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British and handbook
The development of this department at the British Museum moved the focus for the development of conservation from Germany to Britain, and in 1956 Plenderleith wrote a significant handbook called The Conservation of Antiquities and Works of Art, it was this book rather than Rathgen's that is commonly seen as the major source for the development of conservation as we know it today.
Chamberlain wrote the preface to the Radical Programme ( July 1885 ), the first campaign handbook of British political history.
Atkinson worked tirelessly to promote and develop science-based British archaeology, and was famous for his practical contributions to archaeological technique and his pragmatic solutions to on-site problems, which were listed in the handbook he wrote called Field Archaeology.
A handbook to the birds of British Burmah including those found in the adjoining state of Karennee.
Members receive the Journal of the British Astronomical Association bi-monthly ; a guide to observing ; an annual handbook ( of charts and astronomical events ); and access to meetings and the association's collections of books and equipment.
British pathologist, Austin Gresham, wrote a handbook, A Colour Atlas of Forensic Pathology, in 1975.
*-- ( 1923 ) A handbook of the larger British Fungi British Museum, Dep't of Botany, London, OCLC 4142558
Gladman, citing the British and Foreign School Society handbook, wrote " Failure occurred, as it always will, when masters were slaves to " the system ," when they were satisfied with mechanical arrangements and routine work, or when they did not study their pupils, and get down to Principles of Education.
It served as a guide or handbook to the British upper classes and landed gentry ( in this case referred to in the title under the term, county families, for which see county family ).
* British Birds ’ Eggs: a handbook of British oölogy
Despite its age, it has remained the standard work on the identification of British beetles into the 21st century, although the British Entomological and Natural History Society produced a companion volume, New British Beetles-species not in Joy's practical handbook by Peter J. Hodge and Richard A. Jones in 1995.

British and printing
46 printing concerns and 13 merchants combined, representing 85 % of the British printing capacity.
Nevertheless, as if to thumb their nose at Allenby the British press continued to celebrate his victory over the Ottoman Empire by printing cartoons of Richard the Lionheart looking down on Jerusalem from the heavens with the caption reading " At last my dream has come true.
* March 4 The Today national tabloid newspaper is launched in the United Kingdom, pioneering the use of computer photosetting and full-colour offset printing, at a time when British national newspapers still use Linotype machines and letterpress.
Selection of early etched printing plates from the British Museum
By the ninth century printing on paper had taken off, and the first extant complete printed book containing its date is the Diamond Sutra ( British Library ) of 868.
The police seized thousands of Nigerian and non-Nigerian passports, 10, 000 blank British Airways boarding passes, 10, 000 United States money orders, customs documents, false university certificates, 500 printing plates, and 500 computers.
E. V. Rieu could not longer delay his callup and was drafted in 1917, the management then being under his wife Nellie Rieu, a former editor for the Athenaeum ‘ with the assistance of her two British babies .’ It was too late to have important electrotype and stereotype plates shipped to India from Oxford, and the Oxford printing house itself was overburdened with government printing orders as the empire ’ s propaganda machine got to work.
The first printing of the British edition was in October 1934.
In the nations of the British Empire, although the full stop could be used in typewritten material, the point ( mid dot: ·), which can also be called an interpunct ( often referred to as the decimal point ) was preferred for the decimal mark in printing technologies that could accommodate it.
This did not stop British newspapers from printing programme schedules for the station, or a British weekly magazine aimed at teenage girls, Fab 208 from promoting the " DJs " and their lifestyle ( Radio Luxembourg's wavelength was 208 metres ( 1439, then 1440 kHz )).
The fact was forgotten soon after in the U. S., so most US editions, including the newly released eBook, follow the first printing and are therefore unauthorized versions of the text, while the British editions, which follow the first edition printed by Jonathan Cape, contain Pynchon's final revisions.
Despite HarperCollins ' predictions-and, according to Moore, their deliberately limited promotion of the book-the book became enormously popular, becoming the largest-selling nonfiction book for 2002 at such major outlets as Barnes & Noble and Amazon. com, and occupying the # 1 spot in the U. S., the UK ( including being the number one seller on Amazon. co. uk before a British printing was even proposed ), Germany, Ireland, and elsewhere.
An original printing press for the Penny Black, the D cylinder press invented by Jacob Perkins and patented in 1819, is on display at the British Library in London.
The Penny Black printing plates are currently on display at the British Library.
Gutenberg's first and only large-scale printing effort was the now iconic Gutenberg Bible in the 1450s — a Latin translation from the Hebrew Old Testament and the Greek New Testament, copies of which can be viewed on the British Library website www. bl. uk.
Desai created a sensation by bringing out a hand-written cyclostyled newspaper after the printing press was confiscated by the British government.
As the " menace " of printing spread, governments established centralized control mechanisms, and in 1557 the British Crown thought to stem the flow of seditious and heretical books by chartering the Stationers ' Company.
The Areopagitica, published in 1644 under the full title Areopagitica: A speech of Mr. John Milton for the liberty of unlicensed printing to the Parliament of England, was John Milton's response to the British parliament re-introducing government licensing of printers, hence publishers.
The BOA published the Dioptric Review and the British Journal of Physiological Optics on its own in-house printing press.
The American versions differed from the British in one respect crucial to the collectibles market: beyond the first printing, most of Houghton Mifflin's impressions did not identify which printing run they came out of or even a copyright date.
However, the fifth overall impression, or the first printing of the second edition, seems to be garnering prices as high as the British fourth printing, which was the cheapest and most common of the first edition printings.

British and technology
British Aerospace ( BAe ) licensed the AIM-7E2 technology in the 1970s, producing the Skyflash missile.
During the intervening period, bmobile has obtained a virtual stranglehold on the cellular telecommunications market in the British Virgin Islands by a combination of low prices and aggressive advertising, as well as significant investment in infrastructure and technology.
According to Blair ( 1997 ) British Steel faced serious problems at the time of its formation, including obsolescent plants ; plants operating under capacity and thus at low efficiency ; outdated technology ; price controls that reduced marketing flexibility ; soaring coal and oil costs ; lack of capital investment funds ; and increasing competition on the world market.
A skilled labour force coupled with the adoption of modern British / Western business methods and technology ensured that opportunities for external trade, investment, and recruitment were maximised.
Often the technology was purchased from Britain or British engineers and entrepreneurs moved abroad in search of new opportunities.
In some cases ( such as iron ), the different availability of resources locally meant that only some aspects of the British technology were adopted.
LORAN was an American development, advancing the technology of the British GEE radio navigation system that was used early in World War II.
Category: British technology writers
In 1958 the British government traded their VX technology with the United States of America in exchange for information on thermonuclear weapons ; by 1961 the US was producing large amounts of VX and performed its own nerve agent research.
The British then took an active interest in the technology and developed it further during the 19th century.
The British government was very protective of this technology, restricting its export.
The British Firefox ( 1977 ) by Craig Thomas, detailing the Western ( Anglo American ) theft of a superior Soviet jet aeroplane, established the techno-thriller, in which technology and its threats determine plot.
Category: British technology writers
With their military technology, they overcame the local forces with relative ease, and formed several small Boer republics in areas beyond British control, without a central government.
He specialized in reactor technology from United Kingdom when he was offered post-graduate research by the Manchester University, and did extensive research at British Nuclear Power Industry.
At the start of World War II, British ASDIC technology was transferred for free to the United States.
Improving technology and increasing control of world markets allowed British traders to develop a commercial chain in which raw cotton fibers were ( at first ) purchased from colonial plantations, processed into cotton cloth in the mills of Lancashire, and then exported on British ships to captive colonial markets in West Africa, India, and China ( via Shanghai and Hong Kong ).
Category: British science and technology magazines
The idea was that each manufacturer would manufacture part of the system, so French technology procured by France Telecom would land in France, US technology in America procured by AT & T and British technology procured by BT in the UK.
The German military made limited use of frequency hopping for communication between fixed command points in World War I to prevent eavesdropping by British forces, who did not have the technology to follow the sequence.
The Register (" El Reg " or " The Reg " to its staff and readers ) is a British technology news and opinion website.
*" BAE Systems-APTI / ARCO program and apparatus-owner of the HAARP facility, railgun technology, electromagnetic armor, and, a sub-corporation partner with Raytheon via British Aerospace Corporation, as well as owner of Nicola Tesla's " Wardenclyffe Tower " ( first EM long-range weapon ) funding company, the Marconi Company "

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