Search results for inorganic crystal
Results 1-7 of about 7 (Found in 0.159s)

22,

00:54,

2008-04-14 11:43:44
Description: PERFECT STORM -- "Overused by the pundits on evening TV shows to mean just about any coincidence." -- Lynn Allen, Warren, Michigan.
"I read that 'Ontario is a perfect (More) PERFECT STORM -- "Overused by the pundits on evening TV shows to mean just about any coincidence." -- Lynn Allen, Warren, Michigan.
"I read that 'Ontario is a perfect storm,' in reference to a report on pollution levels in the Great Lakes. Ontario is the name of one of the lakes and a Canadian province. This guy would have me believe it's a hurricane. It's time for 'perfect storm' to get rained out." -- Bob Smith, DeWitt, Michigan.
"Hands off book titles as cheap descriptors!" -- David Hollis, Hamilton, New York.
WEBINAR -- A seminar on the web about any number of topics.
"Ouch! It hurts my brain. It should be crushed immediately before it spreads." -- Carol, Lams, Michigan.
"Yet another non-word trying to worm its way into the English language due to the Internet. It belongs in the same school of non-thought that brought us e-anything and i-anything." -- Scott Lassiter, Houston, Texas.
WATERBOARDING -- "Let's banish 'waterboarding' to the beach, where it belongs with boogie boards and surfboards." -- Patrick K. Egan, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan
ORGANIC -- Overused and misused to describe not only food, but computer products or human behavior, and often used when describing something as "natural," says Crystal Giordano of Brooklyn, New York. Another advertising gimmick to make things sound better than they really are, according to Rick DeVan of Willoughby, Ohio, who said he has heard claims such as "My business is organic," and computers having "organic software."
"Things have gone too far when they begin marketing T-shirts as organic." -- Michelle Fitzpatrick, St. Petersburg, Florida.
"'Organic' is used to describe everything, from shampoo to meat. Banishment! Improperly used!" -- Susan Clark, Bristol, Maine.
"The possibility of a food item being inorganic, i.e., not being composed of carbon atoms, is nil." -- John Gomila, New Orleans, Louisiana.
"You see the word 'organic' written on everything from cereal to dog food." -- Michael, Sacramento, California.
"I'm tired of health food stores selling products that they say are organic. All the food we eat is organic!" -- Chad Jacobson, Park Falls, Wisconsin.
WORDSMITH/WORDSMITHING -- "I've never read anything created by a wordsmith - or via wordsmithing - that was pleasant to read." -- Emily Kissane, St. Paul, Minnesota.
AUTHOR/AUTHORED -- "In one of former TV commentator Edwin Newman's books, he wonders if it would be correct to say that someone 'paintered' a picture?" -- Dorothy Betzweiser, Cincinnati, Ohio.
POST 9/11 -- "'Our post-9/11 world,' is used now, and probably used more, than AD, BC, or Y2K, time references. You'd think the United States didn't have jet fighters, nuclear bombs, and secret agents, let alone electricity, 'pre-9/11.'" -- Chazz Miner, Midland, Michigan.
SURGE -- "'Surge' has become a reference to a military build-up. Give me the old days, when it referenced storms and electrical power." -- Michael F. Raczko, Swanton, Ohio. (Less) Channel: youtube

23,

02:42,

2006-12-09 12:15:22
Description: Visit http://tiger.tv/more_info/?181 for complete specs, pricing, and availability on the JVC HD-P70R1U 70 inch HDTV. TigerDirect's Senior Editor provides an overview of the museum quality 1080p (More) Visit http://tiger.tv/more_info/?181 for complete specs, pricing, and availability on the JVC HD-P70R1U 70 inch HDTV. TigerDirect's Senior Editor provides an overview of the museum quality 1080p JVC 70 inch television.
Thanks to the newly developed HD D-ILA devices, the native resolution of the HD-P61R1U is 1920 x 1080, the extreme HD resolution available today for home theater applications. This makes the system suitable not only for high-end home theater use but also for critical viewing venues such as museums and post-production screening rooms.
Slim, Compact Design
The thin frame and reduced depth of the HD-P61R1U simplifies installation and makes it ideal for use in a variety of situations where space availability may be limited.
D65 Color Temperature Standard
JVC's unique optical engine produces rich, natural colors with smooth gradations and low noise. By setting the color temperature at the D65 standard, source media can be faithfully reproduced with the same gradations as the original picture. A unique optical filter permits pin-point D65 calibration that maintains constant contrast in each color channel. Color gradations are natural and consistent all the way from absolute black to absolute white.
3-Chip D-ILA Technology
HD-ILA employs D-ILA, JVC's proprietary reflective technology that boasts the best brightness available today. D-ILA microchips are a highly sophisticated form of LCOS, and require virtually no space between each pixel, enabling the chips to yield the highest aperture ratio (reflective area) producing the highest brightness, contrast and resolution. The HD-P61R1U combines the use of a single high-power user-replaceable lamp, three vertically oriented D-ILA microchips (1920x1080, one for each RGB color), a precision focus lens, and an exclusive polarized beam splitter to create highly accurate colors without the annoying rainbow effects produced by single chip projectors. D-ILA microchips also have a unique inorganic alignment layer that provides longer device life and optimum performance in all operating conditions. You can always count on images superior in resolution, contrast, brightness, grayscaling, and color reproduction.
Redefining Microdisplay - HD-ILA
JVC's highly regarded HD-ILA brand television displays are redefining the standards by which microdisplays are judged. HD-ILA TVs are the most technologically advanced microdisplays available today. Powered by the same D-ILA (Direct-drive Image Light Amplifier) microchips employed by our highly successful professional video projectors, HD-ILA microdisplays make up JVC's flagship television line-up.
D-ILA utilizes a highly sophisticated form of 3-chip, vertically oriented LCOS (liquid crystal on silicon) technology that adds an inorganic alignment layer which both stabilizes the device performance and maximizes chip production. The result is superior resolution, grayscaling, brightness, and color reproduction when compared not only to LCD and DLP™, but also to other existing LCOS systems.
13 Separate Glass Component Projection Lens
JVC's unique, custom designed projection lens assembly contains 13 separate glass components and an aspheric resin coated lens that insures full time precision focus. On each element we use a total of 32 layers of anti-reflective coatings which minimize potential internal reflections and allow for crystal clear pictures and pure image reproduction.
From start to finish, JVC's 3-chip D-ILA technology is superior in almost every way to the other leading forms of microdisplay technologies and the rest of this catalog is designed to show you how and why this is true.
JVC's Exclusive 5th Generation D.I.S.T.
The challenge to television display engineers these days is in making even the oldest and the poorest quality sources appear glorious on big screen HDTV's. JVC engineers answer to that call was to develop a picture processing technology that would not only deliver the advantages of HD resolution, but also one that would create natural looking images with remarkable detail, pure color reproduction and precision focus no matter what the source. The result is JVC's 5th Generation Digital Image Scaling Technology, D.I.S.T. with GENESSA.
Specifications
Display Area 70"
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Resolution 1920 x 1080
Input Video Signal NTSC
ATSC
Audio Ports 10W x 2
Speakers 2
Inputs VGA (15-Pin D-Sub)
Analog Audio Input
RF Input
AV CompuLink III Jack
Component In
HDMI In
Composite Video In
S-Video
Outputs S-Video
Optical Audio
Audio
Composite
Power Consumption 220W
Unit Dimensions (WxHxD) 64 1/8" x 46" x 20 1/2"
Unit Weight 159lbs (Less) Channel: youtube

50,

02:40,

2008-01-07 19:03:24
Description: http://www.encognitive.com
The Rockefeller Foundation began awarding significant grants in this area. Linus Pauling, however, was not an early recipient. His work focused on the crystal structure of (More) http://www.encognitive.com
The Rockefeller Foundation began awarding significant grants in this area. Linus Pauling, however, was not an early recipient. His work focused on the crystal structure of inorganic molecules, and he had shown little interest in biological substances. Nevertheless, impressed by the reputation Pauling was earning among chemists, Weaver visited Caltech and offered Pauling research support in hopes that he could shape the young chemist's research interests. Lured by Rockefeller money, Pauling in the early 1930s turned his attention to the structure of biomolecules, especially proteins such as hemoglobin and antibodies.
Determining the structure of proteins at this time was an enormous problem. Most proteins were difficult to purify, easily degraded, and hard to characterize. Proteins appeared to be not only gigantic molecules comprising hundreds or thousands of atoms--structures much too large to determine directly with x-ray crystallography--but were also relatively fragile, losing their function (denaturing) after even slight heating or mechanical disturbance. No one at the time was even sure that they were distinct molecules--one popular theory held that proteins formed amorphous colloids, gels that did not lend themselves to molecular study.
But once Weaver had convinced him to take on the challenge, Pauling succeeded by his hard work, his deep understanding of simpler chemical structures, and his model-building approach. To solve the problem of protein structure, Pauling first directed his laboratory coworkers to find the precise structures of several amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. This effort resulted in a far better understanding of these important components.
Following on the ideas of the German biochemist, Emil Fischer, Pauling correctly theorized that amino acids linked to one another end-to-end, through relatively rigid bonds that would hold them in certain positions. From this initial understanding of amino acid bonds, he built up his ideas about larger-scale protein structures. Working with Alfred Mirsky in the mid-1930s, Pauling discovered that the denaturing of proteins was the result of breaking weak bonds, called hydrogen bonds, that pinned the amino acid chains into specific shapes and allowed them to function biochemically. Through the 1930s he used his lectures and persuasive writing to criticize rival theories of protein structure.
In May 1951, he wrote a celebrated series of seven papers detailing the structures of a number of proteins at the level of individual atoms, including the structure of the single most important basic form of protein chain, the alpha helix (a hydrogen-bonded helical chain that is a structural component of most proteins). It was an astounding breakthrough, and it opened the door for an understanding of biology at the molecular level.
Pauling's strategic approach to his research, as well as his specific discoveries, established him as a founding father of molecular biology. First, he worked to understand the structures of the subunits that make up the larger molecules. Then he determined how they could link together. He used the basic rules of chemistry and physics to limit and guide his hypotheses. Finally, he built models to test and elaborate his ideas. By using this approach, Pauling was able to make fundamental advances in determining the shapes of biomolecules, and this achievement then allowed him to investigate how chemical structure determines biological function.
For Pauling, though, determining the structure of DNA was the prize that eluded him. In 1952, he proposed a three-chain helical structure for DNA. Hampered by inadequate data, he was mistaken. The following year, armed with better experimental results, James Watson and Francis Crick used Pauling's strategic approach and came up with the correct, double-helical structure. After years of hearing her husband answer questions about how he missed this essential discovery, Pauling's wife Ava Helen asked him--only half in jest--"If that was such an important problem, why didn't you work harder on it?"
http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/MM/Views/Exhibit/narrative/biomolecules.html (Less) Channel: youtube

10,

00:54,

2008-04-21 18:35:28
Description: PERFECT STORM -- "Overused by the pundits on evening TV shows to mean just about any coincidence." -- Lynn Allen, Warren, Michigan. "I read that 'Ontario is a perfect storm,' (More) PERFECT STORM -- "Overused by the pundits on evening TV shows to mean just about any coincidence." -- Lynn Allen, Warren, Michigan. "I read that 'Ontario is a perfect storm,' in reference to a report on pollution levels in the Great Lakes. Ontario is the name of one of the lakes and a Canadian province. This guy would have me believe it's a hurricane. It's time for 'perfect storm' to get rained out." -- Bob Smith, DeWitt, Michigan. "Hands off book titles as cheap descriptors!" -- David Hollis, Hamilton, New York. WEBINAR -- A seminar on the web about any number of topics. "Ouch! It hurts my brain. It should be crushed immediately before it spreads." -- Carol, Lams, Michigan. "Yet another non-word trying to worm its way into the English language due to the Internet. It belongs in the same school of non-thought that brought us e-anything and i-anything." -- Scott Lassiter, Houston, Texas. WATERBOARDING -- "Let's banish 'waterboarding' to the beach, where it belongs with boogie boards and surfboards." -- Patrick K. Egan, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan ORGANIC -- Overused and misused to describe not only food, but computer products or human behavior, and often used when describing something as "natural," says Crystal Giordano of Brooklyn, New York. Another advertising gimmick to make things sound better than they really are, according to Rick DeVan of Willoughby, Ohio, who said he has heard claims such as "My business is organic," and computers having "organic software." "Things have gone too far when they begin marketing T-shirts as organic." -- Michelle Fitzpatrick, St. Petersburg, Florida. "'Organic' is used to describe everything, from shampoo to meat. Banishment! Improperly used!" -- Susan Clark, Bristol, Maine. "The possibility of a food item being inorganic, i.e., not being composed of carbon atoms, is nil." -- John Gomila, New Orleans, Louisiana. "You see the word 'organic' written on everything from cereal to dog food." -- Michael, Sacramento, California. "I'm tired of health food stores selling products that they say are organic. All the food we eat is organic!" -- Chad Jacobson, Park Falls, Wisconsin. WORDSMITH/WORDSMITHING -- "I've never read anything created by a wordsmith - or via wordsmithing - that was pleasant to read." -- Emily Kissane, St. Paul, Minnesota. AUTHOR/AUTHORED -- "In one of former TV commentator Edwin Newman's books, he wonders if it would be correct to say that someone 'paintered' a picture?" -- Dorothy Betzweiser, Cincinnati, Ohio. POST 9/11 -- "'Our post-9/11 world,' is used now, and probably used more, than AD, BC, or Y2K, time references. You'd think the United States didn't have jet fighters, nuclear bombs, and secret agents, let alone electricity, 'pre-9/11.'" -- Chazz Miner, Midland, Michigan. SURGE -- "'Surge' has become a reference to a military build-up. Give me the old days, when it referenced storms and electrical power." -- Michael F. Raczko, Swanton, Ohio. (Less) Channel: youtube

22,

02:42,

2008-04-22 10:16:00
Description: Visit http://tiger.tv/more_info/?181 for complete specs, pricing, and availability on the JVC HD-P70R1U 70 inch HDTV. TigerDirect's Senior Editor provides an overview of the museum quality 1080p (More) Visit http://tiger.tv/more_info/?181 for complete specs, pricing, and availability on the JVC HD-P70R1U 70 inch HDTV. TigerDirect's Senior Editor provides an overview of the museum quality 1080p JVC 70 inch television. Thanks to the newly developed HD D-ILA devices, the native resolution of the HD-P61R1U is 1920 x 1080, the extreme HD resolution available today for home theater applications. This makes the system suitable not only for high-end home theater use but also for critical viewing venues such as museums and post-production screening rooms. Slim, Compact Design The thin frame and reduced depth of the HD-P61R1U simplifies installation and makes it ideal for use in a variety of situations where space availability may be limited. D65 Color Temperature Standard JVC's unique optical engine produces rich, natural colors with smooth gradations and low noise. By setting the color temperature at the D65 standard, source media can be faithfully reproduced with the same gradations as the original picture. A unique optical filter permits pin-point D65 calibration that maintains constant contrast in each color channel. Color gradations are natural and consistent all the way from absolute black to absolute white. 3-Chip D-ILA Technology HD-ILA employs D-ILA, JVC's proprietary reflective technology that boasts the best brightness available today. D-ILA microchips are a highly sophisticated form of LCOS, and require virtually no space between each pixel, enabling the chips to yield the highest aperture ratio (reflective area) producing the highest brightness, contrast and resolution. The HD-P61R1U combines the use of a single high-power user-replaceable lamp, three vertically oriented D-ILA microchips (1920x1080, one for each RGB color), a precision focus lens, and an exclusive polarized beam splitter to create highly accurate colors without the annoying rainbow effects produced by single chip projectors. D-ILA microchips also have a unique inorganic alignment layer that provides longer device life and optimum performance in all operating conditions. You can always count on images superior in resolution, contrast, brightness, grayscaling, and color reproduction. Redefining Microdisplay - HD-ILA JVC's highly regarded HD-ILA brand television displays are redefining the standards by which microdisplays are judged. HD-ILA TVs are the most technologically advanced microdisplays available today. Powered by the same D-ILA (Direct-drive Image Light Amplifier) microchips employed by our highly successful professional video projectors, HD-ILA microdisplays make up JVC's flagship television line-up. D-ILA utilizes a highly sophisticated form of 3-chip, vertically oriented LCOS (liquid crystal on silicon) technology that adds an inorganic alignment layer which both stabilizes the device performance and maximizes chip production. The result is superior resolution, grayscaling, brightness, and color reproduction when compared not only to LCD and DLP™, but also to other existing LCOS systems. 13 Separate Glass Component Projection Lens JVC's unique, custom designed projection lens assembly contains 13 separate glass components and an aspheric resin coated lens that insures full time precision focus. On each element we use a total of 32 layers of anti-reflective coatings which minimize potential internal reflections and allow for crystal clear pictures and pure image reproduction. From start to finish, JVC's 3-chip D-ILA technology is superior in almost every way to the other leading forms of microdisplay technologies and the rest of this catalog is designed to show you how and why this is true. JVC's Exclusive 5th Generation D.I.S.T. The challenge to television display engineers these days is in making even the oldest and the poorest quality sources appear glorious on big screen HDTV's. JVC engineers answer to that call was to develop a picture processing technology that would not only deliver the advantages of HD resolution, but also one that would create natural looking images with remarkable detail, pure color reproduction and precision focus no matter what the source. The result is JVC's 5th Generation Digital Image Scaling Technology, D.I.S.T. with GENESSA. Specifications Display Area 70" Aspect Ratio 16:9 Resolution 1920 x 1080 Input Video Signal NTSC ATSC Audio Ports 10W x 2 Speakers 2 Inputs VGA (15-Pin D-Sub) Analog Audio Input RF Input AV CompuLink III Jack Component In HDMI In Composite Video In S-Video Outputs S-Video Optical Audio Audio Composite Power Consumption 220W Unit Dimensions (WxHxD) 64 1/8" x 46" x 20 1/2" Unit Weight 159lbs (Less) Channel: youtube

4,

03:14,

2009-10-27 00:58:08
Description: Halite Lattice or Sodium Chloride Lattice
Channel: youtube

0,

02:12,

2008-12-16 02:00:20
Description: Tough on dirt and highly effective for cleaning all marine surfaces, this
concentrated eco-friendly formula works without harsh inorganic compounds or other
harmful components. Works with fresh or (More) Tough on dirt and highly effective for cleaning all marine surfaces, this
concentrated eco-friendly formula works without harsh inorganic compounds or other
harmful components. Works with fresh or salt water. Contains no dyes or perfumes.
Sailboat boat soap
Concentrated eco-friendly formula works without harsh inorganic compounds or other
harmful components
Works with fresh or salt water; contains no dyes or perfumes (Less) Channel: youtube
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