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Arcadia Machine & Tool.22 Long Rifle 380 ACP.38 Super 9×19mm Parabellum.357 SIG.40 S&W.400 Corbon.45 ACP United States: 1978 AMT Hardballer: Arcadia Machine & Tool.45 ACP United States: 1977 AMT Lightning pistol: Arcadia Machine & Tool.22 Long Rifle United States: 1980s AMT Skipper: Arcadia Machine & Tool.45 ACP United States: 1960s Arex Rex ...
Arcadia Machine & Tool.22 Long Rifle 380 ACP.38 Super 9×19mm Parabellum.357 SIG.40 S&W.400 Corbon.45 ACP United States: 1978-? AMT Hardballer: Arcadia Machine & Tool.45 ACP United States: 1977-2002 AMT Lightning: Arcadia Machine & Tool.22 Long Rifle United States: 1980s AMT Skipper: Arcadia Machine & Tool.45 ACP United States: 1960s Armatix ...
The ATF, as a representative of the U.S. and with authority from the National Firearms Act, can authorize the transfer of a machine gun to an unlicensed civilian. An unlicensed individual may acquire machine guns, with ATF approval. [7] The transferor must file an ATF application, which must be completed by both parties to the transfer: [7]
"The Lisp Machine manual, 4th Edition, July 1981" "The Lisp Machine manual, 6th Edition, HTML/XSL version" "The Lisp Machine manual" Information and code for LMI Lambda and LMI K-Machine; Jaap Weel's Lisp Machine Webpage at the Wayback Machine (archived 23 June 2015) – A set of links and locally stored documents regarding all manner of Lisp ...
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During World War I, a machine pistol version of the Steyr M1912 called the Repetierpistole M1912/P16 was produced. It used a 16-round fixed magazine loaded via 8 round stripper clips, a detachable shoulder stock and a rather large exposed semi-auto/full-auto selector switch on the right side of the frame above the trigger (down = semi & up = full). [3]
A collection of 3D-printed machine gun conversion devices and other gun parts confiscated by the Evansville Police Department and a joint task force during a Jan. 31, 2024, operation in Evansville.
Lisp Machines, Inc. was a company formed in 1979 by Richard Greenblatt of MIT's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory to build Lisp machines. It was based in Cambridge, Massachusetts . By 1979, the Lisp Machine Project at MIT, originated and headed by Greenblatt, had constructed over 30 CADR computers for various projects at MIT.