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languagehat com : Boyo-wulf

languagehat com : Boyo-wulf
languagehat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from languagehat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Digital Printing: Addressing All of the Bottlenecks in Finishing

Inventor Ron Popeil was a master of the infomercial, and was able to create compelling, memorable messages to highlight his many products. Of particular note was his “Showtime Rotisserie and BBQ,” a device that was rather hyperbolically sold with the tagline, “Set it and forget it.” If only print production was that easy . Despite our hopes that Popeil’s tagline will extend into our printing processes, reality generally differs. While the goal of process workflow is a smooth, frictionless path from inception through delivery, bottlenecks in digital print production are a moving target, the locations of which are dependent on factors including technology, staffing, software, and training. When one element of a process either speeds up or slows down, it can directly affect other process steps and complicate that smooth-flowing ideal.

RTE viewers say the opening of The Late Late Show was uplifting as frontline workers did Jerusalema Challenge

RTE viewers say the opening of The Late Late Show was uplifting as frontline workers did Jerusalema Challenge
thesun.ie - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thesun.ie Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

From the Archives, 1982: Back in Fraser Cave, after 14,500 years

From the Archives, 1982: Back in Fraser Cave, after 14,500 years From the Archives, 1982: Back in Fraser Cave, after 14,500 years By Peter Ellingsen Save Normal text size Back in Fraser Cave, after 14,500 years After travelling over kilometres of black, still water and scrambling up a hill of knotted, ancient trees, Ros Langford yesterday stood on the edge of the most significant archaeological find in the southern hemisphere. With one more step she would be the first Aborigine in 14,500 years known to enter Fraser, or Kutikina (“spirit”) cave on the banks of the Franklin River. The entrance to Fraser Cave, 1982. “Harry Butler’s got nothing on me,” she said, a little self-consciously, before negotiating the muddy opening of the place scientists believe is too precious to flood. There were several minutes of silence as Ms Langford and three other members of the Tasmania Aboriginal Centre wandered about in what is a nearly inaccessible and almost perfe

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