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1 Pascal
m.1 Pascal, Blaise Pascal.2 Pascal, Pascal language.* * *= Pascal.Nota: Lenguaje de programación.Ex. There are other systems also worthy of note such as Oasis and the USCD P-System, the latter being a Pascal-based system (Pascal is a programming language).----* basado en Pascal = Pascal-based.* * *= Pascal.Nota: Lenguaje de programación.Ex: There are other systems also worthy of note such as Oasis and the USCD P-System, the latter being a Pascal-based system (Pascal is a programming language).
* basado en Pascal = Pascal-based.* * *pascal* * *PASCAL, Pascal nmInformát PASCAL, Pascal -
2 basado en Pascal
(adj.) = Pascal-basedEx. There are other systems also worthy of note such as Oasis and the USCD P-System, the latter being a Pascal-based system (Pascal is a programming language).* * *(adj.) = Pascal-basedEx: There are other systems also worthy of note such as Oasis and the USCD P-System, the latter being a Pascal-based system (Pascal is a programming language).
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3 basado
adj.based.past part.past participle of spanish verb: basar.* * *----* aprendizaje basado en la memorización = rote learning.* basado en casos prácticos reales = case-based [case based].* basado en criterios = criteria-based.* basado en datos objetivos = informed.* basado en discos ópticos = optical disc based.* basado en el autor = author-based.* basado en el comentario personal = reportage-based.* basado en el conocimiento = knowledge-based.* basado en el desarrollo de destrezas prácticas = competency based.* basado en el empleado = employee-centered.* basado en el estudiante = student-centred.* basado en el hombre = human-centred [human-centered, -USA].* basado en el microordenador = micro-based.* basado en el objeto = artefact-centred [artefact-centered, -USA].* basado en el papel = paper-based.* basado en el rendimiento = performance-based.* basado en el tiempo = time-based.* basado en el trabajo en equipo = team-based.* basado en el usuario = use-based, client-centred [client-centered, -USA].* basado en facetas = facet-based.* basado en fichas = card-based.* basado en ideogramas = ideographic.* basado en imágenes gráficas = graphics-based.* basado en índices = index-based.* basado en Internet = Internet-based.* basado en la adquisición de contenidos teóricos = content based.* basado en la biblioteca = library-based.* basado en la calidad = quality-oriented.* basado en la colección = collection-centred, materials-centred [materials-centered], collection-based.* basado en la evidencia = evidence based [evidence-based].* basado en la evidencia empírica = evidence based [evidence-based].* basado en la información = information-based, information-intensive.* basado en la inteligencia artificial = AI-based.* basado en la lectura = book-centred.* basado en la OCLC = OCLC-based.* basado en la práctica = empirically-based, grounded in practice, practice-based.* basado en la realidad = reality-based.* basado en las disciplinas del conocimiento = discipline-based.* basado en las imágenes = image intensive.* basado en la tecnología = technologically-based, technology-based, technology-centred [technology-centered, -USA].* basado en la teoría = grounded in theory.* basado en la TI = IT-based.* basado en los costes = cost-based [cost based].* basado en los datos = data-driven.* basado en los objetos = object-specific.* basado en los recursos = resource-based.* basado en manualidades = craft-based.* basado en mapas = map-based.* basado en material impreso = print-based.* basado en microfichas = microfiche-based.* basado en OSI = OSI-based.* basado en Pascal = Pascal-based.* basado en película = film-based [film based].* basado en principios = principled.* basado en tablas = table-driven.* basado en tecnología web = Web-based.* basado en un gestor de bases de datos = DBMS-based.* basado en un método empírico = enquiry-based [inquiry-based, -USA].* basado en un método práctico = enquiry-based [inquiry-based, -USA].* basado en ventanas = window-based.* contrato basado en las diferencias de género = gender contract.* economía basada en el conocimiento = knowledge driven economy.* enseñanza basada en los resultados finales = outcome based education.* estudio basado en un cuestionario = questionnaire survey.* método basado en modelos = modelling approach [modeling approach, -USA].* sistema basado en el conocimiento = knowledge-base system.* sistema basado en las imágenes = image-based system.* sociedad basada en el conocimiento = knowledge based society.* tarifa basada en la utilización de un servicio = traffic-based pricing.* * ** aprendizaje basado en la memorización = rote learning.* basado en casos prácticos reales = case-based [case based].* basado en criterios = criteria-based.* basado en datos objetivos = informed.* basado en discos ópticos = optical disc based.* basado en el autor = author-based.* basado en el comentario personal = reportage-based.* basado en el conocimiento = knowledge-based.* basado en el desarrollo de destrezas prácticas = competency based.* basado en el empleado = employee-centered.* basado en el estudiante = student-centred.* basado en el hombre = human-centred [human-centered, -USA].* basado en el microordenador = micro-based.* basado en el objeto = artefact-centred [artefact-centered, -USA].* basado en el papel = paper-based.* basado en el rendimiento = performance-based.* basado en el tiempo = time-based.* basado en el trabajo en equipo = team-based.* basado en el usuario = use-based, client-centred [client-centered, -USA].* basado en facetas = facet-based.* basado en fichas = card-based.* basado en ideogramas = ideographic.* basado en imágenes gráficas = graphics-based.* basado en índices = index-based.* basado en Internet = Internet-based.* basado en la adquisición de contenidos teóricos = content based.* basado en la biblioteca = library-based.* basado en la calidad = quality-oriented.* basado en la colección = collection-centred, materials-centred [materials-centered], collection-based.* basado en la evidencia = evidence based [evidence-based].* basado en la evidencia empírica = evidence based [evidence-based].* basado en la información = information-based, information-intensive.* basado en la inteligencia artificial = AI-based.* basado en la lectura = book-centred.* basado en la OCLC = OCLC-based.* basado en la práctica = empirically-based, grounded in practice, practice-based.* basado en la realidad = reality-based.* basado en las disciplinas del conocimiento = discipline-based.* basado en las imágenes = image intensive.* basado en la tecnología = technologically-based, technology-based, technology-centred [technology-centered, -USA].* basado en la teoría = grounded in theory.* basado en la TI = IT-based.* basado en los costes = cost-based [cost based].* basado en los datos = data-driven.* basado en los objetos = object-specific.* basado en los recursos = resource-based.* basado en manualidades = craft-based.* basado en mapas = map-based.* basado en material impreso = print-based.* basado en microfichas = microfiche-based.* basado en OSI = OSI-based.* basado en Pascal = Pascal-based.* basado en película = film-based [film based].* basado en principios = principled.* basado en tablas = table-driven.* basado en tecnología web = Web-based.* basado en un gestor de bases de datos = DBMS-based.* basado en un método empírico = enquiry-based [inquiry-based, -USA].* basado en un método práctico = enquiry-based [inquiry-based, -USA].* basado en ventanas = window-based.* contrato basado en las diferencias de género = gender contract.* economía basada en el conocimiento = knowledge driven economy.* enseñanza basada en los resultados finales = outcome based education.* estudio basado en un cuestionario = questionnaire survey.* método basado en modelos = modelling approach [modeling approach, -USA].* sistema basado en el conocimiento = knowledge-base system.* sistema basado en las imágenes = image-based system.* sociedad basada en el conocimiento = knowledge based society.* tarifa basada en la utilización de un servicio = traffic-based pricing. -
4 program
программа, см. тж application || программироватьa program is too big to fit in memory — программа не умещается в отведённой памяти ( машинное сообщение)
- program in- absolute program
- accessory program
- active program
- administration program
- application program
- A-program
- archive program
- assembler program
- assembler-program
- assembly language program
- assembly program
- automatic recovery program
- background program
- benchmark program
- binary program
- blue-ribbon program
- bootstrap program
- brittle program
- C++ program
- C++-program
- called program
- calling program
- cataloged program
- chain additions program
- chain maintenance program
- channel program
- check program
- checking program
- common program
- communication program
- compaction program
- compiled object program
- compiler program
- compiling program
- complete program
- compressor program
- computer program
- concordance program
- concurrent program
- concurrently running programs
- concurrent-scheduling supervisor program
- condensing program
- configuration program
- consulting program
- control program
- conversational program
- conversion program
- copy-protected program
- copyrighted program
- core-resident program
- correct program
- crash-proof program
- curve-fitting program
- data abstraction program
- data access program
- data flow program
- data set utility program
- data-vet program
- debugging program
- decision program
- development program
- diagnosis program
- diagnostic program
- digital simulation program
- disk-resident program
- editor program
- embedded program
- emulator program
- epistemic logic program
- executable program
- executive program
- exerciser program
- externally stored program
- fail-recognition program
- fault-diagnosis program
- fault-location program
- fine-grained program
- fixed program
- foreground program
- format program
- FORTRAN program
- FORTRAN-program
- fragmented programs
- free-standing program
- function program
- gap filling program
- general-purpose program
- generating program
- generator program
- graphic display program
- hardware program
- hardware-maintenance program
- help program
- heuristic program
- high frequency program
- high volume program
- host program
- illustrative program
- impenetrable program
- inactive program
- independent program
- initial input program
- initial loading program
- in-line program
- integer program
- interactive program
- interconsole message program
- internally stored program
- interpreter program
- interpretive program
- introspective program
- job control program
- job program
- knowledge-based program
- language-understanding program
- learning program
- librarian program
- library program
- license program
- linear program
- link-edited program
- load program
- load-and-go program
- loading program
- logical program
- logical relational program
- machine language program
- machine program
- macroassembly program
- macrogenerating program
- mail program
- main program
- manager program
- manufacturer programs
- map program
- mask-level digitization program
- master program
- mathematical program
- menu-driven program
- message control program
- message processing program
- micromodular program
- minimal access program
- minimum access program
- minimum latency program
- modular-sized program
- monitor program
- monitoring program
- monolithic program
- multisupplier program
- mutated program
- network control program
- networking program
- nonexpansible program
- nonprocedural program
- nucleus initialization program
- object program
- operating program
- optimally coded program
- overlay program
- overlays program
- packaged program
- paint program
- panel program
- PASCAL program
- PASCAL-program
- patched program
- placement program
- plugged program
- polling program
- pop-up program
- portable program
- position-independent program
- postedit program
- postmortem program
- precanned program
- precompiler program
- pre-edit program
- prewired program
- prime program program
- printed program
- print-intensive program
- problem-state program
- problem program
- procedural program
- processing program
- production program
- program for Windows
- program in assembler
- program in C++
- program in FORTRAN
- program in PASCAL
- proper program
- prototype program
- pseudoapplication program
- punched tape program
- read-in program
- real-world program
- reduction program
- reenterable program
- reentrant program
- relocatable program
- report program
- resident program
- restructuring program
- reusable program
- robot program
- robust program
- routine program
- routing program
- running program
- runtime program
- salvation program
- sample program
- scrutinous program
- segmented program
- self-adapting program
- self-contained program
- self-diagnostic program
- self-modification program
- self-modifying program
- self-monitoring program
- self-organizing program
- self-relocatable program
- self-relocating program
- self-resetting program
- self-test program
- self-triggering program
- sequence-scheduling supervisor program
- service program
- shareable program
- shell program
- simulation program
- slave program
- snapshot dump program
- snapshot trace program
- software program
- sort program
- sort/merge program
- sorting program
- source language program
- source program
- spaghetti program
- specific program
- spreadsheet program
- stand-alone program
- standard program
- standby program
- start-up program
- steering program
- stored program
- structured program
- subject program
- superconsistent program
- supervisor program
- supervisory program
- support program
- surface program
- suspended program
- symbolic program
- system program
- systems program
- tape-to-printer program
- teaching program
- test program
- throwaway program
- total-load program
- trace program
- trace-interpretive program
- tracing program
- tracking program
- transaction program
- translating program
- translation program
- translator program
- troubleshooting program
- TSR program
- unmaintable program
- unreadable program
- updated program
- user program
- utility program
- wavelet program
- wired-in programEnglish-Russian dictionary of computer science and programming > program
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5 SBL
1) Компьютерная техника: Space Based Laboratory, space based laser2) Спорт: Southern Bicycle League3) Военный термин: shore bombardment line, space-based laser4) Техника: short break logic5) Религия: Seeing The Bible Live, Society Of Biblical Literature6) Университет: Structural Biology Laboratory7) Электроника: Scanned Beam Laminography8) Вычислительная техника: Super BASIC Language (BASIC)9) Геофизика: Sea Bed Logging10) Фирменный знак: Standard Bank London11) Образование: School Based Leadership12) Расширение файла: Stony Brook Pascal Library13) NYSE. Symbol Technologies, Inc. -
6 воспользоваться
•In order to explain..., one must draw on the principles of quantum mechanics.
•The designer must fall back on semiempirical numerical methods of analysis.
•Recourse was made (or We resorted) to a propulsion unit incorporating...
•To take advantage of the higher potential,…
* * *Воспользоваться -- to make use of, to avail oneself of, to take advantage of, to make resort to, to use to advantage; to resort to, to exploit; to capitalize (с выгодой); to enlist (заручиться содействием); to invoke, to enter (рисунком, таблицей)In determining the extent of the hysteresis, we again make use of the concept of a critical blockage.In order for you to avail yourself of this reliable method of journal copy transmittal it would be prudent for you to ask Mr. X. to continue the same arrangements as his predecessor.The resulting system was unable to take advantage of all available trends due to the in-house limitations of some system subcontractors.Because stress levels in the bearing lining have never been easily calculated, resort has been made instead to specific load as a design parameter.This directionality of properties can be used to advantage and must be considered in component design.This phenomenon could possibly be exploited to reduce design mass.First a search program is invoked which, based on these assumptions, locates the liquid-liquid interfaces.We may now enter Fig. to determine the crack growth rates.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > воспользоваться
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7 Bramah, Joseph
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering, Domestic appliances and interiors, Land transport, Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering, Public utilities[br]b. 2 April 1749 Stainborough, Yorkshire, Englandd. 9 December 1814 Pimlico, London, England[br]English inventor of the second patented water-closet, the beer-engine, the Bramah lock and, most important, the hydraulic press.[br]Bramah was the son of a tenant farmer and was educated at the village school before being apprenticed to a local carpenter, Thomas Allot. He walked to London c.1773 and found work with a Mr Allen that included the repair of some of the comparatively rare water-closets of the period. He invented and patented one of his own, which was followed by a water cock in 1783. His next invention, a greatly improved lock, involved the devising of a number of special machine tools, for it was one of the first devices involving interchangeable components in its manufacture. In this he had the help of Henry Maudslay, then a young and unknown engineer, who became Bramah's foreman before setting up business on his own. In 1784 he moved his premises from Denmark Street, St Giles, to 124 Piccadilly, which was later used as a showroom when he set up a factory in Pimlico. He invented an engine for putting out fires in 1785 and 1793, in effect a reciprocating rotary-vane pump. He undertook the refurbishment and modernization of Norwich waterworks c.1793, but fell out with Robert Mylne, who was acting as Consultant to the Norwich Corporation and had produced a remarkably vague specification. This was Bramah's only venture into the field of civil engineering.In 1797 he acted as an expert witness for Hornblower \& Maberley in the patent infringement case brought against them by Boulton and Watt. Having been cut short by the judge, he published his proposed evidence in "Letter to the Rt Hon. Sir James Eyre, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas…etc". In 1795 he was granted his most important patent, based on Pascal's Hydrostatic Paradox, for the hydraulic press which also incorporated the concept of hydraulics for the transmission of both power and motion and was the foundation of the whole subsequent hydraulic industry. There is no truth in the oft-repeated assertion originating from Samuel Smiles's Industrial Biography (1863) that the hydraulic press could not be made to work until Henry Maudslay invented the self-sealing neck leather. Bramah used a single-acting upstroking ram, sealed only at its base with a U-leather. There was no need for a neck leather.He also used the concept of the weight-loaded, in this case as a public-house beer-engine. He devised machinery for carbonating soda water. The first banknote-numbering machine was of his design and was bought by the Bank of England. His development of a machine to cut twelve nibs from one goose quill started a patent specification which ended with the invention of the fountain pen, patented in 1809. His coach brakes were an innovation that was followed bv a form of hydropneumatic carriage suspension that was somewhat in advance of its time, as was his patent of 1812. This foresaw the introduction of hydraulic power mains in major cities and included the telescopic ram and the air-loaded accumulator.In all Joseph Bramah was granted eighteen patents. On 22 March 1813 he demonstrated a hydraulic machine for pulling up trees by the roots in Hyde Park before a large crowd headed by the Duke of York. Using the same machine in Alice Holt Forest in Hampshire to fell timber for ships for the Navy, he caught a chill and died soon after at his home in Pimlico.[br]Bibliography1778, British patent no. 1177 (water-closet). 1784, British patent no. 1430 (Bramah Lock). 1795, British patent no. 2045 (hydraulic press). 1809, British patent no. 3260 (fountain pen). 1812, British patent no. 3611.Further ReadingI.McNeil, 1968, Joseph Bramah, a Century of Invention.S.Smiles, 1863, Industrial Biography.H.W.Dickinson, 1942, "Joseph Bramah and his inventions", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 22:169–86.IMcN -
8 Forrester, Jay Wright
SUBJECT AREA: Electronics and information technology[br]b. 14 July 1918 Anselmo, Nebraska, USA[br]American electrical engineer and management expert who invented the magnetic-core random access memory used in most early digital computers.[br]Born on a cattle ranch, Forrester obtained a BSc in electrical engineering at the University of Nebraska in 1939 and his MSc at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he remained to teach and carry out research. Becoming interested in computing, he established the Digital Computer Laboratory at MIT in 1945 and became involved in the construction of Whirlwind I, an early general-purpose computer completed in March 1951 and used for flight-simulation by the US Army Air Force. Finding the linear memories then available for storing data a major limiting factor in the speed at which computers were able to operate, he developed a three-dimensional store based on the binary switching of the state of small magnetic cores that could be addressed and switched by a matrix of wires carrying pulses of current. The machine used parallel synchronous fixed-point computing, with fifteen binary digits and a plus sign, i.e. 16 bits in all, and contained 5,000 vacuum tubes, eleven semiconductors and a 2 MHz clock for the arithmetic logic unit. It occupied a two-storey building and consumed 150kW of electricity. From his experience with the development and use of computers, he came to realize their great potential for the simulation and modelling of real situations and hence for the solution of a variety of management problems, using data communications and the technique now known as interactive graphics. His later career was therefore in this field, first at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington, Massachusetts (1951) and subsequently (from 1956) as Professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsNational Academy of Engineering 1967. George Washington University Inventor of the Year 1968. Danish Academy of Science Valdemar Poulsen Gold Medal 1969. Systems, Man and Cybernetics Society Award for Outstanding Accomplishments 1972. Computer Society Pioneer Award 1972. Institution of Electrical Engineers Medal of Honour 1972. National Inventors Hall of Fame 1979. Magnetics Society Information Storage Award 1988. Honorary DEng Nebraska 1954, Newark College of Engineering 1971, Notre Dame University 1974. Honorary DSc Boston 1969, Union College 1973. Honorary DPolSci Mannheim University, Germany. Honorary DHumLett, State University of New York 1988.Bibliography1951, "Data storage in three dimensions using magnetic cores", Journal of Applied Physics 20: 44 (his first description of the core store).Publications on management include: 1961, Industrial Dynamics, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press; 1968, Principles of Systems, 1971, Urban Dynamics, 1980, with A.A.Legasto \& J.M.Lyneis, System Dynamics, North Holland. 1975, Collected Papers, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT.Further ReadingK.C.Redmond \& T.M.Smith, Project Whirlwind, the History of a Pioneer Computer (provides details of the Whirlwind computer).H.H.Goldstine, 1993, The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann, Princeton University Press (for more general background to the development of computers).Serrell et al., 1962, "Evolution of computing machines", Proceedings of the Institute ofRadio Engineers 1,047.M.R.Williams, 1975, History of Computing Technology, London: Prentice-Hall.See also: Burks, Arthur Walter; Goldstine, Herman H.; Wilkes, Maurice Vincent; Williams, Sir Frederic CallandKF -
9 Goldstine, Herman H.
SUBJECT AREA: Electronics and information technology[br]b. 13 September 1913 USA[br]American mathematician largely responsible for the development of ENIAC, an early electronic computer.[br]Goldstine studied mathematics at the University of Chicago, Illinois, gaining his PhD in 1936. After teaching mathematics there, he moved to a similar position at the University of Michigan in 1939, becoming an assistant professor. After the USA entered the Second World War, in 1942 he joined the army as a lieutenant in the Ballistic Missile Research Laboratory at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. He was then assigned to the Moore School of Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was involved with Arthur Burks in building the valve-based Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) to compute ballistic tables. The machine was completed in 1946, but prior to this Goldstine had met John von Neumann of the Institute for Advanced Studies (IAS) at Princeton, New Jersey, and active collaboration between them had already begun. After the war he joined von Neumann as Assistant Director of the Computer Project at the Institute of Advanced Studies, Princeton, becoming its Director in 1954. There he developed the idea of computer-flow diagrams and, with von Neumann, built the first computer to use a magnetic drum for data storage. In 1958 he joined IBM as Director of the Mathematical Sciences Department, becoming Director of Development at the IBM Data Processing Headquarters in 1965. Two years later he became a Research Consultant, and in 1969 he became an IBM Research Fellow.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsGoldstine's many awards include three honorary degrees for his contributions to the development of computers.Bibliography1946, with A.Goldstine, "The Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC)", Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to Computation 2:97 (describes the work on ENIAC).1946, with A.W.Burks and J.von Neumann, "Preliminary discussions of the logical design of an electronic computing instrument", Princeton Institute for Advanced Studies.1972, The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann, Princeton University Press.1977, "A brief history of the computer", Proceedings of the American Physical Society 121:339.Further ReadingM.Campbell-Kelly \& M.R.Williams (eds), 1985, The Moore School Lectures (1946), Charles Babbage Institute Report Series for the History of Computing, Vol 9. M.R.Williams, 1985, History of Computing Technology, London: Prentice-Hall.KF -
10 Morland, Sir Samuel
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. 1625 Sulhampton, near Reading, Berkshire, Englandd. 26 December 1695 Hammersmith, near London, England[br]English mathematician and inventor.[br]Morland was one of several sons of the Revd Thomas Morland and was probably initially educated by his father. He went to Winchester School from 1639 to 1644 and then to Magdalene College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1648 and MA in 1652. He was appointed a tutor there in 1650. In 1653 he went to Sweden in the ambassadorial staff of Bulstrode Whitelocke and remained there until 1654. In that year he was appointed Clerk to Mr Secretary Thurloe, and in 1655 he was accredited by Oliver Cromwell to the Duke of Savoy to appeal for the Waldenses. In 1657 he married Susanne de Milleville of Boissy, France, with whom he had three children. In 1660 he went over to the Royalists, meeting King Charles at Breda, Holland. On 20 May, the King knighted him, creating him baron, for revealing a conspiracy against the king's life. He was also granted a pension of£500 per year. In 1661, at the age of 36, he decided to devote himself to mathematics and invention. He devised a mechanical calculator, probably based on the pattern of Blaise Pascal, for adding and subtracting: this was followed in 1666 by one for multiplying and other functions. A Perpetual Calendar or Almanack followed; he toyed with the idea of a "gunpowder engine" for raising water; he developed a range of speaking trum-pets, said to have a range of 1/2 to 1 mile (0.8–1.6 km) or more; also iron stoves for use on board ships, and improvements to barometers.By 1675 he had started selling a range of pumps for private houses, for mines or deep wells, for ships, for emptying ponds or draining low ground as well as to quench fire or wet the sails of ships. The pumps cost from £5 to £63, and the great novelty was that he used, instead of packing around the cylinder sealing against the bore of the cylinder, a neck-gland or seal around the outside diameter of the piston or piston-rod. This revolutionary step avoided the necessity of accurately boring the cylinder, replacing it with the need to machine accurately the outside diameter of the piston or rod, a much easier operation. Twenty-seven variations of size and materials were included in his schedule of'Pumps or Water Engines of Isaac Thompson of Great Russel Street', the maker of Morland's design. In 1681 the King made him "Magister mechanicorum", or Master of Machines. In that year he sailed for France to advise Louis XIV on the waterworks being built at Marly to supply the Palace of Versailles. About this time he had shown King Charles plans for a pumping engine "worked by fire alone". He petitioned for a patent for this, but did not pursue the matter.In 1692 he went blind. In all, he married five times. While working for Cromwell he became an expert in ciphers, in opening sealed letters and in their rapid copying.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1660.Bibliography1685, Elevation des eaux.Further ReadingH.W.Dickinson, 1970, Sir Samuel Morland: Diplomat and Inventor, Cambridge: Newcomen Society/Heffers.IMcN -
11 Bibliography
■ Aitchison, J. (1987). Noam Chomsky: Consensus and controversy. New York: Falmer Press.■ Anderson, J. R. (1980). Cognitive psychology and its implications. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman.■ Anderson, J. R. (1983). The architecture of cognition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.■ Anderson, J. R. (1995). Cognitive psychology and its implications (4th ed.). New York: W. H. Freeman.■ Archilochus (1971). In M. L. West (Ed.), Iambi et elegi graeci (Vol. 1). Oxford: Oxford University Press.■ Armstrong, D. M. (1990). The causal theory of the mind. In W. G. Lycan (Ed.), Mind and cognition: A reader (pp. 37-47). Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell. (Originally published in 1981 in The nature of mind and other essays, Ithaca, NY: University Press).■ Atkins, P. W. (1992). Creation revisited. Oxford: W. H. Freeman & Company.■ Austin, J. L. (1962). How to do things with words. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.■ Bacon, F. (1878). 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Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Bibliography
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