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Therminol is a synthetic heat transfer fluid [1] produced by Eastman Chemical Company. Therminol fluids are used in a variety of applications, including: [2] Hydrocarbon processing (oil and gas, refining, asphalt, gas-to-liquid, etc.) Alternative energy and technologies (concentrated solar power, biofuel, organic Rankine cycle, desalination, etc.)
1. Search your inbox for the subject line 'Get Started with AOL Desktop Gold'. 2. Open the email. 3. Click Download AOL Desktop Gold or Update Now. 4. Navigate to your Downloads folder and click Save. 5. Follow the installation steps listed below.
Visual Pinball ("VP") is a freeware and source available video game engine for pinball tables and similar games such as pachinko machines. It includes a table editor as well as the simulator itself, and runs on Microsoft Windows. It can be used with Visual PinMAME, an emulator for ROM images from real pinball machines.
Games could be bought in chain stores or on the market or certain stores. Most cartridges were multi-packs, or many games within one cartridge. In some cases, games have had their names removed, and in some cases the original name of the game (for example, Dr. Mario was renamed "Medical Hospital").
Viral Protein 1, a name used for the largest, most abundant, or first discovered protein component of the capsids of several virus families Major capsid protein VP1, a main component of the polyomavirus capsid; VP1, a virtual machine architecture conceptually similar to Java; VP-1: Evans VP-1 Volksplane, an aircraft designed for amateur ...
1. Open the Windows Control Panel. 2. Click Programs. 3. Click DataMask by AOL. 4. Click Change/Remove, Add/Remove, or Uninstall. - If there is no entry in the Add/Remove Programs window for DataMask by AOL, contact our technical support team at datamaskhelp@aol.com. 5. Follow the on screen prompts. 6. Restart your computer to complete the ...
VP-Info is a database language and compiler for the personal computer. [1] VP-Info was a competitor to the Clipper and dBase applications in the late 1980s and 1990s. [2] VP-Info was originally intended to run on MS-DOS, DR-DOS and the PC-MOS/386 operating system, but now is run on the vDOS, [3] or DOSbox-X, [4] emulators.
The IBM PC, in contrast, had only five expansion slots, with the video card and floppy disk controller taking two of them. The MPC also included two floppy disk drives, one parallel and two serial ports, which were all optional on the original IBM PC. The MPC was followed up with a portable PC, the 32 pound (15 kg) "luggable" Columbia VP in 1983.