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producer+company

  • 41 бизн.

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > бизн.

  • 42 нефтяная компания

    1) General subject: oil producer, oiler
    3) Business: oil company

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > нефтяная компания

  • 43 программная компания

    3) Makarov: (теле) television maker

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > программная компания

  • 44 אלקואה

    ALCOA, Aluminum Company of America, American company headquartered in Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania), global producer and supplier of aluminum and other fabricated products

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אלקואה

  • 45 fabricante

    adj.
    manufacturing.
    la empresa fabricante the manufacturer
    f. & m.
    manufacturer.
    * * *
    1 manufacturer, maker
    * * *
    noun mf.
    manufacturer, maker
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ
    2.
    SMF [en gran escala] manufacturer, maker; [en pequeña escala] maker
    * * *
    masculino y femenino manufacturer
    * * *
    = manufacturer, builder, maker.
    Ex. Added entries under corporate names are made for a prominently named corporate body, unless it functions solely as distributor or manufacturer.
    Ex. No significant differences were observed between tool users and tool builders in terms of any key constructs examined in the study.
    Ex. The first decision in establishing headings for the works of corporate bodies is the one over which code makers have wavered.
    ----
    * fabricante de automóviles = automaker.
    * fabricante de carrocerías = coachbuilder, bodybuilder [body-builder].
    * fabricante de cartón = paperboard maker, paperboard manufacturer.
    * fabricante de coches = automaker.
    * fabricante de jabón = soapmaker.
    * fabricante de maquinaria agrícola = farm equipment manufacturer.
    * fabricante de moldes = die-sinker.
    * fabricante de ropa = clothing company.
    * fabricante ilegal de bebidas alcohólicas = moonshiner.
    * instrucciones del fabricante = firmware.
    * * *
    masculino y femenino manufacturer
    * * *
    = manufacturer, builder, maker.

    Ex: Added entries under corporate names are made for a prominently named corporate body, unless it functions solely as distributor or manufacturer.

    Ex: No significant differences were observed between tool users and tool builders in terms of any key constructs examined in the study.
    Ex: The first decision in establishing headings for the works of corporate bodies is the one over which code makers have wavered.
    * fabricante de automóviles = automaker.
    * fabricante de carrocerías = coachbuilder, bodybuilder [body-builder].
    * fabricante de cartón = paperboard maker, paperboard manufacturer.
    * fabricante de coches = automaker.
    * fabricante de jabón = soapmaker.
    * fabricante de maquinaria agrícola = farm equipment manufacturer.
    * fabricante de moldes = die-sinker.
    * fabricante de ropa = clothing company.
    * fabricante ilegal de bebidas alcohólicas = moonshiner.
    * instrucciones del fabricante = firmware.

    * * *
    manufacturer
    * * *

     

    fabricante sustantivo masculino y femenino
    manufacturer
    fabricante mf manufacturer
    ' fabricante' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    zapatera
    - zapatero
    - papelero
    - pastelero
    English:
    discontinue
    - maker
    - manufacturer
    - producer
    * * *
    adj
    manufacturing;
    la empresa fabricante the manufacturer
    nmf
    manufacturer
    * * *
    m/f manufacturer, maker
    * * *
    : manufacturer
    * * *
    fabricante n manufacturer

    Spanish-English dictionary > fabricante

  • 46 wytwórni|a

    f (G pl wytwórni) manufacturing company
    - wytwórnia mebli a furniture manufacturer a. producer
    - wytwórnia filmowa a film studio
    - wytwórnia płytowa Muz. a record label a. company

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > wytwórni|a

  • 47 monopoly

    Gen Mgt
    a market in which there is only one producer or one seller. A company establishes a monopoly by entering a new market or eliminating all competitors from an existing market. A company that holds a monopoly has control of a market and the ability to fix prices. For this reason, governments usually try to avoid monopoly situations. Some monopolies, however, such as government-owned utilities, are seen as beneficial to consumers.

    The ultimate business dictionary > monopoly

  • 48 Dickson, William Kennedy Laurie

    [br]
    b. August 1860 Brittany, France
    d. 28 September 1935 Twickenham, England
    [br]
    Scottish inventor and photographer.
    [br]
    Dickson was born in France of English and Scottish parents. As a young man of almost 19 years, he wrote in 1879 to Thomas Edison in America, asking for a job. Edison replied that he was not taking on new staff at that time, but Dickson, with his mother and sisters, decided to emigrate anyway. In 1883 he contacted Edison again, and was given a job at the Goerk Street laboratory of the Edison Electric Works in New York. He soon assumed a position of responsibility as Superintendent, working on the development of electric light and power systems, and also carried out most of the photography Edison required. In 1888 he moved to the Edison West Orange laboratory, becoming Head of the ore-milling department. When Edison, inspired by Muybridge's sequence photographs of humans and animals in motion, decided to develop a motion picture apparatus, he gave the task to Dickson, whose considerable skills in mechanics, photography and electrical work made him the obvious choice. The first experiments, in 1888, were on a cylinder machine like the phonograph, in which the sequence pictures were to be taken in a spiral. This soon proved to be impractical, and work was delayed for a time while Dickson developed a new ore-milling machine. Little progress with the movie project was made until George Eastman's introduction in July 1889 of celluloid roll film, which was thin, tough, transparent and very flexible. Dickson returned to his experiments in the spring of 1891 and soon had working models of a film camera and viewer, the latter being demonstrated at the West Orange laboratory on 20 May 1891. By the early summer of 1892 the project had advanced sufficiently for commercial exploitation to begin. The Kinetograph camera used perforated 35 mm film (essentially the same as that still in use in the late twentieth century), and the kinetoscope, a peep-show viewer, took fifty feet of film running in an endless loop. Full-scale manufacture of the viewers started in 1893, and they were demonstrated on a number of occasions during that year. On 14 April 1894 the first kinetoscope parlour, with ten viewers, was opened to the public in New York. By the end of that year, the kinetoscope was seen by the public all over America and in Europe. Dickson had created the first commercially successful cinematograph system. Dickson left Edison's employment on 2 April 1895, and for a time worked with Woodville Latham on the development of his Panoptikon projector, a projection version of the kinetoscope. In December 1895 he joined with Herman Casier, Henry N.Marvin and Elias Koopman to form the American Mutoscope Company. Casier had designed the Mutoscope, an animated-picture viewer in which the sequences of pictures were printed on cards fixed radially to a drum and were flipped past the eye as the drum rotated. Dickson designed the Biograph wide-film camera to produce the picture sequences, and also a projector to show the films directly onto a screen. The large-format images gave pictures of high quality for the period; the Biograph went on public show in America in September 1896, and subsequently throughout the world, operating until around 1905. In May 1897 Dickson returned to England and set up as a producer of Biograph films, recording, among other subjects, Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee celebrations in 1897, Pope Leo XIII in 1898, and scenes of the Boer War in 1899 and 1900. Many of the Biograph subjects were printed as reels for the Mutoscope to produce the "what the butler saw" machines which were a feature of fairgrounds and seaside arcades until modern times. Dickson's contact with the Biograph Company, and with it his involvement in cinematography, ceased in 1911.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Gordon Hendricks, 1961, The Edison Motion Picture Myth.
    —1966, The Kinetoscope.
    —1964, The Beginnings of the Biograph.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Dickson, William Kennedy Laurie

  • 49 Harwood, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Horology
    [br]
    b. 1893 Bolton, England
    d. 9 August 1964
    [br]
    English watchmaker, inventor and producer of the first commercial self-winding wrist watch.
    [br]
    John Harwood served an apprenticeship as a watch repairer in Bolton, and after service in the First World War he obtained a post with a firm of jewellers in Douglas, Isle of Man. He became interested in the self-winding wrist watch, not because of the convenience of not having to wind it, but because of its potential to keep the mainspring fully wound and to exclude dust and moisture from the watch movement. His experience at the bench had taught him that these were the most common factors to affect adversely the reliability of watches. Completely unaware of previous work in this area, in 1922 he started experimenting and two years later he had produced a serviceable model for which he was granted a patent in 1924. The watch operated on the pedometer principle, the mainspring being wound by a pivoted weight that oscillated in the watch case as a result of the motion of the arm. The hands of his watch were set by rotating the bezel surrounding the dial, dispensing with the usual winding/hand-setting stem which allowed dust and moisture to enter the watch case. He took the watch to Switzerland, but he was unable to persuade the watchmaking firms to produce it until he had secured independent finance to cover the cost of tooling. The Harwood Self-Winding Watch Company Ltd was set up in 1928 to market the watches, but although several thousand were produced the company became a victim of the slump and closed down in 1932. The first practical self-winding watch also operated on the pedometer principle and is attributed to Abraham-Louis Perrellet (1770). The method was refined by Breguet in France and by Recordon, who patented the device in England, but it proved troublesome and went out of fashion. There was a brief revival of interest in self-winding watches towards the end of the nineteenth century, but they never achieved great popularity until after the Second World War, when they used either self-winding mechanisms similar to that devised by Harwood or weights which rotated in the case.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    British Horological Institute Gold Medal 1957.
    Bibliography
    1 September 1924, Swiss patent no. 106,582.
    Further Reading
    A.Chapuis and E.Jaquet, 1956, The History of the Self-Winding Watch, London (provides general information).
    "How the automatic wrist watch was invented", 1957, Horological Journal 99:612–61 (for specific information).
    DV

    Biographical history of technology > Harwood, John

  • 50 Siemens, Sir Charles William

    [br]
    b. 4 April 1823 Lenthe, Germany
    d. 19 November 1883 London, England
    [br]
    German/British metallurgist and inventory pioneer of the regenerative principle and open-hearth steelmaking.
    [br]
    Born Carl Wilhelm, he attended craft schools in Lübeck and Magdeburg, followed by an intensive course in natural science at Göttingen as a pupil of Weber. At the age of 19 Siemens travelled to England and sold an electroplating process developed by his brother Werner Siemens to Richard Elkington, who was already established in the plating business. From 1843 to 1844 he obtained practical experience in the Magdeburg works of Count Stolburg. He settled in England in 1844 and later assumed British nationality, but maintained close contact with his brother Werner, who in 1847 had co-founded the firm Siemens \& Halske in Berlin to manufacture telegraphic equipment. William began to develop his regenerative principle of waste-heat recovery and in 1856 his brother Frederick (1826–1904) took out a British patent for heat regeneration, by which hot waste gases were passed through a honeycomb of fire-bricks. When they became hot, the gases were switched to a second mass of fire-bricks and incoming air and fuel gas were led through the hot bricks. By alternating the two gas flows, high temperatures could be reached and considerable fuel economies achieved. By 1861 the two brothers had incorporated producer gas fuel, made by gasifying low-grade coal.
    Heat regeneration was first applied in ironmaking by Cowper in 1857 for heating the air blast in blast furnaces. The first regenerative furnace was set up in Birmingham in 1860 for glassmaking. The first such furnace for making steel was developed in France by Pierre Martin and his father, Emile, in 1863. Siemens found British steelmakers reluctant to adopt the principle so in 1866 he rented a small works in Birmingham to develop his open-hearth steelmaking furnace, which he patented the following year. The process gradually made headway; as well as achieving high temperatures and saving fuel, it was slower than Bessemer's process, permitting greater control over the content of the steel. By 1900 the tonnage of open-hearth steel exceeded that produced by the Bessemer process.
    In 1872 Siemens played a major part in founding the Society of Telegraph Engineers (from which the Institution of Electrical Engineers evolved), serving as its first President. He became President for the second time in 1878. He built a cable works at Charlton, London, where the cable could be loaded directly into the holds of ships moored on the Thames. In 1873, together with William Froude, a British shipbuilder, he designed the Faraday, the first specialized vessel for Atlantic cable laying. The successful laying of a cable from Europe to the United States was completed in 1875, and a further five transatlantic cables were laid by the Faraday over the following decade.
    The Siemens factory in Charlton also supplied equipment for some of the earliest electric-lighting installations in London, including the British Museum in 1879 and the Savoy Theatre in 1882, the first theatre in Britain to be fully illuminated by electricity. The pioneer electric-tramway system of 1883 at Portrush, Northern Ireland, was an opportunity for the Siemens company to demonstrate its equipment.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1883. FRS 1862. Institution of Civil Engineers Telford Medal 1853. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1872. President, Society of Telegraph Engineers 1872 and 1878. President, British Association 1882.
    Bibliography
    27 May 1879, British patent no. 2,110 (electricarc furnace).
    1889, The Scientific Works of C.William Siemens, ed. E.F.Bamber, 3 vols, London.
    Further Reading
    W.Poles, 1888, Life of Sir William Siemens, London; repub. 1986 (compiled from material supplied by the family).
    S.von Weiher, 1972–3, "The Siemens brothers. Pioneers of the electrical age in Europe", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 45:1–11 (a short, authoritative biography). S.von Weihr and H.Goetler, 1983, The Siemens Company. Its Historical Role in the
    Progress of Electrical Engineering 1847–1980, English edn, Berlin (a scholarly account with emphasis on technology).
    GW

    Biographical history of technology > Siemens, Sir Charles William

  • 51 Wolf, Carl

    [br]
    b. 23 December 1838 Zwickau, Saxony, Germany
    d. 30 January 1915 Zwickau, Saxony, Germany
    [br]
    German inventor of the most popular petroleum spirit safety lamp for use in mines.
    [br]
    From an old mining family in the Saxon coalfields, Wolf was aware from his youth of the urgent demand for a miner's lamp which would provide adequate light but not provoke firedamp explosions. While working as an engineer in Zwickau, Wolf spent his spare time conducting experiments for such a lamp. The basic concept of his invention was the principle that dangerous concentrations of methane and air would not explode within a small pipe; this had been established almost seventy years earlier by the English chemist Humphrey Davy. By combining and developing certain devices designed by earlier inventors, in 1883 Wolf produced a prototype with a glass cylinder, a primer fixed inside the lamp and a magnetic lock. Until the successful application of electric light, Wolfs invention was the safest and most popular mining safety lamp. Many earlier inventions had failed to address all the problems of lighting for mines; Davy's lamp, for example, would too quickly become sooty and hot. As Wolfs lamp burned petroleum spirit, at first it was mistrusted outside Saxony, but it successfully passed the safety tests in all the leading coal-producing countries at that time. As well as casting a safe, constant light, the appearance of the cap flame could indicate the concentration of fire-damp in the air, thus providing an additional safety measure. Wolfs first patent was soon followed by many others in several countries, and underwent many developments. In 1884 Heinrich Friemann, a merchant from Eisleben, invested capital in the new company of Friemann and Wolf, which became the leading producer of miners' safety lamps. By 1914 they had manufactured over one million lamps, and the company had branches in major mining districts worldwide.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    F.Schwarz, 1914, Entwickelung und gegenwär-tiger Stand der Grubenbeleuchtung beim Steinkohlen-Bergbau, Gelsenkirchen (a systematic historical outline of safety lamp designs).
    WK

    Biographical history of technology > Wolf, Carl

  • 52 компания-поставщик программ

    Engineering: production company (теле), program producer (теле)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > компания-поставщик программ

  • 53 фирма-изготовитель

    1) Engineering: maker, manufacturer
    2) Construction: producer
    3) Automobile industry: builder
    4) Production: manufacturing company

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > фирма-изготовитель

  • 54 אוטודסק

    Autodesk, U.S. software company headquartered in California, developer and producer of programs for use in computer-aided design and engineering (such as AutoCAD)

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אוטודסק

  • 55 אמרדה

    n. Amerada, Amerada Hess, American petroleum company based in New York City, major producer and distributor of crude and refined petroleum products

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אמרדה

  • 56 אמרדה הס

    Amerada Hess, American petroleum company based in New York City, major producer and distributor of crude and refined petroleum products

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אמרדה הס

  • 57 Erdöl

    Erdöl n IND, UMWELT oil, petroleum
    * * *
    n <Ind, Umwelt> oil, petroleum
    * * *
    Erdöl
    mineral (crude) oil, petroleum, kerosene (US);
    Erdöl im Küstenvorland onshore oil;
    auf Erdöl stoßen to strike oil;
    Erdölaktien oil shares (stocks, US);
    Erdölarbeiter oilfield worker;
    Erdölbedarf oil demand;
    Erdölbohrungen oil explorations;
    Erdöleinfuhren oil imports;
    Erdöleinnahmen oil income;
    Erdölfazilitäten (Weltwährungsfonds) oil facilities;
    Erdölfeld oilfield;
    Erdölförderländer oil-producing countries;
    Erdölfund oil discovery;
    Erdölgebiet oilfield, oil territory;
    Erdölgelder oil money;
    Erdölgesellschaft oil company;
    Erdölgewinnung oil (petroleum) production;
    Erdölindustrie oil (petroleum) industry;
    Erdölkartell petroleum cartel;
    Erdölkonzession oil concession [rights], concession to extract oil;
    Erdöllager oil stock;
    Erdölland oil-producting (-exporting) state;
    Erdölleitung pipeline;
    Erdölmarkt oil market;
    verfügbare Erdölmengen oil availabilities;
    Erdölpolitik oil policy;
    eingefrorener Erdölpreis frozen oil price;
    von der OPEC festgelegter Erdölpreis Opec-fixed oil price;
    Erdölproduzent oil producer;
    Erdölquelle oil well;
    Erdölreserven oil reserves;
    Erdölsteuereinkünfte oil tax revenue;
    Erdölsucher oil prospector;
    Erdölüberfluss oil affluence;
    Erdölüberschwemmung oil glut;
    Erdölverarbeitung oil refining;
    Erdölverkäufe oil sales;
    Erdölverknappung oil shortage;
    Erdölverschiffung shipment of crude;
    Erdölvorkommen oil occurrence (deposit);
    Erdölwerte oils;
    Erdölwirtschaft oil business;
    Erdölzoll oil tariff.

    Business german-english dictionary > Erdöl

  • 58 Grenzbetrieb

    Grenzbetrieb m WIWI marginal firm
    * * *
    m <Vw> marginal firm
    * * *
    Grenzbetrieb
    marginal company (firm, producer, undertaking)

    Business german-english dictionary > Grenzbetrieb

  • 59 Unternehmer

    Unternehmer m 1. GEN operator, businessman, businesswoman; 2. MGT, PERS entrepreneur; 3. RECHT contractor; 4. GEN, WIWI entrepreneur, trader
    * * *
    m 1. < Geschäft> operator, businessman; 2. <Mgmnt, Person> entrepreneur; 3. < Recht> contractor; 4. <Geschäft, Vw> entrepreneur, trader
    * * *
    Unternehmer(in)
    entrepreneur, enterpriser, contractor, industrialist, factory owner, undertaker (Br.), operator (US), runner (US), (Arbeitgeber) principal, employer;
    Risiko eingehender Unternehmer[in] capital venturer;
    exportinteressierter Unternehmer[in] prospective exporter;
    geschickter Unternehmer[in] engineer;
    selbstständiger (unabhängiger) Unternehmer[in] private trader, independent contractor (entrepreneur), self-employer;
    Unternehmer[in] in der Ölbranche oilman;
    Unternehmer[in]ansicht proprietorial outlook;
    Unternehmer[in]begabung managerial talent;
    Unternehmer[in]betrieb entrepreneurial company;
    Unternehmer[in]eigenschaften managerial (entrepreneurial) qualities, entrepreneurial skill (capacity, ability);
    Unternehmer[in]einkommen entrepreneurial income;
    Unternehmer[in]einstellung proprietorial attitude;
    Unternehmer[in]erfahrung general management experience;
    Unternehmer[in]fonds employer fund;
    Unternehmer[in]funktionen managerial (entrepreneurial) functions;
    Unternehmer[in]garantie contract bond;
    Unternehmer[in]geist spirit in an enterprise, entrepreneurship;
    Unternehmer[in]geist fördern to boost entrepreneurship;
    Unternehmer[in]gewinn business profit, producer’s rent, wages (earnings) of management, residual payment;
    temporärer Unternehmer[in]gewinn quasi-rent;
    freie Unternehmer[in]grundsätze free-enterprise policies;
    Unternehmer[in]gruppe entrepreneurial (employer) group.

    Business german-english dictionary > Unternehmer

  • 60 Unternehmerin

    Unternehmerin f 1. GEN operator, businesswoman; 2. MGT, PERS entrepreneur; 3. RECHT contractor; 4. GEN, WIWI entrepreneur
    * * *
    f 1. < Geschäft> operator, businesswoman; 2. <Mgmnt, Person> entrepreneur; 3. < Recht> contractor; 4. <Geschäft, Vw> entrepreneur
    * * *
    Unternehmer(in)
    entrepreneur, enterpriser, contractor, industrialist, factory owner, undertaker (Br.), operator (US), runner (US), (Arbeitgeber) principal, employer;
    Risiko eingehender Unternehmer[in] capital venturer;
    exportinteressierter Unternehmer[in] prospective exporter;
    geschickter Unternehmer[in] engineer;
    selbstständiger (unabhängiger) Unternehmer[in] private trader, independent contractor (entrepreneur), self-employer;
    Unternehmer[in] in der Ölbranche oilman;
    Unternehmer[in]ansicht proprietorial outlook;
    Unternehmer[in]begabung managerial talent;
    Unternehmer[in]betrieb entrepreneurial company;
    Unternehmer[in]eigenschaften managerial (entrepreneurial) qualities, entrepreneurial skill (capacity, ability);
    Unternehmer[in]einkommen entrepreneurial income;
    Unternehmer[in]einstellung proprietorial attitude;
    Unternehmer[in]erfahrung general management experience;
    Unternehmer[in]fonds employer fund;
    Unternehmer[in]funktionen managerial (entrepreneurial) functions;
    Unternehmer[in]garantie contract bond;
    Unternehmer[in]geist spirit in an enterprise, entrepreneurship;
    Unternehmer[in]geist fördern to boost entrepreneurship;
    Unternehmer[in]gewinn business profit, producer’s rent, wages (earnings) of management, residual payment;
    temporärer Unternehmer[in]gewinn quasi-rent;
    freie Unternehmer[in]grundsätze free-enterprise policies;
    Unternehmer[in]gruppe entrepreneurial (employer) group.
    Unternehmerin
    woman executive.

    Business german-english dictionary > Unternehmerin

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