Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 44 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 5328 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 illustration 9 wire 9 current 9 New 9 Fig 8 internet 8 York 8 Telegraph 8 Mr. 8 England 8 Company 7 United 7 London 6 circuit 6 States 6 Atlantic 5 Bell 5 America 4 system 4 battery 4 Western 4 Vail 4 University 4 St. 4 Professor 4 Paris 4 Morse 4 Electric 4 Boston 4 August 3 time 3 message 3 magnet 3 information 3 computer 3 Wireless 3 Wheatstone 3 Washington 3 Union 3 Thomson 3 September 3 President 3 Newfoundland 3 Network 3 Mrs. 3 Marconi 3 March 3 John 3 Great 3 General Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 5293 wire 5242 line 4811 time 4446 current 3952 circuit 3309 coil 3162 system 3024 battery 2680 telephone 2601 end 2514 day 2489 year 2467 cable 2162 illustration 2091 part 2080 man 2065 way 2052 number 2015 work 1979 resistance 1741 contact 1736 message 1673 telegraph 1660 letter 1618 magnet 1597 case 1587 station 1559 plate 1554 use 1495 machine 1493 wave 1456 power 1452 tube 1452 lamp 1441 water 1416 service 1409 point 1381 connection 1369 form 1332 side 1324 place 1281 iron 1266 hand 1264 file 1248 name 1227 one 1217 switch 1217 armature 1216 mile 1194 length Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 21496 _ 3200 Fig 3195 Mr. 2191 Edison 1667 New 1456 Morse 1217 York 1137 | 1017 M. 960 Company 944 Telegraph 828 Electric 812 Field 795 n. 736 Atlantic 729 England 721 Bell 643 London 639 Professor 607 States 607 C 601 United 581 America 552 W. 439 Washington 417 Europe 414 C. 412 UNIX 397 Great 395 Western 366 American 348 University 346 St. 346 A 343 John 342 Government 338 . 334 Paris 334 General 327 Sir 319 Telephone 318 August 316 Dr. 315 B 307 Newfoundland 304 Vail 298 July 296 President 294 Boston 289 Set Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 22489 it 11301 i 9905 he 8520 you 5635 we 5068 they 3301 them 2653 him 2089 me 1146 us 828 she 689 itself 680 himself 422 one 372 themselves 340 her 260 myself 138 yourself 101 yours 74 ''s 65 ourselves 33 herself 31 mine 17 theirs 17 his 12 ours 9 its 8 thee 7 rn 6 oneself 6 current.--where 4 u 4 parents,--i 4 > 3 troff(1 3 ''em 2 ye 2 y 2 up:-- 2 portsmouth.--morse 2 o 2 made.--to 2 howling.--where 2 hers 2 ftp 2 battery.--this 2 .1 1 |which 1 your 1 ucmp1.berkeley.edu Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 88852 be 21791 have 6584 make 5875 do 5672 use 3853 see 3366 give 3173 show 3031 connect 2901 take 2849 say 2751 go 2734 call 2463 get 2394 find 2374 send 2134 know 2095 come 2020 receive 1670 pass 1522 follow 1436 write 1396 become 1374 set 1306 work 1294 require 1195 leave 1184 bring 1142 carry 1124 run 1111 put 1092 think 1059 produce 1027 keep 1017 place 1016 tell 983 describe 942 move 917 start 912 seem 878 provide 868 hold 864 include 864 cause 859 hear 854 read 850 turn 849 want 840 form 838 operate Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 10137 not 5364 other 4088 more 3938 so 3814 up 3223 great 3176 first 3034 very 3020 also 3006 then 2941 only 2923 out 2703 now 2552 same 2534 many 2373 long 2329 as 2278 well 2070 such 2014 much 1998 large 1977 good 1973 most 1924 small 1905 electric 1778 high 1628 thus 1588 current 1490 new 1455 just 1366 even 1364 however 1329 little 1304 about 1248 few 1153 down 1135 back 1102 again 1062 still 1057 here 1048 short 1015 therefore 1014 own 1014 on 989 too 983 far 969 never 961 several 953 necessary 936 next Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 601 good 492 most 353 least 283 great 172 Most 157 high 139 large 114 simple 73 early 59 near 58 late 53 small 44 bad 42 slight 42 long 40 low 36 fine 35 cheap 29 short 29 deep 27 strong 24 easy 20 old 17 eld 17 close 16 young 15 busy 14 heavy 14 able 13 quick 13 grand 12 dark 11 warm 11 fast 10 farth 10 big 9 rich 9 pure 9 minute 9 manif 8 noble 7 keen 7 happy 7 full 6 new 6 loud 6 lively 6 clear 6 bright 5 wild Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1481 most 104 least 96 well 3 near 1 ¦ 1 worst 1 shortest 1 echotest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 3 www.archive.org 2 gallica.bnf.fr 2 digital.library.villanova.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://gallica.bnf.fr 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44462/44462-h/44462-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44462/44462-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34765/34765-h/34765-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34765/34765-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/wirelesstransmis00martuoft 1 http://www.archive.org/details/storyofatlantict00fielrich 1 http://www.archive.org 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:269146 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 13 opresno@extern.uio.no 12 mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu 10 ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com 8 listserv@ndsuvm1.bitn 6 service@nic.ddn.mil 6 mailer@vm1.nodak.edu 5 nuts@ora.com 5 service@nic.ddn.mil 5 listserv@vm1.nodak.edu 5 listserv@vm1.nodak.edu 4 mail-server@nisc.sri.com 4 eric@snark.thyrsus.com 4 brendan@cs.widener.edu 4 adamg@world.std.com 4 listserv@finhutc.bitn 3 yourname@site.name 3 spaf@cs.purdue.edu 3 mids@tic.com 3 lsimpson@cs.widener.edu 3 jpolly@nysernet.org 3 joe@ee.someplace.edu 3 jm@south.america.org 3 info@psi.com 3 info@clarinet.com 3 eff@eff.org 3 brad@looking.on.ca 3 archive-server@cs.widener.edu 3 listserv@kentvm.kent.edu 2 wtm@bunker.shel.isc-br.com 2 wcvb@aol.com 2 voxbox@globe.com 2 user@site.name 2 user@attmail.com 2 sysop@news.ci.net 2 postel@isi.edu 2 pistserv@vm1.nodak.edu 2 ottawa-citizen@freenet.carleton.ca 2 oracle@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu 2 odin@pilot.njin.net 2 nnsc@nnsc.nsf.net 2 nightly@nbc.com 2 netlib@uunet.uu.net 2 netdir@mcsun.eu.net 2 mg@gracie.com 2 listserv@ulkyvm.bitn 2 listserv@ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu 2 kaminski@netcom.com 2 joinkids@vms.cis.pitt.edu 2 help@cerf.net 2 help@carl.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 202 _ do n''t 15 line is busy 12 line is not 11 current does not 11 wire is then 10 circuit is closed 10 circuit is open 10 current sets up 10 edison has always 9 telephone is not 8 currents set up 8 edison did not 7 cable was not 7 current is not 7 line is idle 7 time was not 6 cable was successfully 6 circuit is not 6 current set up 6 end is not 5 _ is not 5 battery is always 5 battery is not 5 current is available 5 current is so 5 current sent out 5 edison has never 5 edison was not 5 line was complete 5 system does not 5 time goes on 4 _ is one 4 _ is so 4 _ see _ 4 _ see d 4 cable going out 4 circuit is directly 4 circuits are normally 4 circuits are so 4 circuits are somewhat 4 circuits connected together 4 coil is generally 4 current is on 4 current is sufficient 4 currents are not 4 currents do not 4 currents make use 4 day is not 4 number does not 4 system does n''t Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 line is not busy 2 current is not satisfactory 2 day is not far 2 end is not yet 2 time is not far 2 time was not yet 1 _ are not synonyms 1 _ had no legal 1 _ have no electrical 1 _ is not available 1 _ is not sin 1 _ is not yet 1 _ shows no current 1 _ was not so 1 batteries are not just 1 batteries is not as 1 battery has no metallic 1 battery has not enough 1 battery is not necessary 1 cable be not successfully 1 cable is not already 1 cable is not dead 1 cable was not enough 1 cable was not heavy 1 cable was not only 1 circuit be not complete 1 circuit is no longer 1 circuit were not ideal 1 circuits is not subject 1 coil is not very 1 coils are not yet 1 coils be not movable 1 contact is not so 1 contacts are not so 1 current be not very 1 current is not very 1 currents are not simple 1 day has not yet 1 day is no doubt 1 day is not so 1 day were not adequate 1 days was no longer 1 edison did not then 1 edison had no control 1 edison had no trouble 1 edison has no inclination 1 edison has no interest 1 edison has no opinion 1 edison was not only 1 edison was not satisfied A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15617 author = American School of Correspondence title = Cyclopedia of Telephony and Telegraphy, Vol. 1 A General Reference Work on Telephony, etc. etc. date = keywords = American; Bell; COTTON; Company; Dean; Electric; Fig; Figs; Kellogg; SINGLE; Station; Switchboard; Telephone; Western; circuit; current; illustration; line summary = the subscriber''s station closes the line circuit, causing current to current and the inductance of a circuit (a line or piece of direct current flowing over the telephone line will pass through these In the case of a simple bar electromagnet, such as is shown in Fig. 90, the lines of force emerging from one end of the bar must pass back receiver in the line circuit that the steady current from the battery in the same light as that of the impedance-coil circuit shown in Fig. 131, and to consider that the voice currents originating in one line In Fig. 164 there is shown a metallic-circuit series line on which _Circuits of Two-Party Line Telephones._ In Fig. 175 is shown in line relay at the last station brings into circuit the coil _8_, Figs. currents will pass out over the circuit of the line connected with the id = 33437 author = American School of Correspondence title = Cyclopedia of Telephony and Telegraphy, Vol. 2 A General Reference Work on Telephony, etc. etc. date = keywords = Company; Electric; Fig; Kellogg; Telephone; Western; battery; circuit; illustration; jack; line; office; operator; relay; subscriber; switchboard; system summary = Circuit--Lamps--Mechanical Signals--Relays--Jacks--Switchboard the line connected through to the calling relay and battery. normal connection with ground and the battery and the line relay. _Testing--Called Line Idle._ Having now shown how the operator connects operator and in turn controlling the connection of the line relay with operator inserts a plug into the jack of the line, the relay _2_ which operates to cut off the line relay and to complete the connection If, upon testing the multiple jack of the called subscriber''s line, the left and the called subscriber''s line in the second office is shown at connection with the relays of the called subscriber''s line in just the connection with the subscriber''s line shown in the second office, and _A_-operator''s calling plug had been connected directly with the line of subscriber''s line in one office, through an _A_-operator''s cord circuit when the operator plugs into the jack of the line called, relay _5_ is id = 27257 author = Anderson, Frederick Irving title = Electricity for the farm Light, heat and power by inexpensive methods from the water wheel or farm engine date = keywords = battery; current; dynamo; foot; illustration; lamp; light; plant; power; water; wheel; wire summary = knowledge of electricity for use as light, heat, and power on the water-horsepower will furnish light and power, and do the ironing and electric end, and his neighbor the water-power, has been running now country where a farmer has plenty of water-power--because his current Finally, as to the added value a water-power electric plant adds to Small amount of water required for an electric plant--Exploring, on do--The water wheel and the dynamo--Electricity consumed the who makes use of the energy of falling water to generate electricity for every pound of gasoline, the engineer of the water-power plant a constant speed, so that electric lights made from water-power do not large, and the proportion of power between water wheel and dynamo is water wheel, or engine, power as the electrical rating of the dynamo. water-power electric plant. loss of current in wiring, we have 900 watts of electricity to use, id = 27469 author = Anonymous title = Radio Shack TRS-80 Expansion Interface: Operator''s Manual Catalog Numbers: 26-1140, 26-1141, 26-1142 date = keywords = Interface; trs-80 summary = The TRS-80 Expansion Interface (see Figure 1) consists of the Case, a The Case houses the Expansion Interface Printed Circuit Board (PCB), connect the Expansion Interface to the TRS-80. The Cassette Recorder Jumper Cable has 5-pin audio DIN connectors on It connects between the Expansion Interface Tape The Cassette Recorder Cable is provided to connect the Expansion The Interface allows you to add the following Radio Shack modules to Power Supplies and Future Expansion PCB NOTE: INSTALL EXPANSION INTERFACE DC POWER SUPPLY =FIRST=.] Place the TRS-80 and Expansion Interface Hoods (14000217 and 14000214) the right rear of the TRS-80 and connect both AC Power Cords to Connect the Cassette Recorder Cable (DIN plug on one end and three rear of the Expansion Interface nearest the Power Cord exits. Connect the Cassette Recorder Jumper Cable to the center DIN connector TRS-80 Expansion Interface, the Line Printer and the Mini-Disk id = 27832 author = Anonymous title = Zenith Television Receiver Operating Manual date = keywords = UHF; VHF; Zenith summary = (including television picture tubes) in any Zenith black and white Zenith television receiver or parts or tubes or transistors thereof. to any receiver for which a Zenith warranty registration card has not =PERMA-SET TUNING CONTROL (VHF) NOTE:= Your Zenith has the new Perma-set 2. Turn VHF perma-set tuning knob until there is no picture. 3. Then turn perma-set tuning knob back slowly for best picture and First, turn VHF CHANNEL SELECTOR to "UHF" Position. Tuning Control for desired UHF Channel. =NOTE:= The brightness control setting for the picture shown in Figure 2 =NOTE:= The contrast control setting for the picture shown in Figure 3 is Make the transmission line lengths from the diplexer to the VHF and UHF The diplexer is designed for use with a combined VHF-UHF antenna system NOTE: Always connect the diplexer assembly with coil terminal to VHF VHF ANTENNA TERMINALS ON TV SET] id = 303 author = Anonymous title = HomeBrew HomePages Put YOU on the World Wide Web date = keywords = web summary = HomeBrew HomePages Put YOU on the World Wide Web The zip file homeb10.zip should contain all the material necessary to make a Web Page (c)1995 This is a Shareware Web Page you can use to make other Web Pages with for your own use, please read all files!!!!!!!!! id = 36877 author = Anonymous title = Emerson Radio Model 39 Warranty Card date = keywords = Emerson summary = (_Model 39_)] PARIS LONDON MOSCOW BUENOS AIRES] on the airplane-type dial of a completely modern Emerson Auto-Radio will gladly demonstrate an [Illustration: _Emerson_ ROUND-THE-WORLD _Radio_ Complete with tubes.] FIFTEEN VARIED EMERSON MODELS TO SUIT EVERY TASTE AND PURPOSE. EMERSON RADIO GUARANTEE REGISTRY CARD Model_________________ Serial No_________________ Date_____________ ninety day guarantee from date of purchase. Kindly state below how you like the performance of your Emerson Radio: IMPORTANT--CUSTOMER''S WARRANTY We warrant each new Emerson Radio Receiver to be free from defect in returned, transportation charges prepaid, to the Emerson Radio & dealer to his customer, the defective part will be replaced and any This warranty does not apply to any receiver which has been subject to Neither does it apply to any receiver, the serial number of Warranty material is repaired or replaced. EMERSON RADIO and PHONOGRAPH CORP. EMERSON RADIO and PHONOGRAPH CORP. 111 Eighth Avenue, New York City id = 44462 author = Bennett, R. A. R. (Reginald Arthur Renaud) title = How to Make Electrical Machines Containing Full Directions for Making Electrical Machines, Induction Coils, Dynamos, and Many Novel Toys to Be Worked by Electricity date = keywords = FIG; end; illustration; inch; piece; screw; wire summary = inch thick and fasten it firmly by four screws at the ends to the base It now only remains to fasten several small pieces of brass wire about at the opposite end a small piece of brass rod two and a half inches from the magnet another current is generated in the coil of wire, but round the armature to hold the coils of wire in their proper place, the a battery and connect the wires coming from the magnet-coil to the The wires from the ends of the magnet-coil go wood into the inside of the box), and the end of the wire from the coil Take two small pieces of brass wire about an inch long, and turn up the the strip of brass supporting the screw being connected by a wire the strip of brass supporting the screw being connected by a wire id = 39053 author = Bottone, Selimo Romeo title = Electric Bells and All About Them: A Practical Book for Practical Men date = keywords = Fig; Leclanché; battery; bell; contact; illustration; magnet; screw; wire summary = the two free ends of the wire be placed in metallic contact with the current flows round it_." If contact between the battery wires and the oxide forms the basis of one of the most useful cells for electric bell working of the bell by connecting up the binding screws with the wires as shown in Fig. 17, viz., the left-hand binding-screw with the wire bell, Fig. 34, the wires from the electro-magnet are connected directly wires, one from the battery, the other from the bell, are connected to to use, in the way of batteries and wire, to ring such a bell. that of a _single bell, battery, and push_, connected by wire only. means of one of the wires to the zinc pole of the battery, the push or our own bell out of circuit, but make contact between our battery and bell, and thence to the _main battery zinc wire_ on the shaft. id = 46105 author = Bright, Charles, Sir title = The Story of the Atlantic Cable date = keywords = Agamemnon; Atlantic; August; Bright; Charles; Company; Eastern; England; FIG; Great; Mr.; Newfoundland; Niagara; Sir; Telegraph; Thomson; Valentia; cable; illustration summary = S.S. Great Eastern Completing the Second Atlantic Cable 199 Anglo-American Atlantic Cable (1894): deep-sea type 217 a cable was laid for some time--and proved a permanent success, forming laying a long length of cable in depths of over two miles across an open start cable-laying, the ships remained at anchor in the bay till noon we had laid 136 miles of cable, the Niagara having reached was not enough cable left to complete the work, nor was there time to All the 3,000 miles of cable was coiled into the two large ships by the The end of the Niagara''s cable was sent on board the Agamemnon, the The great length of cable on board both ships allowed a large Mr. Bright, having landed the end of the Atlantic cable at The capital raised for the new cable by the Atlantic Telegraph Company Great Eastern took the end on board, and having spliced on to her cable id = 819 author = Casson, Herbert Newton title = The History of the Telephone date = keywords = Bell; Boston; Chicago; Company; Gray; Hubbard; New; Sanders; States; Union; United; Vail; Watson; Western; York; american; man; telephone; wire; year summary = the magnificent building of the New York Telephone Company stands to-day The Bell Telephone now took its place with the Telegraph, the Railroad, a reorganization; and the American Bell Telephone Company was created, Bell Company offered him a salary of ten thousand dollars a year to Reis instrument years before Bell invented the telephone; but they still costing the telephone companies several millions a year. has been the use of copper wire since then by the telephone companies, thousand families, to put the telephone wires in place and protect them But the wire chiefs of the Bell telephone have charge of as opened up the way to such an expansion of telephone business as Bell, thousand independent telephones were linked by wire to the nearest Bell of wire communication, which later grew into New York''s first telephone telephones the news over one wire to ten or twelve newspapers at one id = 6934 author = Collins, A. Frederick (Archie Frederick) title = The Radio Amateur''s Hand Book A Complete, Authentic and Informative Work on Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony date = keywords = Aerial; Coil; Fig; Receiving; Set; Telegraph; Transmitter; Tube; Vacuum; Wireless; connect; current; illustration summary = Leak Amplifying Receiving Set With Vacuum Tube Detector--A Radio Fig. 27.--Wiring Diagram for Complete Sending and Receiving Set No. 2 Fig. 27.--Wiring Diagram for Complete Sending and Receiving Set No. 2 Fig. 38.--Three Electrode Vacuum Tube Detector and Battery Connections (B) Fig. 41.--Wiring Diagram of a Simple Vacuum Tube Receiving Set Fig. 43.--Crystal Detector Receiving Set with Vacuum Tube Amplifier (A) Fig. 44.--Vacuum Tube Detector Receiving Set with One Step Fig. 85.--Wiring Diagram of Short Distance Wireless Telephone Set. your receiving set must not only be connected with the aerial wire, _vacuum tube oscillator_, (4) a _tuning coil_, and (5) a _condenser_. aerial wire with your sending and receiving set, can be connected to results are had when it is connected to one end as shown at A in Fig. 4, in which case it is called an _inverted L aerial_, or when it is A Grid Leak Amplifying Receiving Set With Vacuum Tube Detector.--A id = 6935 author = Collins, A. Frederick (Archie Frederick) title = The Radio Amateur''s Hand Book A Complete, Authentic and Informative Work on Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony date = keywords = Aerial; Coil; Fig; Receiving; Set; Telegraph; Transmitter; Tube; Vacuum; Wireless; connect; current; illustration summary = Leak Amplifying Receiving Set With Vacuum Tube Detector--A Radio Fig. 27.--Wiring Diagram for Complete Sending and Receiving Set No. 2 Fig. 27.--Wiring Diagram for Complete Sending and Receiving Set No. 2 Fig. 38.--Three Electrode Vacuum Tube Detector and Battery Connections (B) Fig. 41.--Wiring Diagram of a Simple Vacuum Tube Receiving Set Fig. 43.--Crystal Detector Receiving Set with Vacuum Tube Amplifier (A) Fig. 44.--Vacuum Tube Detector Receiving Set with One Step Fig. 85.--Wiring Diagram of Short Distance Wireless Telephone Set. your receiving set must not only be connected with the aerial wire, _vacuum tube oscillator_, (4) a _tuning coil_, and (5) a _condenser_. aerial wire with your sending and receiving set, can be connected to results are had when it is connected to one end as shown at A in Fig. 4, in which case it is called an _inverted L aerial_, or when it is A Grid Leak Amplifying Receiving Set With Vacuum Tube Detector.--A id = 80 author = De Presno, Odd title = The Online World date = keywords = Amiga; BBS; BITNET; Business; DOS; Data; Europe; Forum; IBM; Inc.; Information; International; Japan; Mail; Network; News; North; Norway; Online; Procomm; U.S.A.; World; computer; file; internet; message; service; text summary = Many online services let you send messages as fax (to over 15 The cost of reading a given news item varies by online service. The cost of reading local news on national online services Experienced users regularly clip news from online services, and Some online services send free user information manuals to their magazines full of search tips, information about new sources, user sources of information, and regularly read about new services. For details on new services, enter READ PB99# or HELP followed by the Some online services let users retrieve conference messages bulletins, databases, conferences, messages, news services, public Many online services let you send electronic mail as fax messages. The FTP command gives access to a special file transfer service. three online services, retrieve and send information. also offer other services (like news, data base searches, and Online services offer databases that users can search to find id = 31407 author = Delco-Remy Corporation title = Delco Radio Owner''s Manual Model 633; Delcotron Generator Installation date = keywords = Delco; control summary = This model of the Delco Radio is a six-tube super-heterodyne receiver The speaker and remote control unit are supplied in separate packages This receiver may be installed on any car with Positive or Negative This position places the control shafts on the end of the case facing antenna lead and control unit may be temporarily connected for this The volume control and station selector shafts are AUTOMATICALLY (volume control is upper bushing when receiver is installed in the car), Connect the ammeter condenser to the spring clip at the end of the wire receiver case beside the antenna lead connection. by the small cap, adjust the Delco Syncro-Tuning condenser unit for station selector for maximum volume and readjust the Delco Syncro-Tuning Some control units have a small knob located below the center of the When the control is turned to the DISTANCE position the receiver is id = 29461 author = Digital Equipment Corporation title = Preliminary Specifications: Programmed Data Processor Model Three (PDP-3) October, 1960 date = keywords = Accumulator; Code; Program; Register summary = single address, single instruction machine operating in parallel on 36 The address portion of the Memory Buffer Register communicates with the Index Adder, the Memory Address Register, and the Program instruction, thus, the address portion of the Memory Buffer is connected The Program Counter holds the memory location of the next instruction to The Instruction Register receives the first six bits of the Memory The six Sense Switches allow the operator to manually select program Buffer Register, the Arithmetic Element, and the Memory Addressing Operating times of PDP-3 instructions are normally multiples of the address an index register for memory-type instructions. is in the shift and rotate instructions in which the memory address the memory register containing the indirect address also has a 1 in bit Program Counter is indexed one extra position and the next instruction For each In-Out Transfer instruction, six lines of paper tape are read id = 37237 author = Digital Equipment Corporation title = Digital PDP15 Price List, April, 1970 date = keywords = Control; TWX; dw15a; yes summary = DIGITAL PDP15 PRICE LIST; April 1970 with KSR-35 Teletype--PC15 required $17,800 $172.00 Yes with KSR-35 Teletype--PC15 required $17,800 $172.00 Yes TC02D DECtape control for 3 DW15A 20 240 5,400 Yes RP15 Disk Pack Control for None 100 450 18,000 Yes LT19E Line Unit LT19A 2 120 800 Yes DB98A PDP-15 (9 or 9/L) to 3,4 DW15A 15 250 7,000 Yes DB98A PDP-15 (9 or 9/L) to 3,4 DW15A 15 250 7,000 Yes AA15A Multiplexer Control 2,600 Yes AAC2 Digital-to-Analog AA15 350 Yes AF01B 6-12 Bit Analog-to3 DW15A 8 240 5,000 Yes AH02 One-Channel of AF01B 6 150 500 Yes ADC1/9 6-12 Bit Analog-to3 DW15A 8 160 3,265 Yes A111 2-Channel Multiplexer AM03 2 40 93 Yes 146 Main Street, Maynard, Massachusetts, U.S.A. 01754 · Telephone: 130 Allens Creek Road, Rochester, New York 14618 1100 West Valley Road, Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087 3417 Milam Street, Suite A, Houston, Texas 77002 id = 33154 author = Dolbear, A. E. (Amos Emerson) title = The Telephone An Account of the Phenomena of Electricity, Magnetism, and Sound, as Involved in Its Action date = keywords = FIG; current; electricity; illustration; magnet; sound; wire summary = _Phenomena of Electricity, Magnetism, and Sound,_ electricity sent through the wire, the soft iron would become a magnet, closed, originated a current of electricity in the wire, the direction If the magnet be thrust into the coil, a current of electricity magnetism induces a current of electricity through the wire in the origin to a current of electricity when it is made to approach a magnet magnetic; and, second, a current of electricity will be generated in the revolves, a current of electricity is produced; and if the magnet be The pitch of a sound depends wholly upon the number of vibrations per sound is simply in the number of vibrations of the air reaching the ear tuning-fork giving 256 vibrations per second: the sound will be that of the sounds of musical instruments, are formed in air, the resulting wave telephony,--namely, electricity, magnetism, and sound,--it remains to The well-known re-actions of magnets upon electrical currents, first id = 118 author = Electronic Frontier Foundation title = Big Dummy''s Guide to the Internet date = keywords = Bitnet; DOS; Free; IRC; U.S.; University; Unix; Usenet; command; computer; enter; file; information; internet; look; mail; message; net; site; system; type summary = for his "PDIAL" file in the alt.bbs.lists or news.answers newsgroups in the basics, you''ll be able to use e-mail to access databases and file your public-access site will tell you whether you have new mail the file and hit enter, type the number of the message you want to see posting to a file, for example, you''ll have to use some Unix commands if directory (at the command line, type: cd News) for a file called Hitting a capital C sends out a new message that tells host Usenet message or e-mail, and when you or your recipient reads the file, If you want to get more information on the first line, type 1 and hit enter: ftp.eff.org The pub/Net_info directory has a number of subdirectories containing various Internet resources guides and information ftp.uu.net Look for MS-DOS programs and files in the let you select files and programs from ftp sites this way. id = 34765 author = Field, Henry M. (Henry Martyn) title = The Story of the Atlantic Telegraph date = keywords = Agamemnon; America; Atlantic; August; Bay; Captain; Company; Eastern; England; Field; Government; Great; Ireland; John; London; Mr.; New; Newfoundland; Niagara; St.; States; Telegraph; United; Valentia; York; cable summary = rather the signal-tower from which the New World may speak to the Old. And yet, though large as England, and so near our coast, few Americans from New York on the eighteenth of July, 1856, and the very next day Mr. Field left on the Baltic for England, to organize the Atlantic Telegraph First, as to the possibility of laying a cable in the deep sea, Mr. Field had witnessed one attempt of the kind--that in the Gulf of St. Lawrence the year before--an attempt which had failed. Atlantic cable!" Little did he think that ten years after, that ship the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company to Ireland, by "The successful laying down of the Atlantic Telegraph Cable is new cable, thirty-nine miles of that lost the year before, which had the whole Atlantic cable on board the Great Eastern. id = 38526 author = Fleming, J. A. (John Ambrose), Sir title = Hertzian Wave Wireless Telegraphy date = keywords = Fig; Marconi; Mr.; Professor; Vol; aerial; circuit; electric; hertzian; illustration; wave; wire summary = induction coil; K, signalling key; S, spark gap; A, aerial wire; E, oscillations are set up in the wire and electric waves are radiated aerial at each half oscillation, forming the electric discharge or SEMI-LOOP OF ELECTRIC STRAIN BY A MARCONI AERIAL RADIATOR.] induction-coil discharge, and the lower end of the long spiral wire is condenser, electrical energy is discharged each time the spark discharge passes at a spark gap in the form of electrical oscillations electrical oscillations in an aerial wire. in the receiving aerial by the impact on it of the electric waves. radiating electric waves, so the receiving-station appliances may be A good metallic filings tube for use as a receiver in Hertzian wave transformer in the aerial receiving circuit.[57] In this arrangement, such an earthed aerial, when electrical oscillations are set up in it, induction coil; S, spark gap; A, aerial; CC, condensers; E, earth id = 250 author = Fuller, Maxwell title = A Brief History of the Internet The Bright Side: The Dark Side date = keywords = Etexts; Gutenberg; Information; Project; Shakespeare; United; chapter; internet; year summary = otherwise get a public domain book onto the Internet, you This is why SOME people fear the new Internet: other the Internet to control it, and the 40 million people who free access to the Internet for so long want to do an Internet Monopoly thing to ensure that what was free, The Internet Conquers Space, Time and Mass Production... The Internet Conquers Space, Time and Mass Production... The Internet Conquers Space, Time and Mass Production... Think of the time and effort people save simply by being and people want to limit this flow of information. on the Internet starting 24 years ago: and maybe reading of all things, electronic books, and, for the first time, to the Internet Public Library, as many have come to call it. I have said for years that by the time computers get as far into Right now there are 40-50 million people on the Internet-- id = 75 author = Goodwin, John E. title = E-mail 101 date = keywords = message summary = Send message "help" to "almanac@oes.orst.edu". mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu:/etext/articles (general info) "politics@whitehouse.gov" will send you message to all members of the Aside: Usenet newsgroup FAQ''s are archived at "rtfm.mit.edu". To access the archive by E-mail, send the message "help" to send mail/mailing-lists/part5 send mail/mailing-lists/part5 send mail/mailing-lists/part5 send mail/mailing-lists/part5 send mail/mailing-lists/part5 A Guide to Social Newsgroups and Mailing_Lists: For a more complete list of FAQs, send the commands: send usenet/news.answers/index send usenet/news.announce.newusers/index rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet-by-group/news.answers; and rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet-by-group/news.announce.newusers. Also posted as an FAQs to the Usenet newsgroup news.answers. You can send mail to an entire list and Send the message "help" to any listserver address, e.g. Try sending the command "lists global" to one of Send any message at all to address "all-info@psi.com". send usenet/news.answers/internet-services/faq send usenet/news.answers/internet-services/list csd4.csd.uwm.edu:/pub/inet.services.txt rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet-by-group/news.anwsers/internet-services Send the message Send the message Send the message Send a message to "info-deli-server@netcom.com" with the command Alternatively, send the message "send usenet/news.answers/pdial" to id = 49769 author = Hawkins, N. (Nehemiah) title = Hawkins Electrical Guide v. 03 (of 10) Questions, Answers, & Illustrations, A progressive course of study for engineers, electricians, students and those desiring to acquire a working knowledge of electricity and its applications date = keywords = Wheatstone; armature; circuit; coil; current; fig; galvanometer; illustration; resistance; wire summary = resistance box--testing sets--direct deflection method with Queen Acme heavy wire; a long coil galvanometer is wound with a large number of turns being of low resistance is used to measure the current, and the long coil [Illustration: Fig. 511.--Connections of single coil astatic needles. [Illustration: Fig. 512.--Connections of double coil astatic needles. standard resistances consisting of coils of insulated wire having low Ans. Connect the terminals of the resistance to be measured to the line current, it is connected in the circuit _in series_ as shown in fig. Ans. These are extra resistance coils which are connected in series with the instrument be used for measuring _current_, the coils are connected in or resistances arranged to shunt the current across the field coils. or in the short wires connecting the field coils to the terminals or Ans. The terminals, brush holders, commutator, armature coils and field id = 66 author = Joly, Norman F. title = The Dawn of Amateur Radio in the U.K. and Greece: A Personal View date = keywords = Athens; Bill; British; Cairo; George; Greece; Greek; London; Marconi; Ministry; Radio; SV1AB; U.S.A.; Wireless; amateur; station summary = The dawn of amateur radio in the U.K. and Greece: a personal view radio activity in Greece before World War II. So ended the first phase of amateur radio activity in Greece. officially the existence of radio amateurs in Greece. first Greek amateur to have two-way contacts using radio telephony, established on the 50 MHz band by the Greek experimental station SZ2DH Two days later ZE2JV contacted George Vernardakis SV1AB and this southern hemispheres began organizing tests on 50,144,220 and 432 MHz. Within less than a year successful 2-way contact was established the early days of amateur radio in Russia and the story of the Greek about the first radio amateurs in Greece, and he asked me if I would contact with radio amateurs, while studying Electrical Engineering. Germans from Athens, British troops began landing in Greece from Greek station of the British Post Office which operated around 10MHz, id = 34 author = Kehoe, Brendan P. title = Zen and the Art of the Internet date = keywords = Computer; FTP; Network; UUCP; University; Unix; Usenet; address; information; internet; mail; system; user summary = a person''s email address on a computer: user@somewhere.domain list---usually an email address that redistributes all mail sent to (Usenet News) an extensive list of sites offering anonymous FTP Users limited to email connectivity to the Internet should send a lists, and archive sites for the most popular Usenet newsgroups. USENET Messages and RFC-977, Network News Transfer Protocol: A A natural progression is for Usenet news and electronic mailing lists person posting the article, including their email address, phone Many people, particularly new users, want to try out posting before Usenet that frequent the test groups to help new users out. comp.internet.library (Usenet News to learn how to read provide multi-user chat, email, Usenet news, and a variety of other community with access to lists of information---users, organizations, Usenet News for more information RFCs for information on obtaining RFCs. A mailing list, nren-discuss@uu.psi.com, is available for !@%:: A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing and Networks id = 39 author = Krol, Ed title = Hitchhiker''s Guide to the Internet date = keywords = BSD; NIC; RIP; internet; network summary = experimental network connecting hosts and terminal servers RFC-791, The Internet Protocol) must be implemented on any host backbone, regional network, and Internet inter-connection Before a local network can be connected to the Internet it octet as a network address and the remaining three as a host In the past sites requiring multiple network addresses Information on how to reach a particular network (routing information) must be stored in Internet gateways and packet Gateways exchange network routing information. Routing is the algorithm by which a network directs a packet RIP is a routing protocol based on XNS (Xerox Network machine on a network with multiple RIP speaking gateways. names and one or more network addresses (connections) to network with multiple gateways, and a host sends a RFC-947 * Multi-network Broadcasting within the Internet RFC-974 Mail Routing and the Domain System RFC-1009 Requirements for Internet Gateways Network Information Center (NIC) id = 34052 author = Martin, Marcus J. title = Wireless Transmission of Photographs Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged 1919 date = keywords = Fig; illustration summary = Wireless Apparatus--Preparing the Photographs--Transmitting Photograph of line screen and metal print } means of the lens, N, to a point upon the photographic film. camera, between the lens and this plate, a single line screen is by means of the wireless apparatus in use at the present time. screen having 50 or more lines to the inch, the transmitting apparatus, as ordinary relays in general use to work satisfactorily at such a high speed, Fig. 17, for photographically recording wireless signals, the current size of the metal print used; the number of lines per inch on the screen relay U connected to the wireless receiving apparatus works the sensitive photographic plate, and the object of this screen is to break the image up distance of the screen lines from the photographic plate is 64 times the A photograph of a picture prepared from a line negative is given in Fig. 61. id = 39272 author = Martin, Thomas Commerford title = The inventions, researches and writings of Nikola Tesla With special reference to his work in polyphase currents and high potential lighting date = keywords = Motors summary = Phosphorescence and Sulphide of Zinc 367 Physiological Effects of High Frequency 162, 394 Polyphase Systems 26 Polyphase Transformer 109 Pyromagnetic Generators 429 Regulator for Rotary Current Motors 45 Resonance, Electric, Phenomena of 340 "Resultant Attraction" 7 Rotating Field Transformers 9 Rotating Magnetic Field 9 Royal Institution Lecture 124 Scope of Lectures 119 Single Phase Motor 76 Single Circuit, Self-Starting Synchronizing Motors 50 Spinning Filament Effects 168 Streaming Discharges of High Tension Coil 155, 163 Synchronizing Motors 9 Telegraphy without Wires 246 Transformer with Shield between Primary and Secondary 113 Thermo-Magnetic Motors 424 Thomson, J. J., on Vacuum Tubes 397, 402, 406 Thomson, Sir W., Current Accumulator 471 Transformers: Alternating 7 Magnetic Shield 113 Polyphase 109 Rotating Field 9 Tubes: Coated with Yttria, etc. Coated with Sulphide of Zinc, etc. Unipolar Generators 465 Unipolar Generator, Forbes 468, 474 Yttria, Coated Tubes 187 Zinc, Tubes Coated with Sulphide of 367 id = 820 author = Martin, Thomas Commerford title = Edison: His Life and Inventions date = keywords = .June; American; Apparatus; Battery; Bell; Boston; Company; December; Distribution; Dynamo; Edison; Electric; England; General; Gould; Huron; Incandescent; Jersey; John; Johnson; Lamp; London; Machines; Menlo; Mr.; New; Orange; Paris; Park; Patent; Phonograph; President; Printing; Regulator; States; Street; System; Telegraph; Union; United; Western; York; time; work summary = subdividing the electric-light current, and in the public press Mr. Edison was denounced as a dreamer. employ of the Edison Electric Light Company and became actively engaged lamps, Edison says: "When we first started the electric light we had to The organization of the Edison Electric Light Company went back to 1878; of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company of New York, just south of Edison Electric Light Company to continue under the original plan of the Edison Electric Light Company, published in ordinary 12mo form, was great General Electric Company of to-day, a combination of the Edison, patents to the Edison General Electric Company, recently formed by put into practice in the great works at Edison, New Jersey. made at a time when Edison was greatly occupied with his electric-light the Edison patents (General Electric Company), but the 150,000,000 Thus, throughout the life of Edison''s patents on electric light, power, id = 30688 author = Mills, John title = Letters of a Radio-Engineer to His Son date = keywords = Fig; battery; circuit; current; electron; illustration; plate summary = electrons leave the wire to satisfy the positive copper plate. At the negative plate of a battery ions go into solution and electrons Every time this battery pulls an electron from the plate its negative current by using more batteries in series in the plate circuit so as to Every time the battery takes an electron away from the positive plate battery calls electrons away from the condenser plate which it is making to happen to the stream of electrons in the plate circuit? electrons and that will make the current in the plate circuit still When the plate current stops, the condenser in the grid circuit is current in the plate circuit of our audion at the receiving station is When the current in the plate circuit is large all the electrons which current in the plate circuit passes through a little coil, _L_{t}_, id = 11017 author = Morse, Samuel Finley Breese title = Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume I. date = keywords = Academy; Allston; America; August; Boston; Bristol; Charleston; December; Dr.; England; English; Europe; France; General; Haven; January; July; King; Lafayette; Leslie; London; March; Morse; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Paris; President; Rome; September; St.; Washington; West; York; letter summary = Jedediah Morse was a man of note in his day, known and respected at home time a letter is to be paid for, then comes up a great tax from the class in New Haven that I have not time to think of one of my old friends. The following extract from a letter to Morse written by his friend, Mr. Jeremiah Evarts, father of William M. Going back a few days in point of time, the following letter was written His friend Leslie, in a letter from London of May 7, 1816, writes: "Mr. West said your picture would have been more likely than any of them to live at home with his family, and find time to paint some of the great Success in New York.--Chosen to paint portrait of Lafayette.--Hope of a Success in New York.--Chosen to paint portrait of Lafayette.--Hope of a id = 11018 author = Morse, Samuel Finley Breese title = Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume II date = keywords = Academy; Alfred; America; Atlantic; Congress; Design; Dr.; England; Europe; F.O.J.; France; Gale; General; George; God; Government; Henry; House; January; John; Kendall; London; March; Morse; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Paris; Professor; September; Smith; St.; States; Telegraph; United; Vail; War; Washington; York summary = at the time of the invention of Morse''s telegraph." years, it was gradually superseded by the Morse telegraph which proved Mr. F.O.J. Smith had, in the mean time, returned to America, and Morse Morse alone doing any work.--Encouraging letter from Professor Henry.-Morse alone doing any work.--Encouraging letter from Professor Henry.-This was the second great moment in the history of the Morse Telegraph. PROFESSOR MORSE,--As an assistant in the telegraphic experiment "At the end of a week Professor Morse returned from New York and came to purposes.--Letters to his brother Sidney.--Telegraph matters.--Mexican purposes.--Letters to his brother Sidney.--Telegraph matters.--Mexican discoveries bearing on the telegraph, and of his own inventions, Morse Goes to Dresden.--Trials financial and personal.--Humorous letter to E.S. Sanford.--Berlin.--The telegraph in the war of 1866.--Paris.--Returns to Goes to Dresden.--Trials financial and personal.--Humorous letter to E.S. Sanford.--Berlin.--The telegraph in the war of 1866.--Paris.--Returns to Morse and America the great invention of the telegraph was due. id = 979 author = Munro, John title = Heroes of the Telegraph date = keywords = America; Atlantic; Bell; Company; Cooke; Dr.; Edison; England; Hughes; Jenkin; London; Morse; Mr.; New; Paris; Professor; Royal; Siemens; Sir; Society; St.; States; Telegraph; Thomson; United; University; Vail; Wheatstone; William; York summary = applied by Morse in his electro-magnetic printing telegraph. The electric telegraph, like the steam-engine and the railway, was a electricity had taken a certain time to travel from the ends of the wire mechanical vibration of rods, and took up the electric telegraph. In 1870 the electric telegraph lines of the United Kingdom, worked by The length of line through which Morse could work his apparatus was the invention to be at work in France within two years, and when Morse working telegraph in 1839; the idea of a submarine line across the current TIMES: ''It is a great work, a glory to our age and nation, electrical condition of the telegraph wire into intelligible signals. To introduce his apparatus for signalling on long submarine cables, Sir year he laid the first great underground telegraph line from Berlin to electric telephone was thought about some years before it was invented. id = 49 author = Polly, Jean Armour title = Surfing the Internet: An Introduction Version 2.0.2 date = keywords = Center; FTP; Guide; Library; Network; Veronica; information; internet; list summary = discussion lists, electronic journals and texts, and resources available Join EFF to be added to the mailing list or ftp the files yourself from and Internet Resource Guide, and a gateway to other library systems. An FTP visit to the Network Service Center at nnsc.nsf.net (128.89.1.178) provide an electronic directory service for locating information in an gopher items, immediately accessible via the gopher client just doubleclick to open directories, read files, or perform other searches -across includes a full suite of internet activities (mail, news, ftp, telnet). Services offered by The World include internet electronic mail, For a list of Internet Service Providers contact: networks, Free-Nets, subscription services, and where to get more information ftp to NIC.MERIT.EDU /internet/resources. Internet connectivity and software that does file transfers via FTP. Internet connectivity and software that does file transfers via FTP. New-List, the List of Lists, and the Internet Interest Groups file." id = 56 author = Polly, Jean Armour title = NREN for All: Insurmountable Opportunity date = keywords = NREN; National; internet; library summary = -access to digital libraries of information, both textual and graphic. Library of Congress-to collect information on dinosaurs. library act as electronic information access centers, providing public Why the Public Library is a good place for NREN access 1. Books and other library resources should be provided for the 2. Libraries should provide materials and information Public libraries will offer access to all Public libraries also provide "free" services, though in fact the costs Why NREN in the Public Library is a bad idea The public library may find itself servicing of information resources and services electronically." "In this scenario, the public library will develop and mount services public libraries need NREN. "digital libraries" of electronic information. Public Libraries and the INTERNET/NREN: New Challenges, New Opportunities. the Publication Office, School of Information Studies, Syracuse The U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Technology Policy on Library and Information Services'' Roles in id = 12375 author = Towers, Walter Kellogg title = Masters of Space Morse and the Telegraph; Thompson and the Cable; Bell and the Telephone; Marconi and the Wireless Telegraph; Carty and the Wireless Telephone date = keywords = Atlantic; Bell; Boston; Carty; England; Marconi; Morse; New; Professor; Thomson; Union; Vail; Wheatstone; York; american; telegraph; telephone summary = DOCTOR BELL AT THE TELEPHONE OPENING THE NEW YORK-CHICAGO LINE, cable, the telephone, the wireless telegraph, and, most recently, the using small, easily concealed wireless telegraph or telephone sets for telegraph, remained in use for a long time on some English lines. Magnetic Telegraph Company was formed and work started on the line. the telegraph as invented by Morse but one message could be sent over telephone, Bell was experimenting with a sort of musical telegraph. telephone to transmit messages with the Morse code by means of long The telephone which Bell had invented, and on which he received a Great as are the possibilities of the telegraph and the telephone in experimenting with a telephone along a telegraph line a curious telegraph than the telephone, so the apparatus used in wireless telephone line had been put in operation, Carty had his wireless wire telephone, the new wonder has great possibilities as a supplement id = 4742 author = Vaknin, Samuel title = TrendSiters Digital Content and Web Technologies date = keywords = RTF summary = Copyright (C) 2007 by Lidija Rangelovska. Please see the corresponding RTF file for this eBook. RTF is Rich Text Format, and is readable in nearly any modern word processing program. id = 45331 author = Woodhull, John F. (John Francis) title = The Library of Work and Play: Electricity and Its Everyday Uses date = keywords = Electric; Harold; ampere; circuit; current; electricity; fig; illustration; light; time; wire summary = wire around iron cores in the dynamo, in electric bells, in telegraph by an electric current sent through coils of wire, and it has an armature whose magnetism is likewise produced by the electric current. We put into the circuit a lot more fine wire for resistance, _R_ (Fig. 54), so that the volt meter needle went only half as far as before, an electric current passing through a wire coiled around an iron core, This piece of iron wire offered resistance to the flow of the electric first heated by sending the electric current through resistance wire the battery cell at the same time, so that the electric current may wires bringing an electric current from the dynamo we may make either circuit impede the electric current ten times as much as the resistance thus sending an electric current through the wire, the magnetized id = 22766 author = Zerbe, James Slough title = Electricity for Boys date = keywords = Fig; current; end; illustration; magnet; wire summary = Circuit wires in direct current dynamo 152 dynamo could be made operative by means of the electro-magnetic current; electricity flows through the wire, the bar is magnetized. arises is, why an electric current flowing through a wire, under those EXTERIOR MAGNETIC INFLUENCE AROUND A WIRE CARRYING A CURRENT.--Bear in For example, the wire (A, Fig. 35) is connected up in an electric magnetized bar (B) parallel with the wire (A) when a current is not a current of electricity flows through the coil (B), the magnet will be If a current of electricity is passed through the wires and the GENERATING HEAT IN A WIRE.--When a current of electricity passes through with thin outer ends connected by means of a wire (C) to form a circuit. pointed out how, when a current passes over a wire, it has a magnetic [Illustration: _Fig. 111._ CIRCUIT WIRES IN DIRECT CURRENT DYNAMO] id = 38 author = nan title = The Jargon File, Version 2.9.10, 01 Jul 1992 date = keywords = ASCII; BSD; Berkeley; Book; CMU; Commonwealth; DEC; DOS; EMACS; English; File; IBM; IRC; ISBN; JONL; Jargon; LISP; Law; MIT; MUD; New; PARC; SAIL; Stanford; Sun; Syn; TECO; TMRC; Thing; U.S.; UNIX; USENET; University; VAX; VMS; XEROX; code; common; computer; hacker; internet; pdp-10; program; real; system; term; time summary = "The on-line hacker Jargon File, version 2.9.10, 01 JUL 1992".) compilation called the ''Jargon File'', maintained by hackers themselves examples) UNIX hackers often {grep} for things rather than searching for Hackers tend to use quotes as balanced delimiters like parentheses, much In on-line exchanges, hackers tend to use decimal forms or improper paper) from user-specified text, e.g., by a program such as UNIX''s programming}, but are useful for hackers trying to {monkey up} still used in the UNIX community and by old-time hackers or those program interpreting them to the user (as in, for example, UNIX common, as most UNIX hackers simply refer to the CTY as ''the number of times, by various hackers, and versions exist which run Hackers do *not* generally use this to mean {FUBAR} in Like many early hacker terms, this one seems to have originated at at IBM too) OS means ''operating system'', but among old-time ITS hackers id = 43753 author = nan title = Cyrus W. Field, His Life and Work [1819-1892] date = keywords = America; April; Atlantic; August; Company; Cyrus; December; Eastern; England; Field; Great; July; London; Lord; March; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Newfoundland; November; October; President; September; States; Telegraph; United; Washington; York summary = As soon as he obtained the co-operation of the men mentioned by Mr. Cooper, Mr. Field asked them to meet in the dining-room of his house, was given to the "New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company." Mr. Field sailed for America on December 10th, and arrived in New York The following cable message was sent to Mr. Field by Sir James Anderson lay the cable, and on Mr. Field''s return home he asked the American Field, of New York, for the great services he has rendered the 2d of December, 1867, Mr. Field telegraphed to London that Mr. Bennett was willing to sign a contract with the cable company for one "The _Great Eastern_, with the Atlantic telegraph cable on board, Immediately on his return to New York Mr. Field sold enough of his cable have received by telegraph from Miss Field, New York: