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An automotive scan tool (scanner) is an electronic tool used to interface with, diagnose and, sometimes, reprogram vehicle control modules. [1] There are many types from just as many manufacturers, one of the most familiar being the Snap-On Inc. "brick", or MT2500/MTG2500. Snap-On, Hella Gutmann Solutions, OTC/SPX, Xtool india, Autel, Launch ...
SigmaScan Pro is an Image analysis package for scientists, engineers, and technicians that provides a method to measure distances across any object that can be photographed or scanned.
SCK•CEN, Belgian nuclear research institute (Centre d'Étude de l'énergie Nucléaire) Chemical and Engineering News , a publication of the American Chemical Society Abbreviation or code
The automation of machine tool control began in the 19th century with cams that "played" a machine tool in the way that cams had long been playing musical boxes or operating elaborate cuckoo clocks. Thomas Blanchard built his gun-copying lathes (1820s–30s), and the work of people such as Christopher Miner Spencer developed the turret lathe ...
CEN/TC 10 (CEN Technical Committee 10) is a technical decision making body within the CEN system working on the establishment of safety rules for the construction and installation of lifts, escalators, and passenger conveyors in the European Union. [1]
Tudor Scan Tech SA (TST) was founded by Mircea Tudor in 2014, in Switzerland, forming a group of companies with the Romanian company MBTelecom Ltd. (MBT) founded in 1994 by Mircea Tudor. The group of companies designs and manufactures inspection scanners, including x-ray, linear accelerators and gamma ray scanning system for aircraft, cargo ...
The program was first introduced in MS-DOS 6.2 [1] and succeeded its simpler predecessor, CHKDSK.It included a more user-friendly interface than CHKDSK, more configuration options, [2] [3] and the ability to detect and (if possible) recover from physical errors on the disk.
Security Administrator Tool for Analyzing Networks (SATAN) was a free software vulnerability scanner for analyzing networked computers. SATAN captured the attention of a broad technical audience, appearing in PC Magazine [ 1 ] and drawing threats from the United States Department of Justice . [ 1 ]