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Sinclair Broadcast Group, a publicly traded American telecommunications conglomerate, owns or operates 294 television stations across the United States in 89 markets ranging in size from as large as Washington, D.C. to as small as Ottumwa, Iowa/Kirksville, Missouri. [1]
The ZX8301 [1] [2] is an Uncommitted Logic Array (ULA) integrated circuit designed for the Sinclair QL microcomputer.Also known as the "Master Chip", it provides a Video Display Generator, the division of a 15 MHz crystal to provide the 7.5 MHz system clock, ZX8302 register address decoder, DRAM refresh and bus controller.
The company's roots date back to the late 1950s, when electrical engineer Julian Sinclair Smith and his wife Carolyn B. Smith, owning 34.5% of the shares, along with a group of shareholders, formed the Commercial Radio Institute, a broadcasting trade school in Baltimore, Maryland.
The Mystery is a Chesapeake Bay log canoe, built in 1932, by Harry Sinclair in Oxford, Maryland.She measures 34'-7" long, has a beam of 8'-8 1 ⁄ 2" and has a centerboard.She is noted for her very tall masts, is privately owned, and races under No. 8.
In the aftermath of Amstrad buying out Sinclair's computer business in 1986, some confusion arose as to which company had the rights to pursue the project further. Some reports indicated that Amstrad retained such rights, one claiming that "the blueprint is now in Amstrad's hands", [ 9 ] whereas others asserted that the Amstrad deal had left ...
It was built in 1937 by the Sinclair Oil Corporation, along what was the major coastal route in South Carolina until the construction of Interstate 95. The station closed in 1978, and has since seen other commercial uses. [2] It has been restored and now houses the Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage. [3]
The Garber brothers contracted Harry F. Sinclair to construct a well on R. E. Hoy's farm (NE corner, Section 25, T22N, R4W, Garfield County). [2] The well was drilled at a depth of 1,130–56 feet. [3] At 4:00 AM on September 10, the oil began to flow, starting out at 90 to 100 barrels per day (16 m 3 /d). [2]
Jim Westwood is the former chief engineer who worked at Sinclair Research Ltd in the 1980s, starting at the company in 1963. Westwood was the technical mastermind behind many of Sinclair's products [1] and worked there for more than twenty years.