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         Machine Prove:     more detail
  1. Machine-Made Jobs: "Buts" and "Ands" That Must Be Considered in Connection With Common Statements Which on the Surface Appear to Prove That Machines Cause Unemployment by Machinery And Allied Products Institute, 1936-01-01
  2. Program prove-out via machine simulation: before new machining jobs are run at this aerospace composites facility, they are first proven out using 3D machine ... parts.: An article from: Modern Machine Shop by Derek Korn, 2007-07-01
  3. Multitasker: Charger's new 190 SUV proves itself as a multifunction, multispecies fishing machine that can handle big water.(Product/Service Evaluation): An article from: Bass & Walleye Boats by Monte Burch, 2004-08-01
  4. Third party results prove Meadwestvaco CNK[R] cardboard reduces frozen food unsaleables by 44%.(Coated Natural Kraft): An article from: Frozen Food Digest
  5. Electric controls prove big benefit in sanding. (computerized electronic sectional sanding): An article from: Wood & Wood Products by George Force, 1991-08-01

61. Comptometer - Comptometers - Vs. The "Adding Machine"
destined to dominate the (front office) adding machine market while warding off avariety of competitors while Felt Tarrant's Comptograph would prove only a
http://members.cruzio.com/~vagabond/AddingMachines.html
Adding Machines
There are important differences between the mechanical adding machines and the key-driven calculators of this early period. However, please note...
"This discussion specifically excludes the four-function calculators of Odhner design which were particularly well suited to general calculation purposes but not very efficient for the high volume business "totaling" application." The adding machine was (and still is) most usually an "adder/lister" meaning that it added to its total register and printed each item after being "set" into the keyboard and a handle or bar operated. Both were originally limited to addition and complementary subtraction. Direct subtraction, multiplication and division would have to wait another 20 to 30 years and never appear on key-driven calculators, only key-set machines.
The second difference involves how the machine accepted keyed entries. With adding machines, a two step process was required. Values had first to be "set" into the keyboard and then a crank operated to add it to the running total and print it to the listing device. The key-driven calculator, on the other hand, having no listing mechanism to deal with, added each keyed digit as it was entered to the running total with no second operation required.
The Comptograph
The difficulties involved in combining a key-driven design with a printing mechanism proved such a challenge that the machine had virtually no impact on the market for adding machines.

62. ZDNet Home > Prove > Hardware > Desktop
Translate this page Tenendo premuto il tasto CTRL sulla tastiera, puoi selezionare più aziende.Altre prove. Prova Workstation grafica o Game machine? Potente
http://www.zdnet.it/zdnet/jumpCh.asp?idChannel=305

63. TechTV | Cops' New Rabid Radar, Prismiq's Media Machine, And More
But will you give praise to this mean multimedia machine? Watch Tech Live tonightfor a full review. prove it with a Mouse Bungee or Mouse Bungee Pro.
http://www.techtv.com/news/shownotes/story/0,24195,3417750,00.html
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If you want the scoop on what's on the show delivered to your inbox, subscribe to our newsletter Hot Topic The Great Credit Heist Credit card companies including Visa American Express , and MasterCard have revealed that more than 8 million card numbers have been stolen by an unknown hacker. Authorities say that so far, no fraudulent transactions have been committed with the numbers. Still, the huge theft underscores the danger and ease of identity theft, which the FBI calls the fastest-growing crime in the world today. On "Tech Live" tonight, find out how the hacker was able to steal the numbers, and what you can do to protect yourself. Hot Click Cops' Rabid Radar Next time you see a Camaro coming up in your rearview mirror, you might think about slowing down. A new generation of

64. Caltech Press Release, 11/29/2001, Er. Erik Antonsson, John Van Deusen
Antonsson comes up with a contest in which twoperson teams build a machine to perform Thoughit would seem that a design from one year might prove to be an all
http://pr.caltech.edu/media/Press_Releases/PR12202.html
Related Links Dr. Erik Antonsson
Machinist provides undergrads with quality time in the Caltech shop
Machinist John Van Deusen looks on approvingly as two Caltech undergraduates prepare to see how well their new robot climbs a curved wall. The robot performs its task admirablynot necessarily a foregone conclusion in the Caltech machine shop, where dysfunctional robots have been known to come into creation. Van Deusen, ever the diplomat, passes by without commenting one way or the other. "In ME 72 we bite our tongues a lot," Van Deusen says later. The robot the two undergrads have built is pretty much a set of felt-lined caterpillar treads linked by a single aluminum bar. Controlled by radio and powered by small electric motors, the device exists for the purpose of racing up an ever-steepening wall, retrieving as many hockey pucks resting on the wall as possible, and, ideally, winning the coveted first-place award in the famed Mechanical Engineering 72 contest. Van Deusen's purpose, on the other hand, is to show the students how to use the machines, give them advice on how best to achieve what they are trying to achieve, and makes sure they use the high-powered equipment of the machine shop safely. Van Deusen is the guy who consults with the students as they build their machines for the ME 72 competition each Decembera public contest that attracts virtually the entire Caltech campus and usually a fair number of Los Angeles and national media outlets. As manager of the Caltech machine shop, he provides instruction on how to do the fixing and making that will be very much a part of every student's life, to one degree or another. After all, mechanical engineering is the process of creating a new thing to solve an often poorly defined and open-ended problembe it exploration of a new world or mechanical delivery of a new drug.

65. Inbox Patrol - CSO Magazine - February 2003
machine Shop. If you're not on somebody's list of approved senders, their antispamprogram might send you an email asking you to prove that you're not some
http://www.csoonline.com/read/020103/machine.html

February 2003
CSO Magazine
Machine Shop Inbox Patrol
Convergence, Continued

Inbox Patrol
Is there a white knight solution to spam?
BY SIMSON GARFINKEL
E-MAIL IS THE
Internet's killer app. Yet the future of e-mail is in serious jeopardy by the ever-increasing torrent of unwanted e-mail that fills our inboxes and clogs our mail servers. The statistics are frightening. According to Brightmail, an antispam company, 40 percent of all e-mail is now spam, and nearly 15 percent of all spam is pornographic, up from 5 percent last year. Pornographic spam is an affront to many Internet users, creating a hostile workplace and opening employers to the threat of litigation. Brightmail operates a "probe network" built from old e-mail addresses at some of the world's largest (and smallest) ISPs. Whenever lots of mailboxes receive messages that are similar, the messages are sent to Brightmail's operations center, where human beings look at the messages and determine if they are spam. In November 2002, Brightmail's experts uncovered 5.5 million spam "attacks," each consisting of between several thousand and several million messages.
advertisers
Many ISPs have strict policies against spamming. If spam is sent out from your computer, your Internet connection can be terminated without notice or other warnings. Imagine my astonishment in late November when I discovered that more than 100,000 spam messages had been sent to Hotmail from the network connection in my own basement. Here's what happened.

66. AKRI > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Intelligence Prize
a new interest and visible improvements in the development of machine intelligence. asan opportunity to see what others can achieve and could prove a valuable
http://www.akri.org/ai/macint.htm

Front
Search Site Map Links ... Artificial Intelligence
British Computer Society Machine Intelligence Prize
In association with the Electrolux group
Awarded for demonstration of progress towards Machine Intelligence
Read the press release for the 2002 competition proceedings Entries for the 2003 competition are now open, enter online or download the PDF version.
Organisers
Prof. Max Bramer Dr. John L. Gordon (for AKRI)
Prize
A permanent trophy awarded for one year plus a cash prize.
Venue
The competition will be held during the annual SGAI conferences (AI-200x)
Judges
All registered delegates at AI-200x will be eligible to vote in a secret ballot. The competitor receiving most votes will be the winner.
Eligibility
The competition is open to all. A maximum of 5 entries will be presented. To control numbers, these will be selected by the organisers on the basis of information provided by the entrants.
Entry Fee
There is no entry fee but competitors will be asked to meet their own costs.

67. World Machine Beta Release
World machine is currently free for noncommercial use (Other users, contact me originallydeveloped primarily for my own purposes, I hope it will prove to be a
http://students.washington.edu/sschmitt/world/
What is it?
World Machine is a terrain heightfield generator that takes a slightly different approach than the norm. Most available terrain creation software uses the "masterpiece" approach: you dabble a bit here and there until all is perfected and if something goes wrong at any step, or you decide after 30 minutes that you want to use a different basic terrain shape, all is lost. World Machine takes a different approach. The heightfield generation process is viewed in an object-oriented fashion; components that perform different actions are wired together like an electric circuit, allowing you to change anything, at any time in the heightfield pipeline. This control over every step of the terrain process is what makes World Machine unique among (freeware) terrain synthesis tools.
What it has now
  • Easy to use, graph-based visual design approach
  • Many different Perlin Noise generator styles for different looks
  • Ability to import terrain data from .TGA and Terragen heightfield files
  • A variety of devices, such as Terrace, Combiner, Chooser, Transform, etc.
  • Weathering and Fluvial erosion, including export of river and talus maps

68. Using Srvtabs In Stanford's Kerberos Environment
It can be used by a machine or an application to prove its identity withina Kerberos realm (eg, Stanford's Kerberos v4 realm, IR.STANFORD.EDU).
http://lelandsystems.stanford.edu/services/kerberos/sysadmin/help/srvtabs.html
Using Srvtabs in Stanford's Kerberos Environment
A srvtab is a Kerberos identity for something other than a user. It can be used by a machine or an application to prove its identity within a Kerberos realm (e.g., Stanford's Kerberos v4 realm, IR.STANFORD.EDU). This is important because there are many applications that run independent of any particular user, yet still do things that require authentication, such as use AFS or communicate with other kerberized services (such as the harvester). Also, Kerberos principals that belong to machines (rcmd.*) are used by Kerberos to ensure that a user is logging in to the machine he is intending to log in to. There are four major types of srvtabs used in Stanford's Kerberos realm, rcmd.*, ident.*, pop.*, and service.*. The most common of these is rcmd.*, which are srvtabs that are associated with machines. The primary use of these is verifying the identity of a computer when a user tries to log in using Kerberos. One of the features of Kerberos is that all authentication is two way, both the entity requesting service and the entity providing service have to prove their identity. Here is documentation on requesting an rcmd.* srvtab for your machine.

69. MachineHead1.com - News
Davidian'. Closing with a roughhewn covers jam, and a blistering'Supercharger', machine Head more than prove their worth. Don't
http://www.machinehead1.com/news.html

SEND
PRINT The Boyz have been busy doing press for the release of their first ever live album "HellaLive", in stores March 11. The following is a compliation of a few European interviews Robert recently did. Thanks to Blitz, Rock Hard - France, and Power Surge.
So why a Live album now? Most people view that as either the end of an era, or the beginning of a new one.
I'm not sure if it's the end or beginning of something. It definitely felt like the right time to release a Live representation of Machine Head. We've pretty much built a career on our live reputation. Built ourselves by being a band that consistently delivers in the live environment, and the time just felt right. When you've got 4 album's worth of material to choose from, it makes a really nice balance for a show, a good amount of peaks and valley's, which in turn makes for a good album.
Do you think Live albums are important for a bands career?
Depends. If your a Pop band like say....Avril Laverne or whatever her name is, I'd say no, because you rely more on Radio, MTV, etc. For a Metal band I think it's absolutely important.
I also think in general, if you expect to stand the test of time, no matter what type of music you play, you've got to be able to deliver in a live environment, period. People want human interaction, people want that human connection.

70. Time Machine - February/March 2003
Time machine 1953 Ike Gets Tough 50 Years Ago by Frederic Schwarz Such fears werelegitimate, because the temptation might well prove irresistible for Taiwan
http://www.americanheritage.com/AMHER/2003/01/timemach.shtml
February/March 2003 Volume 54, Number 1
Table of Contents
In the News History Happened Here My Brush with History ... Time Machine Time Machine 1953: Ike Gets Tough 50 Years Ago
by Frederic Schwarz
25 Years Ago
March 25, 1978
50 Years Ago
January 2, 1953
January 21, 1953

A federal jury convicts 13 Communist leaders of conspiring to advocate the overthrow of the U.S. government. 100 Years Ago
February 14, 1903
President Theodore Roosevelt signs an act of Congress creating the Department of Commerce and Labor. In 1913 it will be split into two departments. March 22, 1903 The Anthracite Coal Commission, appointed by President Roosevelt in October, recommends shorter hours, a wage increase, and an end to restrictions on union membership. 125 Years Ago January 10, 1878 A constitutional amendment granting women the right to vote is introduced in Congress. It will be reintroduced every session until it passes in 1919 and is ratified in 1920 with the wording unchanged. 200 Years Ago February 24, 1803 In Marbury v. Madison, the U.S. Supreme Court declares an act of Congress void for the first time. 225 Years Ago February 6, 1778

71. Time Machine - July 2002
Time machine 1752 Franklin Flies a Kite 250 Years Ago by FredericSchwarz In so. Nor was he the first to prove it experimentally.
http://www.americanheritage.com/AMHER/2002/03/timemach.shtml
July 2002 Volume 53, Number 3
Table of Contents
In the News The Business of America History Happened Here ... Time Machine Time Machine 1752: Franklin Flies a Kite 250 Years Ago
by Frederic Schwarz
In june of 1752, in Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin performed what may be the most famous scientific experiment of all time by flying a kite in a thunderstorm. In so doing, he verified his theory that lightning is a form of electricity. The experimental apparatus consisted of an ordinary kite with a footlong metal spike attached to its end to attract lightning. At the bottom of the kite string was a key, which absorbed the electricity from the lightning. To keep himself from being electrocuted, Franklin put a length of silk thread between the key and his hand. He stood inside a shed and flew the kite through a window to keep the silk dry and thus non-conducting. When lightning struck, the spike, the kite, the string (which was wet, allowing it to conduct electricity easily), and the key all became electrified. A finger placed near the string attracted its fibers; a knuckle next to the key brought forth sparks. The electricity that was captured in the key could be used to perform all the same experiments and demonstrations as ordinary electricity. One practical benefit that came out of the experiments was the protective lightning rod. Franklin gave instructions for building such a device in his 1753 edition of

72. Borland Q A On ECperf
We feel the testing results do not really prove anything other than the spirit of Borland’scase the application server was run on one server machine with 8
http://community.borland.com/article/0,1410,28519,00.html

73. Man, Machine And The Myth
It’s another shot at the machine by the one guy who deserves it. I’dlike to prove that human players are not hopeless,” he jokes.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/863461.asp?0sl=-10

74. THE HUMAN MACHINE MERGER: ARE WE HEADED FOR THE MATRIX?
How can another person prove to you that he/she really exists as a being If you cannottell a machine simulating conscience from a real conscious machine, if
http://www.kurzweilai.net/articles/art0552.html?m=10

75. General Machine Products Company, Inc. V Prime Domains - Case No. 92531
contact with General machine. DISCUSSION. Paragraph 4(a) of the Policy provides that,to justify transfer of a domain name, a complainant must prove each of the
http://www.arb-forum.com/domains/decisions/92531.htm
THE NATIONAL ARBITRATION FORUM MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA DECISION General Machine Products Company, Inc. v. Prime Domains (a/k/a Telepathy, Inc.) Forum File FA0001000092531 For the reasons explained below, the panel has reached the unanimous conclusion that the domain name should not be transferred to the Complainant. THE DOMAIN NAME This dispute concerns the domain name craftwork.com . The registrar for this domain name is Network Solutions, Inc. THE PARTIES The Complainant is General Machine Products Company, Inc., 3111 Old Lincoln Highway, Trevose, PA 19053 ("General Machine" or Complainant). According to the Complaint, General Machine operates a varied business and has been using the CRAFTWORK trademark to identify a wide range of products used in the utility construction field since 1989. Respondent Prime Domains ("Prime Domains"), P.O. Box 9911, Washington, DC 20016, registered the craftwork.com domain name with Network Solutions on November 4, 1998. Prime Domains alleges that it is in the business of identifying domain names comprised of generic or descriptive terms, registering those domain names, selling them to interested parties, and developing Web sites using those domain names for clients. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Each party is represented by counsel, and has submitted its position to the Panel along with documentary evidence in support of its position. Based on those submissions and the Panel's independent searches of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office ("USPTO") website (because both parties are U.S. residents) and Network Solution's Whois database, the Panel has found the following facts:

76. STSC CrossTalk - We've Come A Long Way From Machine Code To Current Programming
developer to easily express abstract ideas in a language that a machine can execute. Ihope that this issue will prove useful in your efforts to understand the
http://www.stsc.hill.af.mil/crosstalk/2003/02/publisher.html
var root = "/"; var menuRoot = "/menus"; var imageRoot = "/images";
Entire Site CrossTalk Only
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... CrossTalk Feb 2003
Feb 2003 Issue
We've Come a Long Way From Machine Code to Current Programming Languages
As I reviewed this month's CrossTalk theme articles on programming languages, I found it interesting to look back at the evolution of programming during the last 30 years. You can probably guess my age when I admit that the first programs I wrote in college were in machine code. Lt. Col. Thomas M. Schorsch and Dr. David A. Cook begin this issue with their article Evolutionary Trends of Programming Languages . The authors discuss the typical generations of programming languages defining first, second, and third generations, then admit that there is probably no general agreement on what constitutes fourth, fifth, and future generations of languages. (Of course, I actually related to writing programs in a first-generation or machine-code language. One assignment I remember required us to actually write a fully functional program with a limitation of 100 bytes of storage.) Schorsch and Cook go on to describe several general evolutionary trends that have influenced programming languages, as well as some specific recent advances. After discussing many different languages and how they came about, the authors conclude that throughout this total evolution the basic role of a programming languages does not change. This role is to allow the developer to easily express abstract ideas in a language that a machine can execute.

77. Prophet 21 - AutoCrib And Machine Tools Supply Streamline Processes With Trading
machine Tools Supply stocks in excess of 150 AutoCrib dispensing units in over 30 Theintegration with Trading Partner Connect should prove to be a time and
http://www.p21.com/press/autocrib-streamline.html
Powering the Distribution Industry for the Digital Age HOME SITEMAP CONTACT SEARCH ... Events
AutoCrib and Machine Tools Supply Streamline Processes with Trading Partner Connect
Prophet 21 Internet Trading Network Reduces Errors, Saves Money
YARDLEY, PA, December 4, 2002 - In another example of how Trading Partner Connect, Prophet 21's Internet trading network, is streamlining the supply chain, AutoCrib, a leader in inventory management solutions, and Machine Tools Supply, a distributor of machine tools, have formed a trading relationship and are now conducting business electronically -improving customer service and reducing operational costs. "The trading partnership between AutoCrib and Machine Tools Supply is a perfect example of how Trading Partner Connect streamlines the commerce process for distributors and the companies they do business with," says Chuck Boyle, president and CEO of Prophet 21. "Both Auto Crib and Machine Tool Supply were early adopters of Trading Partner Connect and are today reaping the benefits offered by the Internet trading network." Trading Partner Connect has enabled AutoCrib to download restocking orders directly from their vending machines on shop room floors and automatically place purchase orders with its distributors. Bruce Weaver, vice president of AutoCrib, notes a drastic reduction in re-keying errors often associated with these types of transactions because with Trading Partner Connect all information flows from one software system to the next. "We have also eliminated the need to send tag files back to our AutoCrib clients, saving us time and money," Weaver adds. "Trading Partner Connect sends back an advanced ship notice that takes the place of the old AutoCrib tag system."

78. ERCB: The Dream Machine
a paper by Alan Turing, in which he asked whether a machine could think researchersin the United States began writing programs that could prove simple theorems
http://www.ercb.com/brief/brief.0057.html
ERCB Home New Feature Brief ... Links
Vital Statistics
Title The Dream Machine: Exploring the Computer Age Author(s) Jon Palfreman and Doron Swade Publisher BBC Books
London, UK Pages ISBN
The Dream Machine
It no longer seems strange to me to write book reviews on a computer small enough to balance on my knee. Every once in a while, though, when I mention to students that I did my first programming with punched cards, and see the disbelief in their eyes, I am reminded how fast and how far computing has come. "The Dream Machine" a new documentary series jointly produced by the BBC and WGBH-TV in Boston, tells the story of that journey. From the mechanical calculators built during the Enlightenment by Pascal and Liebniz, to the Victorian Gothic of Babbage's Analytic Engine and the fragile complexity of Colossus, the code-breaking machine constructed at Bletchley Park during the Second World War, the development of computers rarely touched everyday life. But by the 1950s, electronic computers were sufficiently cheap and reliable to be adopted by business and industry. Twenty years later, the invention of integrated circuits brought them into the home; today, children are as comfortable with drawing packages and Nintendo games as children of my generation were with television. This story has been told so often that one must wonder what is to be gained from another re-telling, either on television or in this "book of the series". One answer is that any story well told is worth telling, and the authors of this book tell their story well. Their tone is informal, but not inexact; the introduce the technical terms they need where and as they need them, and use them un-self-consciously thereafter.

79. The Children's Machine By Seymour Papert
One educator's positive review of Papert's book 'His philosophy of learning contrasts sharply with Category Computers History Pioneers Papert, Seymour...... Whether or not Papert's Knowledge machine or his little schools become a Relinquishingcontrol may prove challenging given that change in education at the turn
http://www.stemnet.nf.ca/~elmurphy/emurphy/papert.html
THE CHILDREN'S MACHINE
Rethinking School in the Age of the Computer

by Seymour Papert, 1993
Basic Books, New York Children, computers, and learning: these are the themes Papert weaves together in The Children's Machine . According to Papert, we are entering the "age of learning" during which time the "competitive ability is the ability to learn". It is the revolution in technology that has simultaneously brought about the need for improvements in learning as well as providing the opportunity to improve "learning environments". New technologies will enhance learning particularly for children through "the creation of personal media capable of supporting a wide range of intellectual styles". Papert's philosophy of learning contrasts sharply with his depiction of schools' epistemology. According to Papert, schools should favour a more "partial", "qualitative", "interconnected" "personal", "concrete", "intuitive" "nonformalized" way of knowing. He draws on the field of Cybernetics with its epistemology of "managed vagueness" that considers "ways to make the best use of limited knowledge". "Bricolage" or tinkering is the idea he evokes to describe an image of "improvisational" learning with "self-directed activities" that ressemble play and that simulate "the way children learn in non-school settings".

80. Time Machine 2: Search For Dinosaurs By David Bischoff
to track down this creature and photograph it, which may prove once and The TimeMachine series challenges young readers to use their imagination and decision
http://www.ipicturebooks.com/pda/bischoff_searchfor.html
larger image
You need the free Microsoft Reader to view this book.
Title: Time Machine 2: Search for Dinosaurs
Author: David Bischoff
eISBNs: 1-58824-432-6
Price: $3.99
The archaeopteryx was a prehistoric creature that many scientists believe was the first bird. Your mission: to track down this creature and photograph it, which may prove once and for all whether or not birds descended from dinosaurs. But to do this, you have to travel back in time to the Mesozoic era, the age of the dinosaurs! The Time Machine series challenges young readers to use their imagination and decision-making skills to write their own story. Options in the text allow readers to choose any path they like within the plot. Readers must draw on background information about the period to make the right choices. This makes the series a great educational device for youngsters to learn about history and all the different cultures, events, and periods that shaped it. David Bischoff has written several books in the Time Machine series. Home About ipicturebooks.com

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