About: Letterhead is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 32 publications have been published within this topic receiving 190 citations. The topic is also known as: letterhead & en-tête.
TL;DR: A marketing tool having portable lap computer for recording a sales call made by a salesman of an employer on a customer is described in this article.The information of the call is transmitted from the lap computer to a master computer and at the end of the day, the master computer prepared a letter to the customer acknowledging the sales call.
Abstract: A marketing tool having portable lap computer for recording a sales call made by a salesman of an employer on a customer. The information of the call is transmitted from the lap computer to a master computer and at the end of the day, the master computer prepared a letter to the customer acknowledging the sales call. The acknowledgement letter is sent on the letterhead of the employer and in the color of the letterhead logo. The master computer automatically prepares a daily planner or planning aid chart as well as a customer call activity chart and a territory penetration chart which include maps of the territories involved.
TL;DR: A folder of papers and correspondence of Sir Julius Vogel as mentioned in this paper, containing newspaper clippings, letters and telegrams, with a manuscript annotation, "The saga of all defaulters 1914-1918 - 1939-1946".
Abstract: Folder of papers and correspondence.
Includes:
- Telegram from Seddon at completion of Pacific Cable with acknowledgement to Julius Vogel, 1902.
- Letters from Julius Vogel dated 11 and 12 March 1899, on printed letterhead paper.
- Typescript poem with manuscript annotation, "The saga of all defaulters 1914-1918 - 1939-1946".
- Page from 'London Illustrated News', 3 July 1875, with article and portrait of Sir Julius Vogel.
Title supplied by Library.
Quantity: 1 folder(s).
Physical Description: Manuscripts, newspaper clippings, letters and telegrams.
TL;DR: In this article, an automated hybrid mail system/method (10) which sends a graphic image file (17 a) from a sender's terminal (14) into a postal network (26) via a remote printing facility (24).
Abstract: An automated hybrid mail system/method (10) which sends a graphic image file (17 a) from a sender's terminal (14) into a postal network (26) via a remote printing facility (24). The system/method (10) can print a hardcopy document (25) with a letterhead, the method includes: receiving an electronic document (17) from terminal (14), the electronic document (17) including at least the graphic image file (17 a) and a document ID, the document ID associated with a letterhead, the graphic image file (17 a) having been obtained from an application document. The graphic image file (17 a) is transmitted to a printer server (24) to be printed with the letterhead as a hardcopy document (25) by a printer (24), the letterhead having been obtained using the document ID.
TL;DR: The Letterhead Impact Project as mentioned in this paper investigates whether student law review articles editors favor submissions from "first tier" law schools, and the expected answer for the law professors I have asked is, "Of course."
Abstract: What's in a name? The Letterhead Impact Project addresses the question, "Do student law review articles editors favor submissions from 'first tier' law schools?" The expected answer for the law professors I have asked is, "Of course." A colleague's visit to George Mason University (GMU), a top-40 law school in the U.S. News and World Report rankings, gave an opportunity to test this assumption. The experiment was simple. Law reviews of the top-50 ranked law schools were assigned to one of two groups. One of the groups was sent a manuscript using the letterhead from South Texas College of Law, our home institution. The other group was sent the exact same manuscript using the letterhead from GMU. In a surprising result, the groups showed no significant statistical difference in terms of number of days to acknowledge the paper, number of days until first contact or the number of days until acceptance or rejection of the paper. The sole offer the paper did receive was from a law review receiving the paper on GMU letterhead. Letterhead Impact Project goes into the background of the experiment, considers briefly the plight of law review articles editors, and gives the method and results for the study. It also considers various reasons for the lack of any statistically significant differences between the two groups.
TL;DR: In this paper, the problem of proper printing to front and rear faces of a letterhead paper sheet in any setting of one side printing and both side printing to the paper was solved. But the problem was not addressed in this paper.
Abstract: PROBLEM TO BE SOLVED: To carry out proper printing to front and rear faces of a letterhead paper sheet in any setting of one side printing and both side printing to the paper. SOLUTION: The front face of the letterhead paper sheet is set facing upward in a paper storage tray 19 of the image formation device. When printing to both faces is set, paper faces of the letterhead paper are reversed by a paper reversing transferring part 3. Thereafter, printing of an image of the original first page is carried out at an image formation part 2 to the paper front face. Furthermore, the paper sheet is transferred to the paper reversing transferring part 3. After the paper faces are reversed, again, printing of an image of the original second page is carried out at the image formation part 2 to the paper rear face. COPYRIGHT: (C)2005,JPO&NCIPI