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facsimile and fax
As a designer for the Radio Corporation of America ( RCA ), in 1924, Richard H. Ranger invented the wireless photoradiogram, or transoceanic radio facsimile, the forerunner of today ’ s " fax " machines.
In the 1960s, the United States Army transmitted the first photograph via satellite facsimile (" fax ") to Puerto Rico from the Deal Test Site using the Courier satellite.
Prior to the introduction of the ubiquitous fax machine, one of the first being the Exxon Qwip in the mid-1970s, facsimile machines worked by optical scanning of a document or drawing spinning on a drum.
The teleostereograph machine, a forerunner to the modern electronic fax, was developed by AT & T's Bell Labs in the 1920s ; however, the first commercial use of image facsimile telegraph devices dates back to the time of Samuel F. B. Morse's invention in the 1800s.
This early electro-mechanical system was called BEEBFAX – " Beeb " was the popular name for the BBC, and " fax " from the facsimile machine.
The Westar satellites ' transponders were also leased by other companies for relaying video, voice, data, and facsimile ( fax ) transmissions.
A telephone call may carry ordinary voice transmission using a telephone, data transmission when the calling party and called party are using modems, or facsimile transmission when they are using fax machines.
Radiofax, also known as weatherfax ( portmanteau word from the words " weather facsimile ") and HF fax ( due to its common use in the short waves ), is an analogue mode for transmitting monochrome images.
Digital facsimile equipment refers to the modern fax machines which operates on ISDN 64 kbit / s signals and having colour faxing, high speed 3 seconds per page transmission, high resolution graphics, 256 grey scales and may be PC based, high speed fax, Lan Fax etc.
As a designer for the Radio Corporation of America ( RCA ), in 1924, Richard Ranger invented the wireless photoradiogram, or transoceanic radio facsimile, the forerunner of today ’ s fax machines.
Examples are: ad ( advertisement ), cable ( cablegram ), doc ( doctor ), exam ( examination ), fax ( facsimile ), gas ( gasoline ), gym ( gymnastics, gymnasium ), memo ( memorandum ), mutt ( muttonhead ), pub ( public house ), pop ( popular music ).
Among the technological precursors to the videophone were telegraphic image transmitters created by several companies, such as the wirephoto used by Western Union, and the teleostereograph developed by AT & T's Bell Labs, which were forerunners of today's fax ( facsimile ) machines.

facsimile and machine
In 1966, Xerox released the Magnafax Telecopier, a smaller, 46-pound facsimile machine.
In 1843 Scottish inventor Alexander Bain invented a device that could be considered the first facsimile machine.
" As the first facsimile machine, its stylus was controlled by horizontal and vertical bars.
Dr. Rebecca Mercuri, the creator of the Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail ( VVPAT ) concept ( as described in her Ph. D. dissertation in October 2000 on the basic voter verifiable ballot system ), proposes to answer the auditability question by having the voting machine print a paper ballot or other paper facsimile that can be visually verified by the voter before being entered into a secure location.
Howe was forced to defend his patent in a court case that lasted from 1849 to 1854 because he found that Isaac Singer with cooperation from Walter Hunt had perfected a facsimile of his machine and was selling it with the same lockstitch that Howe had invented and patented.
: the use of any telephone facsimile machine, computer, or other device to send an unsolicited advertisement to a telephone facsimile machine ( paragraph ( b )( 1 )( C ))
Dr. Rebecca Mercuri, the creator of the VVPAT concept ( as described in her Ph. D. dissertation in October 2000 on the basic voter verifiable ballot system ), proposes to answer the auditability question by having the voting machine print a paper ballot or other paper facsimile that can be visually verified by the voter before being entered into a secure location.
Bain worked on an experimental facsimile machine in 1843 to 1846.
# A facsimile machine number to opt out.

facsimile and one
Four copies have been preserved of it, of which only one is complete ; but it was reprinted in facsimile in 1854 for the Bannatyne Club by the munificence of the Duke of Buccleuch.
A facsimile of one of the racy magazines he did cartoons for in this period, Coo Coo # 1, was published by Hamilton Comics in 1997.
A facsimile page of Y Gododdin, one of the most famous early Welsh texts featuring Arthur, c. 1275
* In facsimile, a frequency modulation system where one frequency represents picture black and another frequency represents picture white.
It contains one of the few remaining examples of Celtic Plainchant, Pages of the Antiphoner can be accessed online in facsimile from Edinburgh University.
There were, however, limits to how far one could go along these lines, and so, in 1929, Zworykin returned to vibrating mirrors and facsimile transmission, filing patents describing these.
A rare facsimile of the Book of Kells is on public display in the library's Irish Room, and each day one page of the illuminated manuscript is turned.
Urtext editions differ from facsimile editions, which simply present a photographic reproduction of one of the original sources for a work of music.
Of significant import, Jacobi's edition also includes a facsimile of the original Italian found in Venice in 1957, copied in the hand of Giovanni Nicolai ( one of Tartini's best known students ) and including an opening section on bowing and a closing section on how to compose cadenzas not previously known.
Goshen-Gottstein suggested ( in the introduction to his facsimile reprint of the codex ) that not only was it the oldest known masoretic Bible in a single volume, it was the first time ever that a complete Tanakh had been produced by one or two people as a unified entity in a consistent style.
The Dover Books edition which is the main one discussed here, was done as a facsimile of the 3rd edition of the original, " of 1794 ".
* The Wipers Times: Including for the first time in one volume a facsimile reproduction of the complete series of the famous wartime trench magazines, Eveleigh Nash and Grayson, 1930
Johnson noticed that one of these dents had inadvertently been interpreted in the facsimile as a stroke in one of the characters.
Wartime vintage leather jerkins are now collector's items, and at least one UK firm has produced a facsimile.
The check is generally signed by one or two bank employees or officers ; however, some banks issue cashier's checks featuring a facsimile signature of the bank's chief executive officer or other senior official.
* Twenty copies of books of the Bible other than the Pentateuch, some complete, others fragmentary, of one of which, the Book of Habakkuk, dated 916, a facsimile is given.
Upham later claimed he had " printed from March 12, 1862, to August 1, 1863, one million five hundred and sixty four thousand facsimile Rebel notes, of denominations ranging from five cents to one hundred dollars, and presume the aggregate issue, in dollars and cents, would amount to the round number of fifteen millions of dollars ".
1 and 3, the last one of these then still " No. 2 ") and in No. 6 – 7 of September – October 1893 ( Gnossienne No. 2 printed as facsimile, then numbered " No. 6 ").

facsimile and entire
* A facsimile of the entire book at the US Library of Congress
* British Library Digitised Manuscripts Digital facsimile of the entire manuscript
Those revelations and that her entire existence was nothing more than a facsimile of her hated rival Jean Grey, destroyed Madelyne's tenuous grip on sanity.

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