No. A copier does not keep a copy of material that is copied. When a copier makes a copy of your material, the light shines on thousands of little electromagnets. It then uses those thousands of little electromagnets to hold the ink. After it has applied that ink to the page, it turns off those magnets and your copy disappears from the machine.
I have also wanted to get a record deal with Big Machine Records.The way I would go about it is to visit their website, Google the big machine records official site.Go to there contact page and you can send them an email or something. Then I am sure before just giving you a record deal they would request an interview or demo CD.After this you could get a record deal with Big Machine Records.
As long as it is copied digitally, yes.
You can't record music on your digital answering machine because the song is to long and the machine doesn't have that much memory.
A tickertape machine
A machine use to record vote
To select; to extract; to cite; to quote., An extract; a passage selected or copied from a book or record.
Rage Against the Machine is with Epic Records.
The registration also known as owner of record can be copied and used in the operation of a motor vehicle. Title or owner paperwork cannot be copied or altered and still be valid
In general, no; Mac OS X keeps no record of items you've copied in the past. That's not to say that nothing does. For example, Quicksilver (qs.blacktree.com) is able to watch your clipboard and keeps up to 10 recent items on hand.
Taylor Swift's record producer is Big Machine Records.
A seismometer is the machine used to record ground movements such as vibrations from earthquakes. It consists of a mass suspended on a spring that moves along with the ground's motion, generating electrical signals that are recorded as seismic data.
To deliver something in record time is to deliver the something ahead of schedule.