prefix of the year (POTY) - smart

Tom Zurinskas truespel at HOTMAIL.COM
Sat Jan 14 21:15:22 UTC 2012


Some terms pre-exist but suddenly come of age, like smartphone last year standing for those swipe-type phones. More "smarts" from Gizmag.com (a great site to see a wonderfully smart future) New "smart" 
polymer opens door for medical use of low-power near-infrared light 


Researchers at the University of California, 
San Diego (UCSD) have conducted initial testing of a new “smart” plastic 
material which may bring about new uses in medicine for near-infrared light 
(NIR). According to early experiments, the plastic material will break down into 
non-toxic particles in response to lower-power NIR. This may lead to improved 
treatment of, for example, tumors, or improvements in the release of tracing 
compounds and imaging agents for improved medical diagnostics applications.
Polaroid’s 
Android-powered, 16-megapixel Smart Camera

With 
most people happy to make do with camera 
phones for their digital image snapping needs in the majority of 
situations and the quality of such devices improving markedly in recent years, 
makers of dedicated consumer-level cameras face an increasingly tough row to 
hoe. At CES 2012, Polaroid has announced its SC1630 Smart 
Camera that attempts to blur the lines between a camera phone and dedicated 
camera with its smartphone-like form factor and being one of the first dedicated 
cameras to run on Android. 
Tom Zurinskas, Conn 20 yrs, Tenn 3, NJ 33, now Fl 9.
See how English spelling links to sounds at http://justpaste.it/ayk


 
 

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> Poster:       "James A. Landau <JJJRLandau at netscape.com>"
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> Subject:      Re: prefix of the year (POTY) - smart
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> This topic needs some background.
> 
> What we now call "computer workstations" first appeared with MIT's Project MAC (the first time-sharing system) of 1960.  At the time they were usually called "computer terminals".  Most often the terminal was a Model 33 Teletype, now a museum piece but then so ubiquitous that it was said Moses had one at Mount Sinai.
> 
> Note:  "Teletype" is a trademark that has become genericized.  Computer and communications professionals, in my experience at least, always used the term "TTY" while laypeople used "Teletype".
> 
> Now the Model 33, and other terminals, had a very limited repertoire.  A KSR ("keyboard send/receive") version of the Model 33 could do exactly two things: "keyboard send" (operator pressed a key, Teletype printed the character and transmitted the code for that character) and "receive" (Teletype received the code for a character and printed it).
> 
> CRT terminals soon appeared, but mostly they had little capability that a TTY did not have.  Hence the early CRT terminals were sometimes referred to as "glass TTYs".
> 
> Come the 1970's and integrated circuit technology got to the point where a computer (a "microprocessor") could be put on a chip that was cheap enough to be used in mass-produced items).  Various vendors began making computer terminals with microprocessors inside (the jargon term was "microprocessor [is] on-board").  A terminal with a microprocessor inside could do such complicated operations as "hold the first line on the CRT constand while scrolling all other lines up and down."   Such a terminal was said to have "intelligent" and to be an "intelligent terminal" or a "smart terminal".
> 
> Inevitably, I suppose, a CRT that did not have the features a microprocessor could provide became known as a "dumb terminal".  Sometime in 1976-79 one vendor even advertised his brand of "smart terminals" claiming they were superior to everyone else's smart terminals.
> 
> Then stand-alone microcomputers such as the PC and the later Macintosh came along.  These microcomputers could do anything a smart terminal could and when not being used as terminals could do all sorts of other useful things, such as games.  Both smart terminals and dumb terminals became obsolete during the 1980's and nowadays are rarely found (the last survivors I know of are the TDD (Teleommunications for the Deaf) devices which may still be in use among hearing-impaired persons who haven't switched over to e-mail and Web sites.)
> 
> Although there are no more "smart terminals", the word "smart" and its synonym "intelligent" have survived to describe other devices than computer terminals, e.g. "smartphones" in which "smart" has gone from being a stand-alone adjective to a prefix.
> 
> End of lecture.
> 
>     - Jim Landau
> 
> 
> 
> 
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