The Lordship of Fara is a Jacobite Peerage (1689) granted to the Thomson family with a subsidiary title of Laird of MacKinnon.
List of Lords of Fara
* John Thomson (1634-1700)
* John Thomson (1692-1759)
* Alexander Thomson 1723-1810)
* William Thomson (1800-1865)
* William Thomson (1839-1913)
* David William Thomson (1861-1934)
* David Thomson (1891-1973)
* David Thomson (1928-1999) (passed the title to his grandson in 1999)
* Dean MacKinnon Thomson (1999-), (b. 1989)
* The heir presumptive is the present holder's brother, Guy MacKinnon Thomson (b. 1986)
List of Lords of Fara
* John Thomson (1634-1700)
* John Thomson (1692-1759)
* Alexander Thomson 1723-1810)
* William Thomson (1800-1865)
* William Thomson (1839-1913)
* David William Thomson (1861-1934)
* David Thomson (1891-1973)
* David Thomson (1928-1999) (passed the title to his grandson in 1999)
* Dean MacKinnon Thomson (1999-), (b. 1989)
* The heir presumptive is the present holder's brother, Guy MacKinnon Thomson (b. 1986)
Thenginkalbetta, a twin peak rock hill near Ramanagara. From Ramanagara: go towards Kanakapura (you'll have to go across Bangalore-Mysore railway line). After about 12km, on the right hand side, you can see the road to SRS Betta, take that road. Once you reach SRS Betta, you'll be able to see Thenginkalbetta, another 6km to go. Roads are pretty decent, you can drive a bike or a car upto a small village at the base of the hill. Ask someone from the village to guide you to the hill, village folks are friendly and helpful.
The best time to visit- between September and February when the weather is relatively cool, surrounding is green and lakes are full. Reach the hill early morning - the best time to climb rock hills.
The best time to visit- between September and February when the weather is relatively cool, surrounding is green and lakes are full. Reach the hill early morning - the best time to climb rock hills.
Judge Theodore Washington Brevard settled in Tallahassee in 1847. He became the State Comptroller. The General Assembly renamed St. Lucie county to Brevard in his honor, effective January 6, 1855.
Judge T. W. Brevard named his son Theodore Washington Brevard. The younger Brevard also became a lawyer and married a daughter of former Governor Richard Keith Call. While still in his twenties, he served as a Brigadier General in the Confederate Army. Former Governor LeRoy Collins in his book, Forerunners Courageous, has described the family history of the Brevards in Florida. Governor Collins married one of General Brevard's granddaughters, Mary Call Darby.
Judge T. W. Brevard named his son Theodore Washington Brevard. The younger Brevard also became a lawyer and married a daughter of former Governor Richard Keith Call. While still in his twenties, he served as a Brigadier General in the Confederate Army. Former Governor LeRoy Collins in his book, Forerunners Courageous, has described the family history of the Brevards in Florida. Governor Collins married one of General Brevard's granddaughters, Mary Call Darby.
PeerApp is a supplier of peer-to-peer (P2P) infrastructure management technology for Internet service providers (ISPs).
PeerApp technology accelerates the delivery of P2P content and HTTP video streams to subscribers while saving on related bandwidth costs. The technology caches popular P2P and HTTP video-stream content, eliminating repetitive or redundant downloading of identical files and thus freeing up bandwidth for the ISP -- particularly important for international locations where transit links are very expensive.
PeerApp’s P2P caching and content acceleration technology complements traffic-mitigation technologies used by ISPs, including traffic shaping and deep packet inspection.
The main use of P2P has been file-sharing among consumers, However, P2P is increasingly being used for commercial delivery of video and other digital media content, by traditional media organizations (such as the British Broadcasting Company) and new applications (such as Joost, Bablegum, BitTorrent, AOL Video, Azureus, Zattoo and many others ). It is estimated that P2P traffic accounts for upwards of 60% of all Internet traffic today.
PeerApp has obtained a U.S. patent for its core technology, which the company believes to be the only patent granted to date for P2P caching and content acceleration technology.
PeerApp’s solutions also support the HTTP video-streaming protocol and accelerate progressive downloading, the predominant method used by video-sharing Web sites to deliver content from HTTP servers to clients.
The company is headquartered in Newton, Massachusetts, with research and development operations in Herzliya, Israel.
PeerApp products are deployed by Internet service providers in the U.S.; Central and South America; and the Pacific Rim.
PeerApp technology accelerates the delivery of P2P content and HTTP video streams to subscribers while saving on related bandwidth costs. The technology caches popular P2P and HTTP video-stream content, eliminating repetitive or redundant downloading of identical files and thus freeing up bandwidth for the ISP -- particularly important for international locations where transit links are very expensive.
PeerApp’s P2P caching and content acceleration technology complements traffic-mitigation technologies used by ISPs, including traffic shaping and deep packet inspection.
The main use of P2P has been file-sharing among consumers, However, P2P is increasingly being used for commercial delivery of video and other digital media content, by traditional media organizations (such as the British Broadcasting Company) and new applications (such as Joost, Bablegum, BitTorrent, AOL Video, Azureus, Zattoo and many others ). It is estimated that P2P traffic accounts for upwards of 60% of all Internet traffic today.
PeerApp has obtained a U.S. patent for its core technology, which the company believes to be the only patent granted to date for P2P caching and content acceleration technology.
PeerApp’s solutions also support the HTTP video-streaming protocol and accelerate progressive downloading, the predominant method used by video-sharing Web sites to deliver content from HTTP servers to clients.
The company is headquartered in Newton, Massachusetts, with research and development operations in Herzliya, Israel.
PeerApp products are deployed by Internet service providers in the U.S.; Central and South America; and the Pacific Rim.