ARSC noted that the design of the HydraStax allows for lower-cost
mass production. The hydrogen fuel cell features proprietary technology designed to increase the efficiency and useful life of fuel cell membranes.
The only remaining challenges were the stabilization of performance and development of
mass production technologies.
The "Plug-in Austin" campaign will include a city council resolution supporting the
mass production of plug-in HEVs; funds from electric utilities to help local governments, businesses and citizens purchase plug-in HEVs; commitments for fleet orders of plug-in HEVs by local governmental agencies and businesses; and a grassroots petition drive to collect signatures from citizens encouraging automakers to mass produce plug-in hybrids.
Greg Pahl's introduction opens with the history of biodiesel development and use, considering its biodegradable qualities, easy production process lending to either
mass production or home small-scale production, and its potential in this country.
* The AlgoRhythms fabrication process uses a new form of mass-customization, allowing each item to be fabricated differently, eventually with the same speed and efficiency that
mass production uses to make identical items.
Sony Corp., Tokyo, Japan, says it will start
mass production of organic light emitting diode (OLED) display panels for mobile devices from spring 2004, Dow Jones Business News reports.
Toshiba now plans to apply the new process to the
mass production of system LSIs for mobile products in 2005.
Professor Orme's article introduces an intriguing concept: medieval
mass production. Does `Buying a rattle ...
Beginning in early 2002, the jointly owned company, called Frontier Carbon Corp., says it will make fullerenes available in quantity at prices 10 to 100 times lower than those currently prevailing, with
mass production anticipated to reach 1500 tons/yr by 2004.
I'M NOT SO PRECIOUS I DON'T HAVE TIME TO DO MY OWN WORK." At a moment when
mass production dominated the larger culture, which many artists mimicked by shopping out their work, Westermann championed old-fashioned skill and self-reliance.
This shift made
mass production possible, taking distribution out of doctors' control.
Yet, he argues, contrary to what one might expect based on the model of
mass production derived from conventional accounts of the triumph of the British cotton textile industry, it was the more "flexible" silk industry of Lyons that won out.