resistive termination - meaning and definition. What is resistive termination
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What (who) is resistive termination - definition

1940'S – 1960'S U.S. ASSIMILATION POLICY TOWARDS NATIVE AMERICANS
California Rancheria Act of 1958; Termination Act; Termination Acts; Indian Termination Act; Termination policy; California Rancheria Termination Act; Indian Termination Policy; Indian termination
  • [[Ada Deer]] was not in favor of termination.
  • Republican Senator [[Arthur Watkins]] of Utah was the chief Congressional proponent of Indian termination
  • Secretary of the Interior]], 1953–1956
  • self-determination]] instead of termination.

Resistive random-access memory         
  • date=May 2017}} the instance of filament forming when the current abruptly increases beyond a certain voltage. A transistor is often used to limit current to prevent a runaway breakdown following the filament formation.
NON-VOLATILE MEMORY TYPE
Resistive RAM; RRAM; Resistive Random Access Memory; ReRAM
Resistive random-access memory (ReRAM or RRAM) is a type of non-volatile (NV) random-access (RAM) computer memory that works by changing the resistance across a dielectric solid-state material, often referred to as a memristor.
Chain termination         
CHEMICAL REACTION THAT TERMINATES A CHAIN REACTION
Termination reaction
Chain termination is any chemical reaction that ceases the formation of reactive intermediates in a chain propagation step in the course of a polymerization, effectively bringing it to a halt.
Resistive touchscreen         
  • The [[Nintendo DS]], an example of a [[handheld game console]] with a resistive touchscreen.
TOUCHSCREEN TECHNOLOGY
Analog resistive touch technology; Analog resistive; Analog resistive touchscreen; Resistive Touchscreen; Resistive screen; Resistive touch screen
In electrical engineering, a resistive touchscreen is a touch-sensitive computer display composed of two flexible sheets coated with a resistive material and separated by an air gap or microdots.

Wikipedia

Indian termination policy

Indian termination is a phrase describing United States policies relating to Native Americans from the mid-1940s to the mid-1960s. It was shaped by a series of laws and practices with the intent of assimilating Native Americans into mainstream American society. Cultural assimilation of Native Americans was not new; the belief that indigenous people should abandon their traditional lives and become what the government considers "civilized" had been the basis of policy for centuries. What was new, however, was the sense of urgency that, with or without consent, tribes must be terminated and begin to live "as Americans." To that end, Congress set about ending the special relationship between tribes and the federal government.

In practical terms, the policy ended the federal government's recognition of sovereignty of tribes, trusteeship over Indian reservations, and the exclusion of state law's applicability to Native persons. From the government's perspective, Native Americans were to become taxpaying citizens subject to state and federal taxes as well as laws from which they had previously been exempt.

From the Native standpoint, a former US Senator from Colorado Ben Nighthorse Campbell, of the Northern Cheyenne, said of assimilation and termination in a speech delivered in Montana:

If you can't change them, absorb them until they simply disappear into the mainstream culture.... In Washington's infinite wisdom, it was decided that tribes should no longer be tribes, never mind that they had been tribes for thousands of years.

The policy for termination of tribes collided with the Native American peoples' own desires to preserve Native identity. The termination policy was changed in the 1960s and rising activism resulted in the ensuing decades of restoration of tribal governments and increased Native American self-determination.