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WMS Service
WMS can refer to: Technology and computing * Warehouse management system *Workflow management system *Web Map Service, a standard for Internet map servers *Windows Media Services, the streaming media server from Microsoft *Windows MultiPoint Server, a Microsoft Windows Server for Remote Desktops *WMS (hydrology software), watershed simulation software * Welfare Management System (NYC), New York, US * Workload management system, a component of gLite Medicine * Wilderness Medical Society, US, for medical personnel working in the wilderness *Wechsler Memory Scale of memory function *Warwick Medical School, British medical school of Warwick University Companies *WMS Industries and subsidiary WMS Gaming, US electronic gaming and amusement companies * Williams Medical Supplies, a medical supplies company, Rhymney, Wales Schools * Waldron Middle School in Waldron, Arkansas *West Monmouth School in Pontypool, Wales * White Mountain School in Bethlehem, New Hampshire, Other * Written m ...
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Warwick Medical School
Warwick Medical School is the medical school of the University of Warwick and is located in Coventry, United Kingdom. It was opened in 2000 in partnership with Leicester Medical School, and was granted independent degree-awarding status in 2007. History The school was established as a collaborative venture with the University of Leicester. Professor Ian Lauder was appointed Dean of the joint school. The first students to study at Warwick arrived in September 2000. The school had temporary headquarters on the main University of Warwick campus until the Medical Teaching Centre was completed in August 2001 and was formally opened by the Secretary of State for Health in 2002. In 2003 Professor Yvonne Carter was appointed as Vice-Dean, before taking on the role of Dean of Warwick Medical School the following year. . The first MBChB students graduated in 2004, the same year that the old Mathematics and Statistics building at Gibbet Hill was refurbished and renamed the Medical S ...
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West Monmouth School
West Monmouth School (Welsh: ''Ysgol Gorllewin Mynwy''; colloquially: West Mon) is a state-funded and non-selective secondary school in Pontypool, Torfaen, south Wales. Admissions Pupils who attend the school generally live in the Torfaen area. The school offers education for 11-year-olds to 16-year-olds, and 1,174 pupils are currently enrolled there as of September 2024. History The school owes its existence to the charitable donations of William Jones, who died in 1615. He bequeathed money to the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers for the foundation of a grammar school in Monmouth. An accumulation of funds by the end of the nineteenth century encouraged Monmouth School to build a sister school to serve western Monmouthshire. Grammar school After much discussion and debate the town of Pontypool was chosen after land of six acres (24,000 m2) was donated by local landowner John Capel Hanbury. In 1896 the foundation stone of what was then known as Jones' West Monmouth School ...
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Waldron Middle School
Waldron may refer to: People *Waldron (surname) *Waldron Fox-Decent (1937–2019), Canadian academic and political scientist *Waldron Smithers (1880–1954), British politician *Mal Waldron (1925–2002), American jazz pianist, composer and arranger *Adelbert Waldron (1933–1995), US Army sniper (Vietnam-era; most confirmed kills until 2011) *Jeremy Waldron (born 1953), New Zealand legal and political philosopher *John C. Waldron (1900-1942), American naval pilot who died leading a squadron in the Battle of Midway Places United States * Waldron, Arkansas, a city * Aroma Park, Illinois, a village formerly known as Waldron * Waldron, Indiana, an unincorporated community * Waldron, Kansas, a city * Waldron, Michigan, a village * Waldron, Missouri, an unincorporated community * Waldron, Washington, an unincorporated community also known as Waldron Island * Waldron Ledge, Hawaii, which overlooks Kīlauea Caldera * Waldron Shale, Indiana, a geologic formation * Waldron Trail, a hiking tr ...
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Williams Medical Supplies
{{Infobox company, , name = Williams Medical Supplies Ltd , type = Private company , logo = WilliamsMedicalSuppliesLogo.jpg , foundation = 1986 , location_city = Rhymney , location_country = Wales , industry = Healthcare Supplies and Services , products = Medical equipment,Medical consumables,Pharmaceuticals , revenue = , net_income = , operating_income = , num_employees = 160+ , parent = , subsid = , homepage = {{url, wms.co.uk , foot_notes = Williams Medical Supplies Ltd (WMS) is a Wales-based manufacturer and retailer of medical products to the primary care and secondary care markets. It is the largest supplier to general practice in the United Kingdom with a portfolio of products ranging from surgical instruments to pharmaceuticals. Its Medical Services division undertakes testing and calibration of Medical equipment, health & safety audits an ...
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WMS Gaming
WMS Gaming is a manufacturer of slot machines, video lottery terminals and software to help casinos manage their gaming operations. It also offers online and mobile games. WMS was originally a subsidiary of WMS Industries, which became a wholly owned subsidiary of Scientific Games Corporation in 2013. WMS entered the reel-spinning slot machine market in 1994, and in 1996, it introduced its first hit casino slot machine, ''Reel 'em In'', a "multi-line, multi-coin secondary bonus" video slot machine. It followed this with a number of similar games like ''Jackpot Party'', ''Boom'' and ''Filthy Rich''. By 2001, it introduced its ''Monopoly''-themed series of "participation" slots. Since then, WMS Gaming has continued to obtain licenses to manufacture gaming machines using several additional famous brands. The company continues to sell gaming machines and to market its participation games. History WMS Gaming was founded as a subsidiary of WMS Industries, whose roots date back to the ...
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WMS Industries
WMS Industries, Inc. was an American electronic gaming and amusement manufacturer in Enterprise, Nevada. It was merged into Scientific Games in 2016. WMS's predecessor was the Williams Manufacturing Company, founded in 1943 by Harry E. Williams. However, the company that became WMS Industries was formally founded in 1974 as Williams Electronics, Inc. Williams initially was a manufacturer of pinball machines. In 1964, Williams was acquired by jukebox manufacturer Seeburg Corp. and reorganized as Williams Electronics Manufacturing Division. In 1973, the company branched out into the coin-operated arcade video game market with its ''Pong'' clone ''Paddle Ball'', eventually creating a number of video game classics, including '' Defender'', ''Joust'', and '' Robotron: 2084.'' In 1974, Williams Electronics, Inc. was incorporated as a wholly owned subsidiary of Seeburg, which changed its name to Xcor International in 1977. Williams Electronics was spun out as an independent company ...
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Warwick University
The University of Warwick ( ; abbreviated as ''Warw.'' in post-nominal letters) is a public research university on the outskirts of Coventry between the West Midlands and Warwickshire, England. The university was founded in 1965 as part of a government initiative to expand higher education. The Warwick Business School was established in 1967, the Warwick Law School in 1968, Warwick Manufacturing Group (WMG) in 1980, and Warwick Medical School in 2000. Warwick incorporated Coventry College of Education in 1979 and Horticulture Research International in 2004. Warwick is primarily based on a campus on the outskirts of Coventry, with a satellite campus in Wellesbourne and a central London base at the Shard. It is organised into three faculties—Arts; Science, Engineering and Medicine, and Social Sciences—within which there are thirty-two departments. Warwick has around 29,534 full-time students and 2,691 academic and research staff, with an average intake of 4,950 unde ...
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Wechsler Memory Scale
The Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS) is a neuropsychological test designed to measure different memory functions in a person. Anyone ages 16 to 90 is eligible to take this test. The current version is the fourth edition (WMS-IV) which was published in 2009 and which was designed to be used with the WAIS-IV. A person's performance is reported as five Index Scores: Auditory Memory, Visual Memory, Visual Working Memory, Immediate Memory, and Delayed Memory. The WMS-IV also incorporates an optional cognitive exam (Brief Cognitive Status Exam) that helps to assess global cognitive functioning in people with suspected memory deficits or those who have been diagnosed with a various neural, psychiatric and/or developmental disorders. This may include conditions such as dementias or mild learning difficulties. There is clear evidence that the WMS differentiates clinical groups (such as those with dementias or neurological disorders) from those with normal memory functioning and that the primary ...
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Workflow Management System
A workflow management system (WfMS or WFMS) provides an infrastructure for the set-up, performance, and monitoring of a defined sequence of tasks arranged as a workflow application. International standards There are several international standards-setting bodies in the field of workflow management: * Workflow Management Coalition * World Wide Web Consortium * Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards * WS-BPEL 2.0 (integration-centric) and WS-BPEL4People (human task-centric), published by the OASIS Standards Body. The underlying theoretical basis of workflow management is the mathematical concept of a Petri net. Each of the workflow models has tasks (nodes) and dependencies between the nodes. Tasks are activated when the dependency conditions are fulfilled. Workflows for people WfMS allows the user to define different workflows for different types of jobs or processes. For example, in a manufacturing setting, a design document might be automatically ...
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Wilderness Medical Society
The Wilderness Medical Society was created on 15 February 1983 by three physicians from California, United States — Dr. Paul Auerbach, Dr. Ed Geehr, and Dr. Ken Kizer. It is the largest international non-profit membership organization devoted to addressing wilderness medicine challenges, more specifically defined as "medical care delivered in those areas where fixed or transient geographic challenges reduce availability of, or alter requirements for, medical or patient movement resources". It also publishes '' Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Journal'', ''Wilderness Medicine Magazine'', and Wilderness Medicine Clinical Practice Guidelines. Academy of Wilderness Medicine The academy seeks to provide a system of adult education and certification in a modern and standardised way to provide a set level of knowledge and education for practitioners working in the wilderness arena. The goals of the academy are to: * Professional designation for achievement in Wilderness Medicin ...
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Workload Management System
gLite (pronounced "gee-lite") is a middleware computer software project for grid computing used by the CERN LHC experiments and other scientific domains. It was implemented by collaborative efforts of more than 80 people in 12 different academic and industrial research centers in Europe. gLite provides a framework for building applications tapping into distributed computing and storage resources across the Internet. The gLite services were adopted by more than 250 computing centres, and used by more than 15000 researchers in Europe and around the world. History After prototyping phases in 2004 and 2005, convergence with the LHC Computing Grid (LCG-2) distribution was reached in May 2006, when gLite 3.0 was released, and became the official middle-ware of the Enabling Grids for E-sciencE (EGEE) project which ended in 2010. Development of the gLite middle-ware was then taken over by the European Middleware Initiative, and is now maintained as part of the EMI software stack. T ...
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