Essays about: "Babylon"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 10 essays containing the word Babylon.
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1. Increasing Retention in Insurtechs Through Churn Prediction
University essay from Lunds universitet/InnovationsteknikAbstract : Over the last decades, the Swedish insurance industry has seen decreased entry barriers due to deregulation and emerging new technologies, which have the potential to disturb the stagnated and consolidated competitive landscape of the industry. Initiated by newcomers like American insurance startup Lemonade, and later Swedish Hedvig among others, there is an increased push toward digitalization, transparency, and automation in the industry. READ MORE
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2. Performance and Ease of Use in 3D on the Web : Comparing Babylon.js with Three.js
University essay from Blekinge Tekniska Högskola/Institutionen för programvaruteknikAbstract : 3D JavaScript frameworks are used for creating interactive 3D in web applications. There are two prominent frameworks: Babylon.js and Three.js. READ MORE
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3. Can the Subaltern Be Silent? : Silence as Resistance to Colonialism in David Malouf’s Remembering Babylon and E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India
University essay from Högskolan Dalarna/EngelskaAbstract : .... READ MORE
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4. 3D Visualization in booking systems
University essay from Luleå tekniska universitet/Institutionen för system- och rymdteknikAbstract : The use of 3D in web applications became available in the mid 1990's with the release of VRML. Today the use of 3D is very common even with web application, and three.js and Babylon.js has become some of the most popular 3D libraries to support the creation of 3D within web services. READ MORE
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5. Can the Nonhuman Speak? : A Postcolonial Ecocritical Reading of David Malouf’s Remembering Babylon
University essay from Högskolan i Gävle/Avdelningen för humanioraAbstract : This essay explores the representation of nonhuman nature in David Malouf’s postcolonial novel Remembering Babylon. By applying a postcolonial ecocritical framework to the narrative the essay shows how nonhuman nature, including the animalised human “other”, is subject to Western ideologies that see them as resources or services to be exploited. READ MORE