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81 продолжаться
Продолжаться - to continue, to be continuing, to be continued; to persist; to proceed, to be proceeding; to be in progressAt moderate light intensities the O2 uptake continues at an unchanged pace.Progress to an understanding of these factors is continuing along the lines detailed in the initial sections of this paper.Its use will surely be continued.Further studies are in progress to investigate the effect on current superalloys such as IN738, IN792, IN939, etc.For a number of years the 50, 25, 15, 10 rule has also persisted: the maintenance cost be broken down into 50-percent memory, 25-percent packaging and power, 15-percent I/O logic, and 10-percent CPV logic.Development work is proceeding on transmitter design with the aim of further increasing immunity to interference from commercial and military transmission.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > продолжаться
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82 запоминающий
coincident-current, memorizing, memory -
83 pamięć koincydencyjna
• coincident-current memorySłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > pamięć koincydencyjna
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84 постоянный
1) (неизменный по величине, объёму) constant; invariableпостоя́нная ско́рость — constant speed
проявля́ть постоя́нную забо́ту — display unceasing [-'siːs-] concern
2) ( не временный) permanentпостоя́нная а́рмия — regular army
постоя́нный а́дрес — permanent address
постоя́нный жи́тель — permanent resident [-z-]
постоя́нное представи́тельство — permanent representation / office; дип. permanent mission
постоя́нный комите́т — permanent / standing committee
3) (всегдашний, обычный) regularпостоя́нный посети́тель — regular customer
4) ( часто повторяющийся) constant, incessant, continualпостоя́нные угро́зы — constant / incessant threats
••постоя́нный капита́л эк. — constant capital
постоя́нный ток эл. — direct current
постоя́нная величина́ мат. — constant
постоя́нная па́мять информ. — read-only memory
постоя́нные изде́ржки эк. — fixed costs
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85 память для записи темнового тока
Русско-английский ТВ и видео словарь > память для записи темнового тока
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86 CPM
critical path method — метод критического пути; МКПcycles per minute — циклов в минуту, колебаний в минуту (напр., при вибрационной обработке труб)cycles per minute — циклы в минуту (напр., при электрохимической обработке качающимся электродом, в циклических режимах и т.п.) -
87 автомат
1. м. circuit-breakerавтомат коммутирует токи короткого замыкания — the circuit-breaker interrupts short-circuit currents
2. м. киб. automaton, machineлистоштамповочный автомат — automatic sheet stamping press; automatic plate stamping press
автомат перекоса — swashplate; wobble plate
Синонимический ряд:машина (сущ.) машина -
88 восстановление
1. с. restoration2. с. хим. reduction -
89 имеющийся
1. at handимеющийся; рассматриваемый — in hand
наличный; имеющийся в распоряжении — on hand
2. availableколичество; имеющееся в наличии — available quantity
робот, имеющийся в продаже — commercially available robot
3. current4. in hand5. present6. to hand7. on hand8. stocked -
90 команда
1. ж. вчт. instructionзадавать команду с помощью … — specify an instruction by …
команды могут объединяться в многооперационные — instructions are combinable to form a multiple instruction
процесс считывания начинается по команде с ЭВМ — the process of reading is initiated by an instruction from the computer
холостая команда; фиктивная команда — do-nothing instruction
код команды; система команд; набор команд — instruction code
команда-заготовка; скелетная команда — skeleton instruction
2. ж. вчт. crew, gang, party3. command; teamкоманда на освобождение; команда прекращения — quit command
команда-подсказка; подсказанная команда — prompted command
Синонимический ряд:распоряжение (сущ.) веление; повеление; приказ; приказание; распоряжение -
91 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 -
92 стирание
1. deleting; erasing2. erasing3. eraseРусско-английский словарь по информационным технологиям > стирание
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93 Consciousness
Consciousness is what makes the mind-body problem really intractable.... Without consciousness the mind-body problem would be much less interesting. With consciousness it seems hopeless. (T. Nagel, 1979, pp. 165-166)This approach to understanding sensory qualia is both theoretically and empirically motivated... [;] it suggests an effective means of expressing the allegedly inexpressible. The "ineffable" pink of one's current visual sensation may be richly and precisely expressed as a 95Hz/80Hz/80Hz "chord" in the relevant triune cortical system. The "unconveyable" taste sensation produced by the fabled Australian health tonic Vegamite might be poignantly conveyed as a 85/80/90/15 "chord" in one's four channeled gustatory system.... And the "indescribably" olfactory sensation produced by a newly opened rose might be quite accurately described as a 95/35/10/80/60/55 "chord" in some six-dimensional space within one's olfactory bulb. (P. M. Churchland, 1989, p. 106)One of philosophy's favorite facets of mentality has received scant attention from cognitive psychologists, and that is consciousness itself: fullblown, introspective, inner-world phenomenological consciousness. In fact if one looks in the obvious places... one finds not so much a lack of interest as a deliberate and adroit avoidance of the issue. I think I know why. Consciousness appears to be the last bastion of occult properties, epiphenomena, and immeasurable subjective states-in short, the one area of mind best left to the philosophers, who are welcome to it. Let them make fools of themselves trying to corral the quicksilver of "phenomenology" into a respectable theory. (Dennett, 1978b, p. 149)When I am thinking about anything, my consciousness consists of a number of ideas.... But every idea can be resolved into elements... and these elements are sensations. (Titchener, 1910, p. 33)A Darwin machine now provides a framework for thinking about thought, indeed one that may be a reasonable first approximation to the actual brain machinery underlying thought. An intracerebral Darwin Machine need not try out one sequence at a time against memory; it may be able to try out dozens, if not hundreds, simultaneously, shape up new generations in milliseconds, and thus initiate insightful actions without overt trial and error. This massively parallel selection among stochastic sequences is more analogous to the ways of darwinian biology than to the "von Neumann" serial computer. Which is why I call it a Darwin Machine instead; it shapes up thoughts in milliseconds rather than millennia, and uses innocuous remembered environments rather than noxious real-life ones. It may well create the uniquely human aspect of our consciousness. (Calvin, 1990, pp. 261-262)To suppose the mind to exist in two different states, in the same moment, is a manifest absurdity. To the whole series of states of the mind, then, whatever the individual, momentary successive states may be, I give the name of our consciousness.... There are not sensations, thoughts, passions, and also consciousness, any more than there is quadruped or animal, as a separate being to be added to the wolves, tygers, elephants, and other living creatures.... The fallacy of conceiving consciousness to be something different from the feeling, which is said to be its object, has arisen, in a great measure, from the use of the personal pronoun I. (T. Brown, 1970, p. 336)The human capacity for speech is certainly unique. But the gulf between it and the behavior of animals no longer seems unbridgeable.... What does this leave us with, then, which is characteristically human?.... t resides in the human capacity for consciousness and self-consciousness. (Rose, 1976, p. 177)[Human consciousness] depends wholly on our seeing the outside world in such categories. And the problems of consciousness arise from putting reconstitution beside internalization, from our also being able to see ourselves as if we were objects in the outside world. That is in the very nature of language; it is impossible to have a symbolic system without it.... The Cartesian dualism between mind and body arises directly from this, and so do all the famous paradoxes, both in mathematics and in linguistics.... (Bronowski, 1978, pp. 38-39)It seems to me that there are at least four different viewpoints-or extremes of viewpoint-that one may reasonably hold on the matter [of computation and conscious thinking]:A. All thinking is computation; in particular, feelings of conscious awareness are evoked merely by the carrying out of appropriate computations.B. Awareness is a feature of the brain's physical action; and whereas any physical action can be simulated computationally, computational simulation cannot by itself evoke awareness.C. Appropriate physical action of the brain evokes awareness, but this physical action cannot even be properly simulated computationally.D. Awareness cannot be explained by physical, computational, or any other scientific terms. (Penrose, 1994, p. 12)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Consciousness
См. также в других словарях:
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