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The precise origins of the dimensions of US letter-size paper (8.5 × 11 in) are not known. The American Forest & Paper Association says that the standard US dimensions have their origin in the days of manual papermaking, the 11-inch length of the standard paper being about a quarter of "the average maximum stretch of an experienced vatman's arms". [2]
It has the height of Canadian P4 paper (215 mm × 280 mm, about 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in × 11 in) and the width of international A4 paper (210 mm × 297 mm or 8.27 in × 11.69 in), i.e. it uses the smaller value among the two for each side. The table shows how this format can be generalized into an entire format series.
The most used of this series is the size A4, which is 210 mm × 297 mm (8.27 in × 11.7 in) and thus almost exactly 1 ⁄ 16 square metre (0.0625 m 2; 96.8752 sq in) in area. For comparison, the letter paper size commonly used in North America ( 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in × 11 in; 216 mm × 279 mm) is about 6 mm ( 0.24 in ) wider and 18 mm ( 0.71 in ...
0.8 g 0.750 fine 1851–1853 14 mm 0.75 g 0.900 fine 1854–1873 Half Dime 15.5 mm 1.24 g 1794–1873 Dollar 15 mm 1.67 gr 1849–1889 $5 American Gold Eagle 16.5 mm 3.11 g 1986–present $10 American Platinum Eagle 16.5 mm 3.11 g 1997–present Three Cent 17.9 mm 1.94 g 1865-1889 Dime (Clad) 17.91 mm 2.268 g 1965–present Dime 17.9 mm 2.5 g ...
8 bpc No Yes Yes — Yes (1.2 draft) [7] Yes (SMIL/SVG) Yes Yes [8] Yes, XML based — TGA: None, RLE, and other Raster 8 bpc Yes Yes Yes No No No No No — No TIFF: None, LZW, RLE, ZIP, and other Both 16 bpc Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes, via tags Yes, TIFF float Yes WebP: Lossy and lossless Raster 8 bpc No [9] [10] Yes Yes No Yes Yes No ...
8 KB of RAM (2.4 KB user accessible) 96×64 pixels 16×8 characters 6.75 x 3.125 x 1.0: No 1990 110 Allowed Allowed TI-82: Zilog Z80 @ 6 MHz 28 KB of RAM 96×64 pixels 16×8 characters 6.9 × 3.4 × 1.0 [4] No 1993 125 Allowed Allowed TI-83: Zilog Z80 @ 6 MHz 32 KB of RAM 96×64 pixels 16×8 characters 7.3 × 3.5 × 1.0 [4] No 1996 125 Allowed ...
8 KiB ~ 64 KiB per core 256 KiB – 12 MiB 4 MiB – 16 MiB Pentium 4: 5xx 6xx Cedar Mill Northwood Prescott Willamette: 2000–2008 1.3 GHz – 3.8 GHz Socket 423 Socket 478 LGA 775 Socket T: 65 nm, 90 nm, 130 nm, 180 nm 21 W – 115 W 1 /w hyperthreading 400 MHz, 533 MHz, 800 MHz, 1066 MHz 8 KiB – 16 KiB 256 KiB – 2 MiB 2 MiB Pentium 4: 5xx
The article "Usage share of operating systems" provides a broader, and more general, comparison of operating systems that includes servers, mainframes and supercomputers. Because of the large number and variety of available Linux distributions , they are all grouped under a single entry; see comparison of Linux distributions for a detailed ...