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Control Data Corporation (CDC) was a mainframe and supercomputer company that in the 1960s was one of the nine major U.S. computer companies, which group included IBM, the Burroughs Corporation, and the Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), the NCR Corporation (NCR), General Electric, and Honeywell, RCA and UNIVAC.
Navteq Corporation (styled as 'NAVTEQ') was an American Chicago-based provider of geographic information system (GIS) data and a major provider of base electronic navigable maps. The company was acquired by Nokia in 2007–2008, and fully merged into Nokia in 2011 to form part of the Here business unit.
Lake Cook Road: Lake: Highland Park: 38.4: 61.8 — Clavey Road, Skokie Valley Road: 38.8: 62.4: Chantilly Road: Northbound exit and entrance: 40.0: 64.4 — Central Avenue, Deerfield Road: Northern end of freeway: 41.5: 66.8: IL 22 west (Half Day Road) Separate jughandle ramps for traffic exiting onto IL 22; eastern terminus of IL 22: Lake ...
ZAU overlies or abuts many approach control facilities (including Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, Cedar Rapids, Des Moines, the Quad Cities, Peoria, Springfield, Indianapolis, and Grand Rapids approaches). Chicago Center is the tenth busiest ARTCC in the United States. In 2024, Chicago Center handled 2,141,995 aircraft operations. [3]
Franklin Park: Frontage Road: Interchange via connector roads: Schiller Park: 385.2: 619.9: IL 19 (Irving Park Road) to I-294 Toll north: Schiller Park–Chicago line: Balmoral Avenue: South end of expressway: Chicago: 387.0: 622.8: I-190 (Kennedy Expressway) – Chicago, O'Hare: Parclo interchange; no direct access from I-190 EB; I-190 west ...
Interstate 490 (I-490), also known as the O'Hare West Bypass and Western O'Hare Beltway, is a six-mile (9.7 km) electronic toll highway and a beltway that is currently under construction near Chicago, Illinois; it will run along the west side of O'Hare International Airport. [1]
As the Computer Controls division of Honeywell, it introduced further DDP-series computers, and was a $100,000,000 business until 1970 when Honeywell purchased GE's computer division and discontinued development of the DDP line. [6] In a 1970 essay, Murray Bookchin used the DDP-124 as his example of computer progress:
Wacker Drive is a major multilevel street in Chicago, Illinois, running along the south side of the main branch and the east side of the south branch of the Chicago River in the Loop. [2] The vast majority of the street is double-decked ; the upper level is intended for regular street-level traffic, and the lower level for service vehicles ...