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Tayto's and .
Companies worldwide sought to buy the rights to Tayto's technique.

innovation and changed
He also changed " tongue " to " tung "— an innovation that never caught on.
A recent and profound innovation in special effects has been the development of computer generated imagery, or CGI which has changed nearly every aspect of motion picture special effects.
Founded in 1832 by John A. Roebling, who is known for the design of the Brooklyn Bridge in New York, and for innovation in producing wire rope, the community was initially called " Germania ", which was soon changed to " Sachsenburg " and eventually anglicized to Saxonburg.
Another innovation was the attempt to collect a relief, much like the relief due from vassals at the death of an overlord, from the under-tenants of church lands when the church office changed hands.
In 1999, President Bill Clinton awarded the National Medal of Arts to Lear, noting that “ Norman Lear has held up a mirror to American society and changed the way we look at it .” Also in 1999, he and Bud Yorkin received the Women in Film Lucy Award in recognition of excellence and innovation in creative works that have enhanced the perception of women through the medium of television.
From 1921 to 1959 the regime at the college changed very little: tight central control by SED did not encourage innovation.
On October 2004 the organization changed its codes and statutes to develop an attitude of service, leadership, integrity, innovation, and cultural and artistic expression.
One example of technological innovation is in plant genetics whereby the biological characteristics of species can be changed by employing genetic modification to alter biological dependence on the most limiting resource.
As Canada has grown as a nation, the Canadian National Exhibition has also changed over time, reflecting the growth in diversity and innovation.
The Holt Planetarium's programs have focused on audience participation, an innovation that has changed the way small planetariums around the world present astronomy to the public.
Hall changed the way jazz guitar sounded, with his innovation, composition, and improvisation.
As the social climate changed in the 1980s, the show's writing became less edgy, and as the girls became adults, the innovation of the original premise — a divorced mother raising teenage children — was lost.
Criteria for induction include: icon-status ( the toy is widely recognized, respected, and remembered ); longevity ( more than a passing fad ); discovery ( fosters learning, creativity, or discovery ); and innovation ( profoundly changed play or toy design ).
This long-running pattern of tenaciously investing in technical innovation and complete end-to-end system design and manufacture created technically excellent computers, but meant that Apricot was slow to adapt as the worldwide market grew and changed.
Del Turco had quickly changed the party symbol to reinforce the idea of innovation.
As well as lack of innovation in gameplay, reviewers have also noted that the presentation has not changed much from Fire Emblem.
Indeed, the world has changed as financial conglomerates, finanicial innovation and risk management have developed.

innovation and entire
In 2000, a special section of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ( PNAS ) was devoted to " evo-devo ", and an entire 2005 issue of the Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution was devoted to the key evo-devo topics of evolutionary innovation and morphological novelty.
Besides their innovation in the entire genre of funk music, George Clinton and P-Funk are still heard often today, especially in hip-hop sampling.
" He argues that intellectual property laws can actually hinder innovation, since competitors can be indefinitely discouraged from further research expenditures in the general area covered by the patent because the courts may hold their improvements as infringements on the previous patent, and the patent holder is discouraged from engaging in further research in this field because the privilege discourages his improvement of his invention for the entire period of the patent, with the assurance that no competitor can trespass on his domain.
The King decides to transform his entire country into a limited liability corporation – an innovation that even England herself has not yet accepted.
At the time, Gates commented that the innovation would have a “ profound effect ” on their entire product line.
Block parties are reported as a World War I innovation originating from the East Side of New York City, where an entire block was roped off and patriotic songs sung and a parade held to honor the members of that block who had gone off to war.
While he was grounded in the fluid phrase structures and wider variety of possible schematic layouts that came from Haydn and Mozart, his deepest innovation was to work from both ends of a sonata form, conceiving of the entire structure, and then polishing themes which would support that overarching design.
1993 was Carter ’ s biggest year of innovation, creating a program called “ Jazz Ahead ” that took 20 students who were given the opportunity to spend an entire week training and composing with Carter, a program that still exists to this day and is hosted in The Kennedy Center.
We have further to recommend for axe-handles an addition which is liable to suspicion as an entire innovation, but which, we are confident, will be found valuable at those critical moments when the axe is required to hold up two or three men.
* Creativity, innovation, and flexibility will be regarded as necessary elements of education by the entire community.
This innovation, known as pulp magazines, became an entire industry unto itself and made Munsey quite wealthy.
Wilder and the entire Nursing Leadership Team will continue Baylor ’ s 105-year tradition of strong nursing leadership, innovation and distinguished service.

innovation and nature
The radical nature of the innovation in the Congo was not emphasized in the official announcements.
Strauss argued that the unavoidable nature of such arms races, which have existed before modern times and led to the collapse of peaceful civilizations, provides us with both an explanation of what is most truly dangerous in Machiavelli's innovations, but also the way in which the aims of his apparently immoral innovation can be understood.
* Ask Nature-the Biomimicry Design Portal: biomimetics, architecture, biology, innovation inspired by nature, industrial design
Unlike other economic growth theories, his approach explains growth by innovation as a process of creative destruction, which captures the dual nature of technological progress: in terms of creation, entrepreneurs introduce new products or processes in the hope that they will enjoy temporary monopoly-like profits as they capture markets.
Some commentators justify his acceptance of immoral and criminal actions by leaders by arguing that he lived during a time of continuous political conflict and instability in Italy, and that his influence has increased the " pleasures, equality and freedom " of many people, loosening the grip of medieval Catholicism's " classical teleology ", which " disregarded not only the needs of individuals and the wants of the common man, but stifled innovation, enterprise, and enquiry into cause and effect relationships that now allow us to control nature ".
This theory views history as a linear progression propelled by good governance, which is, in turn, to be achieved through balancing the emotional, amoral, and egoistic elements of human nature with the human dignity needs of reason, security, human rights, accountability, transparency, justice, opportunity, innovation, and inclusiveness.
) and E., Lense ( associated editor ) High technology ceramics: past, present, and future ; the nature of innovation and change in ceramic technology.
Later methods such as lean manufacturing corrected this oversight by including ongoing innovation as part of their process and by recognizing the iterative nature of development.
As a result of Bewick's innovation and improvements in the printing press, illustrations of art, nature, technical processes, famous people, foreign lands and many other subjects became more widely available.
This encouraged innovation in producing reliable and fuel-efficient vehicles, because the nature of endurance racing requires cars that last the distance and spend as little time in the pits as possible.
But the essential nature of the tertiary is really an innovation of the thirteenth century.
Kōrin's innovation was to depict nature as an abstract using numerous color and hue gradations, and mixing colors on the surface to achieve eccentric effects, as well as liberal use of precious substances like gold and pearl.
An article about Taimina's innovation in New Scientist was spotted by the Institute For Figuring, a small non-profit organisation based in Los Angeles, and she was invited to speak about hyperbolic space and its connections with nature to a general audience which included artists and movie producers.
Shortly afterwards, the site added the ability for readers to post comments on others ' diary entries-an innovation that was the forerunner of the interactive nature of today's blogs and blog comments.

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