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Ricoh Synchrofax is a Japanese dictating machine from 1959, reissued in 1974 as the 3M Sound Page (model 627AA and 627AG) as official teaching material in the US-state of Oklahoma. [1] It is also known as sound paper. Inventor Sakae Fujimoto filed the patents US3074724A and US3046357A in 1959. [2] [3]
3M launched "Press 'n Peel" a sticky bookmark page holder in stores in four cities in 1977, but the results were disappointing. [36] [37] A year later 3M instead issued free samples of it as a sticky note directly to consumers in Boise, Idaho, with 95% of those who tried them indicating they would buy the product. [36]
[8] [9] The name was soon applied to the entire line of 3M tapes. Scotty McTape, a kilt-wearing cartoon boy, was the brand's mascot for two decades, first appearing in 1944. [10] The familiar tartan design, a take on the well-known Wallace tartan, was introduced in 1945. [10] The Scotch brand, Scotch Tape and Magic Tape are registered ...
An example SDS, including guidance for handling a hazardous substance and information on its composition and properties. A safety data sheet (SDS), [1] material safety data sheet (MSDS), or product safety data sheet (PSDS) is a document that lists information relating to occupational safety and health for the use of various substances and products.
Post-it as we know it was patented by Fry in 1993 as a "repositionable pressure-sensitive adhesive sheet material". [3] Silver worked for over 30 years at 3M rising to a position of a corporate scientist before retiring in 1996. [3] Some of the other products that he worked on included block copolymers and immunodiagnostics. [3]
3M test marketed the product as a "Press 'n Peel" in stores in four cities in 1977, but results were disappointing. [18] [19] A year later, 3M launched a massive marketing campaign known as the Boise Blitz. [1] This campaign involved renaming the product to "Post-it Note" and giving out free samples to offices in Boise, Idaho.
An example of a contact print from small format film strips intended for image review.. A contact print is a photographic image produced from film; sometimes from a film negative, and sometimes from a film positive or paper negative.
In 2005, Enrico Dini, Italy, patented the D-Shape technology, employing a massively scaled powder jetting/bonding technique over an area approximately 6m x 6m x 3m. [11] This technique although originally developed with epoxy resin bonding system was later adapted to use inorganic bonding agents. [ 12 ]