enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: business card blanks for printer machine

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Office supplies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_supplies

    Blank sheet paper: various sizes from small notes to letter and poster-size; various thicknesses from tissue paper to 120 pound; construction paper; photocopier and inkjet printer paper; Preprinted forms: time cards, tax reporting forms (1099, W-2), "while you were out" pads, desk and wall calendars;

  3. Corrugated box design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corrugated_box_design

    Printing dies and patterns are prepared on large, flexible, rubber or tin sheets. They are loaded onto rollers and the box blanks are fed through it, where each is trimmed, printed, cut, scored, folded, and glued to form a box. Finished boxes are then stacked and sent to a banding machine to be wrapped and shipped.

  4. Aperture card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture_card

    An aperture card is a type of punched card with a cut-out window into which a chip of microfilm is mounted. Such a card is used for archiving or for making multiple inexpensive copies of a document for ease of distribution. The card is typically punched with machine-readable metadata associated with the microfilm image, and printed across the ...

  5. Analytical engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytical_Engine

    For output, the machine would have a printer, a curve plotter, and a bell. [9] The machine would also be able to punch numbers onto cards to be read in later. It employed ordinary base-10 fixed-point arithmetic. [9] There was to be a store (that is, a memory) capable of holding 1,000 numbers of 50 decimal digits [15] each (ca. 16.6 kB).

  6. Business card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_card

    An attorney's business card, 1895 Eugène Chigot, post impressionist painter, business card 1890s A business card from Richard Nixon's first Congressional campaign, in 1946 Front and back sides of a business card in Vietnam, 2008 A Oscar Friedheim card cutting and scoring machine from 1889, capable of producing up to 100,000 visiting and business cards a day

  7. Punched card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card

    A 12-row/80-column IBM punched card from the mid-twentieth century. A punched card (also punch card[1] or punched-card[2]) is a piece of card stock that stores digital data using punched holes. Punched cards were once common in data processing and the control of automated machines. Punched cards were widely used in the 20th century, where unit ...

  1. Ads

    related to: business card blanks for printer machine