| 31. | Founded in 1949 in Kent, Washington, United States by Philip Renshaw, the company was a leading manufacturer of punch tape readers.
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| 32. | All of the DX paper tape readers are adjustable-level, reading 5, 6, 7 or 8-level fully punched or chadless paper tape.
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| 33. | Statistician Lisa Neidert remembers using bulky tape readers two decades ago to analyze census figures spread across 26 reels of tape.
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| 34. | Once loaded, the loader would be used to load a larger program off a storage device like a paper tape reader.
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| 35. | Perhaps the TABLE is made out of a similar " read only " paper tape reader, or perhaps it reads punched cards.
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| 36. | The second stage loader then waits for the much longer tape containing the operating system to be placed in the tape reader.
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| 37. | Optional input / output devices included a card reader and punch, a paper tape reader and punch, and a magnetic card reader.
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| 38. | The APEHC was a punched card machine while the APEXC, APERC and APENC were teletypers ( printer, plus paper tape reader and puncher ).
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| 39. | All 160 systems had a paper-tape reader, and a punch, and most had an IBM Electric typewriter modified to act as a computer terminal.
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| 40. | Early editions of the Agat came with a cassette tape reader and a keyboard, although later editions replaced the tape reader with a Latin symbols.
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