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1

Bodson, D., B. G. Cramer, A. R. Deutermann, and J. L. Robinson. "Facsimile transmission via HF radio." IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology 40, no. 3 (1991): 515–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/25.97506.

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2

Seltzer, Steven E., Christopher L. Sistrom, and Spencer B. Gay. "Facsimile Transmission of Radiographic Images." Investigative Radiology 28, no. 9 (September 1993): 860–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004424-199309000-00022.

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Seltzer, Steven E., Christopher L. Sistrom, and Spencer B. Gay. "Facsimile Transmission of Radiographic Images." Investigative Radiology 28, no. 9 (September 1993): 860–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004424-199328090-00022.

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4

Owens, Maureen Casey. "A Look into Facsimile Transmission." Journal of Forensic Sciences 35, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 12807J. http://dx.doi.org/10.1520/jfs12807j.

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Benedict, Michael V., Gregory Reardon, Britt A. Cummins, and Frank J. Krivanek. "Facsimile Transmission of i.v. Drug Orders." American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy 48, no. 12 (December 1, 1991): 2653–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajhp/48.12.2653.

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6

Fung, Hei Tao. "Efficient transmission of halftones via facsimile." Journal of Electronic Imaging 5, no. 4 (October 1, 1996): 496. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.242626.

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7

Stubley, Peter. "Experience with facsimile transmission in Birmingham libraries." Program 20, no. 4 (April 1986): 415–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb046952.

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8

Yamamoto, Loren G., and Robert A. Wiebe. "Improving medical communication with facsimile (fax) transmission." American Journal of Emergency Medicine 7, no. 2 (March 1989): 203–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0735-6757(89)90140-x.

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9

Machida, Sadanobu, and Keisuke Murasaki. "Special edition Facsimile broadcasting. The compatibility of a facsimile transmission with the television broadcasting." Journal of the Institute of Television Engineers of Japan 41, no. 2 (1987): 140–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.3169/itej1978.41.140.

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10

Braid, Andrew. "Group 4 FAX—Facsimile Transmission for Document Delivery." Serials: The Journal for the Serials Community 3, no. 3 (November 1, 1990): 29–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1629/030329.

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11

Dimolitsas, S., J. H. Rieser, R. J. Ragland, H. Feldman, and E. Davis. "Facsimile transmission over digital satellite land-mobile channels." IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology 43, no. 3 (1994): 617–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/25.312813.

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12

Paucker, Günther Michael. "Liturgical chant bibliography 12." Plainsong and Medieval Music 12, no. 2 (October 2003): 179–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0961137103003097.

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Liturgical chant bibliography 12 maintains the traditional division into: (1) Editions and facsimile editions, (2) Books and reprints, (3) Congress reports, (4) Chant journals, (5) Collections of essays and dictionaries, (6) Articles in periodicals and Festschriften. Additions to previous bibliographies, consisting mainly of reviews, follow the present introduction. A significant publication in 2002 was without doubt the colour facsimile of the manuscript Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, fonds lat. 776 (12002), an eleventh-century gradual from the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Michel-de-Gaillac near Albi. Although no staff lines are present, the music is notated carefully in diastematic notation. The availability of a facsimile of this famous manuscript will certainly be of value for the study of semiology and the transmission history of tropes, proses and prosulae. It also contains traces of the Gallican and Mozarabic chant repertories.
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13

Wan-Li Shyu and Jin-Jang Leou. "Detection and correction of transmission errors in facsimile images." IEEE Transactions on Communications 44, no. 8 (1996): 938–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/26.535434.

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14

Tanaka, Kiyoshi, Yasuhiro Nakamura, and Kineo Matsui. "Duplex modified-read coding scheme for facsimile transmission of documents." Electronics and Communications in Japan (Part I: Communications) 73, no. 5 (May 1990): 46–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecja.4410730505.

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15

Tikhonov, D. V. "Transmission of Facsimile Messages in Digital Communication Systems with Statistical Multiplexing." Telecommunications and Radio Engineering 62, no. 1-6 (2004): 373–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1615/telecomradeng.v62.i4.60.

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16

Smith‐Burnett, Letitia. "Fax: testing the uses of facsimile transmission at Aberdeen City libraries." Program 19, no. 3 (March 1985): 271–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb046913.

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17

TAMAMURA, Katsuki. "Development of the Facsimile Transmission Method, the History of the Product." Journal of the Society of Mechanical Engineers 116, no. 1141 (2013): 814–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1299/jsmemag.116.1141_814.

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18

Wake, Yasuhiro, and Katsunori Usuki. "Transmission system for transmitting G3 facsimile signals and compressed speech signals." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 97, no. 5 (May 1995): 3224. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.411758.

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19

Clark, Steven L., Greggory R. DeVore, Patty Sabey, and Kathy N. Jolley. "Fetal heart rate transmission with the facsimile telecopier in rural areas." American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 160, no. 5 (May 1989): 1040–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9378(89)90156-7.

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20

Tanaka, Kiyoshi, and Kineo Matsui. "A digital signature scheme on a document for MH facsimile transmission." Electronics and Communications in Japan (Part I: Communications) 74, no. 8 (August 1991): 30–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecja.4410740803.

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21

Aljaž, Tomaž, Bojan Imperl, and Urban Mrak. "The packet-based networks performance requirements for real-time facsimile transmission." Computer Communications 30, no. 6 (March 2007): 1289–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.comcom.2006.12.018.

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22

Nebenzahl, Israel D., and Eugene D. Jaffe. "Facsimile transmission versus mail delivery of self-administered questionnaires in industrial surveys." Industrial Marketing Management 24, no. 3 (June 1995): 167–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0019-8501(94)00043-v.

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23

Dimolitsas, Spiros, Jack Rieser, Earl Davis, Rod Ragland, and Howard Feldman. "Transmission of group 3 facsimile over inmarsat maritime digital satellite mobile channels." International Journal of Satellite Communications 10, no. 4 (July 1992): 177–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sat.4600100403.

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24

Howell, D. N., A. LeFurgey, A. Tuszynski, and J. D. Shelburne. "Telemicroscopy in Pathology Diagnosis." Microscopy and Microanalysis 7, S2 (August 2001): 846–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1431927600030300.

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Telepathology, derived from the Greek words tele, or “far off,” and pathologia, literally, “study of the emotions,” is a branch of telemedicine in which information about tissue or body fluid samples obtained at one location is transmitted to a distant site for analysis. in its broadest sense, telepathology can be thought of as encompassing any form of remote information transfer about specimens harboring potential disease processes, including verbal communication via telephone. in a majority of cases, however, the term is used to describe interactions involving transmission of microscopic images, or telemicroscopy. Such transmission can occur through a wide variety of media; sharing of printed images is one venerable mechanism that persists in robust form to this day, facilitated and expedited by efficient express-mail systems. Increasingly, however, the terms telepathology and telemicroscopy have acquired the connotation of rapid electronic transmission of digitized images. Facsimile transmission of micrographs is a rudimentary version of this process, but most modern systems employ some form of digital camera attached to a microscope.
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25

Ochi, H., and N. Tetsutani. "A New Halftone Reproduction and Transmission Method Using Standard Black and White Facsimile Code." IEEE Transactions on Communications 35, no. 4 (1987): 466–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tcom.1987.1096788.

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26

Jose, Manju, and S. K. Srivatsa. "A Comprehensive Study and Performance Analysis of Facsimile Transmission Using GSM Fixed Wireless Terminal." International Journal of Computer Applications 44, no. 2 (April 30, 2012): 31–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.5120/6237-8551.

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27

Sherif, M. H., E. Cuevas, T. Liebert, and S. Dimolitsas. "Transmission quality of Group III facsimile on IDR satellite links with circuit multiplication equipment." International Journal of Satellite Communications 12, no. 2 (March 1994): 167–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sat.4600120205.

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28

Chan, TN, CM Lo, WK Tung, and H. Lee. "News Board for Emergency Incidents." Hong Kong Journal of Emergency Medicine 16, no. 4 (October 2009): 277–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/102490790901600416.

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In the past, intra-hospital communication during disaster incidents relied heavily on pagers, phones or direct verbal communication. Other communication channels may include facsimile transmission, email and “walkie-talkie”. There was often delay or inadequacy of information dissemination. This article introduces the “News Board for Emergency Incidents” recently launched in our hospital intranet as an efficient communication channel to convey up-to-date information to other hospital staff during major incidents. The background and process of development of this new communication modality is discussed. We also try to explore possible future development of such “news board” via intranet broadcast.
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29

Korhonen, O. "An Experiment on Image Transmission to an Icebreaker (Abstract)." Annals of Glaciology 9 (1987): 249. http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/s0260305500000896.

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Finland has such a climate that all its harbours in the Baltic Sea are frozen every winter. Ice may sometimes be more than 1 m thick, as it was in the Bay of Bothnia, the northernmost basin of the Baltic Sea, during the winter of 1985.The Finnish Institute of Marine Research has used the imagery of the Tiros-N series of satellites successfully in sea-ice mapping for some years. In the Institute daily ice charts have been prepared and sent by facsimile to icebreakers in the Baltic Sea. In 1985, an experiment was conducted to transmit the same imagery to an icebreaker operating in the Bay of Bothnia. Existing telecommunication networks were used. The image data transmitted by NOAA-6 and NOAA-9 satellites were received at Tromsø Telemetry Station in Norway and then transmitted to Espoo in Finland. The data processing consisted of geometric correction, edge enhancement, and drawing the coastline with location symbols. The most interesting area was extracted and transmitted by NMT mobile telephone to the icebreaker.The almost real-time image transmission turned out to be useful from the point of view of icebreaker operation. The images could be used to identify cracks and narrow leads in the ice. Such very detailed information cannot be included in routine ice charts. The icebreaker can use this information for giving instructions to other ships to find easier routes. This reduces the need for icebreaker assistance. The images can also help the icebreaker to avoid wide heavily ridged areas.This experiment was at low cost and can be technically developed further. It showed that this kind of assistance for icebreakers is economically profitable for winter navigation.
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30

Korhonen, O. "An Experiment on Image Transmission to an Icebreaker (Abstract)." Annals of Glaciology 9 (1987): 249. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260305500000896.

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Finland has such a climate that all its harbours in the Baltic Sea are frozen every winter. Ice may sometimes be more than 1 m thick, as it was in the Bay of Bothnia, the northernmost basin of the Baltic Sea, during the winter of 1985. The Finnish Institute of Marine Research has used the imagery of the Tiros-N series of satellites successfully in sea-ice mapping for some years. In the Institute daily ice charts have been prepared and sent by facsimile to icebreakers in the Baltic Sea. In 1985, an experiment was conducted to transmit the same imagery to an icebreaker operating in the Bay of Bothnia. Existing telecommunication networks were used. The image data transmitted by NOAA-6 and NOAA-9 satellites were received at Tromsø Telemetry Station in Norway and then transmitted to Espoo in Finland. The data processing consisted of geometric correction, edge enhancement, and drawing the coastline with location symbols. The most interesting area was extracted and transmitted by NMT mobile telephone to the icebreaker. The almost real-time image transmission turned out to be useful from the point of view of icebreaker operation. The images could be used to identify cracks and narrow leads in the ice. Such very detailed information cannot be included in routine ice charts. The icebreaker can use this information for giving instructions to other ships to find easier routes. This reduces the need for icebreaker assistance. The images can also help the icebreaker to avoid wide heavily ridged areas. This experiment was at low cost and can be technically developed further. It showed that this kind of assistance for icebreakers is economically profitable for winter navigation.
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31

Väisänen, Olli, Markku Mäkijärvi, and Tom Silfvast. "Prehospital ECG transmission: comparison of advanced mobile phone and facsimile devices in an urban Emergency Medical Service System." Resuscitation 57, no. 2 (May 2003): 179–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0300-9572(03)00028-5.

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32

Baum, J. A. C., H. J. Korn, and S. Kotha. "Dominant Designs and Population Dynamics in Telecommunications Services: Founding and Failure of Facsimile Transmission Service Organizations, 1965-1992." Social Science Research 24, no. 2 (June 1995): 97–135. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ssre.1995.1004.

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33

Taylor, David McD, and Stephen T. Walker. "Facsimile to general practitioners advising of patient admission from the emergency department: Why do some patients refuse consent for transmission?" Emergency Medicine Australasia 11, no. 4 (December 1999): 290–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1442-2026.1999.00063.x.

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34

Atya Baidaa A Ibrahim. "Image Compression Using Improved Method." Journal of Electrical Systems 20, no. 6s (April 29, 2024): 1007–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.52783/jes.2812.

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Effective use of digital images requires certain techniques to lower the number of bits needed to represent them. The goal of compression is to reduce the size of an image while maintaining its information and originality. This research aims to achieve this target by developing a fuzzy logic and histogram-based image compression type detection approach. The main goal is to provide an approach that employs fuzzy logic and graphs for detecting the type of image compression. In order to decide the compression technique depending on the number of color levels in the image which was recovered with the use of histogram, the suggested technique combines a new combination of fuzzy logic as well as image histogram analysis. The experimental findings demonstrated the suggested technique's robustness and efficiency in detecting the best approach for each type of image compression. After 75 images with varying color densities were evaluated, the system's compression rate was approximately 95%. In addition to being a significant contribution to image processing, the study finds practical applications in the following areas: remote sensing through satellite; facsimile transmission of medical images in computer tomography magnetic resonance imaging; teleconferencing systems; military communication systems via radars; geological surveys; and communications systems built by computers.
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35

de Voort, Frederik R. van, Jacqueline Sedman, and Syed Tufail Hussain Sherazi. "Improved Determination of Isolated trans Isomers in Edible Oils by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy Using Spectral Reconstitution." Journal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL 90, no. 2 (March 1, 2007): 446–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jaoac/90.2.446.

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Abstract A substantially more sensitive and accurate alternative to the single-bounce attenuated total reflectance (SB-ATR) Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic method of AOAC/American Oil Chemists' Society (AOCS) was developed for determination of isolated trans isomers, based on transmission measurements using a technique called spectral reconstitution (SR). The method involves the 1:1.5 dilution of an oil with odorless mineral spirits (OMS) containing a spectralmarker. The resulting reduction in sample viscosity facilitates the use of a transmission flow cell, with the spectralmarker serving to determine the precise dilution ratio. This allows the spectral contributions of the OMS to be eliminated and a facsimile of the neat oil spectrum to be mathematically reconstituted. The transmission- SR (T-SR) procedure was initially evaluated relative to SB-ATR to track changes in the trans content of mixtures of unhydrogenated canola and a highly hydrogenated sunflower oil (030% trans). The results indicated that the T-SR procedure had the potential to serve as the basis of an accurate quantitative method. A subsequent T-SR calibration based on the spectral ratioing principle of the SB-ATR AOAC/AOCSmethod was developed by gravimetrically adding trielaidin (04%) to extra virgin olive oil (EVO), producing an excellent linear response with a standard deviation (SD) of <0.04% trans. Subsequent comparison of SB-ATR and T-SR calibrations developed for 5 oils of different types, each spiked with low levels of trielaidin (01.2% trans), clearly indicated that SB-ATR was signal-limited, whereas the T-SR procedure performed well. The EVO calibration was subsequently used to predict the added trans content of these spiked oils, after the spectrum of the corresponding unspiked oil had been ratioed out. The resulting plot of predicted versus added trans was linear, with a slope of 1.02 and an overall SD of <0.05% trans. When the spectra of these oils were ratioed against the spectrum of EVO, the trans predictions for some of the oils were offset by 23 percentage points, emphasizing the need for the appropriate trans-free reference oil to perform accurate analyses. If the latter condition is met, then T-SR provides a very simple technique, with the potential for automation, for analysis of oils by transmission spectroscopy, with approximately 20 the sensitivity of the AOAC/AOCS SB-ATR method.
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36

Gerasimov, Igor V. "A Manuscript about Sufi Sheikh Miracles from R. Fakhretdinov's Archive in the Collection of the IOM, RAS." Written Monuments of the Orient 9, no. 1(17) (June 25, 2023): 82–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.55512/wmo465749.

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Rizaeddin Fakhretdinov (18591936) is one of the most prominent figures among Muslim scholars at the turn of the 1920th cc. whose sphere of scientific interests was biographies. Among the materials of R. Fakhretdinov on the preparation of his famous work Asar there are texts related to Sufism, and of particular interest are descriptions of the miracles performed by Muslim righteous men. One of the documents about the miraculous deeds of a righteous man named Abd al-Latif b. Subhankul b. Ramkul under the title (Fī bayān manāqib al-'imām al-shaiḫ al-kāmil) Explanation of the virtues of al-Imam al-Sheikh al-Kamil (the Imam, the Sheikh who should be followed) is stored in the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts in the archive of R. Fakhretdinov (Fund 131, Inventory 1). The stories in many ways resemble or even coincide with similar Sufi texts from other Muslim countries. This is a sign of cultural and ideological interaction between brotherhoods, as well as transmission of the perfect image of Sufi righteous men. In addition, miracles and their number enhanced the importance of a sheikh mentor in the eyes of his followers and made his authority undeniable. It is worth mentioning that the text is written in a good Arabic literary language, which testifies to a high education level of the author. The present article contains a short biography of Rizaeddin Fakhretdinov, facsimile publication of the text and its translation into English.
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37

Kinal, George V., and Jim Nagle. "Geostationary Augmentation of Global Satellite Navigation–1991 Update." Journal of Navigation 45, no. 2 (May 1992): 166–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0373463300010663.

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This paper and the following five papers were presented at the NAV91 Conference on Satellite Navigation held at Church House, London, 6–8 November 1991. Copies of the conference proceedings are available from the Director, price £85 (non-members) and £65 (members).In the last two years, the idea of a civil geostationary overlay (augmentation) to GPS and GLONASS has moved from the discussion/concept stage to something approaching reality. Many details of implementation have been or are in the process of being determined. Major developments that have taken place in this period of time include: (i) INMARSAT'S adoption of a four ocean region satellite deployment (three had been employed previously), now including one region (AOR-West) that covers the conterminous United States, (ii) Inclusion in the specifications, and contracting for, navigation repeater payloads in the four INMARSAT-3 spacecraft, now under construction, (iii) Major improvements in the Test Bed, bringing the test signals closer in function and structure to those to be provided through the INMARSAT-3 navigation payloads. (iv) Plans in the US and Europe to employ the Test Bed, or a facsimile thereof, for field trials of the GPS/GLONASS integrity channel (GIC) concept, (v) Endorsement of the ‘Wideband GIC’ concept (transmission at GPS L, frequency of a spread spectrum signal) by many members of the aviation community, (vi) Introduction and study of the possibility that the Gic might be able to carry some form of differential corrections in addition to the basic integrity and constellation augmentation functions. In other words, whereas two years ago we were still considering the possibility of a civil element of global satellite radionavigation, this year we are deeply in the process of putting the necessary elements into place.
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38

Rogers, Mary A. M., David Small, Debra A. Buchan, Carl A. Butch, Christine M. Stewart, Barbara E. Krenzer, and Harold L. Husovsky. "Home Monitoring Service Improves Mean Arterial Pressure in Patients with Essential Hypertension: A Randomized Controlled Trial." Circulation 103, suppl_1 (March 2001): 1369–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/circ.103.suppl_1.9998-99.

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P99 While the use of telecommunication systems in medicine has been increasing, there have been few trials to assess the efficacy of such technology for improving blood pressure (BP) in patients with essential hypertension. A randomized controlled trial (RCT) was conducted to assess the efficacy of an home monitoring service which utilized automatic transmission of BP data over telephone lines, conversion of the data into report form by computer, and facsimile transmission of the form weekly to physicians and patients. One hundred and eleven patients were randomized to either home service or usual care and followed for a median of 11 weeks. The primary endpoint was change in mean arterial pressure (MAP) which was assessed using a 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) device at both baseline and exit. There was a 3.0 mm Hg decline in MAP from baseline to exit for patients using the home service and a 1.5 mm Hg increase in MAP for patients receiving usual care (p=0.0139). There was a 2.1 mm Hg decline in average diastolic BP (DBP) in the home service group and a 2.3 mm Hg increase in the usual care group (p=0.0120). In addition, the proportion of 24-hour DBP readings above target levels decreased by 6.8% in patients receiving home service, but increased by 6.2% in patients receiving usual care (p=0.0057). The reduction in BP was evident for both genders, for each ethnic group, and for both younger and older patients. For African-Americans, MAP declined by 9.6 mm Hg for those receiving the home service and increased by 5.25 mm Hg for those receiving usual care (p=0.0469). The difference in MAP between the two study arms remained significant after adjustment for patient characteristics. The decrease in BP for home service was, in part, due to more frequent changes in dose and/or type of medication during the course of the trial. This was the first RCT of a home BP service that did not rely on patient self-report and which used 24-hour ABPM at baseline and at exit to assess usual BP. It is recommended that patients with essential hypertension, who are in the process of evaluation for a change in antihypertensive therapy, utilize a home monitoring service.
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39

Boyd, Kenlyn. "Considerations Before Implementing the Use of Facsimile Transmissions." Journal For Healthcare Quality 11, no. 6 (December 1989): 20–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-1474.1989.tb00682.x.

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40

Ueda, F. "Application of conventional facsimile-communication to current navigation systems for image transmissions." JSAE Review 19, no. 2 (April 1998): 167–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0389-4304(97)00068-4.

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41

Bertocco, M., C. Narduzzi, P. Paglierani, and E. Rizzi. "An in-service measurement system for the quality analysis of facsimile transmissions." IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement 49, no. 6 (2000): 1267–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/19.893268.

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42

Villela, Rubens J. "Radio weather transmissions in the Antarctic." Polar Record 27, no. 161 (April 1991): 103–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247400012225.

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AbstractDuring seven summer Brazilian expeditions to the Antarctic Peninsula area the author used radio weather transmissions to collect data for synoptic analysis and operational weather forecasting. A particularly intensive effort aboard Barão de Teffé in 1989–90 yielded detailed information on frequencies, schedules, procedures and contents, which should be useful to radio-operators, meteorologists, and other Antarctic workers since official publications listing Antarctic radio transmissions are out-dated or incomplete. Radiotelegraph broadcasts particularly valuable to mariners, which may replace or complement facsimile transmissions, are made by Valparaiso, Punta Arenas, and Buenos Aires. Because of unreliable reception of regular fax and teletype broadcasts, synoptic reports were copied directly by monitoring voice and Morse point-to-point circuits, gaining time crucial to operational decisions. Especially useful sources of reports were the Frei, Marambio, and Faraday collections, and the USSR radiotelegraph communications carrying land and ship reports for all sectors of Antarctica and southern hemisphere oceans. Other signals, eg from Chilean lighthouses, ships of opportunity, and aircraft have become useful sources of meteorological information, especially for Drake Passage since Chile has suspended broadcasts, adversely affecting weather forecasting in the area. An insight into weather conditions on the Antarctic Plateau, as well as a sense of history in the making, were gained by monitoring Adventure Network International's radio frequencies.
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43

ROBSON, MICHAEL, and PATRICK ZUTSHI. "An Early Manuscript of the Admonitions of St Francis of Assisi." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 62, no. 2 (March 4, 2011): 217–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046910003040.

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This article discusses a privately owned manuscript of St Francis's collection of addresses known as the Admonitions in the context of the nature of the work, the textual transmission of Francis's writings, his method of composition and other manuscripts of the Admonitions, especially those dating from the thirteenth century. It is argued that the manuscript antedates Francis's canonisation in 1228, is the earliest known manuscript containing the Admonitions and indeed the earliest manuscript of any of Francis's more substantial works. The article publishes the text and provides facsimiles of the manuscript.
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Thomas, Jonathan T., Grant McCall, and Katina Lillios. "Revisiting the Individual in Prehistory: Idiosyncratic Engraving Variation and the Neolithic Slate Plaques of the Iberian Peninsula." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 19, no. 1 (February 2009): 53–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774309000031.

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Experiments in replicating facsimiles of Late Neolithic engraved slate plaques from southwestern Iberia suggest that variation related to fine-motor skills is greater between individual engravers than within the work of a single engraver. This implies that the work of different individuals producing certain classes of material culture may be distinguishable on the basis of repetitive, idiosyncratic traits. These studies also generate otherwise unobtainable information about the experience of plaque making. We examine past and present methodological attempts to differentiate unconscious, individual styles from intentional, culturally mediated styles, and discuss why in some cases it is extremely difficult to separate such variation. We explore the link between individual variation and theoretical notions of the individual, and its implications for understanding the organization, transmission, and shared expression of ancient social practices.
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Rudolf, Winfried. "Digitizing the Old English Anonymous and Wulfstanian Homilies through the Electronic Corpus of Anonymous Homilies in Old English (ECHOE) Project." Anglia 139, no. 1 (March 4, 2021): 128–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ang-2021-0007.

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Abstract This article first outlines the challenges involved in the editing of Old English anonymous and Wulfstanian homilies before introducing the Electronic Corpus of Anonymous Homilies in Old English (ECHOE) project. This new initiative at the University of Göttingen reverses the traditional collation of texts and instead celebrates the book-historical significance of every individual manuscript version, its textual and palaeographical idiosyncrasies, and its revisional layers up through c. 1200 AD. The project provides new forms of display to expose the complex interversional network of textual representations, and develops a range of digital tools to facilitate the identification and swift comparison of related passages. It includes digital facsimiles, palaeographical and rhetorical version profiles, and the Latin sources for each homily, creating opportunities for unprecedented research on the transmission, composition, variation, and performance of the fluid preaching text.
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Nakazawa, Masaru. "Special Issue on Handling of Flexible Object." Journal of Robotics and Mechatronics 10, no. 3 (June 20, 1998): 167–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.20965/jrm.1998.p0167.

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It is difficult to introduce highly versatile automation using robots to handling deformable objects such as thread, cloth, wire, long beams, and thin plates in plant production processes, compared to the handling of rigid objects. Office equipment handles deformable objects such as paper and plastic. Problems unique to these objects is caused by speeding up such equipment and demand for upgrading its accuracy. In agriculture and medical care, automatic, intelligent handling of deformable objects such as fruit and animals has long been desired and practical systems sought. Deformable objects whose handling should be versatiley and accurately automated are classified into two groups based on handling: (A) Flexible, mostly thin, fine objects capable of elastic deformation (B) Soft objects easily crushed, such as soft fruits or animals The problem in handling the first group is controlling object deformation of an infinite degree of freedom with a finite number of manipulated variables. In contrast, a significant problem in handling the second group is often how to handle them without exerting excessive stress and how to handle them safely and reliably. The handling of these two groups differ greatly in mechanics and control theory, and this special issue focuses on the first group — flexible objects — mechanical collection and transport studies, control, and software. Recent studies on their handling are classified into four groups for convenience based on handled objects and types of handling task: (a) Control of deformation, internal force, and vibration or path planning of flexible objects (mainly thin plates and beams) using single or multiple manipulators. (b) Task understanding in insertion of elastic into rigid parts and vice versa, and the study of human skills to help robots accomplish these task. (c) Approaches on improved accuracy, intelligent control, and vibration damping in handling and transfer of sheets and strings with low flexural rigidity, represented by paper or wire. (d) Strategies for grasping and unfolding sheets such as cloth whose flexural rigidity is almost nil. For (a), studies are active on deformation control by two robot hands attempting to grasp cloth. 1-3) In the automobile industry, so-called flexible fixtureless assembly systems are advancing in which two robots process or assemble parts in mid-air without a fixed table to reduce lead time and cost. These systems are mostly developed assuming handled parts are rigid. Nguyen et al. work assuming parts such as sheet metal whose deformation must be taken into consideration.1) Nakagaki et al. propose form estimation that considers even plastic deformation in wire handling by robots, in connection with the development of robots for electric wire installation.4) Many studies cover flexible wire as elastic beams,3-9) but comparatively few focus on bending deformation of thin plates. This special edition includes a paper by Kosuge et al. on thin-plate deformation control. Vibration control of grasped objects becomes important as speed increases. Matsuno kindly contributed his paper on optimum path planning in elastic plate handling. In controlling the deformation of elastic bodies, the mechanics of objects handled is often unknown. This special issue features a paper by Kojima et al. on an approach to this problem by adaptive feed-forward control. For (b), we consider three cases: (1) A cylindrical rigid body inserted into a hole on an elastic plate. (2) An elastic bar inserted into a hole on a rigid body. (3) A tubular elastic body put on a cylindrical rigid body. This special issue carries papers on these problems by Brata et al., Matsuno et al., and Hirai. For (2), a paper by Nakagaki et al.10) covers electric wire installation. For (3), the paper by Shima et al.11) covers insertion of a rigid axis into an elastic hose. Robot skill acquisition is an important issue in robotics in general, and the above papers should prove highly interesting and information because they treat studies by comparing robot and human skills in accomplishing work and acquiring concrete skills knowledge. For (c), attempts are made to theoretically analyze sheet handling mechanisms and control developed based on trial and error, and to structure design theory based on such analysis. These attempts are related to the increased accuracy and speed and enhanced intelligence of sheet-handling office automation equipment such as printers, facsimile machines, copiers, and automated teller machines. Yoshida et al. conducted a series of studies on the effects of guides forming paper feed paths and of inertia force of paper by approximating sheets with a chain of discrete masses and springs.12-14) This special edition also features a study on sheet sticking and jamming. Okuna et al. handles a system of similar nature, mechanical studying the form of paper guides.15) Introducing mechanisms to control the positioning of sheets is effective in raising sheet transfer accuracy. Feedback control that regulates feed roller skew angle as a manipulated variable is proposed.16) Increased reliability in separating single sheets from stacked effectively reduces the malfunction rate in sheet-handling equipment. Ways of optimizing the form of sheet-separation rollers17) and estimating frictional force between separation gates and sheets 18) are also proposed. This special issue contains a proposal by Nakazawa et al. of a mechanism that uses reactive sheet buckling force, made in connection with development of a newspaper page turner for the disabled as technology for separating single sheets. Dry frictional force is most widely used for transporting sheets, but is not stable and may even act as an obstacle to improving accuracy. Niino et al. propose a sheet transfer mechanism that uses electrostatic force.19) For improving the accuracy of flexible wire transmission, this special issue carries a study on transporting flexible thin wire through tension control at multiple points, from a study by Morimitsu et al. on optical fiber installation. The thickness of wire used in equipment is becoming increasingly slim and flexible, along with the equipment it is used in. Tension control in the production process is an important factor in the manufacture of such thin wire. Production efficiency constantly calls for increased transfer speed. It has thus become important to estimate air resistance and inertia and to measure and control the tension of running wire. Studies20,21) by Batra, Fraser, et al. which deal the motion of string in the spinning process provide good examples for learning analytical techniques for air drag and inertia. In string vibration where inertia dominates, attempts are made to control vibration by boundary shaking22,23) and feed-forward/back control.24) For (d), highly versatile robots for handling cloth are being developed, and the software technology for automatic cloth selection and unfolding by robot hands is a popular topic.25-27) Ono et al. comment on the nature of problems in developing intelligent systems for handling cloth and similar objects whose bending rigidity is low and which readily fold and overlap—a paper that will prove a good reference in basic approaches in this field. Mechanical analyses are indispensable to studies on (a) through (c). In contrast, information technology such as characteristic variable measurement, image processing, and discrimination, rather than mechanical analyses, play an important roles in studies on (d). This special issue features a study by Hamashima, Uraya et al. on cloth unfolding as an example of such studies. Studies up to now largely assumed that properties of grasped objects did not change environmental influences such as temperature and humidity. Such influence is often, however, a major factor in handling fiber thread and cloth. This special issue has a paper contributed by Taylor, who studies handling method to prevent influence by such environmental factors. The objective of this special issue will have been achieved if it aids those studying the handling of flexible objects by providing approaches and methodologies of researchers whose target objects differ and if it aids those planning to take up study in this field by providing a general view of this field. References: 1) Nguyen, W. and Mills, J., ""Multi-Robot Control For Plexible Fixtureless Assembly of Flexible Sheet Metal Auto Body Parts,"" Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 2340-2345, (1996). 2) Sun, D. and Shi, X. and Liu, Y., ""Modeling and Cooperation of Two-Arm Robotic System Manipulating a Deformable Object,"" Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 2346-2351, (1996). 3) Kosuge, K., Sakaki, M., Kanitani, K., Yoshida, H. and Fukuda, T., ""Manipulation of a Flexible Object by Dual Manipulators,"" IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 318-323, (1995). 4) Nakagaki, H., Kitagaki, K., Ogasawara, T. and Tukune H., ""Handling of a Flexible Wire -Detecting a Deformed Shape of the Wire by Vision and a Force Sensor,"" Annual Conference on Robotics and Mechatronics (ROBOMEC'96), 207-210, (1996). 5) Wakamatsu, H., Hirai, S. and Iwata, K., ""Static Analysis of Deformable Object Grasping Based on Bounded Force Closure,"" Trans. of JSML, 84-618 (C), 508-515, (1998). 6) Katoh, R. and Fujmoto, T., ""Study on Deformation of Elastic Object By Manipulator -Path Planning of End -Effector-,"" J. of the Robotics Society of Japan, 13-1, 157-160, (1995). 7) Yukawa, T., Uohiyama, M. and Inooka, M., ""Stability of Control System in Handling a Flexible Object by Rigid Arm Robots,"" JSME Annual Conference on Robotics and Mechatronics (ROBOMEC'95), 169-172, (1995). 8) Yukawa, T., Uohiyama, M. and Cbinata, G., ""Handling of a Vibrating Flexible Structure by a Robot,"" Trans. JSME, 61-583, 938-943, (1995). 9) Sun, D. and Liu, Y., ""Modeling and Impedance Control of a Two-Manipulator System Handling a Flexible Beam,"" Trans. of the ASME, 119, 736-742, (1997). 10) Nakagaki, H., Kitagaki, K. and Tukune, H., ""Contact Motion in Inserting a Flexible Wire into a Hole,"" Annual Conference on Robotics and Mechatronics (ROBOMEC'95), 175-178, (1995). 11) Shimaji, S., Brata, A. and Hattori, H., ""Robot Skill in Assembling a Cylinder into an Elastic Hose,"" Annual Conference on Robotics and Mechatronics (ROBOMEC'95), 752-755, (1995). 12) Yoshida, K. and Kawauchi, M., ""The Analysis of Deformation and Behavior of Flexible Materials (1st Reprt, Study of Spring-Mass Beam Model of the Sheet,"" Trans. of JSME, 58-552, 1474-1480, (1992). 13) Yoshida, K., ""Analysis of Deformation and Behavior of Flexible Materials (2nd Report, Static Analysis for Deformation of the Sheet in the Space Formed by Guide Plates),"" Trans. JSME, 60-570, 501-507, (1994). 14) Yoshida, K., ""Dynamic Analysis of Sheet Defofmation Using Spring-Mass-Beam Model,"" Trans. JSME, 63-615, 3926-3932 (1997). 15) Okuna, K., Nishigaito, T. and Shina, Y., ""Analysis of Paper Deformation Considering Guide Friction (Improvement of Paper Path for Paper-Feeding Mechanism),"" Trans. JSME, 60-575, 2279-2284, (1994). 16) Fujimura, H. and Ono, K., ""Analysis of Paper Motion Driven by Skew-Roll Paper Feeding System,"" Trans. JSME, 62-596, 1354-1360, (1996). 17) Shima, Y., Hattori, S., Kobayashi, Y. and Ukai, M., ""Optimum of Gate-Roller Shape in Paper Isolating Methods,"" Conference of Information, Intelligence and Precision Equipment (IIP'96), 61-62, (1996). 18) Suzuki, Y, Hattori, S., Shima, Y. and Ukai, M., ""Contact Analysis of Paper in Gate-Roller Handling Method"", Conference on Information, Intelligence and Precision Equipment (IIP'95), 19-20, (1995). 19) Niino, T., Egawa, S. and Higuchi, T., ""An Electrostatic Paper Feeder,"" J. of the Japan Society for Precision Engineering, 60-12,1761-1765, (1994). 20) Batra, S., Ghosh, T. and Zeidman, M., ""An Integrated Approach to Dynamic Analysis of the Ring Spinning Process , PartII: With Air Drag,"" Textile Research Journal, 59, 416-424, (1989). 21) Fraser, W., Ghosh, T. and Batra, S., ""On Unwinding Yarn from a Cylindrical Package,"" Proceedings of Royal Society of London, A, 436, 479-438, (1992). 22) Jacob, S., ""Control of Vibrating String Using Impedance Matching,"" Proceedings of the American Control Conference (San Francisco),468-472, (1993). 23) Lee, S. and Mote, C., ""Vibration Control of an Axially Moving String by Boundary Control,"" Trans. of the ASME, J. of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control, 118, 66-74, (1996). 24) Ying, S. and Tan, C., ""Active Vibration Control of the Axially Moving String Using Space Feedforward and Feedback Controllers,"" Trans. ASME, J. of Vibration and Acoustics, 118, 306-312, (1996). 25) Ono, E., Ichijo, H. and Aisaka, N., ""Flexible Robotic Hand for Handling Fabric Pieces in Garment Manufacture,"" International Journal of Clothing Science and Technology, 4-5,18-23, (1992). 26) Paraschidis, K., Fahantidis, N, Petridis, V., Doulgeri, Z., Petrou, L. and Hasapis, G, ""A Robotic System for Handling Textile and Non Rigid Flat Materials,"" Computers in Industry, 26, 303-313, (1995). 27) Fahantidis, N., Paraschidis, K, Petridis, V., Doulgeri, Z., Petrou, L. and Hasapis, G., ""Robot Handling of Flat Textile Materials,"" IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine, 4-1, 34-41, (1997).
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"Virtual facsimile and PC image capture/transmission/processing." Computer Communications 10, no. 1 (February 1987): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0140-3664(87)90315-x.

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"Application of conventional facsimile-communication to current navigation system for image transmission Fumio Ueda, Masao Hariguchi (Mitsubishi Electric Corp.)." JSAE Review 18, no. 2 (April 1997): 192. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0389-4304(97)85011-4.

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Muhsyi, Abdul, and Luqman Affandi. "APLIKASI SHARING PRINTER MELALUI VIRTUAL PRIVATE NETWORK (VPN) SEBAGAI MEDIA PENGIRIMAN DOKUMEN." Jurnal Teknologi Informasi, March 31, 2018, 47–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.36382/jti-tki.v9i1.309.

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Telephone technology required for a means of communication between the company,employees and customers. Not only communication course, telephone technology can also submit adocument be printed through fax machine technology that is connected to the network telephone.However telepone technology users have decreased. Because consumers prefer mobile phone orInternet services as a means of communication and cause deterioration in telephone users. So thetechnology is connected in a network telephone also affected, such as fax machines. Internetservice can not submit documents such as mold, as well as a fax machine. These services may beneeded. To send a document without a fax machine, can be done using a printer sharingapplication that allows users to send documents via the VPN. Delivery of documents to the printerthrough a VPN can be done without the use fax machines. Require a small fee to send documentsvia the VPN. Transmission speed per document is superior. The quality of the resulting documentsprinter depending on the printer settings when printing document. VPN security systems can be setalone.Keywords: Facsimile, Printer, Document, VPN, Server, Client.
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"Safeguards Needed in Transfer of Patient Data." Pediatrics 98, no. 5 (November 1, 1996): 984–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.98.5.984.

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This Policy Statement was retired May 2004. The intent of this statement is to provide practitioners with information to assist them in safeguarding the electronic storage and transmission of patient data. It lists safeguards that should be in place in pediatric practices that send facsimiles of patient data. Issues of protecting patient and provider confidentiality, maintaining the security of these data, and state and federal health data legislation are also addressed.
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