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Double up on power line routes
Some of the furor over Bonneville Power Administrations proposed new transmission seems to have subsided, but the delusional thinking that we have unlimited open space to commit to another line that, coincidentally, goes to the same distribution point is ludicrous. To look at the existing towers and right-of-way BPA maintains and to compare them to other systems around the U.S. and the world, one wonders why the existing conductors cant be doubled or trebled as they are in other systems? Oh, Im sure that all the BPA personnel will be able to cite troubles with parallel conductors, lower voltages, increased electromagnetic interference, etc. BPA will present a formidable gauntlet of what cant be done, not what can be done.
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Business Editors/High-Tech Writers/Health/Medical Writers
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 23, 2002
Sponsored by MoHCA (Mobile Healthcare Allian...
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Business Editors/High-Tech Writers
PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 11, 2004
WELLS-CTI, a leading supplier of burn-in and test sockets, is now offer...
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Business Editors/Hi-Tech Writers
SMYRNA, Ga.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 14, 2001
Murata Electronics North America (www.murata.com), a world-leading in...
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Julian A. Montoya, graduate of Taos High School class of 1986, and of the University of New Mexico class of 1991, has been promoted by his employer, Intel Corporation, to the position of principal engineer.
Montoya is Intel's corporate electromagnetic compatibility program manager. He is responsible for the selection, design and implementation of electromagnetic interference controls and electrostatic discharge controls for the company's facilities, worldwide.
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Business Editors/Hi-Tech Writers
SMYRNA, Ga.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 14, 2001
Murata Electronics North America (www.murata.com), a world-leading in...
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GREEN BANK - Of all the threats to scientific research Wesley Sizemore has stymied over the years, satellites and cell phone towers don't stick in his memory quite like the possessive old hound and its treasured heating pad.
Sizemore is an interference hunter, vigilantly pursuing stray electromagnetic signals that bedevil researchers at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, which sits on 13,000 square miles tucked away in the nation's only radio-free quiet zone.
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. NASA has fixed Discovery's spotty grounding, scoured the spacecraft for electromagnetic interference, pored through innumerable pages of documents and done everything else it can think of to get the first shuttle flight in 2 1/2 years going.
With the countdown clocks ticking again Saturday and liftoff set for Tuesday, there's nothing more to do, one manager says, but to keep fingers crossed.
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - NASA has fixed Discovery's spotty grounding, scoured the spacecraft for electromagnetic interference, pored through innumerable pages of documents and done everything else it can think of to get the first shuttle flight in 2 1/2 years going.
With the countdown clocks ticking again Saturday and liftoff set for Tuesday, there's nothing more to do, one manager says, but to keep fingers crossed.