Bell Laboratories/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Pat Palmer (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
Pat Palmer (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
* {{rpl|Electronic switch }} | * {{rpl|Electronic switch }} | ||
* {{rpl|History of scientific organizations and institutions}} | * {{rpl|History of scientific organizations and institutions}} | ||
* {{rpl|Claude Shannon}} | * {{rpl|Claude Shannon}} | ||
* {{rpl|Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor}} | * {{rpl|Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor}} |
Revision as of 10:54, 8 February 2023
- See also changes related to Bell Laboratories, or pages that link to Bell Laboratories or to this page or whose text contains "Bell Laboratories".
- History of television technology: Chronology of the development and history of television. [e]
- Unix: A computer operating system originally conceived and developed by a group of researchers as an unofficial project while they were working at AT&T's Bell Laboratories. [e]
- C (programming language): General-purpose procedural programming language developed in 1972. [e]
- Binary numeral system: Numeral system that represents numbers using only the digits 0 and 1. [e]
- Electronic switch: Add brief definition or description
- History of scientific organizations and institutions: Chronology of the development and history of scientific associations. [e]
- Claude Shannon: (1916-2001) American theoretical mathematician, founder of information theory. [e]
- Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor: A semiconductor device consisting of a metal gate electrode separated by an insulating gate oxide from a semiconductor body. A voltage on the gate modulates the conductivity of a surface channel in the body that connects two body contacts, the source and drain. [e]
- Bipolar transistor: A three-terminal semiconductor device used for switching and amplification. [e]
- Negative feedback amplifier: An amplifier in which a fraction of its output is combined with the signal at its input that opposes the signal in what is called negative feedback in order to improve performance and to reduce sensitivity to parameter variations introduced by manufacturing or environmental uncertainties. [e]
- Model-dependent realism: A philosophical position that all we can know about reality consists of networks of world pictures that explain observations by connecting them by rules to concepts defined in models. [e]
- Research institute: Add brief definition or description