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  2. Breaking (martial arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_(martial_arts)

    Wooden boards are the most common breaking item in most martial arts, Individual boards used may range from nominal sizes as small as 6 in × 12 in × 1 in (152 mm × 305 mm × 25 mm) to as large as 12 in × 12 in × 1 in (305 mm × 305 mm × 25 mm) (a board with a nominal thickness of 1″ has an actual thickness of .75 in (19 mm)).

  3. Checkers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checkers

    Checkers [note 1] (American English), also known as draughts (/ d r ɑː f t s, d r æ f t s /; British English), is a group of strategy board games for two players which involve forward movements of uniform game pieces and mandatory captures by jumping over opponent pieces.

  4. English draughts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_draughts

    There is a standardised notation for recording games. All 32 reachable board squares are numbered in sequence. The numbering starts in Black's double-corner (where Black has two adjacent squares). Black's squares on the first rank are numbered 1 to 4; the next rank 5 to 8, and so on. Moves are recorded as "from-to", so a move from 9 to 14 would ...

  5. Upwords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upwords

    Upwords is a board game.It was originally manufactured and marketed by the Milton Bradley Company, then a division of Hasbro.It has been marketed under its own name and also as Scrabble Upwords in the United States and Canada, and Topwords, Crucimaster, Betutorony, Palabras Arriba and Stapelwoord in other countries.

  6. Stay Alive (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stay_Alive_(game)

    Stay Alive is a strategy game, where 2-4 players [1] try to keep their marbles from falling through holes in the game board while trying to make their opponents' marbles fall through. It was originally published by Milton Bradley (Currently owned by Hasbro ) in 1971 and marketed in television and print advertising as "the ultimate survival game ...

  7. Jumper (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumper_(computing)

    They are typically used to set up or configure printed circuit boards, such as the motherboards of computers. The process of setting a jumper is often called strapping. [citation needed] A strapping option is a hardware configuration setting usually sensed only during power-up or bootstrapping of a device (or even a single chip). [1]

  8. Aggravation (board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggravation_(board_game)

    The name Aggravation was trademarked by BERL Industries, which filed its application on April 10, 1959. [1] A contemporary patent filed by Howard P. Wilde, Sr. two months earlier, in February 1959, describes a game board "which may be played, with high interest, vexation and aggravation by two, three or four persons" but does not provide specific gameplay instructions for the cross-shaped ...

  9. Whiteboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whiteboard

    A combination between a whiteboard and a cork bulletin board Original early 1960s ad for "Plasti-slate", the first whiteboard/dry erase board invented by Martin Heit. It has been widely reported that Korean War veteran and photographer Martin Heit and Albert Stallion, an employee at Alliance, a leading flat rolled steel sheet supplier should be credited with the invention of the whiteboard in ...