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An October 2015 episode of History program American Pickers finds a European version Electric Pen in a private Wisconsin collection of early electric devices. The owner says recent auctions have seen other examples sell for between $15,000 and $20,000 USD [8] This particular Electric Pen includes a rare battery box. The owner sells the Pen to ...
"Edison's Electric Pen; Vanishing Carroll Deering; Lizard Man" August 15, 2013 () 51: 2 "Operation Pastorius; Nellie Bly; Boston Strangler" August 22, 2013 () 52: 3 "Squeaky Fromme; Hodag; Typhoid Mary" August 29, 2013 () 53: 4 "The Dance That Seduced a City; Vanishing Lake; Mysterious Death of Bugsy Siegel"
At the British Academy Film Awards, Conclave (director and Outstanding British Film co-winner Edward Berger pictured) wins four awards, including Best Film. Mahamoud Ali Youssouf is elected chairman of the African Union Commission. President of Romania Klaus Iohannis resigns from office, and is succeeded by Ilie Bolojan in an acting capacity.
Dailymotion is a French online video sharing platform owned by Canal+. Prior to 2024, the company was owned by Vivendi . [ 3 ] North American launch partners included Vice Media , Bloomberg , and Hearst Digital Media . [ 4 ]
In the U.S. version of the show, the "Condoms" segment in Season 28, episode 1 is replaced with the "Rubber Gloves" one, which is a duplicate of the same segment in Season 21, episode 1. The Science Channel in the U.S. lists the seasons [5] differently from the original Canadian version of the show:
The Pen D was a more expensive model, launched in 1962. It has a 32mm f/1.9 lens, a shutter going to 1/500 and an uncoupled selenium meter. The Pen D2, launched in 1964, is the same model with an uncoupled CdS exposure meter replacing the selenium one. The Pen D3, launched in 1965, is the same with a 32mm f/1.7 lens.
Electric Pencil, released in December 1976 by Michael Shrayer, was the first word processor program for home computers. Despite its initial market dominance, alternatives like WordStar and Magic Wand surpassed its popularity some time later.
The Electric Grandmother is a television movie that originally aired January 17, 1982, on NBC as a 60-minute Project Peacock special, [1] based on the 1969 science fiction short story "I Sing the Body Electric" by Ray Bradbury. It stars Maureen Stapleton and Edward Herrmann and was directed by Noel Black.