A dress shoe (U.S. English) is a shoe to be worn at smart casual or more formal events. A dress shoe is typically contrasted to an athletic shoe.
(esp. of the moon) Give a silvery appearance to
Provide (mirror glass) with a backing of a silver-colored material in order to make it reflective
coat with a layer of silver or a silver amalgam; "silver the necklace"
a soft white precious univalent metallic element having the highest electrical and thermal conductivity of any metal; occurs in argentite and in free form; used in coins and jewelry and tableware and photography
made from or largely consisting of silver; "silver bracelets"
Coat or plate with silver
In mathematics, width may refer to: *In geometry, the minimum distance between two parallel lines, planes, or hyperplanes that enclose a given shape **Curve of constant width **Surface of constant width **Mean width is one of the "intrinsic volumes" contemplated by Hadwiger's theorem in integral
The measurement or extent of something from side to side
The sideways extent of a swimming pool as a measure of the distance swum
In geometric measurements, length most commonly refers to the longest dimension of an object.
the extent of something from side to side
A piece of something at its full extent from side to side
Of great or more than average width
(after a measurement and in questions) From side to side
Open to the full extent
having great (or a certain) extent from one side to the other; "wide roads"; "a wide necktie"; "wide margins"; "three feet wide"; "a river two miles broad"; "broad shoulders"; "a broad river"
with or by a broad space; "stand with legs wide apart"; "ran wide around left end"
across-the-board: broad in scope or content; "across-the-board pay increases"; "an all-embracing definition"; "blanket sanctions against human-rights violators"; "an invention with broad applications"; "a panoptic study of Soviet nationality"- T.G.Winner; "granted him wide powers"
With Optical Binary Code
Sony Cyber-shot Dsc H2
The term binary code can mean several different things:
* In mathematics, a binary code can refer to a linear code over the finite field F2 = Z/2Z.
* In computing and telecommunication, it is used for any of a variety of methods of coding data, such as sequences of characters, into sequences of groups of bits, including fixed-width words or bytes, and variable-length codes such as Huffman code and arithmetic coding.
In a fixed-width binary code, each letter, digit, or other character, is represented by a sequence of bits of the same length, usually indicated in code tables by the octal, decimal or hexadecimal notation for the value of that sequence of bits interpreted as a binary number.
For representing texts in the Latin alphabet often a fixed width 8-bit code is used. The ISO 8859-1 character code uses 8 bits for each bits for each character e.g. "R" is "01010010" and "b" is "01100010"; the block of 8 bits is called a byte; it extended the earlier ASCII code, based on the version of the Latin alphabet used for English, which uses 7 bits to represent 128 characters (0–127).
The Unicode standard defines several variable-width encodings and the fixed-with 32-bit (4-byte) UTF-32 code, potentially having room for billions of characters, but using barely more than one million combinations as definable code points.
Pulsemonger 2009 Version
Currently discontinued!
The Pulsemonger is a one of a kind design by me. It takes an input signal, squares it up, divides it by 2 (the sub-octave), and sends each pitch through individual pulse width modulator circuits that generates synth like tones. With the internal shapeable triangle LFO chorus and sci-fi sounds can be produced. The pulse width is variable from 1-50% and each can be externally controlled via the 1/4" input jacks.