fünf Uhr Tee - ορισμός. Τι είναι το fünf Uhr Tee
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Τι (ποιος) είναι fünf Uhr Tee - ορισμός

AMERICAN COMPUTER SCIENTIST
Uhr, Leonard

tee         
  • A baseball hitting tee
  • Golf tees
  • A novelty golf tee of a human tooth
  • A [[rugby league]] ball on a kicking tee
STAND USED IN GOLF TO SUPPORT A STATIONARY BALL SO THAT THE GOLFER CAN STRIKE IT
Golf tees; Golf tee; Kicking tee
tee1
¦ noun
1. a cleared space on a golf course, from which the ball is struck at the beginning of play for each hole.
2. a small peg with a concave head which is placed in the ground to support a golf ball before it is struck from a tee.
3. a mark aimed at in bowls, quoits, curling, and other similar games.
¦ verb (tees, teeing, teed) Golf
1. (usu. tee up) place the ball on a tee ready to make the first stroke of the round or hole.
2. (tee off) begin a round or hole of golf by playing the ball from a tee.
Origin
C17 (orig. Scots, as teaz): of unknown origin.
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tee2
¦ noun informal a T-shirt.
tee         
  • A baseball hitting tee
  • Golf tees
  • A novelty golf tee of a human tooth
  • A [[rugby league]] ball on a kicking tee
STAND USED IN GOLF TO SUPPORT A STATIONARY BALL SO THAT THE GOLFER CAN STRIKE IT
Golf tees; Golf tee; Kicking tee
(tees, teeing, teed)
1.
In golf, a tee is a small piece of wood or plastic which is used to support the ball before it is hit at the start of each hole.
N-COUNT
2.
On a golf course, a tee is one of the small flat areas of ground from which people hit the ball at the start of each hole.
N-COUNT
3.
to a tee: see T
tee         
  • A baseball hitting tee
  • Golf tees
  • A novelty golf tee of a human tooth
  • A [[rugby league]] ball on a kicking tee
STAND USED IN GOLF TO SUPPORT A STATIONARY BALL SO THAT THE GOLFER CAN STRIKE IT
Golf tees; Golf tee; Kicking tee
<tool, operating system> A Unix command which copies its standard input to its standard output (like cat) but also to a file given as its argument. tee is thus useful in pipelines of Unix commands (see plumbing) where it allows you to create a duplicate copy of the data stream. E.g. egrep Unix Dictionary | tee /dev/tty | wc -l searches for lines containing the string "Unix" in the file "Dictionary", prints them to the terminal (/dev/tty) and counts them. Unix manual page: tee(1). [Jargon File] (1996-01-22)

Βικιπαίδεια

Leonard Uhr

Leonard Uhr (1927 – October 5, 2000) was an American computer scientist and a pioneer in computer vision, pattern recognition, machine learning and cognitive science. He was an expert in many aspects of human neurophysiology and perception, and a central theme of his research was to design artificial intelligence systems based on his understanding of how the human brain works. He was one of the early proponents of incorporation into artificial intelligence algorithms of methods for dealing with uncertainty.

Uhr published eight books (as author and/or editor) and nearly 150 journal and conference papers. His seminal work was an article written in 1963 with Charles Vossler, "A Pattern Recognition Program That Generates, Evaluates, and Adjusts Its Own Operators", reprinted in Computers and Thought — edited by Edward Feigenbaum and J. Feldman — which showcases the work of the scientists who defined the field of artificial intelligence. He was a Ph.D. major professor for 20 students, many of whom have gone on to become in their own right important contributors to artificial intelligence.

Uhr graduated from Princeton University in 1949 with a B.A. in psychology. He received master's degrees in philosophy from the University of Brussels and Johns Hopkins University in 1951 before obtaining his Ph.D. in psychology in 1957 from the University of Michigan. As a child, Uhr attended Oak Lane Country Day School outside Philadelphia.

Uhr was a professor of computer science and of neuroscience at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Prior to that, he was also on the faculty of psychology at the University of Michigan.