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Original file (800 × 800 pixels, file size: 1.93 MB, MIME type: image/gif, looped, 40 frames, 1 min 0 s) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Original file (800 × 800 pixels, file size: 3.4 MB, MIME type: image/gif, looped, 76 frames, 1 min 54 s) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The 1997 tournament awarded a $700,000 first prize to the Deep Blue team and a $400,000 second prize to Kasparov. Carnegie Mellon University awarded an additional $100,000 to the Deep Blue team, a prize created by computer science professor Edward Fredkin in 1980 for the first computer program to beat a reigning world chess champion. [29]
Tristia of the Deep-Blue Sea (Japanese: 蒼い海のトリスティア, Hepburn: Aoi Umi no Torisutia) is a PS2, PSP, and PC game, developed by Kogado Studio. This game is part of the Deep-Blue series along with the sequel, Neosphere of the Deep-Blue Sky ( 蒼い空のネオスフィア ) and Akatsuki no Amaneka to Aoi Kyojin .
Kogado has released adventure, strategy, and bishōjo games for the MSX, MSX2, PlayStation 2 and PC, including such titles as Symphonic Rain, Gadget Trial, Little Witch Parfait, Tristia of the Deep-Blue Sea (which has been made an original video animation), and Power Dolls. The studio has a number of teams working together.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.
Neosphere of the Deep-Blue Sky: PlayStation 2: February 22, 2007: Unreleased Unreleased Unreleased Kogado Studio [45] Amagōshi no Yakata PlayStation 2: March 8, 2007: Unreleased Unreleased Unreleased FOG Inc. [46] GrimGrimoire [g] PlayStation 2: April 12, 2007: June 26, 2007 September 28, 2007 September 28, 2007 Nippon Ichi Software ...
To fly with an emotional support animal (ESA) on participating airlines, a traveler generally needs a letter from a licensed mental health professional (LMHP), such as a psychologist or psychiatrist.