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Precision Manuals Development Group was founded by Robert S. Randazzo, Senior Developer, in January 1998. Originally conceived as a small technical publishing company, PMDG's first product, the 747-400PS1 User's Guide was released in February 1998, to assist non-pilots with mastering the aircraft.
Diagram of the OODA loop. The OODA loop (observe, orient, decide, act) is a decision-making model developed by United States Air Force Colonel John Boyd.He applied the concept to the combat operations process, often at the operational level during military campaigns.
The FV101 Scorpion is a British armoured reconnaissance vehicle and light tank.It was the lead vehicle and the fire support type in the Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked), CVR(T), family of seven armoured vehicles.
Example of a single industrial control loop; showing continuously modulated control of process flow. A closed-loop controller or feedback controller is a control loop which incorporates feedback, in contrast to an open-loop controller or non-feedback controller.
This manual supersedes FM 3-0, dated 6 October 2017. James C. McConville: INACTIVE: ADP 3–0 (FM 3–0) ADP 3–0, Unified Land Operations: 10 October 2011 [13] This manual supersedes FM 3–0, dated 27 February 2008 and Change 1, dated 22 February 2011. Raymond T. Odierno: INACTIVE: FM 3–0 (incl. C1) FM 3–0, Operations (with included ...
UNIX System III (or System 3) is a discontinued version of the Unix operating system released by AT&T's Unix Support Group (USG).. AT&T announced System III in late 1981, [2] and it was first released outside of Bell Labs in 1982.
0–3: 0-88038-489-1: OA—Oriental Adventures was originally its own campaign setting, but the setting has been incorporated into Forgotten Realms. Swords of the Daimyo: David Cook: March 1986 ― 68: OA1: 6–10: 0-88038-273-2: Night of the Seven Swords: Jon Pickens, David Cook, Harold Johnson, Rick Swan, Ed Carmien, and David James Ritchie ...
OK Labs and OKL4 are the result of collaboration among academia, business, and open-source development. OK Labs technology is derived from the L4 microkernel which originated in the early 1990s at German research Lab GMD, further developed at IBM Watson Research Center, the University of Karlsruhe in Germany, the University of New South Wales and NICTA in Australia.