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Word: high-tech (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...manufactured by the Texas-based NVision Grafix, Inc. According to the company's vice president of marketing, Steve Kersen, the computer-generated posters first came out in August of 1992, when two UT-Austin grads, computer specialist Mike Bielinski and artist Paul Herber, teamed up to create the high-tech aesthetics of Hollusions. The image appears because, by looking "through" the poster instead of at its surface, your brain is tricked. The altered focal point creates the illusion of a three-dimensional image...

Author: By Joshua D. Fine, | Title: Now you don't see it, Now you don't see it | 11/11/1993 | See Source »

Also in Porter Square is Healthworks, a down-to-earth, all-women's club which lacks the high-tech neon and chrome decor of Bally's but provides all the basics and a few nice amenities...

Author: By Amanda C. Pustilnik, | Title: Cambridge Boasts Luxurious Well-Equipped Health Clubs, But Buyers Should Beware: The MAC is Cheap and Near | 11/10/1993 | See Source »

...Wall Street believes that only outsiders can bring radical change to companies that desperately need it. Put Kodak in that category. Though the company enjoyed a healthy cash flow from sales of all those little yellow boxes of film, it never seemed able to get costs under control or high-tech products successfully launched. In spite of numerous restructurings, the company posted losses of $1.7 billion on revenues of $11.9 billion during the first nine months...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Builder, Not a Slasher | 11/8/1993 | See Source »

Photographic giant Eastman Kodak successfully wooed George Fisher, chairman of high-tech electronics firm Motorola, to become its new chairman and chief executive officer, effective immediately. Fisher had brilliantly positioned Motorola to compete in the new world of communications, and his move shocked the company's board and employees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Week October 24-30 | 11/8/1993 | See Source »

...Link connects two science buildings, Mallinckrodt and Hoffman, and house offices and high-tech laboratories. It links two architectural eras and two related departments. A better reporter might subject the building to a hard-nosed critique, but this one, dear readers, treats it as a structure worthy of reverence. Call him crazy. Call this the Cult of The Link. Call it whatever; but first, get to know his totem...

Author: By Marc D. Zelanko, | Title: Ceci N'est Pas Un Link | 11/4/1993 | See Source »

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