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This is a worldwide list of tram builders. ... Canadian Car and Foundry - Montreal, Quebec, [2] 1909–1913; 1940s; Ottawa Car Company - Ottawa, Ontario, 1891–1948 [2]
VT1.5 is a type of virtual tributary in SONET. SONET bandwidth is defined in multiples of an OC-1/STS-1, each of which can transport up to 51.84 Mbit/s. However, it is frequently desirable to address much smaller portions of bandwidth. To meet this need, sub-STS-1 facilities called Virtual Tributaries have been defined.
The fabless company concentrates on the research and development of an IC-product; the foundry concentrates on manufacturing and testing the physical product. If the foundry does not have any semiconductor design capability, it is a pure-play semiconductor foundry. An absolute separation into fabless and foundry companies is not necessary.
The car was built for the Interborough Rapid Transit system of New York City, the first of 300 such cars ordered by that system. In 1903, the company was operating overseas in Trafford Park, Manchester, England, and it was featured on a Triumphal Arch built for the Royal Visit of Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1903. The factory buildings ...
Rugga wagons were primarily produced for 2 ft (610 mm) and 600 mm (1 ft 11 + 5 ⁄ 8 in) gauges, but like all Hudson products, could be manufactured to any gauge required. Rugga wagons were built in a range of sizes from the smallest at 13.5 cu ft or 0.50 cu yd or 0.38 m 3 up to a huge 54 cu ft or 2.0 cu yd or 1.5 m 3 .
It is under development at VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland since 2004. [1] Serpent was originally known as Probabilistic Scattering Game (PSG) from 2004 to the first pre-release of Serpent 1 in October 2008. [2] The development of Serpent 2 was started in 2010. [3] The current stable version Serpent 2.2.0 was released in May 2022. [4]
The founder of R A Lister and Company was Robert Ashton Lister, who was born in 1845. [1] He led the exhibit of the family's products to the Paris Exhibition of 1867, [2] but on return fell out with his father, [citation needed] and in the same year founded R.A.Lister and Company [3] in the former Howard's Lower Mill, Water Street in Dursley to manufacture agricultural machinery.
Modo was created by the same core group of software engineers that previously created the pioneering 3D application LightWave 3D, originally developed on the Amiga platform and bundled with the Amiga-based Video Toaster workstations that were popular in television studios in the late 1980s and early 1990s.