they are chairs that shock the life out of convicts and they can never survive the shock and are only found in america, they were made by Harold Brown in 1888. he got the idea by seeing a drunk workman fall into an electrical generator and burn, shocked the life out of him.
Alessandro Volta was an Italian physicist (1745 - 1827). His contribution was that he improved the electrophorus and later invented the first electric battery in 1800. Alessandro Volta was a great man with great passion to invent something and finally he did. His work is still remembered today through the use of his family name Volta, which is used in the electrical term Volt.
It is still an new technology, it still has to take it course and see what happens
They move electrical signals through predetermined logic gates to execute an assembly instruction billions of times a second(at around the year 2000 and still today 2008 just improvents in architecture and the way the signals move are the usual reason they are more powerful now) Refer to what is an assembly instruction and/or what are logic gates if still in confusion.
He was that patented the electrical system used to light up houses and buildings around the world.
Silver, if cost is no problem. For reasonably priced wires that are readily available, copper. Aluminum is by far the poorer conductor in use today.
yes they are still around today
No there aint any workhouses still around today, because they are all exctinct.
Yes Quakers are still around today, but they exist in a much different way then they did in past times.
Yes typhus is still around today but it is very very rare !!!
yes they are still around and very nouty
yes the steam engine is still around
yes
yes, they are
Yes!
They are still around today
because
No. They are still around today.