects. As an offshoot of the SOMF paradigm, CCMN concepts support the “Everything is a Service” chief promise. As illustrated in the CCMN model image on the far right. In addition, as shown, CCMN also tackles the construction of various cloud types such as Public, Private, Community, Hybrid, and more.
The ability to abstract services in spite of their location, interoperability challenges, or deployment difficulties, the CCMN model fosters an elastic cloud computing environment, nimble enough to adapt to changes, a vital contribution that meets business or technological imperatives. Therefore, the CCMN notation widens the scope of SOMF by adding a cloud layer, an entity in which services collaborate, interact, and jointly offer solutions on a larger scale.
Cloud Computing Modeling
To understand how it is possible to model services in the cloud context, the practitioner must be aware that a cloud evolves through a number of stages, as shown in the image on the far right. For example, a cloud can be illustrated as a concept, an analysis property, a design subject, or as a physical entity. This progression through time suggests that the cloud construction must adhere to a cloud life cycle. Thus, six different models (see
About the Cloud Computing Notation (CCMN)
The Cloud Computing Modeling Notation (CCMN), among other cloud computing modeling languages, has emerged as an organizational architectural necessity in the space of software as a service modeling (SaaSM), a modeling language for designing cloud computing environments and their offered underpinning services. Furthermore, the CCMN notation facilitates the creation of a cloud reference landscape, in which various services, categorized by their capabilities, devised to offer business or technological solutions to subscribed consumers. The term “categorized” pertains to the traditional classification of cloud offerings, cloud delivery models such as Software as a Service (SaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS), Infrstructure as a Service (IaaS), Data Storage as a Service (DSaaS), and more.
The Chief Promise of CCMN
CCMN is a natural extension of the whose different abstraction levels help illustrate a service ecosystem for enterprise architecture, application architecture, and service-oriented architecture projects. As an offshoot of the SOMF paradigm, CCMN concepts support the “Everything is a Service” chief promise. As illustrated in the CCMN model image on the far right. In addition, as shown, CCMN also tackles the construction of various cloud types such as Public, Private, Community, Hybrid, and more.
The ability to abstract services in spite of their location, interoperability challenges, or deployment difficulties, the CCMN model fosters an elastic cloud computing environment, nimble enough to adapt to changes, a vital contribution that meets business or technological imperatives. Therefore, the CCMN notation widens the scope of SOMF by adding a cloud layer, an entity in which services collaborate, interact, and jointly offer solutions on a larger scale.
Cloud Computing Modeling
To understand how it is possible to model services in the cloud context, the practitioner must be aware that a cloud evolves through a number of stages, as shown in the image on the far right. For example, a cloud can be illustrated as a concept, an analysis property, a design subject, or as a physical entity. This progression through time suggests that the cloud construction must adhere to a cloud life cycle. Thus, six different models (see
Harry Baron born 21 January 1944 in Tel Aviv is an Israeli sculptor and art professor. He was educated at the Berlin Academy of Art in Berlin, Germany and serves as the head of the Sculptor's Department at the Avni Academy of Art in Tel Aviv as well as the acting as the head of the Israeli Sculpture Studio. He is also the founder of the Israeli branch of the Round Table Club.
Baron is an accomplished sculptor and has exhibited in multiple one man shows both in Israel and abroad, including an exhibition with painter, Joan Miró. He has been commissioned to create public art for cities across the world, including in Tel_Aviv, Jerusalem, Berlin, Bremen, Tokyo, Japan and the United States.
He has received many honours, including: President-Honorable, Round Table Israel; Knight of Round Table, Great Britain and Ireland; and the American Israeli Cultural Foundation Scholarship.
Baron is an accomplished sculptor and has exhibited in multiple one man shows both in Israel and abroad, including an exhibition with painter, Joan Miró. He has been commissioned to create public art for cities across the world, including in Tel_Aviv, Jerusalem, Berlin, Bremen, Tokyo, Japan and the United States.
He has received many honours, including: President-Honorable, Round Table Israel; Knight of Round Table, Great Britain and Ireland; and the American Israeli Cultural Foundation Scholarship.
Hollywood Pins was a company that operated in California from 1990 to 1995. The company's primary products were replica Starfleet insignia associated with the Star Trek science fiction franchise.
Hollywood Pins was contracted to provide several insignia pins for extras appearing in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. The primary actors, however, were provided costume accessories by the Paramount Pictures costume department.
The high quality Star Trek pins made by Hollywood Pins were advertised on page 54 of the 2001-2005 Morris Costumes catalog, which is still in use.
In 1994, business for Hollywood Pins began to dwindle and the company closed at the start of 1995.
Hollywood Pins was contracted to provide several insignia pins for extras appearing in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. The primary actors, however, were provided costume accessories by the Paramount Pictures costume department.
The high quality Star Trek pins made by Hollywood Pins were advertised on page 54 of the 2001-2005 Morris Costumes catalog, which is still in use.
In 1994, business for Hollywood Pins began to dwindle and the company closed at the start of 1995.