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Takao Suzuki
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Takao Suzuki is an International Program Manager in the MSN division at Microsoft. He has worked on internationalization in projects including Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, and MSN Messenger. He's ... participating in the W3C International Web Services effort, and helped with international issues in CSS/HTML. His education includes MSc. in Systems Engineering from Boston University. He was born and raised in Tokyo.
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Takao Suzuki (Japanese 鈴木貴男, b. September 20, 1976 in Sapporo, Japan) is a professional tennis player on the ATP Tour from Japan. He reached a career high ranking in singles of 102 in the world in 1998 and has earned nearly three fifths of a million dollars in prize winnings on the ATP Tour. He is well-known for his outstanding performance against Roger Federer at the Australian Open in 2005. Although Suzuki lost to Federer in straight sets (6-3, 6-4, 6-4), Suzuki challenged Federer in many of the games and put up a close battle in each of the sets he lost. In 2006, Suzuki injured his shoulder at the Australian Open qualifying tournament in a match against Paul Capdeville and sat out most of the season as a result. He briefly returned to competitive tennis in May in a challenger tournament in South Korea and lost in the quarter finals.
Takao Suzuki, the vice-director of the Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, has no hesitation in hailing this unlovely glop as the Japanese woman's best friend. He says it helps her not only to live longer than Western women, but to remain healthier into old age and to suffer just a third of the hip fractures and fewer symptoms of menopause.
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Takao Suzuki recieved his B.E. from the department of Aeronautical Engineering at Kyoto University in 1994. He received his M.S. in 1996 and his PhD in 2001 from the Department of Aeronautics and Astonautics at Stanford University. He is currently a Postdoctoral Scholar in the Mechanical Engineering department at Caltech.
As Japanese number one Takao Suzuki shivered to the dictates of a fever, Rohan throbbed to destiny's drum. Facing novice Jun Kato instead of the wily Suzuki, he knew fate had finally conspired in his favour. Opportunity knocked and Rohan rocked. The deliverance took two hours and read 7-6 (5), 6-4, 6-4.
Takao Suzuki’s Words in Context (translation by Akria Miura) had previously been published as Japanese and the Japanese. As a work of sociolinguistics, the earlier title perhaps makes more sense. Suzuki wants to make some larger truths about language and particularly the Western focus of most linguistic tools. The larger truths, though, are perhaps elementary: […]
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