contact printer - определение. Что такое contact printer
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Что (кто) такое contact printer - определение

IMPACT PRINTER THAT PRINTS ONE ENTIRE LINE OF TEXT AT A TIME
Line Printer; Drum printer; Lineprinter; Barrel printer; Band printer; Band printing; Chain printer; Green bar; Greenbar; Printer chain; Train printer; Comb printer; Bar printer; Wheel printer
  • Green-zebra-paper
  • An IBM 1403 printer opened up as it would be to change paper. Note form tractors on each side of the paper and carriage control tape in upper right. Print chain is covered by full width ribbon on open gate, lower right.
  • A type bar line printer was incorporated in the [[IBM 402]] and 403 accounting machines.
  • An [[IBM 716]] line printer, based on the [[IBM 407]] wheel mechanism, attached to an [[IBM 7090]] mainframe at NASA's [[Goddard Spaceflight Center]] during [[Project Mercury]].
  • mainframe]] era.
Найдено результатов: 686
Contact copier         
Contact printer; Exposure unit
A contact copier (also known as contact printer), is a device used to copy an image by illuminating a film negative with the image in direct contact with a photosensitive surface (film, paper, plate, etc.).
simplex printer         
  • A Calcomp 565 drum plotter
  • Sample output from  9-pin dot matrix printer (one character expanded to show detail)
  • Print drum from drum printer
  • [[Epson]] MX-80, a popular model of dot-matrix printer in use for many years
  • adj=on}} [[tractor-feed paper]]. They were also called "132-column printers".
  • HP Deskjet, an inkjet printer
  • Typeball print element from IBM Selectric-type printer
  • Liquid ink cartridge from Hewlett-Packard HP 845C inkjet printer
  • Game Boy Pocket Printer]], a [[thermal printer]] released as a peripheral for the [[Nintendo]] [[Game Boy]]
  • inkjet printer]] while printing a page.
  • IBM 1403 line printer
  • An illustration showing small yellow tracking dots on white paper, generated by a color laser printer
  • A disassembled dye sublimation cartridge
  • "daisy wheel" print element
  • Receipt printer printing a Twitter timeline
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL THAT PRINTS TEXT OR GRAPHICS
Printer (computer); Characters Per Second; Pages per minute; Print head; Photo printer; Photo Printer; PC printer; Computer printers; Impact printer; Photograph printer; Card printer; Color printer; Electronic printer; Characters per second; Personal photo lab; Network printer; Computer printer; Desktop printer; Free photo printing; Colour Printer; Impact printers; Computer printing; ID card printer; Impact printing; ID badge maker; ID Badge Maker; 🖨; Printing speed; 🖶; Simplex printer; History of computer printers
<communications> A term applied by Western Union Telegraph Company to teletypewriters that are not part of a multiplex system. They usually provided for alternate transmission in both directions. If working simplex or half-duplex, what was keyed in at the keyboard would be typed out at the printing portion. If working full-duplex, sending would be blind as the printing portion was being used only for reception. (2000-04-02)
impact printer         
  • A Calcomp 565 drum plotter
  • Sample output from  9-pin dot matrix printer (one character expanded to show detail)
  • Print drum from drum printer
  • [[Epson]] MX-80, a popular model of dot-matrix printer in use for many years
  • adj=on}} [[tractor-feed paper]]. They were also called "132-column printers".
  • HP Deskjet, an inkjet printer
  • Typeball print element from IBM Selectric-type printer
  • Liquid ink cartridge from Hewlett-Packard HP 845C inkjet printer
  • Game Boy Pocket Printer]], a [[thermal printer]] released as a peripheral for the [[Nintendo]] [[Game Boy]]
  • inkjet printer]] while printing a page.
  • IBM 1403 line printer
  • An illustration showing small yellow tracking dots on white paper, generated by a color laser printer
  • A disassembled dye sublimation cartridge
  • "daisy wheel" print element
  • Receipt printer printing a Twitter timeline
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL THAT PRINTS TEXT OR GRAPHICS
Printer (computer); Characters Per Second; Pages per minute; Print head; Photo printer; Photo Printer; PC printer; Computer printers; Impact printer; Photograph printer; Card printer; Color printer; Electronic printer; Characters per second; Personal photo lab; Network printer; Computer printer; Desktop printer; Free photo printing; Colour Printer; Impact printers; Computer printing; ID card printer; Impact printing; ID badge maker; ID Badge Maker; 🖨; Printing speed; 🖶; Simplex printer; History of computer printers
<printer> The earlier, noisier kind of printer where part of the mechanism comes into contact with the paper. The term would only be only used in contrast to "non-impact printer". Examples include line printer, daisy wheel printer, {golf ball printer}, dot matrix printer, Braille printer. (1998-10-13)
Printer (computing)         
  • A Calcomp 565 drum plotter
  • Sample output from  9-pin dot matrix printer (one character expanded to show detail)
  • Print drum from drum printer
  • [[Epson]] MX-80, a popular model of dot-matrix printer in use for many years
  • adj=on}} [[tractor-feed paper]]. They were also called "132-column printers".
  • HP Deskjet, an inkjet printer
  • Typeball print element from IBM Selectric-type printer
  • Liquid ink cartridge from Hewlett-Packard HP 845C inkjet printer
  • Game Boy Pocket Printer]], a [[thermal printer]] released as a peripheral for the [[Nintendo]] [[Game Boy]]
  • inkjet printer]] while printing a page.
  • IBM 1403 line printer
  • An illustration showing small yellow tracking dots on white paper, generated by a color laser printer
  • A disassembled dye sublimation cartridge
  • "daisy wheel" print element
  • Receipt printer printing a Twitter timeline
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL THAT PRINTS TEXT OR GRAPHICS
Printer (computer); Characters Per Second; Pages per minute; Print head; Photo printer; Photo Printer; PC printer; Computer printers; Impact printer; Photograph printer; Card printer; Color printer; Electronic printer; Characters per second; Personal photo lab; Network printer; Computer printer; Desktop printer; Free photo printing; Colour Printer; Impact printers; Computer printing; ID card printer; Impact printing; ID badge maker; ID Badge Maker; 🖨; Printing speed; 🖶; Simplex printer; History of computer printers
In computing, a printer is a peripheral machine which makes a persistent representation of graphics or text, usually on paper. While most output is human-readable, bar code printers are an example of an expanded use for printers.
Card printer         
  • A Calcomp 565 drum plotter
  • Sample output from  9-pin dot matrix printer (one character expanded to show detail)
  • Print drum from drum printer
  • [[Epson]] MX-80, a popular model of dot-matrix printer in use for many years
  • adj=on}} [[tractor-feed paper]]. They were also called "132-column printers".
  • HP Deskjet, an inkjet printer
  • Typeball print element from IBM Selectric-type printer
  • Liquid ink cartridge from Hewlett-Packard HP 845C inkjet printer
  • Game Boy Pocket Printer]], a [[thermal printer]] released as a peripheral for the [[Nintendo]] [[Game Boy]]
  • inkjet printer]] while printing a page.
  • IBM 1403 line printer
  • An illustration showing small yellow tracking dots on white paper, generated by a color laser printer
  • A disassembled dye sublimation cartridge
  • "daisy wheel" print element
  • Receipt printer printing a Twitter timeline
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL THAT PRINTS TEXT OR GRAPHICS
Printer (computer); Characters Per Second; Pages per minute; Print head; Photo printer; Photo Printer; PC printer; Computer printers; Impact printer; Photograph printer; Card printer; Color printer; Electronic printer; Characters per second; Personal photo lab; Network printer; Computer printer; Desktop printer; Free photo printing; Colour Printer; Impact printers; Computer printing; ID card printer; Impact printing; ID badge maker; ID Badge Maker; 🖨; Printing speed; 🖶; Simplex printer; History of computer printers
A card printer is an electronic desktop printer with single card feeders which print and personalize plastic cards. In this respect they differ from, for example, label printers which have a continuous supply feed.
King's Printer         
  • Victoria]], [[British Columbia]] houses the offices for the King's Printer for British Columbia
OFFICE IN THE KINGDOM OF ENGLAND AND ITS SUCCESSORS
Queen's Printer for Scotland; Queen's Printer for Canada; Office of the Queens Printer; Office of the Queen's Printer; Office of the Queen's Printer for Scotland; Manitoba Queen's Printer; King's Printer for Canada; The Queen's Printer; The King's Printer; Queen's Printer
The King's Printer (known as the Queen's Printer during the reign of a female monarch) is typically a bureau of the national, state, or provincial government responsible for producing official documents issued by the King-in-Council, Ministers of the Crown, or other departments. The position is defined by letters patent under the royal prerogative in various Commonwealth realms.
contact lens         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
(contact lenses)
Contact lenses are small plastic lenses that you put on the surface of your eyes to help you see better, instead of wearing glasses.
N-COUNT: usu pl
Contact lens         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
Contact lenses, or simply contacts, are thin lenses placed directly on the surface of the eyes. Contact lenses are ocular prosthetic devices used by over 150 million people worldwide, and they can be worn to correct vision or for cosmetic or therapeutic reasons.
contact lens         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
¦ noun a thin plastic lens placed directly on the surface of the eye to correct visual defects.
contacts         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
contact lenses.

Википедия

Line printer

A line printer prints one entire line of text before advancing to another line. Most early line printers were impact printers.

Line printers are mostly associated with unit record equipment and the early days of digital computing, but the technology is still in use. Print speeds of 600 lines per minute (approximately 10 pages per minute) were achieved in the 1950s, later increasing to as much as 1200 lpm. Line printers print a complete line at a time and have speeds in the range of 150 to 2500 lines per minute.

The types of line printers are drum printers, band-printers, and chain printers. Other non-impact technologies have also been used, as thermal line printers were popular in the 1970s and 1980s, and some inkjet and laser printers produce output a line or a page at a time.