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prototype+workshop

  • 1 цех по изготовлению опытных образцов

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > цех по изготовлению опытных образцов

  • 2 información textual

    (n.) = textual information, text information, text knowledge, textual data, textual matter, textual document
    Ex. All non-coded ( textual) information which is not to be indexed is kept in the notes area of the record.
    Ex. A multimedia computer system can integrate two or more types of media materials in digital form, such as audio, image, full-motion video, and text information.
    Ex. A prototype, natural language, text-knowledge system has emerged from the project and includes a data base manager to compile the text knowledge and to make it available to navigational commands.
    Ex. Text-numeric databases contain a mixture of textual and numeric data (such as company annual reports) and handbook data.
    Ex. A word processor is simply a computer which is dedicated to the manipulation of textual matter.
    Ex. Interfaces for the following types of resources are of special interest to this workshop: textual documents; statistical data; multimedia or mixed-media data; geospatial data; and genomics and proteomics data = En este traller de trabajo son de interés especial los interfaces para los siguientes tipos de recursos: documentos de texto, datos estadísticos, información multimedia, información geospacial y datos de la genómica y la proteómica.
    * * *
    (n.) = textual information, text information, text knowledge, textual data, textual matter, textual document

    Ex: All non-coded ( textual) information which is not to be indexed is kept in the notes area of the record.

    Ex: A multimedia computer system can integrate two or more types of media materials in digital form, such as audio, image, full-motion video, and text information.
    Ex: A prototype, natural language, text-knowledge system has emerged from the project and includes a data base manager to compile the text knowledge and to make it available to navigational commands.
    Ex: Text-numeric databases contain a mixture of textual and numeric data (such as company annual reports) and handbook data.
    Ex: A word processor is simply a computer which is dedicated to the manipulation of textual matter.
    Ex: Interfaces for the following types of resources are of special interest to this workshop: textual documents; statistical data; multimedia or mixed-media data; geospatial data; and genomics and proteomics data = En este traller de trabajo son de interés especial los interfaces para los siguientes tipos de recursos: documentos de texto, datos estadísticos, información multimedia, información geospacial y datos de la genómica y la proteómica.

    Spanish-English dictionary > información textual

  • 3 Muster

    Muster n 1. COMP pattern; 2. GEN pattern, sample, template; 3. PAT design; 4. V&M sample, pattern, model
    * * *
    n 1. < Comp> pattern; 2. < Geschäft> pattern, sample, template; 3. < Patent> design; 4. <V&M> pattern, model
    * * *
    Muster
    (Form) pattern, set form, device, shape, figure, (Gebrauchsmuster) design, pattern [sample], patterned sample, (Modell) model, copy, prototype, (Norm) norm, standard, (Textilwaren) figure, (Type) type, (Vorbild) paragon, mirror, example, (Warenprobe) sample, trial piece, specimen;
    dem Muster entsprechend up to sample;
    laut Muster, mit dem Muster übereinstimmend true to specimen;
    nach Muster according to pattern (sample), on the model (lines);
    nach dem Muster von on the pattern (model) of;
    schlechter als das Muster inferior to sample;
    streng nach Muster strictly up to sample;
    auf Bestellung angefertigtes Muster custom design;
    anhängende Muster annexed (attached) samples;
    aufdringliches Muster loud pattern;
    beigefügtes Muster attached sample;
    zu buntes Muster loud design;
    eingetragenes Muster registered pattern (design, Br.);
    einheitliches Muster standard pattern;
    gängiges Muster conventional design;
    gewerbliches Muster industrial design;
    vor Absendung der Ware gezogenes Muster preshipment sample;
    kostenloses Muster free sample;
    ungeschütztes Muster open pattern;
    unverkäufliches Muster free sample;
    nicht verkäufliche Muster models not on sale;
    verschiedene Muster sundry samples;
    verschlossenes Muster sealed sample;
    vorgelegtes Muster sample displayed;
    wiederkehrendes Muster repeated pattern;
    Muster auf Anfrage kostenlos free samples on request;
    Muster unter versiegeltem Verschluss sealed sample;
    Muster ohne Wert (Postversand) samples [only], no commercial value (US), by pattern (sample) post;
    Muster abschneiden to cut off a sample;
    mit Mustern verschiedene Versuche anstellen to put samples through a series of tests;
    nach einem Muster arbeiten to work from a pattern;
    Muster stichprobenartig auswählen to select a specimen at random;
    nach dem Muster bestellen to order goods from sample;
    als Muster dienen to serve as a model;
    Muster einsehen to have a look at the patterns;
    dem Muster entsprechen to correspond to pattern, to be up to (match the, correspond to the) sample;
    dem Muster nicht entsprechen not to be up to pattern;
    sich auf ein Muster festlegen to decide on a pattern;
    einem absehbaren Muster folgen to follow a predictable pattern;
    nach ausländischen Mustern gestalten to foreignize;
    etw. nach dem Muster kaufen to buy s. th. from sample;
    Muster nehmen to draw samples;
    als Muster ohne Wert senden (verschicken) to send as samples of no value;
    mit dem Muster übereinstimmen to match the sample;
    mit Mustern versehen to pattern;
    Muster vorführen to wait on with patterns;
    Muster vorlegen to submit samples;
    Muster ziehen to draw (take) samples, to sample;
    Muster zusammenstellen to arrange patterns, to assort (make up a collection of) samples;
    Musterabänderung modification of a design;
    Musterabkommen model convention;
    Musteranforderungskarte sample request card;
    Musteranfrage request for pattern;
    Musterangebot sample offer;
    Musteranlage pilot project;
    Musteranmeldung application for registration as design;
    Musterarbeitsvertrag model employment contract;
    Musterauftrag trial order;
    Musterbedingungen standard form contract conditions;
    Musterbeispiel [prime] example;
    Musterbericht standard report;
    Musterbestellung sample order;
    Musterbestimmungen eines Vertrages model conditions of contract;
    Musterbetrieb model enterprise (plant, workshop), pilot plant;
    landwirtschaftlicher Musterbetrieb model (demonstration) farm;
    Musterbeutel mailing bag;
    Musterbilanz standard balance sheet;
    Musterbrief form (US) (sample, standard, specimen) letter;
    Musterbuch specimen (pattern, sample, design) book, book of patterns;
    charakteristische Mustereigenschaften design requirements;
    Mustereintragung sample entry;
    Musterentnahme sampling;
    Mustererkennungssoftware pattern recognition software;
    Musteretat guideline budget;
    Musterexemplar pattern, sample, specimen [copy], prototype, showpiece;
    Musterfarm demonstration (model) farm;
    Musterformular specimen (sample) form;
    vollständige Mustergarnitur full set of samples.

    Business german-english dictionary > Muster

  • 4 Ferguson, Harry

    [br]
    b. 4 November 1884 County Down, Ireland
    d. 25 October 1960 England
    [br]
    Irish engineer who developed a tractor hydraulic system for cultivation equipment, and thereby revolutionized tractor design.
    [br]
    Ferguson's father was a small farmer who expected his son to help on the farm from an early age. As a result he received little formal education, and on leaving school joined his brother in a backstreet workshop in Belfast repairing motor bikes. By the age of 19 he had built his own bike and began hill-climbing competitions and racing. His successes in these ventures gained useful publicity for the workshop. In 1907 he built his own car and entered it into competitions, and in 1909 became the first person in Britain to build and fly a machine that was heavier than air.
    On the outbreak of the First World War he was appointed by the Irish Department of Agriculture to supervise the operation and maintenance of all farm tractors. His experiences convinced him that even the Ford tractor and the implements available for it were inadequate for the task, and he began to experiment with his own plough designs. The formation of the Ferguson-Sherman Corporation resulted in the production of thousands of the ploughs he had designed for the Ford tractor, but in 1928 Ford discontinued production of tractors, and Ferguson returned to Ireland. He immediately began to design his own tractor. Six years of development led to the building of a prototype that weighed only 16 cwt (813kg). In 1936 David Brown of Huddersfield, Yorkshire, began production of these tractors for Ferguson, but the partnership was not wholly successful and was dissolved after three years. In 1939 Ferguson and Ford reached their famous "Handshake agreement", in which no formal contract was signed, and the mass production of the Ford Ferguson system tractors began that year. During the next nine years 300,000 tractors and a million implements were produced under this agreement. However, on the death of Henry Ford the company began production, under his son, of their own tractor. Ferguson returned to the UK and negotiated a deal with the Standard Motor Company of Coventry for the production of his tractor. At the same time he took legal action against Ford, which resulted in that company being forced to stop production and to pay damages amounting to US$9.5 million.
    Aware that his equipment would only operate when set up properly, Ferguson established a training school at Stoneleigh in Warwickshire which was to be a model for other manufacturers. In 1953, by amicable agreement, Ferguson amalgamated with the Massey Harris Company to form Massey Ferguson, and in so doing added harvesting machinery to the range of equipment produced. A year later he disposed of his shares in the new company and turned his attention again to the motor car. Although a number of experimental cars were produced, there were no long-lasting developments from this venture other than a four-wheel-drive system based on hydraulics; this was used by a number of manufacturers on occasional models. Ferguson's death heralded the end of these developments.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Honorary DSc Queen's University, Belfast, 1948.
    Further Reading
    C.Murray, 1972, Harry Ferguson, Inventor and Pioneer. John Murray.
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Ferguson, Harry

  • 5 Gropius, Walter Adolf

    [br]
    b. 18 May 1883 Berlin, Germany
    d. 5 July 1969 Boston, USA
    [br]
    German co-founder of the modern movement of architecture.
    [br]
    A year after he began practice as an architect, Gropius was responsible for the pace-setting Fagus shoe-last factory at Alfeld-an-der-Leine in Germany, one of the few of his buildings to survive the Second World War. Today the building does not appear unusual, but in 1911 it was a revolutionary prototype, heralding the glass curtain walled method of non-load-bearing cladding that later became ubiquitous. Made from glass, steel and reinforced concrete, this factory initiated a new concept, that of the International school of modern architecture.
    In 1919 Gropius was appointed to head the new School of Art and Design at Weimar, the Staatliches Bauhaus. The school had been formed by an amalgamation of the Grand Ducal schools of fine and applied arts founded in 1906. Here Gropius put into practice his strongly held views and he was so successful that this small college, which trained only a few hundred students in the limited years of its existence, became world famous, attracting artists, architects and students of quality from all over Europe.
    Gropius's idea was to set up an institution where students of all the arts and crafts could work together and learn from one another. He abhorred the artificial barriers that had come to exist between artists and craftsmen and saw them all as interdependent. He felt that manual dexterity was as essential as creative design. Every Bauhaus student, whatever the individual's field of work or talent, took the same original workshop training. When qualified they were able to understand and supervise all the aesthetic and constructional processes that made up the scope of their work.
    In 1924, because of political changes, the Weimar Bauhaus was closed, but Gropius was invited to go to Dessau to re-establish it in a new purpose-built school which he designed. This group of buildings became a prototype that designers of the new architectural form emulated. Gropius left the Bauhaus in 1928, only a few years before it was finally closed due to the growth of National Socialism. He moved to England in 1934, but because of a lack of architectural opportunities and encouragement he continued on his way to the USA, where he headed the Department of Architecture at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design from 1937 to 1952. After his retirement from there Gropius formed the Architect's Collaborative and, working with other architects such as Marcel Breuer and Pietro Belluschi, designed a number of buildings (for example, the US Embassy in Athens (1960) and the Pan Am Building in New York (1963)).
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1984, Scope of Total Architecture, Allen \& Unwin.
    Further Reading
    N.Pevsner, 1936, Pioneers of the Modern Movement: From William Morris to Walter Gropius, Penguin.
    C.Jenck, 1973, Modern Movements in Architecture, Penguin.
    H.Probst and C.Shädlich, 1988, Walter Gropius, Berlin: Ernst \& Son.
    DY

    Biographical history of technology > Gropius, Walter Adolf

  • 6 Bell, Revd Patrick

    [br]
    b. 1799 Auchterhouse, Scotland
    d. 22 April 1869 Carmyllie, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish inventor of the first successful reaping machine.
    [br]
    The son of a Forfarshire tenant farmer, Patrick Bell obtained an MA from the University of St Andrews. His early association with farming kindled an interest in engineering and mechanics and he was to maintain a workshop not only on his father's farm, but also, in later life, at the parsonage at Carmyllie.
    He was still studying divinity when he invented his reaping machine. Using garden shears as the basis of his design, he built a model in 1827 and a full-scale prototype the following year. Not wishing the machine to be seen during his early experiments, he and his brother planted a sheaf of oats in soil laid out in a shed, and first tried the machine on this. It cut well enough but left the straw in a mess behind it. A canvas belt system was devised and another secret trial in the barn was followed by a night excursion into a field, where corn was successfully harvested.
    Two machines were at work during 1828, apparently achieving a harvest rate of one acre per hour. In 1832 there were ten machines at work, and at least another four had been sent to the United States by this time. Despite their success Bell did not patent his design, feeling that the idea should be given free to the world. In later years he was to regret the decision, feeling that the many badly-made imitations resulted in its poor reputation and prevented its adoption.
    Bell's calling took precedence over his inventive interests and after qualifying he went to Canada in 1833, spending four years in Fergus, Ontario. He later returned to Scotland and be-came the minister at Carmyllie, with a living of £150 per annum.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Late in the day he was honoured for his part in the development of the reaping machine. He received an honorary degree from the University of St Andrews and in 1868 a testimonial and £1,000 raised by public subscription by the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland.
    Bibliography
    1854, Journal of Agriculture (perhaps stung by other claims, Bell wrote his own account).
    Further Reading
    G.Quick and W.Buchele, 1978, The Grain Harvesters, American Society of Agricultural Engineers (gives an account of the development of harvesting machinery).
    L.J.Jones, 1979, History of Technology, pp. 101–48 (gives a critical assessment of the various claims regarding the originality of the invention).
    51–69 (provides a celebration of Bell's achievement on its centenary).
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Bell, Revd Patrick

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