Segger (disambiguation)

Last updated

Segger may refer to:

Related Research Articles

Fernwood, Greater Victoria

Fernwood is a neighbourhood near downtown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, bounded by the neighbourhoods of North/South Jubilee, North Park, Fairfield, Rockland, Hillside-Quadra, Oaklands and Harris Green.

Alex George Australian botanist

Alexander Segger George is a Western Australian botanist. He is the authority on the plant genera Banksia and Dryandra. The "bizarre" Restionaceae genus Alexgeorgea was named in his honour in 1976.

Craigdarroch Castle Historic house museum in British Columbia, Canada

Craigdarroch Castle in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, is a historic, Victorian-era Scottish Baronial mansion. It was designated a National Historic Site of Canada due to its landmark status in Victoria.

Seger is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

James Bay, Greater Victoria

James Bay is a high density neighbourhood of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. It is the oldest residential neighbourhood on the West coast of North America that is north of San Francisco. James Bay occupies the south side of the Inner Harbour close to downtown. Access to the neighbourhood is along Belleville Street, Government Street, Douglas Street and Dallas Road.

John Teague

John Teague was a Canadian architect and politician who served as mayor of Victoria, British Columbia from 1894 until 1895.

Segger Microcontroller, founded in 1992, is a private company involved in the embedded systems industry. It provides products used to develop and manufacture 4 categories of embedded systems: real-time operating systems (RTOS) and software libraries (middleware), debugging and trace probes, programming tools and in-system programmers. The company is headquartered in Monheim am Rhein, Germany with remote offices in Gardner, Massachusetts; Milpitas, California; and Shanghai, China.

Code Composer Studio

Code Composer Studio is an integrated development environment (IDE) to develop applications for Texas Instruments (TI) embedded processors.

Richard the Redeless is an anonymous fifteenth-century English alliterative poem that critiques Richard II's kingship and his court, seeking to offer Richard retrospective advice, following his deposition by Henry IV in 1399. The poet claims that "Richard has been poorly advised, his kingdom mismanaged, his loyal subjects ill-served." The author believes that the advice he imparts will be of great aid to any guiding the kingdom in future years. The poem also contains elements of satire, especially towards court manners and clothing fashions.

Seeger is the surname of various people.

Rockland, Greater Victoria

Rockland is a historic neighbourhood of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, located just southeast of downtown and northeast of Beacon Hill Park, and comprising the northern portion of the official city neighbourhood of Fairfield. Its boundaries are imprecise but the area roughly flanks Rockland Avenue.

The University of Victoria Legacy Art Galleries (Legacy) is the university's art museum in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, responsible for the accessibility and stewardship of an art collection which consists of approximately 18,000 objects including Canadian, Indigenous and international historic and contemporary art. Legacy activates the collection for research, teaching and learning for students, faculty and the general public through exhibitions, campus displays, publications, web-projects, public programs, and events—on site and through digital resources.

Samuel Maclure was a Canadian architect in British Columbia, Canada, from 1890 to 1920. He was born on 11 April 1860 in Sapperton, New Westminster, British Columbia, to John and Martha Maclure. He studied painting at the Spring Garden Institute in Philadelphia from 1884 to 1885, and he was a self-taught architect. He married Margaret Catherine (Daisy) Simpson, an accomplished pianist and portrait painter, on 10 August 1889.

Synaphea bifurcata is a shrub endemic to Western Australia.

Professor Marie-Claire Cordonier Segger is a full professor, senior executive, an international expert in policy, law and governance on climate change, biodiversity, human rights, trade, investment and financial law and the world's Sustainable Development Goals. She currently serves as Leverhulme Trust Visiting Professor at the University of Cambridge, UK; Executive Secretary of the global Climate Law and Governance Initiative (CLGI) and Senior Director of the Centre for International Sustainable Development Law (CISDL). She is also a Fellow in Law & LLM/MCL Director of Studies at the Lucy Cavendish College; Fellow at the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law; Visiting Fellow at the Bennett Institute for Public Policy and Fellow at the Cambridge Centre for Energy, Environment & Natural Resource Governance. Further, she is Full Professor at the University of Waterloo School of Environment, Enterprise and Development in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, where she is also Senior Fellow at the Balsillie School of International Affairs (BSIA) and Senior Advisor to the Interdisciplinary Centre on Climate Change (IC3). She serves as Chair of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) Biodiversity Law & Governance Initiative; Rapporteur for the International Law Association Committee on Sustainable Natural Resources Management; Co-founder Member of the Board of the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) of Canada; Member of the International Law Association (ILA) Board of Canada; Co-founder and Councillor of the World Future Council.

Markus Gehring is an international jurist in European and international trade law, and both Fellow and Director of Studies in Law at Hughes Hall at University of Cambridge. He is also a senior fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation.

Simona Maaskant Library Library in Edmonton

The Simona Maaskant Library is the library at the King's University in Edmonton, first opened in 1981 as The King's College Library, and renamed in 1998 after its chief librarian Simona Maaskant.

Segger is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: