How are you taking advantage of the API economy? The API Economy is opening up a world of possibilities for businesses to create new products and services faster than ever before. It's not just a better way to do things—it's a potential source of revenue. Take 90 seconds to answer a few questions and see how your company stacks up against industry peers. We'll give you a complete audit report and suggest some immediate ways your company can participate even more. The results will be for your eyes only and will not be shared in any way.

Grow: You already know that exposing services to your customers — on their terms — drives growth. Put new, improved and more valuable information in the right hands (and more of them).

Innovate: Your see that your company's products and services have room to grow, evolve and mutate. Connect with the cohorts that can help you innovate —whether it's simple feedback or more heavy lifting. Experience: You get it. You've got a jillion platforms, yet one user experience. You want to harmonize your back end with your front door and elegantly package the whole thing through any screen. Grow: You already know that exposing services to your customers — on their terms — drives growth.

Raspolozhite Elementi V Poryadke Vozrastaniya Ih Metallicheskih Svojstv

Put new, improved and more valuable information in the right hands (and more of them). Innovate: Your see that your company's products and services have room to grow, evolve and mutate. Connect with the cohorts that can help you innovate —whether it's simple feedback or more heavy lifting. Experience: You get it. You've got a jillion platforms, yet one user experience. You want to harmonize your back end with your front door and elegantly package the whole thing through any screen. Grow: You already know that exposing services to your customers — on their terms — drives growth.

Put new, improved and more valuable information in the right hands (and more of them). Innovate: Your see that your company's products and services have room to grow, evolve and mutate. Connect with the cohorts that can help you innovate —whether it's simple feedback or more heavy lifting. Experience: You get it. Komparator na tranzistorah. You've got a jillion platforms, yet one user experience. You want to harmonize your back end with your front door and elegantly package the whole thing through any screen.

From the essays of a young scholar in Kamchatka whose historical interests led him to a reassessment of Trotsky, to a student-sponsored exhibit of paintings by a local surrealist artist in Irkutsk, to verbal clashes between students at Novosibirsk State University and visiting Americans during 1970 May Day protests against the war in Vietnam, Aleksei Borzenkov surveys youth political and cultural activity in the Urals, Siberia, and the Russian Far East from de-Stalinization through perestroika. Readers interested in Soviet youth culture, student life, and grassroots political expression will find a wealth of detail about individuals, organizations, and student publications; a bibliographic review in the introduction and thorough footnotes provide an extensive guide for further research. This multivolume work thus makes an important contribution on a topic about which there is little available information. The book falls short, however, in providing an explanation or analysis for the activities it chronicles, while its structure makes it difficult for the reader to connect on-the-ground activities to larger social and political trends. Borzenkov draws on materials from 40 local and regional archives, as well as personal collections, interviews with participants, and journalistic reminiscences that appeared after perestroika.

He also cites extensively from regional and youth publications. The books include chapters devoted to a wide range of youth activities, including May Day festivals ( maevki), institute- and factory-based singing and theater groups, student publications, youth-initiated discussions, and underground organizations.

Each base 1, 2, 3 can be made of any spatially stable material, such as cardboard, resin, metal, wood, etc. The clear base (not shown) may be formed from any.

The first volume is devoted to officially sponsored youth programs, while the second deals with informal, unauthorized, and nonconformist activity. A third, supplementary volume contains photographs and reproductions of the people, events, and works discussed. [End Page 153] An introductory chapter makes the book's strongest attempt at analyzing the upswing of student activism in the 1960s, citing primarily demographic and economic factors. Not only did youth make up a relatively high percentage of the overall population during this period, but increasing investments in higher education allowed rapid growth in the number of students at universities and technical institutes, which became the seedbeds of youth activity. Students, buoyed by relative prosperity in the 1960s and early 1970s, enjoyed improved university facilities and looked optimistically toward the prospect of upward mobility.