Fantom Paper

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Francesca Cruiz

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Aug 3, 2024, 5:52:31 PM8/3/24
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Finally, give your work true archival textures!Make your work look like it's been printed, painted, or drawn on real paper! Phantom Paper is a collection of 21 high-definition, seamless, and impressively realistic paper textures.

The World Bank has used an income classification to group countries for analytical purposes for many years. Since the present income classification was first introduced 25 years ago there has been significant change in the global economic landscape. As real incomes have risen, the number of countries in the low income group has fallen to 31, while the number of high income countries has risen to 80. As countries have transitioned to middle income status, more people are living below the World Bank's international extreme poverty line in middle income countries than in low income countries. These changes in the world economy, along with a rapid increase in the user base of World Bank data, suggest that a review of the income classification is needed. A key consideration is the views of users, and this paper finds opinions to be mixed: some critics argue the thresholds are dated and set too low; others find merit in continuing to have a fixed benchmark to assess progress over time. On balance, there is still value in the current approach, based on gross national income per capita, to classifying countries into different groups. However, the paper proposes adjustments to the methodology that is used to keep the value of the thresholds for each income group constant over time. Several proposals for changing the current thresholds are also presented, which it is hoped will inform further discussion and any decision to adopt a new approach.

Phantom settlements, or paper towns, are settlements that appear on maps but do not actually exist. They are either accidents or copyright traps. Notable examples include Argleton in Lancashire, UK and Beatosu and Goblu, US.[1]

Phantom settlements often result from copyright traps, also known as mountweazels, which is when a false entry is placed in literature to catch illegal copiers.[2] Agloe, New York, was invented on a 1930s map as a copyright trap. In 1950, a general store was built there and named Agloe General Store, as that was the name seen on the map. Thus, the phantom settlement became a real one.[3]

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.

FANTOM (Functional ANnoTation Of the Mammalian genome) is an international research consortium led by RIKEN focused on functional annotation of mammalian genomes and characterization of transcriptional regulatory networks. In FANTOM5 the consortium, consisting of over 500 international members from 20 countries, has generated maps of human regulatory elements and transcriptional regulatory network models. To achieve this they use CAGE (Cap Analysis of Gene Expression) sequencing on RNA samples from every major human organ, multiple primary cell types, over 200 cancer cell lines, 30 time courses of cellular differentiation, and mouse developmental time courses.

This collection brings together research articles, analyses, resource papers and letters from FANTOM5, as well as descriptions of the data generated by the project, all of which have been published by Nature Research.

Owen Rackham, Jose Polo, Julian Gough and colleagues present a method, Mogrify, for predicting sets of transcription factors that can induce transdifferentiation between cell types. They show that Mogrify is able to predict known factors for published cell conversions and experimentally validate factors for two new conversions.

Hilary Finucane, Brendan Bulik-Sullivan, Benjamin Neale, Alkes Price and colleagues introduce a new method, called stratified LD score regression, for partitioning heritability by functional category using genome-wide association study summary statistics. They observe a substantial enrichment of heritability in conserved regions and illustrate how this approach can provide insights into the biological basis of disease and direction for functional follow-up.

Cell-to-cell communication relies upon interactions between secreted ligands and cell surface receptors. Here, Ramilowski et al.present a draft cell-to-cell communication network based on expression of ligand-receptor pairs in 144 different human cell types.

Body plan complexity is associated with the number of different cell types, yet the processes that create this diversity are unclear. Here the authors use transcriptomics to test the hypothesis that unlike cancer cells, novel normal cell types arise through sub-specialization of an ancestral cell type.

Piero Carninci and colleagues report the discovery of a large class of noncoding RNAs, non-annotated stem cell transcripts (NASTs), which are implicated in the regulation of stem cell properties. The authors identify 8,873 mouse and 3,042 human NASTs and functionally validate 4 as having an important role in the maintenance of pluripotency.

A study from the FANTOM consortium using single-molecule cDNA sequencing of transcription start sites and their usage in human and mouse primary cells, cell lines and tissues reveals insights into the specificity and diversity of transcription patterns across different mammalian cell types.

Using the FANTOM5 CAGE expression atlas, the authors show that bidirectional capped RNAs are a signature feature of active enhancers and identify over 40,000 enhancer candidates from over 800 human cell and tissue samples across the whole human body.

I rarely ever come to this forum due to the fact that the information given is by amateurs and not by the real technicians of HP. I did, however, come here to give a valid solution that may help most of you people out due to the fact that I too, recently had the same issue. I mean, stick components into an oven? Hell, why don't we throw the whole printer in there! If it is a soldering issue then there would be other areas that would be affected as it is the MB we are talking about.

I own and run a computer business and I repair printers all the time but this was the first time I repaired a HP P3015. Grinding noise and paper jams was evident so I fixed the grinding noise as it was due to the feed roller shaft not connecting properly to the pickup roller in tray 2. (N.B This is a single tray feed only with duplex support)

The only way to fix your problem is to completely dismantle the side of the printer where the motherboard is, right down to the point of the cogs and wheels being exposed. Be careful here as the cogs are not secured in place and they will fall out if you tip it. Find the offset twin cogs and pull it out so as the cogs and the drive shaft has been removed.

From the sound of it, most of you people run businesses with plenty of printers running all the time and I doubt you would have the time to do the work yourselves. Getting a repairman to do the work could end up being costly so if it is still under warranty, phone them up, tell them what it is and hopefully they will do the right thing.

I won't go into detail on the work I did but I will state that this fixed my problem of the ghost paper jams. As the problem I had was identical to every person here, then I will give it a 90% chance that will fix your problem up.

While it does not seem to be broken, the front door that you open to replace toner is open just a tiny bit more than it can tolerate (apparently). We pressed it firmly closed and the phantom jams ended. A bit of tape on either side holds it closed all the way and things have been working well.

Placed them at our Sales department last week, next to each other. 2 of them still run great, the third one is constantly giving this error. Watch this: A BRAND NEW PRINTER. Has yet to reach 400 cycles on the motor.

Replaced pickup rollers and updated to latest firmware. Still did not help. Over weekend had to print two 100+ page docs. Jammed on both of them, numerous times. I am not some office wonk....I have advanced degrees in EE and have been over this printer a number of times. This weekend caused me to reach my limit...Out it went....Hello Brother.

I can certainly understand a problem in design/mfg or whatever. What I can't stand is the lack of HPs response on this issue in all this time (and they are still mfg the stupid thing). In my opinion, they are ignoring the customer....moreover, the are scr***ing the customer.

What is even more surpising is that no one HP tech person has offered any solid input to this matter. Ahhhh, where is the HP of the 70s??? Engineering excellence and quality products....another has been company run into the ground by pointy-haired 'management'......

Just a reminder that this is a peer-to-peer community of HP customers, and not a venue to contact HP directly. Most of the users here are consumers like yourself who are offering solutions because they like to help others, and any HP employees you see are here on their own capacity and not representing the company.

If you have additional or direct feedback for HP about their products or services, or questions about repair, you can use the link below for contact information.

-hp/ww-contact-us.html

If you have other questions and concerns about using the forum, please feel free to send me a private message.

Update to our story. We let our supplier handle the contact with HP, but for some reason they wouldn't. So our supplier called me today. She started a conference call with me, supplier and HP support. We did a couple of tests on the printer over the phone. And I mailed the results to support.

I did replace tray 2 on the printer with one from another P3015dn (we bought 3 at the same time) last week thursday, no issue since then on both printers. And no issue's during testing with HP support on the phone.

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