The Trump effect or Trump mode effect is a theory concerning the discrepancies between voter opinion polls and election outcomes in the 2016 presidential election in the United States. It is similar to the Bradley effect. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has consistently performed better in online and automated polls than in traditional surveys conducted by live callers. White voters in particular are less likely to voice support for his candidacy in public.
Mode effect is the broad term used to describe the phenomenon of a person giving different answers because of different polling methods. In the 2016 presidential election, Trump effect or Trump mode effect is the specific term given when polling the candidacy of Donald Trump.
A study conducted by Morning Consult showed that Donald Trump performed six percentage points better online than via live telephone callers. The theory is that voters, especially college educated white voters, are afraid to tell a live caller that they support Trump even though they really do support him. They do not want to be called racists or to be judged negatively.
This effect is named after Donald Trump but it is a world-wide phenomenon. For example, right wing parties in Germany also poll better in online polls compared to live interviewers.
Mode effect is the broad term used to describe the phenomenon of a person giving different answers because of different polling methods. In the 2016 presidential election, Trump effect or Trump mode effect is the specific term given when polling the candidacy of Donald Trump.
A study conducted by Morning Consult showed that Donald Trump performed six percentage points better online than via live telephone callers. The theory is that voters, especially college educated white voters, are afraid to tell a live caller that they support Trump even though they really do support him. They do not want to be called racists or to be judged negatively.
This effect is named after Donald Trump but it is a world-wide phenomenon. For example, right wing parties in Germany also poll better in online polls compared to live interviewers.
Bio-Nucleonics Inc. is a privately held, life sciences company located in the United States. The company develops, manufactures, and markets radiopharmaceuticals, medical devices, and imaging agents to detect and treat cardiovascular, oncological, and neurological diseases. Approved by the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and the Florida Board of Pharmacy, it is the only U.S. company focused on the development and production of generic radiopharmaceuticals.
Regulations
The company is regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Florida Bureau of Radiation Control, and the Florida Board of Pharmacy. Its products undergo rigorous validation and testing in accordance with current Good Manufacturing Practice, Good Laboratory Practice, and Quality System Requirements.
Products and services
Bio-Nucleonics' lead product is , which is the generic version of Metastron. Generic Strontium-89 is an option to consider for cancer bone pain therapy. It imitates the behavior of calcium and is preferentially absorbed by bone, concentrating at sites of painful metastatic bone disease. Generic Strontium-89 injection is a pure beta emitter, and selectively irradiates sites of primary and metastatic bone involvement with minimal irradiation of soft tissues distant from bone lesions.
Honors and awards
Bio-Nucleonics Inc., received the 2009 "Best of Doral Award" in Radioactive Diagnostic Substances, as well as Miami's Beacon Council "Key to the County", in recognition of its importance to the Miami-Dade County economy.
Regulations
The company is regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Florida Bureau of Radiation Control, and the Florida Board of Pharmacy. Its products undergo rigorous validation and testing in accordance with current Good Manufacturing Practice, Good Laboratory Practice, and Quality System Requirements.
Products and services
Bio-Nucleonics' lead product is , which is the generic version of Metastron. Generic Strontium-89 is an option to consider for cancer bone pain therapy. It imitates the behavior of calcium and is preferentially absorbed by bone, concentrating at sites of painful metastatic bone disease. Generic Strontium-89 injection is a pure beta emitter, and selectively irradiates sites of primary and metastatic bone involvement with minimal irradiation of soft tissues distant from bone lesions.
Honors and awards
Bio-Nucleonics Inc., received the 2009 "Best of Doral Award" in Radioactive Diagnostic Substances, as well as Miami's Beacon Council "Key to the County", in recognition of its importance to the Miami-Dade County economy.
Bizarre 64
was a bulletin board system written for the Commodore 64 by Bill Atchison circa 1985 in order to fill the need for a faster and more professional BBS system than was currently available at the time for the Commodore-64 computer system.
The problem faced with the Commodore-64 was that the disk drives were being run as serial devices transmitting data roughly at 1200 or 2400 bit/s which is about the same speed of the average modem at the time. Visitors to a typical Commodore-64 BBS would see the data stream visibly stagger and wait online for many seconds as the BBS switched from modem output to disk access for more data. Therefore, the challenge of the Bizarre-64 BBS was to eliminate all of the waiting and make the data transfer appear transparent to the visitor and look as smooth and fast as competitive products running on more expensive hardware.
How Bizarre-64 resolved this problem is that the disk drives and modem could actually transmit data simultaneously so by caching a partial index of the BBS in memory certain information could be flushed to the modem output buffer immediately while the computer was waiting on the disk to transfer the data. Since the disk drives had their own on-board computers commands could be sent to locate and transfer records asynchronously without the program needing to wait for events from the disk to complete. Bizarre-64 leveraged this capability by always sending requests in advance to the disk drive and then would output a stream of data to the modem while waiting on the next record from the disk drive. This technique made Bizarre-64 very responsive to the visitor so that actions such as NEXT or PREVIOUS message seemed to happen instantly upon pushing the letter.
Additionally, Bizarre-64 could support rapid login and membership search for up to 4,000 members via a hash index table stored in ghost RAM hidden behind an 8K ROM. This allowed logins and user name searches to be extremely fast in 1-2 seconds as using the hash table located the member name with a mathematical formula thus requiring only a couple of disk accesses to identify the exact member record. This was a massive improvement over other systems that searched linearly through a member database that could take almost a minute or more to locate a record.
was a bulletin board system written for the Commodore 64 by Bill Atchison circa 1985 in order to fill the need for a faster and more professional BBS system than was currently available at the time for the Commodore-64 computer system.
The problem faced with the Commodore-64 was that the disk drives were being run as serial devices transmitting data roughly at 1200 or 2400 bit/s which is about the same speed of the average modem at the time. Visitors to a typical Commodore-64 BBS would see the data stream visibly stagger and wait online for many seconds as the BBS switched from modem output to disk access for more data. Therefore, the challenge of the Bizarre-64 BBS was to eliminate all of the waiting and make the data transfer appear transparent to the visitor and look as smooth and fast as competitive products running on more expensive hardware.
How Bizarre-64 resolved this problem is that the disk drives and modem could actually transmit data simultaneously so by caching a partial index of the BBS in memory certain information could be flushed to the modem output buffer immediately while the computer was waiting on the disk to transfer the data. Since the disk drives had their own on-board computers commands could be sent to locate and transfer records asynchronously without the program needing to wait for events from the disk to complete. Bizarre-64 leveraged this capability by always sending requests in advance to the disk drive and then would output a stream of data to the modem while waiting on the next record from the disk drive. This technique made Bizarre-64 very responsive to the visitor so that actions such as NEXT or PREVIOUS message seemed to happen instantly upon pushing the letter.
Additionally, Bizarre-64 could support rapid login and membership search for up to 4,000 members via a hash index table stored in ghost RAM hidden behind an 8K ROM. This allowed logins and user name searches to be extremely fast in 1-2 seconds as using the hash table located the member name with a mathematical formula thus requiring only a couple of disk accesses to identify the exact member record. This was a massive improvement over other systems that searched linearly through a member database that could take almost a minute or more to locate a record.
From the Fields: A History of Prep Football in Turlock, California is a historical sports non-fiction book written by Richard Paolinelli and published in 2015 by Tuscany Bay Publishing. It is a 438-page narrative account of the near century of high school football played in Turlock, California - including stats, rosters, photographs and interviews with former players and coaches. Starting with the first team of 15 players from the 1920 Turlock High football team all the way through to the 2014 season.
Background
The book also weaves in some of the history of the city of Turlock as it is connected to the football program and tells the story of several of the players in their post-football days. It also highlights the growing pains the city went through as it transitioned from a small agricultural town and into a larger commuter-based city.
Players spotlighted include former pro football players from Turlock - Bob Mitchell, Paul Larson, Jeff Winans, Jonathan Quinn, Tom Brandstater and Colin Kaepernick - along with moments in the history of Turlock connected to the football program.
There is an official website connected to the book that continues recording the history of football in Turlock from the end of the 2014 season to present day. From The Fields recently passed an editorial review by the Stanislaus County Library and is part of the library's Special Collections section.
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References
Background
The book also weaves in some of the history of the city of Turlock as it is connected to the football program and tells the story of several of the players in their post-football days. It also highlights the growing pains the city went through as it transitioned from a small agricultural town and into a larger commuter-based city.
Players spotlighted include former pro football players from Turlock - Bob Mitchell, Paul Larson, Jeff Winans, Jonathan Quinn, Tom Brandstater and Colin Kaepernick - along with moments in the history of Turlock connected to the football program.
There is an official website connected to the book that continues recording the history of football in Turlock from the end of the 2014 season to present day. From The Fields recently passed an editorial review by the Stanislaus County Library and is part of the library's Special Collections section.
<ref name="101.19"/>
References