Designedfor all users, this introductory lab will let you experience firsthand the powerful combination of Magellan Text Mining and Content Server. The text mining engine crawls the document contents in the Content Server repository and extracts metadata in the form of categories and attributes like entities, organizations, people and concepts. These results get written back to the Content Server and are made available as a faceted search using multiple filters that specify the different aspects and qualities of the documents being searched for. This lab uses content metadata enrichment with Content Server, but it can also be used with Documentum and any other ECM repository.
I want to build a 'fat' jar of my code. I understand how to do this mostly but all the examples I have use the idea that the jar is not local and I am not sure how to include into my assembled jar another JAR that I built that the scala code uses. Like what folder does this JAR I have to include reside in?
So where would I put the jar in the SBT project folder structure so it gets picked up when I run sbt assembly? Is that in the main/resources folder? Which the reference manual says is where 'files to include in the main jar' go?
If the change in the magellan project is usefull for the rest of the world, you should push your changes and create a pull request, so that in the future you can just include the latest build of this library
The Strait of Magellan is also called the Straits of Magellan as well as the Magellan Strait. The starting point for those wanting to experience a Strait of Magellan cruise is the town of Punta Arenas.
Punta Arenas, in southern Chile, is an unlikely mixture of faded European gilded-age splendor, wild-western U.S. frontier town, immigrant melting pot, and modern-day adventure expedition kick-off point.
The local cemetery is an especially interesting repository of Punta Arena history. It has been ranked as one of the most beautiful cemeteries in the world, certainly among the most dramatic cemeteries in Latin America.
The official name of the local cemetery is the Cementerio Municipal de Punta Arenas Sara Braun. Sara Braun, who donated the land for the cemetery, was a Latvian immigrant who traveled to Punta Arenas in the early 1900s.
Apparently, Ms. Braun was as eccentric as she was rich because before her death she dictated that the main doors of the cemetery be locked forever. To this day the only entrance to the cemetery is through the side door.
One of the stops is a colony of Magellan Penguins you can only view from the Zodiacs in order not to disturb the colony. If this is your first time in the area, a visit to these penguin colonies will certainly be a highlight of the cruise.
If you are lucky, your Zodiac will be accompanied by dolphins swimming alongside you as you speed over the frigid waters of these southern oceans. You might also see sea lions and elephant seals lounging on outcrops.
One of the highlights on our Strait of Magellan cruise would have to be a shore excursion to the majestic Pia Glacier. Passengers can hike around the Pia Glacier area right at the base of the glacier.
Up until then, we had felt barely a ripple on the ship. The night we ventured into the ocean near Cape Horn the ship tossed and lurched to the point that one had to hold on to railings in order to stabilize.
I could not help but imagine how if we, in our modern sturdy ship with a professional crew, were lurching in the turbulent waters how it must have been for the crews of the early explorers on the Magellan ship.
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