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Browsing Posts published in February, 2010

Years ago, I purchased some t-shirts at the market of a popular Caribbean port of call. I bought the shirts for my children, three t-shirts for $10.

I thought it was a bargain. My wife laundered the shirts before she would let our children wear them, and they fell apart in the first wash!

One of my favorite articles of casual clothing as a teenager was a light, knit sweater that my father had worn. It had a grey background with the pink silhouette of a sailing ship woven into the yarn. (I am guessing from the color scheme that he must have purchased it in the 50s.) My father wore the shirt for years, and then I wore it several more. Finally, it, too, fell apart.

All our clothing becomes threadbare or falls apart if we keep and wear it long enough, but the clothing God gives us lasts forever.

Isaiah wrote, “…my soul shall exult in my God, for he has clothed me with garments; he has covered me with the robe of righteousness…” This garment is woven upon the woof and warp of Christ’s active and passive obedience. He filled the law for us and took our sins upon himself. Then he paid the penalty for our sins by his death on the cross.

God covers us, through faith, with Christ’s righteousness like a robe. Our new casual clothing will never wear out, become threadbare or go out of fashion, and when God sees it he sees his righteous Son.

A Chinese professional casual clothing/wear manufacturer and supplier, Tongli specializes in producing men’s and women’s casual wear,fashion clothing,sportswear,children’s clothes,suit jackets,shirts,trousers,etc. Welcom to : http://casualwear.bokee.net

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Peter Kronowitt

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Pete Kronowitt is a software strategist in Intel’s Open Source Technology Center and develops and manages the worldwide program for Linux operating system vendors. Pete has 20 years in the high-tech sector, with IBM, Xircom, and more than twelve years with Intel. He has led global teams for market and platform roadmap development in the worldwide channel and directed software ecosystem relationships for new Intel platform introductions. Peter has held positions as board observer at JBoss, was a founding and Steering Committee member of Open Business Readiness Rating, and was Steering Committee vice chair for the Open Source Development Lab Desktop Linux Working Group. Pete also participates on several open source companies’ advisory boards.

 

 

Lisa T. Su

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As the senior vice president and chief technology officer for Freescale Semiconductor, the global leader in embedded processing solutions, Lisa Su is responsible for Freescale’s technology roadmap and global R&D operations. Lisa joined Freescale in June 2007 from IBM, where she was vice president of the Semiconductor Research and Development Center. Lisa held various positions at IBM, including director of the PowerPC product line. Prior to working for IBM, Lisa was a member of technical staff at Texas Instruments. She has authored or co-authored more than 40 technical publications, including a book chapter on next-generation consumer electronics. In 2002, Lisa was selected as one of MIT Technology Review’s Top 100 Young Innovators.

 

Deepak Saxena

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OLPC is a non profit organization that is supported by individuals, businesses and foundations with a mission of ensuring all school-aged children in the developing world are able to engage effectively with their own personal laptop, networked to the world, so that they, their families and their communities can openly learn and learn about learning. Until recently, Deepak was the lead kernel maintainer at MontaVista software, a position in which he focused on various areas including merging patches, providing direction on technology roadmaps, and developing processes. Previous to that role he was the lead maintainer of the Linux kernel port to the Intel IXP4xx and IXP2xxx network processors found on various WiFi, WiMax, and cellular routers. Deepak also worked at Intel Corporation and helped lead the development of the Intelligent I/O (I2O) stack for Linux. Deepak has been using Linux since 1993 and playing with the kernel for about 10 years. When not hacking, Deepak likes to go on bike rides, seek out good beer, and world travel.

 

Ross Dickson

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As Virtutech’s principal technology specialist, Ross manages Virtutech’s relationships with semiconductor and IP vendors, represents Virtutech at industry and trade organizations, and helps customers understand the business values provided by Virtutech’s technology. Ross has worked with numerous Virtutech customers to implement virtualized software development platforms and to introduce their use across the enterprise. Before Virtutech, Ross investigated multi-processor memory system design at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

 

 

Matthew Porter

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The chief software architect for Embedded Alley Solutions, Matt Porter first contributed to Linux as an early Debian developer. As an early adopter of embedded Linux, Matt developed and maintained support for embedded PowerPC systems in the mainline kernel. He was the fist member of the Linux kernel team at Motorola Computer Group and later joined MontaVista Software as the founding member of its Arizona engineering center. At Embedded Alley, Matt works in several areas of kernel and userspace to provide solutions for embedded Linux products.
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John Mehaffey

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John is responsible for MontaVista’s technology strategy for mobile device software. He has been working with Linux on embedded systems for over 8 years, and has authored a number of papers and articles on the subject. John is the technical liason for MontaVista to the CELF, LiPS, OSDL MLI, and LiMo organizations, and has participated in number of standards efforts, including authoring the Linux appendix to the PICMG 2.13 standard.
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Henri Beaino

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Henri Beaino has years of experience working with embedded solution providers, helping them to embed Oracle data management products. While at Oracle, Mr. Beaino has expanded Oracle’s embedded practices to a large number of technology products including the flagship Oracle 11g relational database, the TimesTen database, and Berkeley database product families. Prior to Oracle, Mr. Beaino worked at T-Mobile developing and supporting OSS/BSS applications based on Oracle technology.
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Greg Seibert

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Greg Seibert started his illustrious engineering career in the aerospace industry and then spent 10 years developing POSIX real-time operating systems. His career path next led him into the networking industry. Greg has been at Cavium Networks for four years, where he is a senior technical marketing engineer. Greg designed and delivers the curriculum for the Cavium Networks “Introduction to OCTEON Programming” course, which helps Tier 1 networking engineers architect their software for multicore environments.
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Paul McKenney

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Paul E. McKenney is a distinguished engineer at IBM and has worked on SMP, NUMA, and RCU algorithms for longer than he cares to admit (see this if you don’t believe this). He has recently become quite interested in getting realtime response from mid-range SMP systems. Prior to that, he worked on packet-radio and Internet protocols (but long before the Internet became popular), system administration, business applications, and realtime systems, the latter on early 1980s eight-bit systems. He is extremely thankful that today’s computers have much more than 64 kbytes of memory. His hobbies include running and the usual house-wife-and-kids habit.
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