Laserjet 4si
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HP LaserJet 1012 The HP LaserJet 1012 is a low-end, monochrome laser printer from Hewlett-Packard that retails for US $199.99 and was designed as an inexpensive laser alternative to Inkjet printers for home and small office use. It is capable of printing a maximum 15 pages per minute (although after many pages, the print speed slows down to prevent overheating, as the printer has no onboard fan) and has a 1200 dpi effective output (optical 600 dpi).
External link
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/18972-236251-236263-14638-236263-377934.html HP LaserJet 1012 printer - overview and features
Category:Hewlett-Packard products
HP LaserJet 4200 The HP 4200 series were replacements for the HP LaserJet 4100 series of printers. They were introduced in December 2002 together with the HP LaserJet 4300 series.
The HP 4200 series of printers consists of the following
4200
4200n
4200tn
4200dtn
4200dtns
4200dtnsl.
The base model, the 4200, has the following specifications: 48 MB of memory, parallel port connection and a 600 sheet paper tray. All the others have 64 MB of memory with the letters standing for the following
n = network ready
t = additional tray to hold an extra 500 sheets
d = double sided printing
s = stacker for output tray
l = stapler.
They are all powered by a PMC-Sierra RM7065A CPU running at 300 MHz. This is a 64 bit processor based on the MIPS architecture. The printing engine is manufactured by Canon (company).
This series of printers can handle PCL, PostScript, HP-GL/2 and PJL print languages.
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF25a/18972-236251-236263-14638-f51-84028.html Official web site
Category:Hewlett-Packard products
HP LaserJet 4300 The HP 4300 series are a faster version of the HP LaserJet 4200 series of printers.
The HP 4300 series of printers consists of the following
4300
4300n
4300tn
4300dtn
4300dtns
4300dtnsl.
The base model, the 4300, has the following specifications: 64MB of memory, parallel port connection and a 600 sheet paper tray. All the others have 80MB of memory with the letters standing for the following
n = network ready
t = additional tray to hold an extra 500 sheets
d = double sided printing
s = stacker for output tray
l = stapler.
They are all powered by a PMC-Sierra RM7065A CPU running at 350MHz. This is a 64 bit processor based on the MIPS architecture.
This series can handle PCL, PostScript, HP-GL/2 and PJL print languages.
Category:Hewlett-Packard products
SI
The International System of Units (abbreviated SI from the French phrase, ''Système International d'Unités'') is the most widely used system of units. It is the most common system for everyday commerce in the world, and is almost universally used in the realm of science.
In 1960, SI was selected as a specific subset of the existing Metre-Kilogram-Second systems of units (MKS), rather than the older Centimetre-Gram-Second system (CGS). Various new units were added with the introduction of the SI and at later times. SI is sometimes referred to as the metric system, especially in the United States, which has not widely adopted it, although it has been used more commonly in recent years, and in the UK, where conversion is only partial. SI is a specific canon of measurements derived and extended from the ''Metric system''; however, not all metric units of measurement are accepted as SI units.
History
Scientists, chiefly in France, had been advocating and discussing a decimal system of measurement based on natural units at least since 1640, but the first official adoption of such a system was after the French Revolution of 1789. The metric system tried to choose units which were non-arbitrary, while practical, merging well with the revolution's official ideology of "pure reason"; it was proposed as a considerable improvement over the inconsistent customary units which existed before, whose value often depended on the region.
The most important unit is that of length: one metre was originally defined to be equal to 1/10 000 000th of the distance from the pole to the equator along the meridian through Paris. (Prior discussions had often suggested the length of a seconds pendulum in some standard gravity, which would have been only slightly shorter, and perhaps easier to determine.) This is approximately 10% longer than one yard. Later on, a platinum rod with a rigid, X-shaped cross section was produced to serve as the easy-to-check
SI =Besides USA who doesn't use SI=
Which countries besides US do not use SI units in everyday life? AxelBoldt
:That depends in part on definitions. Britain has finally gone metric for most purposes, but have an indefinite exemption for a few things, such as selling beer by the pint, not the liter or half-liter. Hong Kong is SI, except when they're selling fruit by the catty at outdoor markets. I suspect there are other such. Vicki Rosenzweig
::Ok, then: are there other countries where non-metric units are used as extensively as in the US? AxelBoldt
::I'm pretty sure that no other coutry in the world uses non-metric units as extensively as in the US. However, in some english speaking countries, the size is measured in foot-inches (at least in Canada, and partially in the UK).
::Interestingly enough, in some specific area, the measurements are non metric in metric countries. For instance screen diagonals (for TVs and computer screens) and floppy disks sizes are measured in inches, heights when flying in a plane are measured in feet, height of bicycles are in inches in Europe. The speed limits are in mph in Ireland.
::Another interesting phenomenon is the adjustment of ancient measurement units to the metric system. For instance, the french pound ("livre") has been adjusted to 0.5 kg and the swedish mile ("mil") has been adjusted to 10 km. Chtito 09:00, 4 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:::Additionally in Britain, miles are still used for distance and miles per hour for speed on roads. The height and weight of a person is still de facto a imperial measurment, depsite official attempt to mchange to metric. All medical forms will give the option of imperial or metric as most Britons do not use metric in this specific area. Addtionally the height and weight of boxers is still expressed in imperial terms. The major difference to the US system is the use of Stones (units of 14 pounds) in personal weight. For Example, a 175 pound person would say they are ''"12 stones, 7 pounds"'' or
Sis Sis (also known as Sision or Sisk?ia, later Flaviopolis or Flavias), is the city of Kozan in Adana Province in Turkey. It is situated on the left bank of the Kirkgen Su, a tributary of the Jibun (Pyramus) and at the south end of a group of passes leading from the Anti-Taurus valleys to the Cilician plain and Adana.
History
Sis was besieged by the Arabs in 704 but relieved by the Byzantines. The Abbasid caliph al-Mutawakkil took it and refortified it, but it soon returned to Byzantine hands. It was rebuilt in 1186 by Leo II, king of Lesser Armenia, who made it his capital. In 1374 it was taken and demolished by the sultan of Egypt, and it has never recovered its prosperity.
It has had, however, a great place in Armenian ecclesiastical history from the times of St Gregory the Illuminator to our own. Gregory himself was there consecrated the first Catholicos in AD 267, but transferred his see to Vagarshabad (Echmiadzin), whence, after the fall of the Arsacids, it passed to Tovin. After the constitution of the kingdom of Lesser Armenia, the catholicate returned to Sis (1294), the capital, and remained there 150 years.
In 1441, Sis having fallen from its high estate, the Armenian clergy proposed to remove the see, and on the refusal of the actual Catholicos, Gregory IX, installed a rival at Echmiadzin, who, as soon as Selim I had conquered Greater Armenia, became the more widely accepted of the two by the Armenian church in the Ottoman Empire. The Catholicus of Sis maintained himself nevertheless, and was supported in his pretensions by the Pope up to the middle of the 19th century, when the patriarch Nerses, declaring finally for Echmiadzin, carried the government with him. In 1885 Sis tried to declare Echmiadzin schismatic, and in 1895 its clergy took it on themselves to elect a Catholicus without reference to the patriarch; but the Ottoman Empire annulled the election, and only allowed it six years later on Sis renouncing
SIS The initials SIS may stand for:
# Swedish Standards Institute (earlier named ''Standardiseringskommissionen i Sverige'').
# Schengen Information System
# Secret Intelligence Service (MI6, a British intelligence agency).
# Security Intelligence Service (either a Canadian or a New Zealand intelligence agency)
# Signals Intelligence Service This United States Army group, led by William F. Friedman, broke the Japanese Foreign Office cypher called Purple. It eventually became a part of the NSA.
# Strategic information system An information system to support enterprises' strategy.
# Single Instance Store A system for coalescing identical object instances to save space.
# Silicon Integrated Systems
# Slovenska informacna sluzba (Slovak Intelligence Service)
# Special Intelligence Service A secret FBI intelligenge agency operating in South America during World War Two.
# SIS is the filename suffix for executable files for the Symbian OS operating system
Compare Sis - a settlement in Turkey.
no:SIS
sv:SIS
Si Si, si, or SI may stand for:
'SI', the Système International d'Unités (the 'metric' International System of Units)
one of two Spanish words pronounced like "see":
*''sí'' (accented) for "yes" and
*''si'' (unaccented) for "if"
in music, Si, the seventh note of ''solfege''
in chemistry, Si, the chemical symbol for ''silicon''
in Mohican mythology, Si, the lunar deity
Sinhalese language, (ISO 639 alpha-2)
Slovenia (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code, SI)
in British law, a Statutory Instrument
Smithsonian Institution
Socialist International
Spokane International Railroad
''Sports Illustrated''
Sports Interactive
Situationist International
Staten Island, a borough of New York City and an island in the Hudson River
Swedish Institute (''Svenska institutet'')
Supplemental Instruction
Sexual Intercourse (medical abbreviation, not common usage)
Self-injury or self-harm
SI is the acronym for Swarm Intelligence
In mathematics, si or Si is the Sine integral
the IATA code for Skynet Airlines
The Si is a self-replicating artifact in ADOM
SI
de:SI
eo:Si
fr:SI
it:Si
la:SI
ja:SI
pl:Si
sl:Si
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Laserjet 4si
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Laserjet 4si
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