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BowLingual (バウリンガル), or "Bow-Lingual" as the North American version is spelled, is a computer-based dog language-to-human language translation device developed by Japanese toy company Takara and first sold in Japan in 2002. Versions for South Korea and the United States were launched in 2003.
9mm Parabellum Bullet, a Japanese rock band, formed in March 2004 in Yokohama; Para-Bellum, a Russian band that competed to represent at the Eurovision Song Contest 2010; Parabellum (Colombian band), an extreme metal band from Medellín active in the 1980s; Parabellum (French band), an alternative rock and punk band that formed in 1984
The Phraselator is a weatherproof handheld language translation device developed by Applied Data Systems and VoxTec, a former division of the military contractor Marine Acoustics, located in Annapolis, Maryland, USA. It was designed to serve as a handheld computer device that translates English into one of 40 different languages. [1]
Whistle's first product, an activity monitor for dogs that tracked their exercise, was released in 2013. [4] The company raised an additional $10 million in a Series A funding round and $15 million in Series B. [1] [5] A February 2014 agreement with PetSmart placed the Whistle device in all the company's stores and led to co-marketing efforts. [6]
These included more memory, as well as offering many features unique to the Apple IIe and Apple IIc, all while undercutting Apple's price. The ACE 2200 sported a detached keyboard and dual internal 5.25-inch floppy disk drives. Franklin also released a pair of IBM PC compatible computers, the Franklin PC6000 and PC8000, during 1986–1988.
The first known machine translation proposal was made in Estonia and involved a typewriter-translator. [1] 1933: July 5: Proposal: Georges Artsrouni patents a general-purpose device with many potential applications in France. He seems to have been working on the device since 1929. [1] 1933: September 5: Proposal
Relief at the entrance of the Cultural Center of the Armies in Madrid, showing the Latin phrase "Si vis pacem, para bellum.". Si vis pacem, para bellum (Classical Latin: [siː wiːs ˈpaːkɛ̃ ˈparaː ˈbɛllʊ̃]) is a Latin adage translated as "If you want peace, prepare for war."
The end product is to display 36 braille characters at a time on a 5 in × 2 in (127 mm × 51 mm) interface [note 1] with an intended retail price around US$100. [3] With existing braille display devices priced in the range of $1,500 to $2,500, Tactile has been characterized as a potential "quantum leap forward for the blind community."