Quick Description: (Read All) Free engineering utility for calculating stress and deflection in beams. Primary Download Secondary Download |
The deflection of the beam towards a particular direction when force is applied to it is called Beam deflection. Based on the type of deflection there are many beam deflection formulas given below, w = uniform load (force/length units) V = shear. I = moment of inertia. E = modulus of elasticity.
Category:Business(Rank: 1,156 / 1,823): Math & Scientific Tools(Rank: 50 / 82) Downloads: 254 This Week (Rank: 10,537 / 15,688) / 3594 Total (Rank: 10,193 / 15,688) Developer:Richard Getze Software Home Page: http://www.geocities.com/richgetze License Type: Freeware ($0.00) Language: English Most Recent File Validation (?): Sun, January 4th, 2004 8:03 PM PST OS: Win95,Win98,WinME,WinXP,Windows2000 - Install and Uninstall. |
- Watch the full match: Chelsea 2-1 Leicester (H) from 2020/21 Fill the live football void in your life by watching all 90 minutes of a crucial 2-1 Chelsea win against Leicester with fans back at the Bridge in the 2020/21 campaign.
- I can get an idea of what to expect w/ Beamboy, but I think since this will be a fabricated 'beam', it's gonna be kind of skewed. When I tell Beamboy that I'm using 3'x3'x3/16' aluminum angle, and I halve the deflection it gives me since I'll be using 2 of them, about 14-16' apart O.C., would that be somewhat representative of my 'actual' deflection?
Full Description: |
Keywords: engineering, mechanical, civil, structural, beam, analysis, bending, stress, deflection, shaft
About Apple security updates
For our customers' protection, Apple doesn't disclose, discuss, or confirm security issues until an investigation has occurred and patches or releases are available. Recent releases are listed on the Apple security updates page.
For more information about security, see the Apple Product Security page. You can encrypt communications with Apple using the Apple Product Security PGP Key.
Beamboy 2.2 Full Hd
Apple security documents reference vulnerabilities by CVE-ID when possible.
watchOS 3.2.2
Released May 15, 2017
AVEVideoEncoder
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: An application may be able to gain kernel privileges
Description: Multiple memory corruption issues were addressed with improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-6989: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
CVE-2017-6994: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
CVE-2017-6995: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
CVE-2017-6996: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
CVE-2017-6997: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
CVE-2017-6998: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
CVE-2017-6999: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
Entry updated May 17, 2017
CoreAudio
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: An application may be able to read restricted memory
Description: A validation issue was addressed with improved input sanitization.
CVE-2017-2502: Yangkang (@dnpushme) of Qihoo360 Qex Team
CoreFoundation
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: Parsing maliciously crafted data may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed with improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-2522: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added May 19, 2017
CoreText
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: Processing a maliciously crafted file may lead to application termination
Beamboy 2.2 Full Version
Description: A denial of service issue was addressed through improved validation.
CVE-2017-7003: Jake Davis of SPYSCAPE (@DoubleJake), João Henrique Neves and Stephen Goldberg of Salesforce
Entry updated June 7, 2017
Foundation
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: Parsing maliciously crafted data may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed with improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-2523: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added May 19, 2017
IOSurface
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: An application may be able to gain kernel privileges
Description: A race condition was addressed through improved locking.
CVE-2017-6979: Adam Donenfeld (@doadam) of the Zimperium zLabs Team
Entry updated May 17, 2017
Kernel
Beamboy V2.2
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: An application may be able to execute arbitrary code with kernel privileges
Description: A race condition was addressed through improved locking.
CVE-2017-2501: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Kernel
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: An application may be able to read restricted memory
Description: A validation issue was addressed with improved input sanitization.
CVE-2017-2507: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
CVE-2017-6987: Patrick Wardle of Synack
SQLite
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: A maliciously crafted SQL query may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: A use after free issue was addressed through improved memory management.
CVE-2017-2513: found by OSS-Fuzz
SQLite
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: A maliciously crafted SQL query may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: A buffer overflow issue was addressed through improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-2518: found by OSS-Fuzz
CVE-2017-2520: found by OSS-Fuzz
SQLite
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: A maliciously crafted SQL query may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed with improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-2519: found by OSS-Fuzz
TextInput
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: Parsing maliciously crafted data may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed with improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-2524: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
WebKit
Available for: All Apple Watch models
Impact: Processing maliciously crafted web content may lead to arbitrary code execution
Description: Multiple memory corruption issues were addressed with improved memory handling.
CVE-2017-2521: lokihardt of Google Project Zero
Additional recognition
Kernel
We would like to acknowledge Orr A. of Aleph Research, HCL Technologies for their assistance.