2,221 research outputs found

    Evidence from the Patent Record on the Development of Cash Dispensing Technology

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    There are but a handful of systematic studies on the history of automated teller machines (ATMs) yet all fail to address the issue of paternity while perpetrating ‘common wisdom’ beliefs. This article looks at the birth of currency dispensing equipment, the immediate predecessor to the ATM. At the simplest level, at least four separate instance of innovation can reasonably claim to be the origin of the concept. However, the question as to who invented it is less illuminating than an understanding of the process of innovation itself and how these competing families developed into the modern conception of an ATM. Our research supports the view of user-driven innovation as surviving business records and oral histories tell of close involvement of bank staff in establishing requirements and choosing amongst alternative solutions in the implementation of first generation technology. This case thus shows greater understanding in the user’s role in shaping and directing technological development.Cash dispensers (ATMs), History, Financial data processing, Patents, Research and development, User interfaces

    Generalization of the matrix product ansatz for integrable chains

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    We present a general formulation of the matrix product ansatz for exactly integrable chains on periodic lattices. This new formulation extends the matrix product ansatz present on our previous articles (F. C. Alcaraz and M. J. Lazo J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 37 (2004) L1-L7 and J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 37 (2004) 4149-4182.)Comment: 5 pages. to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Ge

    High-speed noise-free optical quantum memory

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    Quantum networks promise to revolutionise computing, simulation, and communication. Light is the ideal information carrier for quantum networks, as its properties are not degraded by noise in ambient conditions, and it can support large bandwidths enabling fast operations and a large information capacity. Quantum memories, devices that store, manipulate, and release on demand quantum light, have been identified as critical components of photonic quantum networks, because they facilitate scalability. However, any noise introduced by the memory can render the device classical by destroying the quantum character of the light. Here we introduce an intrinsically noise-free memory protocol based on two-photon off-resonant cascaded absorption (ORCA). We consequently demonstrate for the first time successful storage of GHz-bandwidth heralded single photons in a warm atomic vapour with no added noise; confirmed by the unaltered photon statistics upon recall. Our ORCA memory platform meets the stringent noise-requirements for quantum memories whilst offering technical simplicity and high-speed operation, and therefore is immediately applicable to low-latency quantum networks

    Evidence from the Patent Record on the Development of Cash Dispensing Technology

    Get PDF
    There are but a handful of systematic studies on the history of automated teller machines (ATMs) yet all fail to address the issue of paternity while perpetrating ‘common wisdom’ beliefs. This article looks at the birth of currency dispensing equipment, the immediate predecessor to the ATM. At the simplest level, at least four separate instance of innovation can reasonably claim to be the origin of the concept. However, the question as to who invented it is less illuminating than an understanding of the process of innovation itself and how these competing families developed into the modern conception of an ATM. Our research supports the view of user-driven innovation as surviving business records and oral histories tell of close involvement of bank staff in establishing requirements and choosing amongst alternative solutions in the implementation of first generation technology. This case thus shows greater understanding in the user’s role in shaping and directing technological development

    Evidence from the Patent Record on the Development of Cash Dispensing Technology

    Get PDF
    There are but a handful of systematic studies on the history of automated teller machines (ATMs) yet all fail to address the issue of paternity while perpetrating ‘common wisdom’ beliefs. This article looks at the birth of currency dispensing equipment, the immediate predecessor to the ATM. At the simplest level, at least four separate instance of innovation can reasonably claim to be the origin of the concept. However, the question as to who invented it is less illuminating than an understanding of the process of innovation itself and how these competing families developed into the modern conception of an ATM. Our research supports the view of user-driven innovation as surviving business records and oral histories tell of close involvement of bank staff in establishing requirements and choosing amongst alternative solutions in the implementation of first generation technology. This case thus shows greater understanding in the user’s role in shaping and directing technological development

    Asymmetric exclusion model with several kinds of impurities

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    We formulate a new integrable asymmetric exclusion process with N−1=0,1,2,...N-1=0,1,2,... kinds of impurities and with hierarchically ordered dynamics. The model we proposed displays the full spectrum of the simple asymmetric exclusion model plus new levels. The first excited state belongs to these new levels and displays unusual scaling exponents. We conjecture that, while the simple asymmetric exclusion process without impurities belongs to the KPZ universality class with dynamical exponent 3/2, our model has a scaling exponent 3/2+N−13/2+N-1. In order to check the conjecture, we solve numerically the Bethe equation with N=3 and N=4 for the totally asymmetric diffusion and found the dynamical exponents 7/2 and 9/2 in these cases.Comment: to appear in JSTA

    Synthesis and phosphorylation of chromatin-associated proteins in cAMP-induced "differentiated" neuroblastoma cells in culture

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    Prostaglandin E1 and a cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor 4-(3-butoxy-4-methoxybenzyl)-2-imidazolidinone, RO20-1724, were used to induce differentiation in mouse neuroblastoma cells in culture. The incorporation of amino acids and phosphate into nuclear proteins of control and drug-treated cells (1 h and 3 days after treatment) was examined using double radioisotopic techniques. A marked decrease in histone synthesis and H1-histone phosphorylation were observed in `differentiated' neuroblastoma cells after 3 days of prostaglandin E1 and RO20-1724 treatment, but only small differences were noted in the synthesis and phosphorylation of non-histone chromatin associated proteins after 3 days of drug treatment. Minimal changes were observed in the labeling of histone and non-histone nuclear proteins if the cells were treated for 1 h with prostaglandin E1 and RO20-1724.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/21755/1/0000149.pd

    Optimal Coherent Filtering for Single Noisy Photons

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    We introduce a filter using a noise-free quantum buffer with large optical bandwidth that can both filter temporal-spectral modes, as well as inter-convert them and change their frequency. We show that such quantum buffers optimally filter out temporal-spectral noise; producing identical single-photons from many distinguishable noisy single-photon sources with the minimum required reduction in brightness. We then experimentally demonstrate a noise-free quantum buffer in a warm atomic system that is well matched to quantum dots and can outperform all intensity (incoherent) filtering schemes for increasing indistinguishability.Comment: 5 pages, 4 Figure
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