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id and Fairchild
* < cite id = CITEFairchild > Fairchild Semiconductor.
id: Fairchild Semiconductor

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id and F
id: Arsenal F. C.
*< cite id = tr32-1306 > W G Melbourne, J D Mulholland, W L Sjogren, F M Sturms ( 1968 ), " Constants and Related Information for Astrodynamic Calculations ", NASA Technical Report 32-1306, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, July 15, 1968 .</ cite >
*< cite id = morrste2004 > L V Morrison, F R Stephenson ( 2004 ), " Historical values of the Earth's clock error ΔT and the calculation of eclipses ", Journal for the History of Astronomy ( ISSN 0021-8286 ), vol.
*< cite id = stemorr84 > F R Stephenson, L V Morrison ( 1984 ), " Long-term changes in the rotation of the earth – 700 B. C.
*< cite id = stemorr95 > F R Stephenson, L V Morrison ( 1995 ), " Long-Term Fluctuations in the Earth's Rotation: 700 BC to AD 1990 ", Royal Society ( London ), Philosophical Transactions, Series A ( ISSN 0080-4614 ), vol. 351 ( 1995 ), # 1695, pp. 165 – 202 .</ cite >
id: Plymouth Argyle F. C.
id: West Bromwich Albion F. C.
id: Max F. Perutz
If one is given an object L of C together with a natural isomorphism Φ: Hom (–, L ) → Cone (–, F ), the object L will be a limit of F with the limiting cone given by Φ < sub > L </ sub >( id < sub > L </ sub >).
# < cite id = philip86 > Philip, G M and Watson, D F, 1986, Matheronian Geostatistics ; Quo Vadis ?, Mathematical Geology, Vol 18, No 1 </ cite >
* < cite id = refDolan1985 > Dolan, Edward F. Jr. Hollywood Goes to War.
id: Tranmere Rovers F. C.
id: Southampton F. C.
* < cite id = refSaffordetal2003 > Safford, Laurance F. with Cameron A. Warren and Robert R. Payne.
id: Manchester City F. C.
* < span id =" Ted87 "> Tedford, R. H .; Galusha, T .; Skinner, M. F .; Taylor, B. E .; Fields, R. W .; Macdonald, J. R .; Rensberger, J. M .; Webb, S. D .; and Whistler, D. P.
id: F. W. Woolworth Company
id: Torquay United F. C.
id: William F. Albright
In this example, the value of the requested F domain is directly placed in the formula and the C domain variable is re-used in the query for the existence of a department, since it already holds a crew member's id.
id: P. F. Strawson
id: Willard F. Libby
< span id =" F " />

Fairchild and Channel
The Fairchild Channel F is a game console released by Fairchild Semiconductor in August 1976 at the retail price of $ 169. 95.
By 1977, the Fairchild Channel F had sold 250, 000 units and was second-place behind the VCS.
The Channel F electronics were designed by Jerry Lawson using the Fairchild F8 CPU, the first public outing of this processor.
Ken Uston reviewed 32 games in his book Ken Uston's Guide to Buying and Beating the Home Video Games in 1982, and rated some of the Channel F's titles highly ; of these, Alien Invasion and Video Whizball were considered by Uston to be " the finest adult cartridges currently available for the Fairchild Channel F System.
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fr: Fairchild Channel F
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nl: Fairchild Channel F
pl: Fairchild Channel F
pt: Fairchild Channel F
ru: Fairchild Channel F
fi: Fairchild Channel F
sv: Fairchild Channel F
At the time of the U. S crash, there were numerous consoles on the market, including the Atari 2600, the Atari 5200, the Bally Astrocade, the ColecoVision, the Coleco Gemini ( a 2600 clone ), the Emerson Arcadia 2001, the Fairchild Channel F System II, the Magnavox Odyssey < sup > 2 </ sup >, the Mattel Intellivision ( and its just-released update with several peripherals, the Intellivision II ), the Sears Tele-Games systems ( which included both 2600 and Intellivision clones ), the Tandyvision ( an Intellivision clone for Radio Shack ), and the Vectrex.
* Fairchild Channel F
In 1976, the company released the first video game system to use ROM cartridges, the Fairchild Video Entertainment System ( or VES ) later renamed Channel F, using the F8 microprocessor.
Several cartridges for the Fairchild Channel F include previously unknown Easter eggs, programmed by Michael Glass and Brad Reid-Selth, that are believed to predate Robinett's work.
* The Fairchild Channel F, an early video game console
* August – Fairchild Semiconductor releases the Video Entertainment System ( later known as the Channel F ), the first cartridge-based video game console.
The F8 was used in the Fairchild Channel F Video Entertainment System in 1976 and in the VideoBrain Computer system in 1977.
Unfortunately by the time the Game Brain was finished, dedicated consoles were becoming obsolete against consoles with programmable ROMs, such as the already released Fairchild Channel F, the RCA Studio 2, and Atari's own 2600.
By the end of the 1970s, cartridge-based systems, beginning with the Fairchild Channel F, had risen to prominence during the second generation of consoles due to the success of the Atari 2600, though stand-alone systems such as Coleco's Mini-Arcade series continued to have a smaller presence in the home market up until the North American video game crash of 1983.

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