User:Mliu92/sandbox
Helpful
[edit]To-Do
[edit]- Taiwan Referendum Act
- Lou Pai
- Coyote Point Park (historical documents/photos?)
- San Mateo Central Park (see pictures linked in San Mateo article)
- Nagao Sakurai (expand)
- Henry Liu
- Peng Wan-ru (cleanup)
- Liu Pang-yu (infobox)
- Murder of Pai Hsiao-yen (extend April–August timeline)
- Clyde Iron Works?
- Benjamin Franklin Hotel [1]
- Peninsula Hotel ?
- Norman Cecil Raab [2] and [3]
- E R "Mike" Foley [4]
- Chuck Seim [5]
- System 80 Singhal, AK; Srikantiah, G (1991). "A review of thermal hydraulic analysis methodology for PWR steam generators and ATHOS3 code applications". Progress in Nuclear Energy. 25 (1): 7–70. doi:10.1016/0149-1970(91)90041-M.
- Create a gallery of Formation Badges of the British Army using the precedent of Brigade insignia of the United States Army and link it to Formation patch article.
- Leo Soong article: http://asianpacificfund.org/board/leo-soong/ http://ajw.asahi.com/article/globe/feature/usChina/AJ201403070003 http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/30/nyregion/an-epitaph-for-madame-chiang-kai-shek-mama.html https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SHszAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tjIHAAAAIBAJ&pg=3638%2C6854680 https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ObceAAAAIBAJ&sjid=d88EAAAAIBAJ&pg=2281%2C1697426 https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Lb4dAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ilEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2380%2C1472794
- Tom Keen San Mateo:
105 Hayward St (1940 census)
- http://archives.smdailyjournal.com/article_preview.php?id=74308
- http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_26945705/cold-case-san-mateo-mob-hit-suspected-1952
- http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1952/02/06/page/1/article/kill-dog-track-promoter-in-blasted-auto
- https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=abMyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=DewFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1264%2C2794290
- http://www.geni.com/people/Thomas-Tomas-Keen/6000000011929137499
- Edward Bayard Heath
- Heath Baby Bullet
- Ford GN-34
- Foley, E.R. (March–April 1964). "Bay Bridge Reconstruction [Part 3]" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 43 (3–4). Division of Highways, California Department of Public Works: 48–52, 59. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
- Raab, N.C. (January–February 1962). "Bay Bridge: Second Phase of Reconstruction Nearing Completion" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 41 (1–2). Division of Highways, California Department of Public Works: 36–43. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
- Raab, N.C. (July–August 1960). "Bay Bridge: First Phases of Reconstruction For Added Capacity Completed" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 39 (7–8). Division of Highways, California Department of Public Works: 35–42. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
- http://libraryarchives.metro.net/DPGTL/bart/1961-parsons-engineering-report-to-sf-bart-district.pdf San Mateo County BART alignment
- http://libraryarchives.metro.net/DPGTL/trafficplans/1963_rapid_tranist_a_reality.pdf
- http://www.ilwu.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/march04dispatcher.pdf Tugboat Annie
- http://lcweb2.loc.gov/master/pnp/habshaer/ca/ca3800/ca3883/data/ca3883data.pdf paintersville bridge
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/eekim/albums/72157630154628324 which bridge is this? not rio vista.
- https://www.sanmateocourt.org/documents/grand_jury/2004/SamTrans%20vers%203.0_final.pdf SamTrans owns the PCJPB ROW?
- The Firebrand, Mabel Craft Deering "The Firebrand". San Francisco Call. Vol. 102, no. 97. 5 September 1907. Retrieved 16 August 2016.Deering, Mabel Craft (September 1907). "The Firebrand". Sunset Magazine. XIX (5). San Francisco: Passenger Department, Southern Pacific Company: 453–461. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
- Steele, Rufus (September 1907). "The Spread of San Francisco". Sunset Magazine. XIX (5). San Francisco: Passenger Department, Southern Pacific Company: 437–452. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
Clyde Iron Works
[edit]- Acquired by Barium Steel 1944: [6]
- Acquired by AMCA 1973: [7] and [8]
- National Oilwell Varco [9]
- Haakon Crane (400 tons) 1977: [10]
Horse anatomies, of various languages
[edit]Cropping example
[edit]Sum of the odds is a perfect square
[edit]It can be shown that the sum of the first odd numbers is equal to , that is,
Prove a specific example
[edit]Say . Then and the sum of the first three odd numbers is .
Prove the next one in sequence is true
[edit]Assume
Evaluate :
By assumption,
so
Simplify:
The Mr T Experience Timeline
[edit]Timeline
[edit]Gallery packed hover example
[edit]-
Urawa Saitama
-
1982 Caltrain logo
-
JPBX 165, Caltrain car in Metrolink livery
For Henry Liu article
[edit]- H.Con.Res. 49 | Roll call vote 53, via Clerk.House.gov
- H.Con.Res. 110
- S.Con.Res. 10
Roland S/AS
[edit]Nikon lens tables
[edit]Focal length | Lens | Dates | Aperture Range | Elements/ Groups | Focus | Angle (diagonal) |
Weight | Size (Diam. × Length) |
Filter Thread | Notes | Photo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fisheye lenses
[edit]Focal length | Lens | Dates | Aperture Range | Elements/ Groups | Focus | Angle (diagonal) |
Projection size | Weight | Size (D × L) |
Filter Thread | Notes/Patent | Photo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6mm | 6mm f/2.8 | 1972/03 – 1998 | f/2.8–? | 12/9 | MF, 0.25 m (0.82 ft)–∞ | 220° | Circular, approx. 24mm diameter | 5,200 g 180 oz |
236 mm × 160 mm 9.3 in × 6.3 in |
N/A (turret) | [a] | |
6mm f/5.6 | 1970/02 – 1978/03 | f/5.6–? | 9/6 | MF, fixed | 430 g 15 oz |
92 mm × 43 mm 3.6 in × 1.7 in |
N/A (turret) | [b][1] | ||||
7.5mm | 7.5mm f/5.6 | 1966/01 – 1970/02 | f/5.6–? | 9/6 | MF, fixed | 180° | 350 g 12 oz |
82 mm × 44 mm 3.2 in × 1.7 in |
N/A (turret) | [b] | ||
8mm | 8mm f/2.8 | 1970/02 – 1998 | f/2.8– | 10/8 | MF, 0.3 m (0.98 ft)–∞ | 1,000 g 35 oz |
123 mm × 128 mm 4.8 in × 5.0 in |
N/A (turret) | ||||
8mm f/8 | 1962/07 – 1965/04 | f/8–? | 9/5 | MF, fixed | 300 g 11 oz |
82 mm × 42.3 mm 3.23 in × 1.67 in |
N/A (turret) | [b] | ||||
- Notes
Nikon patents
[edit]Fisheye
[edit]- 6 mm f/2.8 Circular Fisheye (220°)
- 6 mm f/5.6 Circular Fisheye (220°) (requires MLU (Mirror lock-up))[2]
- 7.5 mm f/5.6 Circular Fisheye (requires MLU)
- 8 mm f/2.8 Circular Fisheye
- 8 mm f/8.0 Circular Fisheye (requires MLU)
- 10 mm f/5.6 OP Circular Fisheye (requires MLU)
- 16 mm f/2.8 Full Frame Fisheye (180°)
- 16 mm f/3.5 Full Frame Fisheye (170°)[3]
- 10.5?
- 8–15mm
- 16mm f/2.8 AF-D with CRC[4]
Ultrawide
[edit]- 13 mm f/5.6
- 15 mm f/3.5
- 15 mm f/5.6[5]
- 18 mm f/4.0 uses same patent as 20/3.5 UD?
- 18 mm f/3.5
Wideangle
[edit]- 24 mm f/2.0
- 24 mm f/2.8
- 28 mm f/2.0
- 28 mm f/2.8
- 28 mm f/3.5
- 35 mm f/1.4
- 35 mm f/2.0
- 35 mm f/2.8
- 28 mm f/2.8 E
- 35 mm f/2.5 E
- 36–72 mm f/3.5 E
- 25–50 mm f/4.0
- 28–45 mm f/4.5
- 28–50 mm f/3.5 Macro
- 28–85 mm f/3.5-4.5 Macro
- 35–70 mm f/3.5
- 35–70 mm f/3.5 Macro
- 35–70 mm f/3.3-4.5
- 35–70 mm f/3.5-4.8
- 35–85 mm f/2.8-4.0 (prototype only)
- 35–105 mm f/3.5-4.5 Macro
- 35–135 mm f/3.5-4.5
- 35–200 mm f/3.5-4.5 Macro
Normal/Standard
[edit]- 45 mm f/2.8 GN
- 45 mm f/2.8 P
- 50 mm f/1.2
- 50 mm f/1.4
- 50 mm f/1.8
- 50 mm f/2.0
- 55 mm f/1.2
- 58 mm f/1.2 Noct
- 58 mm f/1.4
- 50 mm f/1.8 E
- 50–135 mm f/3.5 Macro
- 50–300 mm f/4.5
- 50–300 mm f/4.5 ED
Medium telephoto
[edit]- 85 mm f/1.4
- 85 mm f/1.8
- 85 mm f/2.0
- 105 mm f/1.8
- 105 mm f/2.5
- 105 mm f/4.0 (pre-set)
- 120 mm f/4.0 IF Medical
- 135 mm f/2.0
- 135 mm f/2.8
- 135 mm f/3.5
- 100 mm f/2.8 E
- 135 mm f/2.8 E
- 70–210 mm f/4.0 E
- 75–150 mm f/3.5 E
- 70–210 mm f/4.5-5.6
- 80–200 mm f/2.8 ED
- 80–200 mm f/4.0
- 80–200 mm f/4.5
- 85–250 mm f/4.0-4.5
Telephoto
[edit]- 180 mm f/2.8 ED
- 200 mm f/2.0 ED-IF
- 200 mm f/4.0 Q
- 200 mm f/4.0
- 200 mm f/5.6 Medical
- 300 mm f/2.0 ED-IF
- 300 mm f/2.8 ED (pre-set)
- 300 mm f/2.8 ED-IF
- 300 mm f/4.5 P
- 300 mm f/4.5 H
- 300 mm f/4.5 ED
- 300 mm f/4.5 ED-IF
- 100–300 mm f/5.6 Macro
Super telephoto
[edit]- 400 mm f/2.8 ED-IF
- 400 mm f/3.5 ED-IF
- 400 mm f/4.5 (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 400 mm f/5.6 ED
- 400 mm f/5.6 ED-IF
- 500 mm f/4.0 P ED-IF
- 500 mm f/5.0 Reflex
- 500 mm f/8.0 Reflex
- 600 mm f/4.0 ED-IF
- 600 mm f/5.6 (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 600 mm f/5.6 ED (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 600 mm f/5.6 ED-IF
- 800 mm f/5.6 ED-IF
- 800 mm f/8.0 (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 800 mm f/8.0 ED (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 800 mm f/8.0 ED-IF
- 1000 mm f/6.3 Reflex
- 1000 mm f/11.0 Reflex
- 1200 mm f/11.0 (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 1200 mm f/11.0 ED (lens head; requires CU-1 or AU-1 focus unit)
- 1200 mm f/11.0 ED-IF
- 2000 mm f/11.0 Reflex
- 180–600 mm f/8.0 ED
- 200–400 mm f/4.0 ED
- 200–600 mm f/9.5
- 360–1200 mm f/11.0 ED
- 1200–1700 mm f/5.6-8.0 P ED-IF
- Macro
- 45 mm f/2.8 ED PC-E Micro
- 55 mm f/2.8 Micro
- 55 mm f/3.5 Micro
- 55 mm f/4.0 UV Micro (prototype only)
- 85 mm f/2.8D PC Micro
- 85 mm f/2.8D PC-E Micro
- 105 mm f/4.5 UV Micro
- 105 mm f/4.0 (bellows lens)
- 105 mm f/4.0 Micro
- 105 mm f/2.8 Micro
- 135 mm f/4.0 (bellows lens)
- 200 mm f/4.0 IF Micro
Series E lenses
[edit]- 28 mm f/2.8
- 35 mm f/2.5
- 50 mm f/1.8
- 100 mm f/2.8
- 135 mm f/2.8
- 36–72 mm f/3.5
- 70–210 mm f/4.0
- 75–150 mm f/3.5
Manual-focus zoom lenses
[edit]- 25–50 mm f/4.0
- 28–45 mm f/4.5
- 28–50 mm f/3.5 Macro
- 28–85 mm f/3.5-4.5 Macro
- 35–70 mm f/3.5
- 35–70 mm f/3.5 Macro
- 35–70 mm f/3.3-4.5
- 35–70 mm f/3.5-4.8
- 35–85 mm f/2.8-4.0 (prototype only)
- 35–105 mm f/3.5-4.5 Macro
- 35–135 mm f/3.5-4.5
- 35–200 mm f/3.5-4.5 Macro
- 43–86 mm f/3.5
- 50–135 mm f/3.5 Macro
- 50–300 mm f/4.5
- 50–300 mm f/4.5 ED
- 70–210 mm f/4.5-5.6
- 80–200 mm f/2.8 ED
- 80–200 mm f/4.0
- 80–200 mm f/4.5
- 85–250 mm f/4.0-4.5
- 100–300 mm f/5.6 Macro
- 180–600 mm f/8.0 ED
- 200–400 mm f/4.0 ED
- 200–600 mm f/9.5
- 360–1200 mm f/11.0 ED
- 1200–1700 mm f/5.6-8.0 P ED-IF
Imaginators characters
[edit]Element | Brawler | Sorcerer | Smasher | Bowslinger | Knight | Quickshot | Sentinel | Ninja | Bazooker | Swashbuckler |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fire | Ember | Tae Kwon Crow | Flarewolf | |||||||
Earth | Golden Queen | Tri-Tip | Barbella | |||||||
Magic | Mysticat | Pain-Yatta | Buckshot | |||||||
Tech | Dr. Neo Cortex | Ro-Bow | Dr. Krankcase | Chain Reaction | ||||||
Undead | Pit Boss | Chopscotch | Wolfgang | |||||||
Air | Air Strike | Wild Storm | Bad Juju | |||||||
Life | Crash Bandicoot | Ambush | Boom Bloom | Chompy Mage | ||||||
Water | Grave Clobber, King Pen | Tidepool | ||||||||
Light | Blaster-Tron | Aurora | ||||||||
Dark | Hood Sickle | Starcast |
OSM map template
[edit]No | Name | Year | Address | Notability | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dragon Gate | 1970 | Grant at Bush | Southern entrance to Chinatown on Grant. One of the most photographed locations. | |
2 | St Mary's Square | — | 651 California | Features statue of Dr. Sun Yat-sen, by Beniamino Bufano and a memorial for Chinese-American veterans of World Wars I and II. | |
3 | Sing Chong building | 1907 | 601–615 Grant | Designed by Ross & Burgren and among the earliest buildings erected after the 1906 earthquake. Strong influence on Chinatown architecture. | |
Sing Fat building | 1907 | 573 Grant | |||
4 | Nam Kue Chinese School | 1925 | 755 Sacramento | Private school offering classes in Chinese culture, history, and language. | |
5 | Portsmouth Square | 1800s | 733 Kearny | Oldest public space in San Francisco. | |
6 | Chinese Telephone Exchange | 1909 | 743 Washington | All calls to Chinatown were routed by name and occupation until 1948. | |
7 | Tin How Temple | 1910 | 125 Waverly | Oldest Taoist temple in Chinatown. | |
8 | Ross Alley | 1849 | Between Jackson, Washington, Grant, and Stockton | Often used as a backdrop for films. | |
Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Company | 1962 | 56 Ross Alley | Working fortune cookie factory and shop. | ||
9 | Chinese Hospital | 1925 (demolished), 1977, 2017 | 845 Jackson | Only Chinese-language hospital in United States. | |
10 | Six Companies | c.1907 (remodeled 1950s) | 843 Stockton | Sometimes called the "White House" of Chinatown. |
From People v. Merel
[edit]- "People v. Merel". Court of Appeals of California, First Appellate District, Division Four. 12 May 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
Event | State[a] | Cazares[b] | Merel[c] | Magidson[d] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sexual encounters with Araujo | Merel: approx. two weeks prior (Sep 20) | |||
Magidson: approx. two days prior (Oct 2) | ||||
Araujo was first confronted by | Merel: "We want to know why everybody—you want everybody to fuck you in the ass. Are you a woman or sloppy ass nigga?" | |||
Physical confirmation of anatomy | Magidson: suggested "let me feel" | |||
In the bathroom | Araujo went to the bathroom alone with Magidson. Merel knocked on the door and asked for information. Magidson opened the door, told Merel that Araujo was not letting him feel her, and closed the door again. Brown went to the bathroom to see if Araujo would be more comfortable with a woman, and conducted a forced inspection. Brown left Araujo inside, and announced that Araujo was a man. Cazares entered the bathroom and prevented Merel from entering to confront Araujo. | |||
Genital exposure | Magidson: pulls underwear aside, revealing testicles. Puts Araujo in chokehold multiple times. | |||
Araujo attempts to leave | Assisted by Emmanuel, prevented by Magidson and Nabors | |||
Physical violence | Two slaps to head from either Merel or Magidson. Araujo begs them to stop: "No, please don't. I have a family." Merel returns with a food can and strikes Araujo hard enough to dent the can. Merel leaves, returns with frying pan and strikes a lighter blow. | |||
Nabors and Cazares leave | Cazares: "[We're] going to get some shovels so they can kill that bitch," to group. Privately, to Nabors, he says Araujo told him she had connections to a street gang and offered him money to help her escape. | |||
Nabors and Cazares return | Araujo was sitting on a couch, conscious. Merel was holding a dumbbell bar with free weights. Cazares and Nabors: "Knock that bitch out." Magidson punches Araujo twice in the face, then knees her twice in the face, causing her head to fly back and dent the wall. | |||
Merel | Cleans the couch after ordering Araujo to get off it. | |||
After Araujo is unconscious | Magidson ties Araujo's wrists and ankles. Cazares retrieves a blanket. Magidson, Nabors, and Cazares carry Araujo to the garage. Nabors returns the house to check on Merel, sees Magidson moving the rope up to the upper part of her body. |
- Notes
Waverly table
[edit]← Washington Street ← | ||||||
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | ↓ W a v e r l y P l a c e ↓ |
(numspan) | (name) | (img) |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
→ Clay | Street → | |||||
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
(img) | (name) | (numspan) | (numspan) | (name) | (img) | |
← Sacramento Street ← |
Electrical configuration
[edit]Power is supplied to the trains through an overhead contact system (OCS), consisting of a messenger wire, which assumes a parabolic shape due to sag, and a contact wire suspended below the messenger wire. The contact wire is nearly parallel to the ground, and supplies traction current to the pantograph of an electric train's. Both the messenger wire and the contact wire are energized with single-phase alternating current at 25kV with a frequency of 60 Hz. This allows the OCS to be used for both Caltrain and future California High-speed Rail service, and this electrical configuration matches that of Amtrak (on the Northeast Corridor) and portions of the New Jersey Transit commuter rail system.[7]
Contact wire height is planned to vary between 16 to 23 feet (4.9 to 7.0 m), depending on overhead clearance required, with the messenger wire another 2 to 5 feet (0.61 to 1.52 m) above that, and pole height will vary between 30 to 50 feet (9.1 to 15.2 m). Nominal clearance under the contact wire will be 23 feet (7.0 m) to accommodate freight and non-electrified passenger rail service. Poles are nominally spaced 180 to 200 feet (55 to 61 m) apart, but can be reduced to 75 feet (23 m) for the tightest-radius bends (just south of San Francisco and just north of San Jose). Typical pole spacing in bends will be 120 to 150 feet (37 to 46 m), and for straight sections of track, maximum spacing is 230 feet (70 m) between poles.[7]
Help:Table
[edit]Uneven alignment of columns and rows
[edit]There may be a situation where an uneven number of cells may need to be aligned with each other, for instance, a single row may be split into two cells (rows) in one column and three cells (rows) in an adjacent column. If is the maximum number of cells in a given row, this can be handled by the following procedure:
- Set the rowspan to for any cell in that row that is a single cell.
Wiki markup:
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |- ! Column 1 !! Column 2 !! Column 3 !! colspan="4" | Column 4 |- | rowspan="4" | A1 | rowspan="2" | B2 | C3 | colspan="4" | D4 |- | rowspan="2" | E3 | colspan="2" rowspan="2" | F4 | colspan="2" rowspan="2" | G5 |- | rowspan="2" | H2 |- | I3 | J4 | colspan="2" | K5 | L6 |}
As it appears in a browser:
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | B2 | C3 | D4 | |||
E3 | F4 | G5 | ||||
H2 | ||||||
I3 | J4 | K5 | L6 |
As it appears in a browser:
Column 1 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | |||||
B1 | C2 | ||||
D3 | E4 | F5 | |||
G1 | H2 | I3 | J4 |
Wiki markup:
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |- ! Column 1 !! Column 2 !! Column 3 !! colspan="4" | Column 4 |- | rowspan="4" | A1 | rowspan="2" | B2 | C3 | colspan="4" | D4 |- | rowspan="2" | E3 | colspan="2" rowspan="2" | F4 | colspan="2" rowspan="2" | G5 |- | rowspan="2" | H2 |- | I3 | J4 | colspan="2" | K5 | L6 |}
As it appears in a browser:
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | B2 | C3 | D4 | |||
E3 | F4 | G5 | ||||
H2 | ||||||
I3 | J4 | K5 | L6 |
Grant Avenue, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
[edit]looks down from Chinatown over a foggy bay ...
https://hoodline.com/2016/09/touring-chinatowns-fading-neon-lights-part-1 https://hoodline.com/2016/09/touring-chinatown-s-fading-neon-signs-part-2
References
[edit]- ^ US patent 3524697A, Isshiki, Masaki & Matsuki, Keiji, "Achromatic super wide-angle lens", issued 1970-08-18, assigned to Nikon Corp
- ^ US patent 3524697A, Isshiki, Masaki & Matsuki, Keiji, "Achromatic super wide-angle lens", issued 1970-08-18, assigned to Nikon Corp
- ^ US patent 3734600A, Shimizu, Yoshitaka, "Fisheye lens systems", issued 1973-05-22, assigned to Nikon Corp
- ^ US patent 5434713A, Sato, Haruo, "Fisheye lens having a short distance compensating function", issued 1995-07-18, assigned to Nikon Corp
- ^ US patent 3663095A, Mori, Ikuo, "Retrofocus type super-wide angle objective lens", issued 1972-05-16, assigned to Nikon Corp
- ^ US patent 3549241A, Mori, Ikuo, "Extremely wide-angle object lens", issued 1970-12-22, assigned to Nikon Corp
- ^ a b c ICF International (February 2014). "2: Project Description" (PDF). Peninsula Corridor Electrification Project EIR (Report). Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
- ^ ICF International; Walter, Rich (February 2016). Caltrain Peninsula Corridor Electrification Project Environmental Re-Evaluation for Proposed Project Changes After Finding of No Significant Impact (December 2009); Changed Traction Power Facility Locations, Overhead Contact System and Electrical Safety Zone Alignments, and Right of Way Acquisition (PDF) (Report). Federal Transit Administration. Retrieved 14 June 2018.