Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Scientific Data Systems (SDS), was an American computer company founded in September 1961 by Max Palevsky, Arthur Rock and Robert Beck, veterans of Packard Bell Corporation and Bendix, along with eleven other computer scientists. SDS was the first to employ silicon transistors, and was an early adopter of integrated circuits in
The SDS Sigma series is a series of third generation computers [1] [2] [3] that were introduced by Scientific Data Systems of the United States in 1966. [4] The first machines in the series are the 16-bit Sigma 2 and the 32-bit Sigma 7; the Sigma 7 was the first 32-bit computer released by SDS.
Military Armament Corporation (MAC) was an American manufacturer of small arms, co-founded by Gordon Ingram, an engineer and gun designer, and Mitchell WerBell, owner of SIONICS, which manufactured gun sound suppressors. It is known for manufacturing the MAC-10 and MAC-11 machine pistols in the 1970s.
The MAGPAK 9446 tape drive subsystem and associated 9401 tape cartridge [7] was developed by SDS for the SDS 900 series and announced in May 1964 [8] Each tape drive unit consists of two independently controlled magnetic tape drives mounted on a standard 10½-inch by 19-inch panel. [9] Data are recorded at 7.5 inches per second and 1,400 bits ...
That year the company also became the third largest mortgage lender in the U.S. in 2019 with $118 billion in unpaid principal balance (accounting for a market share of around 5%), the sixth largest mortgage servicer with a servicing portfolio of $369 billion in unpaid principal balance, and the largest aggregator of residential mortgage loans. [2]
Get the Boydton, VA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
The Military Armament Corporation Model 10, officially abbreviated as "M10" or "M-10", [5] and more commonly known as the MAC-10, is a compact, blowback operated machine pistol/submachine gun that was developed by Gordon Ingram in 1964.
Three generations of Power Mac G5 were released before it was discontinued during the Mac transition to Intel processors. The announcement of the transition came in mid-2005, but the third generation of G5 systems was introduced towards the end of 2005. Most notably in this generation was the introduction of a Quad-core 2.5 GHz system.