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ffrr and full
The Decca Stereo format was called ( in succession to ffrr ), " ffss ", i. e. " full frequency stereophonic sound ".

ffrr and frequency
The frequency range of ffrr was 80 – 15000 Hz, with a signal-to-noise ratio of 60dB.

ffrr and was
While Decca's early ffrr releases on 78-rpm discs had some noticeable surface noise, which diminished the effects of the high fidelity sound, the introduction of long-playing records in 1949 made better use of the new technology and set an industry standard that was quickly imitated by Decca's competitors.
The label's ear logo was copied from the original ffrr logo source.

ffrr and enabled
The new records were made of vinyl ( the old discs were made of brittle shellac ), which enabled the ffrr recordings to be transferred to disc very realistically.

ffrr and on
*-See the chapter on " Getting on Record ", pp. 62 – 75, about the early record industry and Fred Gaisberg and Walter Legge and ffrr ( Full Frequency Range Recording ).

ffrr and .
The ffrr technique became internationally accepted and considered a standard.

full and frequency
Many amplifiers are ultimately slew rate limited ( typically by the impedance of a drive current having to overcome capacitive effects at some point in the circuit ), which sometimes limits the full power bandwidth to frequencies well below the amplifier's small-signal frequency response.
* Throwing away more of the data in the signal — keeping just enough to reconstruct an " intelligible " voice rather than the full frequency range of human hearing.
The tuned circuit resonates at one frequency, the fixed carrier frequency, and so the unwanted frequencies are suppressed, and the wanted full signal ( sine wave ) will be extracted by the tuned load.
Similarly, a full house tends to occur more often than a flush in a piquet deck, due to the increased frequency of each playing card rank, creating a change in poker combination ranking.
In most cases a game of Reversi reaches an end in which all 64 squares are filled, but positions in which the board is not full and neither player may make a legal move also occur with some frequency.
As of 2010, after 10 years of data collection, SETI @ home has listened to that one frequency at every point of over 67 percent of the sky observable from Arecibo with a least 3 scans ( out of the goal of 9 scans ), which covers about 20 percent of the full celestial sphere.
However, most cable systems could not accommodate the full 54-890 MHz VHF / UHF frequency range and the twelve channels of VHF space were quickly exhausted on most systems.
Block conversion of the entire affected frequency band onto UHF, while less common, was used by some models to provide full VCR compatibility and the ability to drive multiple TV sets, albeit with a somewhat nonstandard channel numbering scheme.
* Period ( physics ), the time taken for one full oscillation ; it is the reciprocal of frequency
Strip chart recorders with galvanometer driven pens may have a full scale frequency response of 100 Hz and several centimeters deflection.
There are disadvantages with SC cut shear mode crystals, such as the need for the maintaining oscillator to discriminate against other closely related unwanted modes and increased frequency change due to temperature when subject to a full ambient range.
The name ' spread spectrum ' comes from the fact that the carrier signals occur over the full bandwidth ( spectrum ) of a device's transmitting frequency.
Infinity's full range electrostatic speaker system that was developed during the 1960s also used a woofer to cover the lower frequency range that its electrostatic arrays did not handle adequately.
Due to this and the low excursion capability, full range electrostatic loudspeakers are large by nature, and the bass rolls off at a frequency corresponding to a quarter wavelength of the narrowest panel dimension.
In practice, nearly all software and electronic devices that generate frequency spectra apply a fast Fourier transform ( FFT ), which is a specific mathematical approximation to the full integral solution.
The Blue package contained leases on land-lines and on studio facilities in New York, Washington, D. C., Chicago and Los Angeles ; contracts with talent and with about sixty affiliates ; the trademark and " good will " associated with the Blue name ; and licenses for three stations ( WJZ in New York, San Francisco's KGO, and WENR in Chicago — really a half-station, since WENR shared time and a frequency with " Prairie Farmer " station WLS, with which it would later merge under full ABC ownership in 1954 ).
BIC and Marantz briefly offered models that could be run at double speeds, but Nakamichi was widely recognized as one of the first companies to create decks that rivaled reel-to-reel decks with frequency response from the full 20 – 20, 000 Hz range, low noise, and very low wow and flutter.
Services resumed over the central section on 3 April 2003 and to all stations ( at reduced frequency ) on 12 April, with full service by the end of the month.
The following enumerates the ( absolute ) frequency of each hand, given all combinations of 5 cards randomly drawn from a full deck of 52 without replacement.
Gain can be nearly flat from DC to full frequency.
A full list of birds and their frequency of appearance can be found online.
The Ernest Ansermet recording of Stravinsky's Petrushka was key in the development of full frequency range records and alerting the listening public to high fidelity in 1946.

full and range
Because of the means of publication -- science-fiction magazines and cheap paperbacks -- and because dystopian science fiction is still appearing in quantity the full range and extent of this phenomenon can hardly be known, though one fact is evident: the science-fiction imagination has been immensely fertile in its extrapolations.
At a minimum, recording -- usually on tape, which is now in wide professional use -- brings the psychiatric interview alive so that the full range of emotion and meaning can be explored repeatedly by the therapist or by a battery of therapists.
Presently they had to give up running the furnace at full capacity and depend on the old coal range in the kitchen, which had never been removed when the new gas range was installed, and the fireplaces and an electric heater in Grandma's room.
Actors and actresses will often have many instructors and teachers for a full range of training involving, but not limited to, singing, scene-work, monologue techniques, audition techniques and partner work.
#* A consistent evidence base of the contribution of all kinds of museums to the full range of public service agendas will be developed.
In byte-oriented systems ( i. e. most modern computers ), the term uncompressed BCD usually implies a full byte for each digit ( often including a sign ), whereas packed BCD typically encodes two decimal digits within a single byte by taking advantage of the fact that four bits are enough to represent the range 0 to 9.
The Press publishes a full range of K-12 textbooks.
The outcome may be summarized using the Glasgow Coma Scale, which yields a number in the range 3 — 15, with a score of 3 indicating brain death ( the lowest defined level of consciousness ), and 15 indicating full consciousness.
" Some modern readers find this narrow definition disappointing, but his focus was on the conduct of military operations in war, not on the full range of the conduct of politics in war.
In addition, due to the development of body armor, support personnel required a compact weapon with more penetration than the traditional submachine gun, leading to the development of the personal defense weapon, or PDW, which uses rounds that have better ballistics than simple pistol rounds but less power and range than full rifle rounds.
Generally the shotguns are regulated to hit the point of aim at a given distance, usually the maximum expected range since that is the range at which a full choke would be used, and where precise regulation matters most.
It is accepted, however, that there is an " enormous " range of reliability findings in studies, and that validity is unclear because, given the lack of diagnostic laboratory or neuroimaging tests, standard clinical interviews are " inherently limited " and only a (" flawed ") " best estimate diagnosis " is possible even with full assessment of all data over time.
The terms can be used to describe a full range of web resources: video, images, web pages etc.
For example, in jazz, aspiring bassists have to learn how to perform a wide range of pizzicato tones, including using the sides of the fingers to create a full, deep sound for ballads, using the tips of the fingers for fast walking basslines or solos, and performing a variety of percussive ghost notes by raking muted or partially muted strings.
In pursuit of this mission, DARPA has developed and transferred technology programs encompassing a wide range of scientific disciplines which address the full spectrum of national security needs.
By 1797, when the third edition was completed, it had been expanded to 18 volumes addressing a full range of topics, with articles contributed by a range of authorities on their subjects.
The habitat plus the niche is called the ecotope, which is defined as the full range of environmental and biological variables affecting an entire species.
Because subwoofers are generally limited to a bandwidth of no higher than 150 Hz, the switching speed for the amplifier does not have to be as high as for a full range amplifier, and simpler designs could be utilized.
In order to study them the full range of biographical knowledge available today on Kraepelin is necessary ( see e. g. Burgmair et al., I-VII ).
As a part of NASA ’ s Agency Consolidated End-User Service ( ACES ) Program, HP will modernize NASA ’ s entire end-user infrastructure by delivering a full range of personal computing services and devices to more than 60, 000 users.
The proper embouchure allows the instrumentalist to play the instrument at its full range with a full, clear tone and without strain or damage to one's muscles.

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