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A vinyl cutter. A vinyl cutter is an entry-level machine for making signs. Computer-designed vector files with patterns and letters are directly cut on the roll of vinyl which is mounted and fed into the vinyl cutter through USB or serial cable. Vinyl cutters are mainly used to make signs, banners and advertisements.
Diamond Cut Audio Restoration Tools (DC-Art) was originally a private venture by R&D engineer Craig Maier and software engineer Rick Carlson. Developed in the early 1990s, the original concept was conceived in an attempt to preserve the extensive Edison Lateral collection of test pressing recordings held at the Edison National Historic Site in West Orange, New Jersey.
Seiki (given name), a Japanese given name Seiki Digital , an American television manufacturing company Japanese corvette Seiki , a screw sloop in the Imperial Japanese Navy
Computer magazines began to provide software in audio form "Vinyl Data" on flexi discs from June 1979 until 1986, as an alternative to a reader manually typing in a printed program code listing. They were intended to be dubbed by the user into cassette tape recorder, which can be played by the computer's tape drive to load the program.
Cricut, Inc. is an American brand of cutting plotters, or computer-controlled cutting machines, designed for home crafters. The machines are used for cutting paper, felt, vinyl, fabric [2] and other materials such as leather, matboard, and wood.
The cutting surfaces of a milling cutter are generally made of a hard and temperature-resistant material, so that they wear slowly. A low cost cutter may have surfaces made of high speed steel. More expensive but slower-wearing materials include cemented carbide. Thin film coatings may be applied to decrease friction or further increase hardness.
Seiki Shimizu (清水 正紀, Shimizu Seiki, born 1915 in Japan) is best known for his work as an author writing about Japanese candlestick charting techniques used to analyze and evaluate stocks in his highly regarded book The Japanese Chart of Charts.
The first color video game was the 1973 arcade game Playtron, developed by Japanese company Kasco (Kansei Seiki Seisakusho Co.), which only manufactured two cabinets of the game. [260] The first video game to represent player characters as human sprite images was Taito 's Basketball , which was licensed in February 1974 to Midway , releasing it ...