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Word: gadgetized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...anticipation of just such a rescue, Solar Max's creators equipped the satellite with a pin, or trunnion, near its midriff. It forms a perfect mate with a gadget to be carried by Nelson that looks like a fat belly button. NASA calls that protrusion TPAD (for trunnion pin attachment device). Nelson will attach the TPAD to the pin and then fire some of the MMU'S thrusters to brake Solar Max's rotation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space: Tinkering with Solar Max | 4/9/1984 | See Source »

...weekends he putters in his garage or enters one of his roadsters in a classic-car show. He may risk his capital on the newest computer technology, but he invests his passion in mechanical relics of an earlier age. "I don't turn on to the latest electronic gadget," he says. "I turn on to older, nonelectrical things...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Four Financial Genies | 1/23/1984 | See Source »

...complex video game (a modern update of a baccarat table); a direct confrontation over Largo's innocent girlfriend Domino (Kim Basinger); and finally the obligatory showdown. The victory for the old days--for viewers and characters alike--is best summed up by "Q" (Alec McCowen), Bond's chief gadget provider. "The bureaucrats are now running the place; you can't do anything without a computer okaying it. Everything's by the book," he laments to Connery. "Now that you're back, I hope we're going to have some gratuitous sex and violence...

Author: By John D. Solomon, | Title: Nobody Does It Better | 10/17/1983 | See Source »

Sixty years ago, the universe of knowledge, it appeared, was still manageable; it could be comprehended through short cuts, and if that was impossible, then through hard, serious effort. TIME fitted that perception. It was a short cut, a gadget of knowledge. But it was also more. The very invention of the newsmagazine?with its orderly rubrics, its organization of information?symbolized the conviction that people could grasp the world and make sense of it. TIME was didactic. Parentheses were filled with statistics about height, weight, area, population. "Learned footnotes" sprouted at the bottoms of pages. But at the start...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TIME at 60: A Letter From The Editor-In-Chief | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

...calls himself a "latent heterosexual" and says he has an intense desire to return to the womb-"anybody's." His father, he remembers, once worked in a factory but was replaced by a small gadget. His mother, he says, bought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SHOW BUSINESS 1963: New Faces Barbra Streisand | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

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