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121 commercialization
сущ.тж. commercialisation эк. коммерциализацияа) (подчинение деятельности целям извлечения прибыли; включение новых товаров, технологий и т. д. в коммерческую деятельность; перевод чего-л. на коммерческое использование)development and commercialization of new materials — разработка и коммерческое внедрение новых материалов
The commercialization of football has turned it from a sport into a business. — Коммерциализация футбола привела к тому, что футбол стал бизнесом, а не спортом.
See:б) (этап трансформации государственных предприятия, на котором управляющие государственным предприятием несут ответственность за финансовые результаты деятельности предприятия, а государство прекращает предоставление дотаций на покрытие убытков от хозяйственной деятельности) -
122 roll-out
['rǝʊlaʊt]N [of system, product] (=launch) lanzamiento m ; (=development) desarrollo m ; [of new technology] desarrollo m -
123 patent
1) патент (охранный документ на изобретение, удостоверяющий признание предложения изобретением, его приоритет и исключительное право на него патентообладателя)2) патентовать; патентованный; патентный•- patent applied for
- patent in force
- patent being in force
- patent for a design
- patent for an invention
- patent for a plant
- patent for improvement
- patent in dispute
- patent on a design
- patent pending
- patent referred to
- patent abroad
- patent of addition
- patent of confirmation
- patent of importation
- patent of improvement
- patent of revalidation
- abandoned patent
- additional patent
- adjudicated patent
- AEC-owned patent
- anticipating patent
- apparatus patent
- art patent
- article patent
- assailable patent
- assigned patent
- atomic energy patent
- attackable patent
- attacked patent
- basic patent
- biological patent
- blocking patent
- blocking-off patent
- borderline patent
- British Letters patent
- broad patent
- business method patent
- cancelled patent
- ceased patent
- chemical patent
- cited patent
- collateral patent
- colonial patent
- combination patent
- Commission-owned patent
- communicated patent
- competing patent
- complementary patent
- composition-of-matter patent
- confirmation patent
- conflicting patent
- contestable patent
- copending patents
- corresponding patents
- deadwood patent
- dead-wood patent
- defective patent
- dependent patent
- design letters patent
- device patent
- disputed patent
- divisional patent
- domestic patent
- dominant patent
- dormant patent
- double patent
- dragnet patent
- drug patent
- duplicate patents
- earlier patent
- economic patent
- electrical patent
- European patent
- exclusive patent
- exercisable patent
- existing patent
- expired patent
- exploitable patent
- extended patent
- extinct patent
- fencing-off patent
- final patent
- foreign patent
- forfeited patent
- fortifying patent
- freed patent
- free-lance patent
- French pharmaceutical patent
- granted patent
- home patent
- importation patent
- improvement patent
- incipient patent
- incontestable patent
- independent patent
- indigenous patent
- industrial patent
- industrial development patent
- infringed patent
- infringing patent
- infringing patents
- inoperative patent
- interdependent patents
- intervening patent
- invalid patent
- issued patent
- joint patent
- key patent
- land patent
- lapsed patent
- later patent
- later-dated patent
- legally effective patent
- letters patent
- licensed patent
- litigious patent
- live patent
- machine patent
- main patent
- manufacture patent
- master patent
- material patent
- mechanical patent
- medical patent
- metallurgical patent
- method patent
- minor patent
- modification patent
- more recent patent
- narrow patent
- national patent
- national patent under the PCT
- native's patent
- new use patent
- non-convention patent
- Nordic patent
- not infringed patent
- nuisance patent
- objected patent
- obstructive patent
- old patent
- operative patent
- original patent
- ornamental design patent
- overlapping patents
- paper patent
- parallel patent
- parent patent
- pending patent
- petty patent
- pharmaceutical patent
- pioneer patent
- plant patent
- pooled patent
- posthumous patent
- practicable patent
- printed patent
- prior patent
- process patent
- product patent
- provisional European patent
- questionable patent
- reference patent
- regional patent
- reinstated patent
- reissue patent
- reissued patent
- related patent
- revoked patent
- scarecrow patent
- secret patent
- senior patent
- shot gun patent
- simultaneous patent
- small patent
- software patent
- standard patent
- strain patent
- strong patent
- structure patent
- subordinate patent
- subsequent patent
- subservient patent
- subsidiary patent
- sued upon patent
- suppressed patent
- transfer of technology patent
- unenforceable patent
- unexpired patent
- universal patent
- unjustified patent
- unused patent
- U. S. patent
- useful model patent
- utility patent
- valid patent
- valuable patent
- void patent
- voidable patent
- weak patent
- withheld patent
- world-wide patent
- worthless patent
- X-series patent
- younger patent
- youngest patent* * *патент (охранный документ, представляющий исключительнее право на осуществление, использование и продажу изобретения в течение определенного срока и на определенно» территории) -
124 model
1) модель; макет; образец; эталон || моделировать; изготавливать по образцу или эталону || образцовый; эталонный2) форма || придавать форму3) фасонного сечения (напр. о металле)•- 3-D model
- 3-D wireframe model
- algorithm model
- analog model
- animation model
- as-machined model
- autoregressive model
- behavioral model
- brand-new model
- CAD model
- CAD solid model
- cammed model
- causal model
- CGS model
- client-server model
- CN model
- component connection model
- computational model
- computer model
- conceptual model
- control model
- data model
- development models
- dexel model
- diagnosis model
- diagnostic model
- die model
- discrete parts manufacturing model
- disturbance model
- ER model
- error model of a machine
- error model of a single axis
- experimental model
- feature-based CAD model
- feature-based model
- finite-dimensional model
- flexible manufacturing model
- FMS model
- force deflection model
- freeform computer model
- full-scale model
- generalized model
- generic action model
- generic activity model
- generic model
- hierarchic data model
- hierarchical data model
- hierarchical model
- hierarchically structured model
- horizontal model
- infinite-dimensional model
- information-logical model
- kinetic laser anneal model
- language model
- large-scale model
- learning model
- life-size model
- life-sized model
- log normal model
- master model
- mathematical surface model
- meaning $ text model
- network model
- observation model
- orthogonal flute model
- OSI model
- parallel computational model
- parameter-oriented model
- Petri model
- PN model
- polyhedral model
- principal model
- process-message model
- product model
- profile model
- qualitative model
- quantitative model
- queueing model
- R and D model
- reference model
- relation model
- relational model
- repair model
- representative model
- reverse engineer model
- scale model
- scaled-down model
- scaled-up model
- sculptured surface model
- semantic model
- shop floor model
- shop floor production model
- signal model
- simulated model
- simulation model
- software model
- solid model
- solids model
- stochastic model
- structural model
- surface model
- surfaced CAD model
- symbolic model
- task-specific model
- technological model
- test model
- time-series model
- tool animation model
- top-of-the-line model
- topological model
- tracking model
- transaction model of AGVs
- true-volume model
- underconstrained model
- undimensioned model
- unifying model
- vertical model
- vibration model
- volumetric error model
- wholistic model
- wire-frame model
- working model
- world modelEnglish-Russian dictionary of mechanical engineering and automation > model
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125 gap
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126 growth
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127 complex adaptive system
Gen Mgta system that overrides conventional human controls because those controls will subdue inevitable change and development within that system. Complex adaptive systems are a product of the application of chaos theory (see chaos) and complexity theory to the world of organizations. According to writers such as Richard Pascale, organizations that are subject to too much control are at risk of failure. The bureaucracy has been cited as an example of extreme control and the top down approach to management. However, if a bureaucracy is left to adapt naturally, it could become capable of self-organization and of creating new methods of operating. -
128 Hancock, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 8 May 1786 Marlborough, Wiltshire, Englandd. 26 March 1865 Stoke Newington, London, England[br]English founder of the British rubber industry.[br]After education at a private school in Marlborough, Hancock spent some time in "mechanical pursuits". He went to London to better himself and c.1819 his interest was aroused in the uses of rubber, which until then had been limited. His first patent, dated 29 April 1820, was for the application of rubber in clothing where some elasticity was useful, such as braces or slip-on boots. He noticed that freshly cut pieces of rubber could be made to adhere by pressure to form larger pieces. To cut up his imported and waste rubber into small pieces, Hancock developed his "masticator". This device consisted of a spiked roller revolving in a hollow cylinder. However, when rubber was fed in to the machine, the product was not the expected shredded rubber, but a homogeneous cylindrical mass of solid rubber, formed by the heat generated by the process and pressure against the outer cylinder. This rubber could then be compacted into blocks or rolled into sheets at his factory in Goswell Road, London; the blocks and sheets could be used to make a variety of useful articles. Meanwhile Hancock entered into partnership with Charles Macintosh in Manchester to manufacture rubberized, waterproof fabrics. Despite these developments, rubber remained an unsatisfactory material, becoming sticky when warmed and losing its elasticity when cold. In 1842 Hancock encountered specimens of vulcanized rubber prepared by Charles Goodyear in America. Hancock worked out for himself that it was made by heating rubber and sulphur, and obtained a patent for the manufacture of the material on 21 November 1843. This patent also included details of a new form of rubber, hardened by heating to a higher temperature, that was later called vulcanite, or ebonite. In 1846 he began making solid rubber tyres for road vehicles. Overall Hancock took out sixteen patents, covering all aspects of the rubber industry; they were a leading factor in the development of the industry from 1820 until their expiry in 1858.[br]Bibliography1857, Personal Narrative of the Origin and Progress of the Caoutchouc or Indiarubber Manufacture in England, London.Further ReadingH.Schurer, 1953, "The macintosh: the paternity of an invention", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 28:77–87.LRD
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