Divvio primarily focuses on multimedia indexing & search and develops technologies that aim to improve the user experience in consuming digital media on the Internet and mobile devices. Based on a proprietary technology, Divvio indexes millions of rich media clips every day and provides copyright compliance and site-monitoring tools to media content providers and distributors. Divvio's API-based Architecture allows for rich-media content delivery applications on IP-enabled devices and provides inter-working scenarios to service providers , web-based content providers, content owners, internet advertisers, large enterprises and government agencies. Divvio, a privately-funded startup, was co-founded in 2006 by Dr. Hossein Eslambolchi and Dr. Joubine Dustzadeh, and is based in Menlo Park, California.
In mathematical analysis, many generalizations of Fourier series have proved to be useful. They are all special cases of decompositions over an orthonormal basis of an inner product space. Here we consider that of square-integrable functions defined on an interval of the real line, which is important, among others, for interpolation theory.
The Arawak and Taino indigenous people originating from South America settled on the island between 4000 and 1000 BC. When Christopher Columbus arrived in 1494 there were over 200 villages ruled by chiefs or caciques, with the south coast of Jamaica being the most populated, especially around what is now known as Old Harbour. The Taino population was largely increasing when the Spanish arrived[citation needed]. The Tainos were still inhabiting Jamaica when the British took control of the island. It has been proposed that the Taino bloodline has been absorbed into the population. The Jamaican National Heritage Trust is attempting to locate and document any evidence of the Taino/Arawaks. Christopher Columbus claimed Jamaica for Spain after landing there in 1494. Columbus' probable landing point was Dry Harbour, now called Discovery Bay. St. Ann's Bay was the "Saint Gloria" of Columbus who first sighted Jamaica at this point. One mile west of St. Ann's Bay is the site of the first Spanish settlement on the island, Sevilla, which was abandoned in 1554 because of numerous pirate raids.