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Topic: Electrical industries


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In the News (Mon 28 Dec 09)

  
  Industrial Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Industrial Revolution was the major technological, socioeconomic and cultural change in the late 18th and early 19th century that began in Britain and spread throughout the world.
The major change in the metal industries during the era of the Industrial Revolution was the replacement of organic fuels based on wood with fossil fuel based on coal.
This "second" Industrial Revolution gradually grew to include the chemical industries, petroleum refining and distribution, electrical industries, and, in the twentieth century, the automotive industries, and was marked by a transition of technological leadership from Britain to the United States and Germany.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Industrial_Revolution   (8201 words)

  
 Encyclopedia :: encyclopedia : Electrical engineering   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-01)
Electrical engineering is an engineering discipline that deals with the study and application of electricity and electromagnetism.
Electrical engineering is a broad field that encompasses many subfields including those that deal with power, control systems, electronics and telecommunications.
Electrical engineers may be found in the pristine lab environment of a fabrication plant, the offices of a consulting firm or on site at a mine.
www.hallencyclopedia.com /Electrical_engineering   (3605 words)

  
 Industrial Revolution - Facts, Information, and Encyclopedia Reference article
The Industrial Revolution was the major technological, socioeconomic and cultural change in the late 18th and early 19th century resulting from the replacement of an economy based on manual labor to one dominated by industry and machine manufacture.
The causes of the Industrial Revolution were complex and remain a topic for debate, with some historians seeing the Revolution as an outgrowth of social and institutional changes wrought by the end of feudalism in Great Britain after the English Civil War in the 17th century.
This "second" Industrial Revolution gradually grew to include the chemical industries, petroleum refining and distribution, electrical industries, and, in the twentieth century, the automotive industries, and was marked by a transition of technological leadership from Great Britain to the United States and Germany.
www.startsurfing.com /encyclopedia/i/n/d/Industrial_Revolution_e3eb.html   (5783 words)

  
 Electrical & Computer Engineering Research Guide - Marriott Library - Univ of Utah
Electrical Engineering uses science, technology, computers, and circuit logic to design, simulate, construct, maintain, and distribute goods, services, and information systems.
If you are a student, faculty or employee of the Univesity of Utah, you may register for remote database access, allowing you the ability to search from home or other off-campus locations -- try the "Transparent Proxy" link on the right side of this web page for a quick and easy connection to most databases.
The mission of the EEEL is to strengthen the U.S. economy and improve the quality of life by providing measurement science and technology, and by advancing standards, primarily for the electronics and electrical industries.
www.lib.utah.edu /ResGuides/ece.html   (3707 words)

  
 Franz Fehrenbach 1949— - ROBERT BOSCH, FEHRENBACH ARRIVES AT BOSCH, FROM FUEL INJECTORS TO DIESEL
Bosch's common-rail technology—the industry's best and already a 20 percent improvement over previous diesel fuel economy—would have meant nothing if Fehrenbach had not been willing to actualize platform sharing in 1997.
John Naisbitt, the renowned author of Megatrends, was wrong to predict the wholesale migration of car manufacturing to the third world as the first world became postindustrial with a monopolization of knowledge-sector jobs.
In other words Fehrenbach decided to put Bosch through the kind of downsizing that the automobile industry had implemented in the United States, which championed postindustrialism, savaging the communities of Michigan unless workers agreed to concessions.
www.referenceforbusiness.com /biography/F-L/Fehrenbach-Franz-1949.html   (3330 words)

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