CSPD
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CSPD
CSPD may refer to: * Colorado Springs Police Department, Colorado, U.S. * Center for the Study of the Public Domain, at Duke University Law School, North Carolina, U.S. * Client-side persistent data, a term for storing data required by web application * CSPD (molecule), a chemical reagent for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) staining * Calendar of State Papers Domestic, see HMS Royal Oak (1664) * ''Christlich-Soziale Partei Deutschlands'', see Peter-Michael Diestel * Civil Status and Passport Department, the government office that issues Jordanian passport The Jordanian passport (Arabic: جواز السفر الأردني) is issued by the Civil Status and Passport Department (CSPD) to citizens of Jordan for international travel. Passport types Jordan issues two types of passports: * Regular pas ...
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Colorado Springs Police Department
The Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD) is the police department for the City of Colorado Springs, Colorado. CSPD was involved in the capture and surrender of several members of the Texas Seven. Organization The CSPD is headed by the chief of police, who presides directly over three bureaus (each headed by a deputy chief) and two sections. *Operations Support Bureau - Operations Support has three divisions: Public Safety Communications Division, Management Services, and Professional Standards. *Patrol Operations Bureau - Patrol Operations has four divisions: Falcon (northwest), Gold Hill (southwest, includes the downtown Peak Station), Sand Creek (southeast), and Stetson Hills (northeast). *Investigative & Special Operations Bureau - Investigative & Special Operations has three divisions: Investigations; Metro Vice, Narcotics, and Intelligence; and Specialized Enforcement. *Human Resources Section- Human Resources includes four units. *Fiscal Services Section Rank stru ...
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CSPD (molecule)
CSPD ([3-(1-chloro-3'-methoxyspiro[adamantane-4,4'-dioxetane]-3'-yl)phenyl] dihydrogen phosphate) is a chemical substance with formula C18H22ClO7P. It is a component of enhanced chemiluminescence enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kits, used for the detection of minute amounts of various substances such as proteins. Properties The molecule CSPD has the following functional groups in the structure: phosphate group, phenyl group, spiro group, methyl ether group, and chlorine group. The ones worth noting are the ones above. None of these groups carry a charge. If there was a charge this would have had a change in the compound's pH, 3D structure, mass and bond angles. The toxin CSPD effect persister cell formation using MqsR (MqsR, a crucial regulator for quorum sensing and biofilm formation, is a GCU-specific mRNA interferase in ''Escherichia coli'') and persister cells are cells that avoid stress and are characterized by reduced metabolism and other factors. References < ...
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Client-side Persistent Data
Client-side persistent data or CSPD is a term used in computing for storing data required by web applications to complete internet tasks on the client-side as needed rather than exclusively on the server. As a framework it is one solution to the needs of Occasionally connected computing or OCC. A major challenge for HTTP as a stateless protocol has been asynchronous tasks. The AJAX pattern using XMLHttpRequest was first introduced by Microsoft in the context of the Outlook e-mail product. The first CSPD were the 'cookies' introduced by the Netscape Navigator. ActiveX components which have entries in the Windows registry can also be viewed as a form of client-side persistence. See also * Occasionally connected computing * Curl (programming_language) * AJAX * HTTP * Web storage Web storage, sometimes known as DOM storage (Document Object Model storage), is a standard JavaScript API provided by web browsers. It enables websites to store persistent data on users' devices si ...
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HMS Royal Oak (1664)
HMS ''Royal Oak'' was a 100-gun first rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched in 1664 at Portsmouth Dockyard. ''Royal Oak'' was built by John Tippetts, Master-Shipwright at Portsmouth 1660-8, who later became Navy Commissioner and subsequently Surveyor of the Navy (Knighted 1672). Historian Brian Lavery quotes an entry in the "Calendar of State Papers, Domestic" series (CSPD; the records of the English, and later, the British, governmental proceedings, dating back to the reign of Henry VIII; also known as the "British State Papers", and now held by the National Archives) from 9/3/1665 that reports: the King (i.e., Charles II) "...is very much pleased with the new frigate built at Portsmouth, the ''Royal Oak'', and has ordered Tippetts, the shipwright who built her, to build just such another, and not to mend her in any part, being assured that anything which is not just so cannot be so good..." The career of ''Royal Oak'' in the Royal Navy was brief, but highly e ...
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Peter-Michael Diestel
Peter-Michael Diestel (born 14 February 1952 in Prora) is a German lawyer and former politician (independent, formerly DSU, CDU). He was the last Interior Minister of East Germany, under Prime Minister Lothar de Maizière (1990). As such, he represented the DDR in the negotiations on the unification treaty. He was then a member of the Brandenburg state parliament until 1994. Biography Diestel's father was a major, first in the armed forces, later in the NVA and lecturer at the Friedrich Engels Military Academy. Diestel was born in Prora, Kreis Rügen into an East German military family. He completed vocational training in 1972 as a skilled worker for cattle breeding, but was initially not allowed to study for political reasons. He was therefore active as a swimming instructor, lifeguard and cattle breeder before he studied law at Karl Marx University Leipzig from 1974 to 1978. As a high school graduate, Diestel said he joined the East German party CDU and left again af ...
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Center For The Study Of The Public Domain
Duke University School of Law (Duke Law School or Duke Law) is the law school of Duke University, a Private university, private research university in Durham, North Carolina. One of Duke's 10 schools and colleges, the School of Law is a constituent academic unit that began in 1868 as the Trinity College School of Law. In 1924, following the renaming of History of Duke University, Trinity College to Duke University, the school was renamed Duke University School of Law. Duke Law is consistently ranked as one of the top law schools in the United States, and admits about 14.5 percent of applicants. The law school is one of the Law school rankings in the United States#Top 14 law schools, "T14" law schools that have consistently ranked within the top 14 law schools since ''U.S. News & World Report'' began publishing rankings. According to ALM (company), Law.com, 91.36 percent of its 2018 graduating class were employed within 10 months, with a median starting salary in the private sec ...
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