Efficient warp and style changes are decisive factors for flexibility and productivity in the weaving mill. Stäubli offers advanced system solutions for reading in of warps at sizing machines, automatic drawing-in, warp leasing, and warp tying, as well as supporting means for quick style changes on the weaving machine.
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Stäublis weaving preparation systems can be used in all weaving mills and with all types of weaving machines. By working closely with customers as well as manufacturers of weaving machines and transport equipment, we have optimised and adapted our systems to meet a wide variety of requirements
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In Lyon, France, Joseph Marie Jacquard (-) demonstrated in a loom that enabled unskilled workers to weave complex patterns in silk. The Jacquard Loom is controlled by a chain of multiple cards punched with holes that determine which cords of the fabric warp should be raised for each pass of the shuttle. The ability to store and automatically reproduce complex operations found wide application in textile manufacturing.
In , Semen Korsakov (-) devised methods of searching information stored on punched cards for the Russian Police Ministry. English mathematician Charles Babbage described plans to use punched number cards to input programs and data into his Analytical Engine in .
Scottish clock maker Alexander Bain (-) used a continuous card in the form of punched paper tape to speed the input of text messages for transmission over the railroad telegraph in . Data storage and input on punched tape remained in use for small computers and machine tool control through the early s.
American inventor Herman Hollerith (-) built an electro-mechanical tabulator to analyze statistical information stored on punched cards for the U.S. Census of . Hollerith founded the Tabulating Machine Company in to exploit other applications for his system. The original Hollerith punch card (3 1/4" high and 7 3/8" wide) was approximately the same size as the US dollar bill at the time to facilitate adaptation of some existing storage and handling devices. Hollerith's firm and three others merged to form the Computing Tabulating Recording Company in that was renamed International Business Machines Corporation in . Other companies, including Burroughs, NCR, Powers Samas, and Remington Rand, introduced their own cards but as IBM grew to dominate the early data processing industry, its format with rectangular holes and 80 columns introduced in emerged as a standard data storage medium.
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