Ti Msp432 Arm Programming for Embedded Systems by Shujen Chen, Muhammad Ali Mazi
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In this post, we will be discussing the book “Ti Msp432 Arm Programming for Embedded Systems” by Shujen Chen and Muhammad Ali Mazi. This book is a comprehensive guide for programmers looking to learn about ARM programming for embedded systems using the TI MSP432 microcontroller.
The authors cover a wide range of topics, starting from the basics of ARM architecture and programming, to more advanced concepts such as real-time operating systems and debugging techniques. The book also includes hands-on examples and exercises to help readers apply their knowledge in practical scenarios.
Overall, “Ti Msp432 Arm Programming for Embedded Systems” is a valuable resource for anyone looking to enhance their skills in embedded systems programming. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced programmer, this book will provide you with the tools and knowledge needed to succeed in the field.
Have you read this book? What are your thoughts on it? Let us know in the comments below!
#Msp432 #Arm #Programming #Embedded #Systems #Shujen #Chen #Muhammad #Ali #Mazi, MSP
It’s Your Life Too! Thrive and Stay Ali Dave Nassaney Paperback
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Are you feeling overwhelmed, stressed, or stuck in a rut? Do you feel like you’re just going through the motions, rather than truly living your life to the fullest? It’s time to take control and make a change.
In “It’s Your Life Too! Thrive and Stay Alive” by Dave Nassaney, you’ll learn how to break free from the constraints holding you back and start living a life that brings you joy, fulfillment, and purpose. This powerful guide will help you identify your goals, overcome obstacles, and create a plan for success.
Whether you’re struggling with health issues, financial stress, or simply feeling lost in your daily routine, this book will provide you with the tools and inspiration you need to thrive and stay alive. Don’t settle for mediocrity – take charge of your life and start living on your own terms.
Pick up a copy of “It’s Your Life Too! Thrive and Stay Alive” today and start your journey towards a happier, healthier, and more fulfilling life. You deserve to live the life of your dreams – don’t wait another day to make it a reality.
#Life #Thrive #Stay #Ali #Dave #Nassaney #Paperback, IT Consulting
Price: $26.99 (as of Dec 29,2024 07:58:26 UTC – Details)
MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated) Director : unknown Run time : 187 minutes Actors : Ann Ali, Tina Smith, Joannie Bunns, Rick Cassidy, Keith Erickson ASIN : B083QXSJZ8
In this post, we will delve into the intriguing world of two lesser-known filmmakers, Ann Ali and Tina Smith, and their lost films, as well as the mysterious figure known as “The Godmother.”
Ann Ali and Tina Smith were both up-and-coming filmmakers in the late 1970s and early 1980s, known for their avant-garde and experimental approach to filmmaking. However, their careers were cut short when their films mysteriously disappeared from public view, leaving behind only a handful of obscure references and rumors.
One of the most famous lost films of Ann Ali is “The Godmother,” a surreal and enigmatic exploration of power, corruption, and femininity. The film was rumored to have been heavily influenced by the works of David Lynch and Ingmar Bergman, and featured a haunting performance by an unknown actress in the titular role.
Similarly, Tina Smith’s lost films are shrouded in mystery, with titles like “The Shadowed Mirror” and “Echoes of the Past” only existing in scattered reviews and film festival programs. Smith was known for her bold visual style and thematic exploration of memory, identity, and loss.
The Godmother, a mysterious figure rumored to have connections to the underground world of cinema, is said to have played a pivotal role in the disappearance of Ali and Smith’s films. Some believe that The Godmother was a powerful and enigmatic figure who controlled the fate of these filmmakers and their work, while others speculate that she may have been a myth or a collective hallucination.
As we delve deeper into the lost films of Ann Ali and Tina Smith, and the enigmatic figure of The Godmother, we uncover a web of intrigue, mystery, and creativity that continues to captivate and inspire filmmakers and film enthusiasts alike. Perhaps one day, these lost films will resurface, allowing us to finally unravel the secrets that they hold. Until then, the legacy of Ann Ali, Tina Smith, and The Godmother lives on in the shadows of cinema history.
#Godmother #Lost #Films #Ann #Ali #Tina #Smith,ann
Advanced Virtual Assistants – A Window to the Virtual Future by Ali Soofastaei H
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In today’s fast-paced world, virtual assistants have become an indispensable tool for businesses and individuals alike. From managing calendars and scheduling meetings to answering emails and providing customer support, virtual assistants can handle a wide range of tasks with efficiency and ease.
But as technology continues to evolve, so too do virtual assistants. Advanced virtual assistants are now taking things to the next level, offering a wide range of capabilities that were once only possible in the realm of science fiction.
These advanced virtual assistants are powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning, allowing them to learn and adapt to their users’ needs over time. They can analyze data, make predictions, and even carry out complex tasks autonomously, freeing up their human counterparts to focus on more strategic and creative work.
Imagine a virtual assistant that can not only schedule your meetings and manage your inbox, but also analyze market trends, generate reports, and even provide strategic insights to help you make better decisions. This is the future of virtual assistants, and it’s closer than you might think.
As we continue to push the boundaries of technology, virtual assistants will only become more advanced and capable. They will become an integral part of our daily lives, seamlessly integrating with our devices and systems to provide us with the information and support we need, when we need it.
So if you’re ready to embrace the virtual future, now is the time to start exploring the possibilities of advanced virtual assistants. With their help, you can streamline your workflow, boost your productivity, and unlock new opportunities for growth and success. The future is virtual – are you ready to embrace it?
#Advanced #Virtual #Assistants #Window #Virtual #Future #Ali #Soofastaei
Politics of Gender and Education : Critical Perspectives, Paperback by Ali, S…
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In the book “Politics of Gender and Education: Critical Perspectives” by author S. Ali, the intersection of gender and education is explored through a critical lens. Ali delves into the ways in which gender norms and expectations shape educational experiences and outcomes for individuals, particularly girls and women.
Through a combination of theoretical analysis and empirical research, Ali uncovers the ways in which gendered power dynamics play out in educational settings, influencing everything from curriculum development to classroom interactions. The book also examines the impact of policies and practices on gender equality in education, highlighting the need for a more inclusive and equitable approach.
With its insightful analysis and thought-provoking perspectives, “Politics of Gender and Education” offers a valuable contribution to the field of gender studies and education. This paperback is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding the complex relationship between gender, power, and education.
#Politics #Gender #Education #Critical #Perspectives #Paperback #Ali #S..
Starrett Snow and Landscape Services employees work Thursday on the base of an upcoming Muhammad Ali statue in front of Bates Mill No. 5 on Main Street in Lewiston. Andree Kehn/Sun Journal
LEWISTON — Construction work is underway for a 10-foot bronze statue of Muhammad Ali in front of Bates Mill No. 5 on Main Street in Lewiston, developer Tom Platz of Platz Associates confirmed Thursday.
Crews were at the location, neighboring Lewiston’s landmark Hopeful sign, to prepare the ground for the 3-foot base the statue will need.
The statue will depict Ali standing victorious over his felled opponent in the 1965 knockout fight with Sonny Liston in the first round of their championship rematch at what is now The Colisée in Lewiston.
According to local artist Charlie Hewitt, the plan is to unveil the statue on or around May 25, 2025 for the 60th anniversary of Ali’s iconic victory in 1965. Hewitt said there will be a film recounting the fight as well.
“We don’t have an exact time yet, but it’s well on its way,” Platz said Thursday. “I believe the sculptor is getting ready to send it to the foundry, and that’s a multi-month process.”
New Jersey-based sculptor Zenos Frudakis was recruited back in 2018 to bring the city’s vision to life.
“His process is to create a sculpture out of clay, and then from clay it goes through multiple other media before it actually becomes a bronze sculpture,” Platz explained.
“It’s a very lengthy process. It is sculpted in clay and then molded and then resculpted and molded in a different material before it eventually gets to ceramic,” he continued.
“At each stage, the sculptor has to go back through it and detail it again because every time you copy it, it loses some detail,” Platz said. “You continue to do that through the process until it’s finally made out of bronze in multiple pieces. Then, those pieces are welded together and the sculptor goes back and redetails it all again.”
Platz did not disclose how much the statue will cost. “It’s being funded by private people. It’s been (through) fundraising with individuals that we know are interested and are helping to fund it,” Platz said.
Muhammad Ali in Lewiston before his 1965 title fight with Sonny Liston. Associated Press photo
The project has been in the works since 2018, interrupted by a global pandemic in 2020. “I think (Frudakis) probably started on that clay a year ago. That process alone is a year and a half. Foundry process is four months by itself,” Platz explained.
Platz said that the years add up “when you take the process of actually creating the sculpture, picking a site and getting that taken care of and then getting it funded.”
The statue is intended to be a part of the art trail across Lewiston and Auburn. “The hope is, and I think we’ve already started some of that in Lewiston-Auburn, creating sculptures around the two cities and mapping it for people to take that walk,” Platz added.
Ground work on Main Street is set to wrap up by the end of next week, Ben Starrett of Starrett Snow and Landscape Services said.
“Our Muhammad Ali statue will commemorate the historic fight at The Colisée and symbolize the never-ending fighting spirit that our city possesses,” Lewiston Mayor Carl Sheline said.
Exciting news for boxing fans and residents of Lewiston, Maine! A statue of the legendary boxer Muhammad Ali is currently under construction in downtown Lewiston.
Ali, known for his incredible boxing skills and larger-than-life personality, has left a lasting impact on the world of sports and beyond. The statue, which will be erected in a prominent location in the city, will serve as a lasting tribute to his legacy and achievements.
The statue is being created by a talented local artist and is set to be unveiled later this year. Residents and visitors alike will have the opportunity to pay homage to one of the greatest athletes of all time right here in Lewiston.
Stay tuned for more updates on this exciting project and be sure to visit the statue once it is completed to honor the one and only Muhammad Ali.
It was January 1977, and the onetime member of the Beatles was being quizzed about the potential for the group to reunite after going their separate ways seven years earlier.
“Will it happen?” Harrison asked rhetorically. “I suppose so. There is definitely no reason why it’s absolutely out of the question for the rest of our lives.”
Of course, no such reunion ever took place. But it certainly wasn’t for lack of trying. For a period in the 1970s, a number of promoters, entrepreneurs, and optimists mounted attempts to get the Fab Four back on stage. While most simply tried to entice the band with money—and in ever-increasing amounts—one man opted to take a different approach. He believed the one way the Beatles could reappear was if he could crowdfund the money needed and appeal to the group’s charitable nature. In a brash and impulsive move, he even roped boxing legend Muhammad Ali into the picture.
All any Beatles fan needed to make their dream come true was to send in a single dollar.
A Band Apart
The Beatles—Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr, and George Harrison—arrived in New York City for the first time on February 7, 1964. The assembled crowd of around 4000 who welcomed them at JFK Airport seems quaint compared to the histrionics that followed. Roughly 74 million people saw them perform on The Ed Sullivan Show days later. For the next six years, the band was likely the most famous musical group on the planet. One hit record followed another, from Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band toThe White Album.
But unlike contemporaries the Rolling Stones or the Who, the Beatles were not built to last. According to Lennon, the death of manager Brian Epstein in 1967 was the beginning of the end.
“After Brian died, we collapsed,” Lennon said. “Paul took over and supposedly led us. But what is leading us, when we went round in circles? We broke up then.”
Infighting, lawsuits, and bad feelings made a comeback unlikely in the extreme, especially once the bandmates went on to solo careers. But as the 1970s progressed, the appetite for a repeat of Beatlemania grew: Sales of compilation albums and back catalog hits were encouraging, with millions of copies sold. It was even said some attendees of McCartney’s tour with his new band, Wings, were there in the hopes of seeing some of his old bandmates trot onstage.
The Beatles took over the U.S. and UK in the 1960s. | Fox Photos/GettyImages
As more time passed, some came to believe a Beatles one-night-only return performance would break show business records. Promoter Bill Sergent floated a $50 million deal. Sid Bernstein, who once booked the group at Carnegie Hall, made a $100 million offer.
Alan Amron had another idea. A 28-year-old entrepreneur from Long Island with a laudable track record—he invented a high-powered water gun before the Super Soaker and a sticky notepad before the Post-It—Amron believed that the best way to get the group to agree would be to demonstrate the public’s appetite for it.
How? By having them pay for it.
“I thought it would be easy to get a dollar from every Beatles fan in the world to reunite the Beatles,” Amron tells Mental Floss. “A by-the-people funded event.”
Amron launched the International Committee to Reunite the Beatles in 1976. His plan was to solicit $1 from each of the group’s fans, with an eye on amassing as much as $50 million by the 10th anniversary of Sgt. Pepper’s in June 1977.
“There are 200 million Beatles fans in the world,” Amron said in 1977. “This is a fact. And if there are 200 million Beatles fans, it could reach 100 million of them and if only half send in a dollar, that’s $50 million.”
To publicize his idea, he took out an ad in The Village Voice, a New York City alt-weekly, and had his campaign highlighted in Rolling Stone.
The reaction was swift, and mostly positive. “I had started to get money in envelopes in the mail literally from all over the world,” Amron says, “and in currency that I never even seen before, from countries I didn’t even know existed.”
Money was one thing. Connections were another. Getting a meeting with a Beatle or their representatives would be difficult without an intermediary, and so would mounting a complex telecast Amron had planned for the concert. Then, Amron had a stroke of luck. While on vacation in Miami Beach, Amron walked into a diner and spotted the only man who could conceivably make a claim to being more famous than the Beatles: Muhammad Ali.
Amron seized the moment. “I read that Ali knew the Beatles and loved them,” Amron says, “so I approached him in a Miami Beach diner asking for his help to raise the people’s money and then in broadcasting the event worldwide into movie theaters like he was successfully doing at the time with his boxing matches.”
Amron tapped Ali on his broad shoulders. “Excuse me, sir,” he said, “but I’m trying to re-form the Beatles. Would you like to help?”
The cold approach worked. Ali loved the idea and invited Amron to his home in Chicago. With his business partner Joel Sacher, Amron flew in and sat down with the former heavyweight champion, who agreed to take up the cause.
“Our partnering with him made the front pages of major newspapers around the world,” Amron says. “Ali was the most famous person on the planet. The funding picked up 2000 percent overnight. Ali even invited Joel and I to President Jimmy Carter’s inaugural ball in Washington, D.C.”
In another welcome coincidence, there was a person on Carter’s inauguration guest list that the three desperately wanted to meet: John Lennon.
Let It Be
The event, which was held in January 1977, seemed like a perfect storm of opportunity. In one corner was Amron, Sacher, and Ali; in the other was Lennon, and with him an opportunity to make a face-to-face appeal without intermediaries or lawyers.
Lennon reportedly listened to Ali’s pitch for a reunion that would benefit charity, perhaps by as much as $200 million. Out of interest or politeness, he didn’t shoot down the idea but instead offered to meet Ali and discuss it further at his apartment at the Dakota, a residential building on New York’s Upper West Side.
With Yoko Ono, John Lennon greets Muhammad Ali in 1977. | Wally McNamee/GettyImages
“I hope to impress them with the idea that this is money to help people all over the world,” Ali said a few days later. “I don’t need the money, and neither do the Beatles. The idea is to create this fund, and to help people develop a quality of the heart.” The money, he said, would go toward “feeding and clothing the poor children of the world.”
At this point, Amron felt the event was a real possibility. “We never got a ‘no,’ ” he says. “We got messages back from all four members that were ‘yes,’ ‘yes,’ ‘maybe,’ and ‘it could happen someday if it was the right situation.’ ”
It seemed like that right situation was finally coming together. But Lennon and Ali never met in Lennon’s apartment. Instead, representatives for the factions met and talked. Depending on the time and source, it was either encouraging or not. When asked by Playboy interviewer David Sheff in September 1980 about the idea of a charity concert, Lennon was dismissive.
“After the $200 million is gone, then what?” he said. “It goes round and round in circles. You can pour money in forever … There is no one concert. We would have to dedicate the rest of our lives to one world concert tour, and I’m not ready for it. Not in this lifetime, anyway.”
Even Harrison, once optimistic, turned sour by 1979.
“It will never happen,” he said. “In the end, it wasn’t nearly as much fun for us as it was for you. … Let’s face it, the Beatles can’t save the world. We’ll be lucky if we can save ourselves.”
The project came to an untimely end on December 8, 1980. “The idea was a few years in the making when it all ended abruptly when John Lennon was assassinated,” Amron says. Mark David Chapman shot and killed the former Beatle outside the apartment complex where the musician had once invited Ali to visit.
Amron doesn’t have an exact tally of the total amount raised but recalls it was roughly $6000 early on. Following Lennon’s death, Amron donated the funds to charity.
While the reunion didn’t materialize, it was far from a waste. Ali liked Amron so much he asked him to help manage his business deals, a partnership that last for around four years. In both the Beatles project and the Ali association, Amron had developed some additional caché in the business world. “It made meeting with big stars and important corporate people much easier,” he says. “They listened to my every word.”
Still, it was perhaps a quixotic goal. The last track on the final album the band recorded, 1969’s Abbey Road, was titled “The End.”
Read More About The Beatles:
In 1976, boxing legend Muhammad Ali made a bold attempt to reunite the world-famous band The Beatles. At the time, the group had been disbanded for six years, with tensions running high between the members.
Ali, known for his charisma and charm, thought he could use his influence to bring the band back together. He reached out to each member individually, trying to convince them to put aside their differences and come together for a special reunion performance.
Despite Ali’s best efforts, his plan ultimately fell through. John Lennon, who had left the band in 1969, was not interested in reuniting with his former bandmates. Paul McCartney and George Harrison were also hesitant, not wanting to revisit past conflicts.
Although Ali’s attempt to reunite The Beatles was unsuccessful, his efforts showed the power of his personality and his belief in the magic of music to bring people together. The band may never have reunited, but Ali’s bold move remains a fascinating moment in music history.
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Muhammad Ali, Beatles, reunion, iconic moment, music history, cultural impact, celebrity friendships, pop culture, legendary figures, nostalgia, music legends, friendship goals, historic event.
Fight fans who know the Sonny Liston story know the former heavyweight champion of the world had, shall we say, a testy relationship with cops. Liston, who had himself a pretty lousy 1964 – with him shockingly losing the crown to massive, loudmouth underdog Cassius Clay that February – had another bad experience at the hands of the law at the end of the year.
Liston was pulled by the cops in Denver, on Christmas Day no less, this his umpteenth arrest (reports are sketchy, but some say Sonny had the bracelets put on him no less than 19 times during his adult life), and his Christmas was duly ruined. According to reports from the archives, two policemen who were on duty on Christmas Day noticed a man who was, as they called it, “staggering through a parking lot.”
The as yet unknown man got into his Cadillac and drove away, this in “erratic” fashion. The two cops pulled over the car, and upon doing so they recognised the former heavyweight champ. Then things got nasty. A shoving match ensued, and soon TEN cops were on the scene. And they still couldn’t handle Liston. Eventually, Liston reluctantly got into the back of the cop car, with him initially admitting to having had one beer.
The cops say Liston, at the station, changed his story and said he’d had “maybe six to eight beers…..and some tasty liquor.” Liston spent the night in jail. Perhaps somewhat surprisingly, current heavyweight champ Muhammad Ali, who had taken the title from Sonny when still known as Cassius Clay (and was still referred to by his “slave name” by the US media in 1964 and would continue to be so for some years) – came to Sonny’s aid. Ali, after reading about Sonny’s plight, told anyone who would listen that his ring rival had unjustly been made an example of by the cops (again) and that his arrest had been “pitiful.”
Now, if Sonny had downed as many as eight beers, along with some “tasty liquor,” and if he had been unable to walk straight, with him instead “staggering,” how did it take as many as ten cops to deal with him? The Denver cops, who we all know hounded Liston something terrible, couldn’t have made a mountain out of a mole hill, could they?
It seems they sure did.
Poor Sonny, he never was given a break; not by the cops, not by the media, and unfortunately not by most of the media and historians, and it continues to be this way today as far as some historians and so-called experts go. Liston had made a real splash when he posed, quite shockingly, as Santa Clause, this on the December 1963 cover of Esquire Magazine. Now, an ex-champ who nobody, so the story continues to go, wanted when he was the world ruler, was spending his Christmas Day inside an eight by four jail cell.
No wonder Liston found it tough to smile when in the wrong company. And for Sonny, most people were folks he would have described as the wrong company.
Sonny Liston always said that in boxing, there is a good guy and a bad guy, with him adding how his cowboy movie was different, as the bad guy – this a role he had long since grown used to portraying – won. But on Christmas Day 60 years ago, Liston seemed to be as down as could possibly be imagined for a star, world class athlete and former heavyweight king.
In short, during his still so mysterious life, Sonny Liston never ever did seem to get a break. Those rare few who had the good fortune of knowing the real Liston all commented on his intelligence, his great sense of humour, his generosity, and his absolute love of kids. Sonny, as everyone knows, died under murky circumstances some time in either late December of 1970 or early January of 1971. Officially he was 38 years old.
On Christmas Day in 1964, the boxing world was shocked when heavyweight champion Sonny Liston was arrested on charges of reckless driving and carrying a concealed weapon. However, what was even more surprising was the unexpected ally who came to his defence – the legendary Muhammad Ali.
Ali, who had recently defeated Liston to become the new heavyweight champion, spoke out in support of his rival, stating that Liston was a good man who had been misunderstood by the media. Despite their fierce competition in the ring, Ali showed compassion and solidarity with Liston in his time of need.
The incident brought attention to the complex relationship between the two fighters, highlighting the respect and camaraderie that can exist even in the midst of intense rivalry. It also served as a reminder that even in the world of sports, compassion and empathy can transcend competition.
As we reflect on this Christmas Day in 1964, let us remember the unexpected bond that was formed between Sonny Liston and Muhammad Ali, and the power of forgiveness and understanding in the face of adversity.
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Christmas Day 1964, Sonny Liston arrest, Muhammad Ali defends Liston, historical boxing events, Ali vs Liston rivalry, boxing legends, Christmas Day sports history
Big Data Overview, Ali Roghani, Faraz Rabbini, Paperback Book, 9781492802495
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Big Data Overview by Ali Roghani and Faraz Rabbini: A Comprehensive Guide to Understanding Big Data
In today’s digital age, the amount of data being generated and collected is growing at an exponential rate. From social media interactions to online transactions, businesses and organizations are constantly inundated with massive amounts of data. But how can they make sense of this data and use it to their advantage?
In their groundbreaking book, “Big Data Overview,” Ali Roghani and Faraz Rabbini provide a comprehensive overview of big data and its applications. This paperback book, with the ISBN 9781492802495, is a must-read for anyone looking to understand the world of big data and its impact on businesses, technology, and society.
From explaining the basics of big data and its key concepts to exploring real-world case studies and examples, Roghani and Rabbini break down complex ideas into easily digestible content. Whether you’re a business professional looking to harness the power of big data or a student wanting to learn more about this rapidly evolving field, this book is a valuable resource.
So, if you’re ready to dive into the world of big data and unlock its potential, be sure to pick up a copy of “Big Data Overview” by Ali Roghani and Faraz Rabbini. It’s a must-have for anyone looking to stay ahead in today’s data-driven world.
#Big #Data #Overview #Ali #Roghani #Faraz #Rabbini #Paperback #Book, Data Management
Swarna Gupta Rehan Ali Ansari Dipay Deep Learning with R (Paperback) (UK IMPORT)
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Are you interested in delving into the world of deep learning with R? Look no further than “Swarna Gupta Rehan Ali Ansari Dipay Deep Learning with R”! This comprehensive guide, available in paperback and imported from the UK, covers everything you need to know about deep learning using the R programming language.
Whether you’re a beginner looking to get started or an experienced data scientist wanting to enhance your skills, this book is perfect for all levels of expertise. With step-by-step instructions, practical examples, and real-world applications, you’ll be able to master the fundamentals of deep learning and apply them to your own projects.
Don’t miss out on this valuable resource for mastering deep learning with R – order your copy today!
#Swarna #Gupta #Rehan #Ali #Ansari #Dipay #Deep #Learning #Paperback #IMPORT, deep learning