Several vendors are working to improve the throughput of laser-welding machines and the process of reducing stress in the welds. |
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Another point to be tackled is the claim that charging machines only account for five per cent of withdrawals. |
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Or it could sell home machines through warehouse clubs like Costco or BJ's, which are very successful in moving upscale merchandise. |
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Washing machines replaced the wash tub and their mechanical agitators replaced women poling their clothes in steaming, sudsy water. |
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Midland road wideners are specialized machines designed to place material to the side of a lane and spread at a specified profile. |
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As for money, credit cards are widely accepted in most countries and cash machines are increasingly commonplace. |
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He listens to the oxygen machines hum and burble and gasp, the humidifier wheeze, the buzz of the fluorescent light in the hall. |
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Our exercise machines are post-hole diggers, shovels, rakes, push mowers, and wheelbarrows. |
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The only recorded fault on any of the machines in October was on Wednesday October 20 when one of the machines would not accept coins. |
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Horse players are now being treated like the mugs who jam their money into slot machines. |
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The very reason we spend money on things like soap and washing machines is that we trust the dirt is temporary and can be washed away. |
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Perhaps students, instead of wasting money on machines, could just get a washboard and do their clothes in the kitchen sink. |
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He realised that the answer to his business problems was to provide machines that made real coffee with fresh milk. |
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In the days before we all had washing machines people used to send their clothes to a laundry. |
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Today the clean, cool lines of its refrigerators and washing machines help boost its sales around the world. |
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It launched as an online CD store, but now hawks everything from washing machines to clothing. |
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The most popular warranties cover washing machines, dishwashers, televisions and so on. |
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There's a separate section for metal items, like washing machines, fridges and microwaves. |
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Two houses have been rebuilt so far, with Iraqis supplying washing machines, refrigerators and furniture. |
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Previous trips have involved wholesale deliveries of washing machines, bikes, computers, clothes and food. |
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Due to the poor electricity supply, it is not possible to use either refrigerators or washing machines. |
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Criminal groups commonly target 'air gapped' machines with malware delivered via USB stick. |
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Instead, they're investing the money in washing machines, refrigerators, cars, and houses. |
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It is the ballots that were not counted because the machines could not read them that are important. |
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Do not run the hot tap or use dishwashers, washing machines or other appliances fed by the hot water supply. |
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Consider as an example the watermarking of currency, so that scanners and photocopy machines will recognize a bill and refuse to scan it. |
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Swimming pools, diving boards, wave making machines, water slides and many other attractions were on offer on the night. |
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By 1812 Jefferson had three threshing machines in operation, two powered by horses and one by a waterwheel. |
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Since there is no guarantee that these machines will be benign, it is vital we find a way to remain in control. |
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Unlike burning coal or oil, wave and wind machines do not spew sulphur and cause acid rain. |
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The shriveled black olives are then vacuumed up with machines that look like street cleaners. |
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The machines are adaptable to either single or multiple filling operations. |
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The other incident involved a jet-skier who had got into difficulties and we would urge people to take extra care when using these machines. |
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The machines at our disposal in the Home Ec room began their existence as treadle models that at some point had been wired for electricity. |
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Incredibly powerful, fast machines spit flames as they race each other over a very short, straight course. |
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In 1782, Watt developed a rotary engine that could turn a shaft and drive machinery to power the machines to spin and weave cotton cloth. |
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Dawnus provided machines to prepare the site and supplied concrete, aggregate, timber and manpower. |
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Growth in mass markets, combined with the development of textile machines, gave dominance to factory production of cloth, knitwear, and lace. |
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There were serious mountain bikers and some very fancy machines and plenty of average joes and joannes on their deadly treadlies. |
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I wanted to take it into a whole rock show direction, but I wimped out because the whole sound is based around drum machines. |
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He has literally kept some of our offices and machines working by duct tape and force of will alone. |
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Those cute floppy paws are like that because they're spring-loaded killing machines, ideal for thwacking seals to death. |
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The madcap machines from blockbuster film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang are winging and trundling their way to Bradford. |
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Instead they pumped the water which turned the wheels which powered the machines. |
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Sewing machines brought mass-produced shoes in standard sizes and ready-to-wear clothes within universal reach. |
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They had several original Enigma machines, and the better part of a rebuild of Colossus, the first ever electronic computer. |
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Vending machines offer the advantages of convenience, hygiene and consistency in taste. |
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Volunteers have then been given the necessary training to use the machines in advance of an ambulance arriving. |
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Access to the transparent buildings reproduced a feeling of knowledge, knowledge of the inner workings of both machines and humans. |
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This includes large white goods like washing machines, carpets and furniture. |
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The pruning machines were simply reciprocating cutters or flails mounted on a tractor. |
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The malware records passwords and keystrokes once users of infected machines visit targeted websites. |
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The tops of the washing machines are covered by a jungle of well-watered pot plants. |
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The best person that has ever worked with my cutting machines is a boy only 18 years old, who never did a stroke of work in his life before that. |
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Experimentation on large wind machines continued in the U.S., France, Germany, Great Britain and Denmark. |
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As we are a school, it is insane having a lab where 4-6 machines are not working at one time. |
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These machines drove the market and eventually, a year after they were out, all of them had our BASIC built-in. |
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The marina will have a wet dock and gallery with equipment and machines to carry out repair works. |
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The main banks have reciprocal agreements that allow each other's customers to use cash machines free of charge. |
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He talked to her as the machines worked, repairing the damage that his blast had wreaked. |
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The lack of a jukebox, dancefloor or fruit machines is in keeping with the York Brewery theme of pubs for drinking, eating and talking. |
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Four of these machines were built and had a long and useful life hauling large components for Airbus airliners. |
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Gaming amenities include over 900 state-of-the-art slot machines, 30 table games, keno and a sports book. |
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The machines were also light enough in weight to be frequently hauled through the tunnels and operated on top of flatbed rail cars. |
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And over the next few years, as the costs shrink, wind machines will likely grow in number and in size. |
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Most budget machines come with at least a read-only drive, which is necessary as most software is supplied on CD-Rom. |
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The sounds of machines whirring and bells ringing could be heard as far away as a city block. |
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Over the past decade, 500 wind machines have sprouted around the little hamlet, which lies 15 miles from Zaragoza. |
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I managed quite well and could've gone on longer only I had other infernal machines of torture to subject my poor, aged body to. |
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They are asking producers for keyed ignition switches, tracking systems and machines with homing devices. |
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All the door staff were primed to leap into action when the ticket machines recognised the 10-millionth visitor and were waiting for the moment. |
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He looked back at the counter where a blonde haired girl was busy working the machines. |
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It will take them two days, using machines, to wash up the china and cutlery. |
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Cash machine crime is increasing in Surrey and there have been incidents of cards being cloned after thieves tampered with machines. |
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States, led by the killing machines of Texas and Florida, are putting to death women, children, the sick, and the mentally ill. |
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Protein machines convert the free energy of adenosine triphosphate binding and hydrolysis into work. |
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The best thing you could do for yourself would be to find a gym with the recumbent cycle machines. |
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For this majority, having costume changes, confetti cannons, wind machines, fake blood, stage diving and a laser light show is a welcome change. |
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They have books, books on tape, whoopee cushions, comedy cassettes, slot machines, and generally over 500 varieties of liquid refreshment. |
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They have electricity only during the day, when sewing machines buzz in the craft centre and Khmer pop songs emanate from radios. |
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She was told the machines were not working and that she must come back on another day. |
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An Opportunity has arisen in the Coventry area for a skilled wirer that involves working with injection mould machines. |
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The internal workings of the machines cannot be examined by citizens, political opponents or technology experts. |
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Because of problems with radiotherapy machines, some patients were having to wait 12 weeks for treatment after first seeing the radiotherapist. |
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Our eventual aim is to display the complete history of computing, from the abacus to the latest machines. |
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There are several different machines that recognize audio, whether it is speech or music. |
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Heavy machines then pounded and abraded them to make the surfaces smooth and uniform. |
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The Senate has also approved a Small Turbine Investment Credit for homeowners who install residential wind machines, which the AWEA supports. |
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When the library was started, the Stanford University computing center was a little building with keypunch machines and a line printer. |
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The first were time card machines in the early 20th century, which automated factory workers clocking in and out. |
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There were so many machines and servers whirring away in the background I may as well have stayed at my desk. |
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He began by repairing bicycles and agricultural machines and also manufacturing cutters and reapers. |
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Its hard cheeses are handcrafted in open vats by qualified cheesemakers, not machines. |
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Ironically, the dunes remaining are not the ones from which the famous aeronauts tried their flying machines. |
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For now, however, users would do well to exercise extreme caution in updating their machines. |
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Computer manufacturers routinely gave machines to schools at a discount or without cost, but adapting them to educational purposes proved difficult. |
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He said the truck would be used to transport diesel and other lubricants to the underground drilling machines, as well as reclaim used oil from them. |
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The government reassures us that cash machines will not run dry, and that supermarkets will have enough supplies between Christmas and the New Year. |
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However, if he also keeps the commitment to buy new helicopters from Eurocopter, this will mean that in a couple of years Bulgaria will have 36 machines. |
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But modernity, its machines, objectivity and industry, produced its counterfoil within Holmes as well. |
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Retailers have entered the terminals and the vending machines offer everything from deodorant to iPads. |
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Lovins said that three-quarters of all wind machines sold in the world come from Denmark and he was sure that Taiwan could make inexpensive wind machines. |
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Labels similar to those attached to fridges, freezers, washing machines, dishwashers, and other white goods will appear in car showrooms from 1st September. |
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Business machines were drab, bare-bones affairs that could connect to the Internet, manage to run a spreadsheet and a word processor at the same time, and that's about it. |
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Some 5-10 million machines will be produced next year, analysts reckon. |
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The three machines stolen in yesterday's theft were used by pupils for word processing, databases and spreadsheets as well as Internet access for research. |
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With small machines, the core plates are keyed direct to the shaft. |
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The routine, workaday books that keep rolling off printing machines and that one lives and works with today share very little of that quality, or that sensibility. |
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Traffic police in Wiltshire are urging motorcyclists to ensure they take extra care on the roads as they wheel their machines out at the start of the season. |
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Its wind machines, each with blades 100 feet long, together generate 40 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 32,000 households in Denmark's bustling capital. |
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All of today's video machines, like video poker, video blackjack, and video keno, operate using the same microprocessor technology and randomized sequencing as slot machines. |
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Besides a full complement of table games, keno and poker, there are more than 2,300 slot and video gaming machines, including an exclusive high limit slot pavilion. |
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Looking for a rec center with an acre of cardio and weight machines like the ones used at the Beijing Olympics? |
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It also harkened back to Ada Lovelace, who asserted that machines would be able to do almost anything, except think on their own. |
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John Logie Baird, television innovator, with lots of pictures of Baird and his wonky machines, including a diagram of the early TV studios at Crystal Palace. |
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Water tanks, wind machines and a furnace surrounded the centre. |
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By the way, the machines work like any other ATM unless the customer pushes a button to request a human teller. |
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How would this ragtag bunch of different machines play together? |
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The machines are put together largely from non-aircraft components. |
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The initial collections displayed Cambodian menu photo rejects and paper found in copy machines. |
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American field kitchens arrived with everything to cater to the raw hunger of battle, including ice cream machines. |
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Some machines have a special wool cycle for wools and similar material. |
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With files shared among a large number of workstations, it becomes imperative that machines have their clocks synchronized so that file time stamps are globally comparable. |
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The switch last fall from the punch-card ballots to the optical scanner machines allows a voter to complete an absentee ballot and feed it into the machine immediately. |
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As was the case with so many other businesses, it turned out that machines could do the job more quickly and cheaply. |
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Endless images of wholesale destruction and the war machines that brought it about blurred the boundary between reality and fiction, the normal and the horrific. |
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Commanders may also control huge mechanical war machines, devastating artillery and gigantic starships as they attempt to obliterate their adversaries into space dust. |
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In a back room, video poker machines ding and chirp with the occasional squeal of delight from a winner. |
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Registered clubs have been on the warpath against NSW Labor since the poker machine tax hikes in 1997, and pubs and Star City Casino were allowed to have poker machines. |
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According to Mr Clare, a staggering 71 out of every 100 washing machines sold with an extended warranty incur claims within three years of purchase! |
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Thus, the SHU was chock full of contraband, because all the x-ray machines were used by the clinics and not the guards. |
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Similarly washing machines have made washermen without jobs. |
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The washing machines could take our entire week's clothes in one go. |
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How ironic that we train our children first to be good, social human beings, only to later demand that they act like acquisitive, productivist, hardhearted machines. |
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Or what if an ingredient in your beer or cocktail machines has gone bad without knowing it? |
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The faster form of river transport is the speedboat, machines that make so much noise as they roar by that passengers wear crash helmets to drown out the racket. |
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When they're both going, it's like watching two thrashing machines, one crashing the ball through gully and point and the other lifting anything within reach over mid wicket. |
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For many years each of these steps was an individual process, requiring teams of workers and many machines. |
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Other threshing machines would discharge grain from a conveyor, for bagging by hand. |
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Both the older and modern machines require a good deal of effort to operate. |
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Threshing machines appear in Twenty One Pilots' music video for the song House of Gold. |
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An undershot water wheel turned by the mill fleam on the west side of the new mill drove the spinning machines. |
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Luddites feared that the time spent learning the skills of their craft would go to waste as machines would replace their role in the industry. |
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Computer knowledge has also become greatly valued within the industry as most of the machines and safety monitors are computerized. |
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The danger of being beneath the machines meant that they had to constantly pay attention to its movements in order to avoid serious injury. |
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Further, early sentences by magistrates against the rioters, even those who destroyed threshing machines, were fairly light. |
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Sir, This is to acquaint you that if your threshing machines are not destroyed by you directly we shall commence our labours. |
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Modern mechanized hay production today is usually performed by a number of machines. |
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Prior to the introduction of cheap photocopying the use of machines such as the spirit duplicator, hectograph, and mimeograph was common. |
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After some difficulty, he was able to leave England with descriptions and models of the machines used. |
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He learned of the American interest in developing similar machines, and he was also aware of British laws against exporting the designs. |
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Construction of the machines was completed in 1793, as well as a dam, waterway, waterwheel, and mill. |
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Manufacturing was based on Richard Arkwright's cotton spinning system, which included carding, drawing, and spinning machines. |
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The mill owners recruited young Yankee farm girls from the surrounding area to come work the machines at Waltham. |
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The owners recruited young New England farm girls from the surrounding area to work the machines at Waltham. |
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It actually took eight years to deliver the order, as Whitney perfected and developed new techniques and machines. |
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Dogs were sometimes used on machines such as a treadmill, which could be adapted to churn butter. |
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The women usually minded the four machines and kept the looms oiled and clean. |
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Employing some 200 people, its primary purpose was the design, manufacture, installation and commissioning of continuous casting machines. |
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Bobbins are typically found in sewing machines, cameras, and within electronic equipment. |
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The tunnel was the proving ground of a number of boring machines for the shot holes, using gelignite to blast the rock. |
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The idea of self-willed machines, which could decide to take over the world, scares all the people smart enough to create such devices. |
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These slot machines are just the small fry. The big games are in the back room. |
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Bubble machines sparge water for platform diving competitions to lessen the impact. |
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In addition to the Enigma ciphers, a number of other telecipher machines were used for high-level communication. |
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No ubiquitous telephones, no fax machines or computers burping and tweeping and chirping their electronic chirps. |
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After acidy digest of samples, the amount of considered elements was measured by the atomic absorption machines and photometer fleme. |
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The gambler's chances of winning at blackjack, craps, roulette and even the slot and videopoker machines vary greatly among the casinos. |
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Because we cannot vire money between budgets, we buy more machines than we need, but cannot pay anyone to run them! |
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Those old machines are not very glamorous, but even 20 years after their introduction, they are still the workhorses of the industry. |
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In the future, will machines end the need for employment and lead to a workless society? |
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Cordon off a few key machines and the assembly line cannot function. |
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The OSCE said the back-ups would ensure the full-time operation of computers plus fax and passport checking machines. |
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Number 10 Bomber-Reconnaissance Squadron on the east coast flew Wapitis, an aircraft only modestly superior to WWI machines. |
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Specifically, the lawsuit challenges the use of voting machines and absentee voting in elections for public office. |
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Festo has published a new whitepaper to help designers improve the electro-pneumatic control of their machines. |
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Wilmington will also unveil its NextGen series of large-platen machines for molding large solid and foam parts weighing up to 150 lb. |
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Wilmington plans to add wood-filled foam machines of 500, 750, 1000, and 2500 tons. |
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The industrial wind machines weren't to contain his infamous combover thatch, however. |
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In addition, it should be trying to wind machines, the original cost have less and must be installed in places that have inflated considerably. |
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Apart from this, the other problem she faces is sweating, due to which she needs to have wind machines blowing air around her constantly. |
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As they are unzipped and swept away by powerful wind machines, hair becomes freed, and make up is wiped away. |
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Gosling contrasted this to the symbiotic relationship of operating system and hardware inherent in Wintel machines. |
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Some 45 workers slaved over the machines in two half-day shifts. |
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For more about Qingdao Tianyang Machinery puzzle machines and dies, steel rule dies and custom dies, visit www. |
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A very simple but common abuse occurs when consumers fail to change the default password on home answering machines. |
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Most dialers cannot detect answering machines with high accuracy and still comply with the two-second rule. |
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On most Unix machines, according to Moffitt, to upgrade the OS requires administrators to quiesce the box and go into single-user mode. |
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They are suspected of carrying out ram raids on ATM cash machines across the region. |
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For its next four years, the new firm occupied one of Weed's buildings, milling thousands of screws daily on over 50 machines. |
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The machines were not yet accurate enough to give useful results. |
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These companies are heartless, soulless, money-making machines. |
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The Secretary of State, upon the installation of the addressograph machines, was to reduce the temporary service. |
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Our machines have shown us the uninhabited heavens while parting the angelless clouds. |
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On the Hong Kong system, three types of changemaking machines are likely to be installed in each station, for varying value coins. |
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These machines, whilst not removing as much flesh as a skilled filleter, do process greater quantities of fish in a given time. |
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Washboards went the way of the dinosaurs when washing machines became commonplace. |
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It can highlight our embodiment, a qualitative step away from the hallmark machines that work so resolutely to disembody us. |
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In 1743 a factory opened in Northampton with 50 spindles on each of five of Paul and Wyatt's machines. |
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As the Industrial Revolution progressed, machines with metal parts and frames became more common. |
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Some lost hands or limbs, others were crushed under the machines, and some were decapitated. |
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Threshing machines were a particular target, and hayrick burning was a popular activity. |
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Precision manufacturing techniques made it possible to build machines that mechanized the shoe industry. |
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Wider machines may have the wings supported by individual wheels and have hinge joints to allow flexing of the machine over uneven ground. |
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Cotton processing in other parts of the world increased, often on machines produced in Manchester. |
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Second, new machines, especially the rotary press, allowed the printing of tens of thousands of copies a day at a low cost. |
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The first jamming operations were carried out using requisitioned hospital electrocautery machines. |
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This time, Vincent... became an unwitting lab rat for a vaccine that turned soldiers into hyperaggressive killing machines. |
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The early mills were narrow and low in height, of light construction, powered by water wheels and containing small machines. |
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While Babbage's machines were mechanical and unwieldy, their basic architecture was similar to a modern computer. |
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To this day, Turing machines are a central object of study in theory of computation. |
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Babbage was never able to complete construction of any of his machines due to conflicts with his chief engineer and inadequate funding. |
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These machines move autonomously while collecting surface dust and debris into a dustbin. |
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Two of the earliest Budding machines sold went to Regent's Park Zoological Gardens in London and the Oxford Colleges. |
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These were heavy machines that took several hours to warm up to operating pressure. |
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After numerous advances, these machines were sold by the Stott Fertilizer and Insecticide Company of Manchester and Sumner. |
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About this time, an operator could ride behind animals that pulled the large machines. |
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On petrol machines the engine drives both the cylinder and the rear roller. |
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Universal motors also lend themselves to electronic speed control and, as such, are an ideal choice for devices like domestic washing machines. |
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Until the Stagecoach takeover, ticketing was done via ticket machines provided by Abberfield Technology of Australia. |
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Fare tables were shown on the machines with the validity of the different prices. |
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When Stagecoach took over South Yorkshire Supertram it removed the ticket machines and began selling tickets on board. |
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Periodicals are also frequently sold through newsagents and vending machines. |
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Around the early 1990s new technology and more powerful machines overcame this problem. |
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These weapons were vulnerable to fire from the castle as they had a short range and were large machines. |
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It also includes several passages about hypothetical flying machines and submarines, attributing their first use to Alexander the Great. |
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Coffee bars had jukeboxes, which in some cases reserved space in the machines for the customers' own records. |
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Since digital memcomputing machines map integers into integers they are robust against noise, and hence scalable. |
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Common training equipment includes free weights, rowing machines, jump rope, and medicine balls. |
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He continued his involvement in motorcycling, participating in classic events with bikes from his stable of vintage racing machines. |
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The company combines participation in motorcycle races throughout the world with the development of high potential racing machines. |
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Moto Guzzi produced competitive race machines, and by 1957 nearly all the Grand Prix races were being won by streamlined machines. |
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Fighter Command had been at its lowest ebb, short of men and machines, and the break from airfield attacks allowed them to recover. |
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But now that human capital is scarcer than machines, widespread education has become the secret to growth. |
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Where natural substances had previously been understood organically, the mechanical philosophers viewed them as machines. |
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Their final aircraft design, the Silver Dart, embodied all of the advancements found in the earlier machines. |
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Clarke produced modern classics which focus on the interaction between humans and machines. |
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Art Nouveau did not eschew the use of machines, as the Arts and Crafts Movement did. |
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Both designers used machines for the first phases of manufacture, but all the pieces were finished by hand. |
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The railways did provide opportunity too with one Riverside company selling their reaping machines as far afield as Syria and Australia. |
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Power to the machines was provided by a large steam engine via overhead shafting and belts. |
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It is known that they were also capable of building and operating mining equipment such as crushing mills and dewatering machines. |
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Farming was originally simple and organic, but underwent major changes after the Second World War as machines came into widespread use. |
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Gill was commissioned to develop a typeface with the number of allographs limited to what could be used on Monotype or Linotype machines. |
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New techniques were invented to allow mixing of the music, as this was before the era of multitrack tape machines. |
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It was reported to have an annual capacity factor of 32 percent, not much different from current wind machines. |
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Downwind machines have been built, because they don't need an additional mechanism for keeping them in line with the wind. |
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Power and riches appear then to be, what they are, enormous and operose machines contrived to produce a few trifling convenencies to the body. |
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This unit is typically used to express the output power of engines and the power of electric motors, tools, machines, and heaters. |
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The casino features slot machines, blackjack, roulette, and poker facilities. |
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The machines are designed for Offshore wind power in Brittany, the UK, and Normandy. |
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This gave them a paper strength of 254 machines, about the equivalent of an armoured division. |
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However, the use of graduated pressure machines has never gained widespread acceptance in clinical practice. |
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Now everyone rushes up along and down along to no purpose and if you ask me it all started wi' they pedally machines. |
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In the 18th and early 19th centuries Western scientists developed flying machines based on the Chinese toy. |
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Competitors use this surface to slide their machines sideways, powersliding or broadsiding into the bends. |
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Heinkel stayed in business by making bicycles and mopeds, while Messerschmitt made sewing machines and automobile parts. |
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The first milking machines were an extension of the traditional milking pail. |
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Once all of the milking machines have been removed from the milked row, the milker releases the cows to their feed. |
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The use of the obsolete machines was gradually phased out as the new models were phased in. |
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Almost all the industrial machines used in modern farming are powered by fossil fuels. |
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Industrial societies rely heavily on machines powered by fuels for the production of goods. |
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By the late 18th century several working machines had been built and patented. |
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They assaulted the embankment, preceding their assault with volleys from slings and spears thrown by machines. |
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At that time Ainsworth had been manufacturing and selling poker machines in NSW for nineteen years. |
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Lotteries, horse-racing and poker machines loom large in the life experience of many Australians. |
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Stick machines are sometimes used, which coat the stick with paste and perfume, though the bulk of production is done by hand rolling at home. |
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There are a few internationally linked automated teller machines that accept Visa cards in Freetown operated by ProCredit Bank. |
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Along the way, Japanese put machines on a pedestal, cherished and befriended them. |
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While more formal design processes in the US, Germany and the United Kingdom failed to develop competitive machines. |
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This is unattractive in Artificial Intelligence, as it requires a computation over abstract Turing machines. |
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Such manipulation of the tax, and therefore the vote, created an opportunity for the rise of urban bosses and political machines. |
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In 1586 Flemish engineer Simon Stevin derived the mechanical advantage of the inclined plane, and it was included with the other simple machines. |
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He was the first to understand that simple machines do not create energy, they merely transform it. |
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The idea that a machine can be decomposed into simple movable elements led Archimedes to define the lever, pulley and screw as simple machines. |
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The modern approach to characterizing machines focusses on the components that allow movement, known as joints. |
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Human and animal effort were the original power sources for early machines. |
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After electrification, when most small machinery was no longer hand powered, mechanization was synonymous with motorized machines. |
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Before long, the machines could automatically change the specific cutting and shaping tools that were being used. |
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Devices that fabricate components by selective addition of material are called rapid prototyping machines. |
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Numerous inventors in the textile industry such as John Kay and Samuel Crompton, suffered harassment when developing their machines or devices. |
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Edward Cave, a publisher, obtained a licence and set up machines in a warehouse in London. |
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This carding technology of Lewis Paul and Daniel Bourn seems to be the basis of later carding machines. |
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In 1748 Lewis Paul of Birmingham, England, invented two hand driven carding machines. |
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Modern machines are driven by belting from an electric motor or an overhead shaft via two pulleys. |
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These machines generally have two rollers, or drums, covered with card clothing. |
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From 1825 the steam engine was able to power larger machines constructed from iron using improved machine tools. |
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Moody used a system of overhead pulleys and leather belting, rather than bevel gearing, to power his machines. |
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Once the weaver has made their circuit of the front of the machines, they will then circle around to the back. |
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However, there are a number of inherent dangers in the machines, to which inattentive or poorly trained weavers can fall victim. |
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Also, due to possible pinch points on the front of machines, loose, baggy clothing is prohibited. |
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However, even with such guidelines in place, injuries in textile production, due to the machines themselves, are still commonplace. |
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Metalworking lathes evolved into heavier machines with thicker, more rigid parts. |
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Fully automatic mechanical lathes, employing cams and gear trains for controlled movement, are called screw machines. |
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Evans struggled to find the money to pay the highly skilled carpenters needed to construct his complex machines. |
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They designed the patterns of the water wheel systems, carved their gear mechanisms, and finally erected the mill machines. |
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The operating system of such machines is a closed loop system and functions on feedback. |
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With the declining price of computers and open source CNC software, the entry price of CNC machines has plummeted. |
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There is a high degree of standardization of the tooling used with CNC milling machines, and a lesser degree with manual milling machines. |
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For manual milling machines, there is less standardization, because a greater plurality of formerly competing standards exist. |
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