• product (business)

    marketing: Product: The first marketing-mix element is the product, which refers to the offering or group of offerings that will be made available to customers. In the case of a physical product, such as a car, a company will gather information about the features…

  • product (economics)

    production system: Underlying principles: All production systems, when viewed at the most abstract level, might be said to be “transformation processes”—processes that transform resources into useful goods and services. The transformation process typically uses common resources such as labour, capital (for machinery and equipment, materials, etc.), and space (land, buildings,…

  • product (mathematics)

    arithmetic: Addition and multiplication: …× 5 is called the product. The symbol × of this operation is read “times.” If such letters as a and b are used to denote the numbers, the product a × b is often written a∙b or simply ab.

  • product cipher (cryptology)

    product cipher, data encryption scheme in which the ciphertext produced by encrypting a plaintext document is subjected to further encryption. By combining two or more simple transposition ciphers or substitution ciphers, a more secure encryption may result. In the days of manual cryptography,

  • product development (business)

    aerospace industry: Product development and testing: Initiation of the product development process differs between the military and commercial sectors. In the United States the defense services normally provide detailed mission specifications for desired products, against which contractors submit proposals as part of a competitive process. Proposals are…

  • product differentiation (economics)

    monopoly and competition: Product differentiation: The structure of a market is also affected by the extent to which those who buy from it prefer some products to others. In some industries the products are regarded as identical by their buyers—as, for example, basic farm crops. In others the…

  • product diversification (economics)

    automotive industry: Diversity of products: The automotive industry’s immense resources in production facilities and technical and managerial skills have been devoted predominantly to the building of motor vehicles, but there has been a consistent and strong incentive to extend into related products and occasionally into operations whose…

  • product liability insurance (insurance)

    liability insurance: Product liability and malpractice insurance present special problems because of the increasingly high cost of court awards of damages and because of the public’s high expectations of product safety and physician performance. An additional problem for product liability insurance is that the courts have tended…

  • product quality

    computer science: Social and professional issues: …should be linked to a quality-control system that maintains a database of quality information and alerts the manager if quality is deteriorating and possibly even provides a diagnosis as to the source of any problems that arise. Automatically tracking the flow of products from station to station on the factory…

  • product rule (mathematics)

    product rule, Rule for finding the derivative of a product of two functions. If both f and g are differentiable, then (fg)′ = fg′ +

  • product set (mathematics)

    set theory: Operations on sets: The Cartesian product of two sets A and B, denoted by A × B, is defined as the set consisting of all ordered pairs (a, b) for which a ∊ A and b ∊ B. For example, if A = {x, y} and B = {3,…

  • product, chemical (industry)

    chemical industry: The complicated characteristics of the chemical industry: …changes, and some of the products of a modern refinery complex are chemicals by any definition. The term petrochemical is used to describe these chemical operations, but, because they are often carried out at the same plant as the primary distillation, the distinction between petroleum industry and chemical industry is…

  • production (economics)

    production system: Underlying principles: All production systems, when viewed at the most abstract level, might be said to be “transformation processes”—processes that transform resources into useful goods and services. The transformation process typically uses common resources such as labour, capital (for machinery and equipment, materials, etc.), and space (land, buildings,…

  • production casing (drilling technology)

    fracking: Horizontal drilling: …yet another pipe called the production casing. In many operations more than one well can be drilled from a single surface site (or “pad”), or more than one lateral section can radiate from a single borehole.

  • production cell (biology)

    biotechnology: History of biotechnology: … (often a human protein) into production cells—such as yeast, bacteria, or mammalian cells in culture—which then begin to produce the protein in volume. In the process of splicing a gene into a production cell, a new organism is created. At first, biotechnology investors and researchers were uncertain about whether the…

  • production chain (economics)

    production chain, in economics, an analytical tool used to understand the nature of the production process (including production of both goods and services) and its transformations. The production process is a sequence of productive activities leading to an end use—a chain of linked functions, in

  • Production Code (motion-picture standards)

    Dracula: …ending, in accordance with Hollywood’s Production Code, for a 1936 rerelease of the film; the original ending was subsequently lost. The commercial success of Dracula helped establish Universal Pictures as the premier studio for horror pictures, with Frankenstein following soon thereafter. In 1998 composer Philip Glass was commissioned to write…

  • production function (economics)

    production function, in economics, equation that expresses the relationship between the quantities of productive factors (such as labour and capital) used and the amount of product obtained. It states the amount of product that can be obtained from every combination of factors, assuming that the

  • production line (industrial engineering)

    assembly line, industrial arrangement of machines, equipment, and workers for continuous flow of workpieces in mass-production operations. (Read Henry Ford’s 1926 Britannica essay on mass production.) The design for an assembly line is determined by analyzing the steps necessary to manufacture each

  • production management (industrial engineering)

    production management, planning and control of industrial processes to ensure that they move smoothly at the required level. Techniques of production management are employed in service as well as in manufacturing industries. It is a responsibility similar in level and scope to other specialties

  • production process

    automation: Manufacturing applications of automation and robotics: Three types of automation in production can be distinguished: (1) fixed automation, (2) programmable automation, and (3) flexible automation.

  • production rate (industrial engineering)

    mass production: A summary of mass production concepts: Similarly, a production line is usually designed to operate most efficiently at a specified rate. If the required production levels fall below that rate, operators and machines are being inefficiently used; and if the rate goes too high, operators must work overtime, machine maintenance cannot keep up,…

  • production reactor (nuclear reactor)

    nuclear reactor: Production reactors: The very first nuclear reactors were built for the express purpose of manufacturing plutonium for nuclear weapons, and the euphemism of calling them production reactors has persisted to this day. At present, most of the material produced by such systems is tritium

  • production scheduling

    logistics: Production scheduling: Scheduling of production is done by others in the firm but with the assistance of the logistics staff. Production is scheduled in an attempt to balance demand for products with plant capacity and availability of inputs. Inbound materials and components must be scheduled…

  • production system (industrial engineering)

    production system, any of the methods used in industry to create goods and services from various resources. All production systems, when viewed at the most abstract level, might be said to be “transformation processes”—processes that transform resources into useful goods and services. The

  • production theory (economics)

    theory of production, in economics, an effort to explain the principles by which a business firm decides how much of each commodity that it sells (its “outputs” or “products”) it will produce, and how much of each kind of labour, raw material, fixed capital good, etc., that it employs (its “inputs”

  • production, factors of (economics)

    factors of production, term used by economists to denote the economic resources, both human and other, which, if properly utilized, will bring about a flow or output of goods and services. Simply stated, factors of production are the “inputs” necessary to obtain an “output.” However, not all the

  • production, theory of (economics)

    theory of production, in economics, an effort to explain the principles by which a business firm decides how much of each commodity that it sells (its “outputs” or “products”) it will produce, and how much of each kind of labour, raw material, fixed capital good, etc., that it employs (its “inputs”

  • production-smoothing problem (industrial engineering)

    production management: Planning and control: This is called the “production-smoothing” problem. When more than one product is involved, complex industrial engineering or operations research procedures are required to analyze the many factors that impinge on the problem.

  • Productions of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart (work by Stewart)

    Maria Stewart: Activism: Productions of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart, a collection of her speeches, essays, and poems, was published in 1835.

  • Productive Thinking (work by Wertheimer)

    Max Wertheimer: His Productive Thinking, which discussed many of his ideas, was published posthumously in 1945.

  • productivity (economics)

    productivity, in economics, the ratio of what is produced to what is required to produce it. Usually this ratio is in the form of an average, expressing the total output of some category of goods divided by the total input of, say, labour or raw materials. In principle, any input can be used in the

  • productivity, biological (biology)

    estuary: Primary productivity: The high level of plant production in estuaries supports a correspondingly high level of production of invertebrate animals and fish. Estuaries often contain beds of shellfish such as mussels and oysters and large populations of shrimps and crabs. Fish such as plaice and flounders

  • PROE

    rules of engagement: Peacetime rules of engagement (PROE) were also developed that differentiated hostile acts versus hostile intent and also emphasized that a response must be appropriate to the level of threat. Prior to the development of PROE, rules of engagement had only served to inform wartime actions;…

  • proecdysis (zoology)

    crustacean: Exoskeleton: …into four main stages: (1) Proecdysis, or premolt, is the period during which calcium is resorbed from the old exoskeleton into the blood. The epidermis separates from the old exoskeleton, new setae form, and a new exoskeleton is secreted. (2) Ecdysis, or the actual shedding of the old exoskeleton, takes…

  • Proell, Annemarie (Austrian skier)

    Annemarie Moser-Pröll is an Austrian Alpine skier who held the all-time record of six women’s World Cup championships, five in succession (1971–75). Pröll skied from the age of four. She tried out for the Austrian national ski team at the age of 15. Her Olympic Winter Games success came late. She

  • proembryo (plant anatomy)

    plant development: Origin of the primary organs: …mass of tissue called the proembryo. No cotyledon, stem apex, or root apex is organized in this early period; these organs do not appear until after germination has occurred.

  • Proemio e carta al condestable de Portugal (work by Santillana)

    Iñigo López de Mendoza, marquis de Santillana: …to his collected works, the Proemio, the first example in Spanish of formal literary criticism, distinguishes three literary styles: high, for classical writing in Greek and Latin; middle, for formal works in the vernacular; and low, for ballads and songs without formal order.

  • proenzyme (biochemistry)

    zymogen, any of a group of proteins that display no catalytic activity but are transformed within an organism into enzymes, especially those that catalyze reactions involving the breakdown of proteins. Trypsinogen and chymotrypsinogen, zymogens secreted by the pancreas, are activated in the

  • Proerosia (Greek festival)

    Demeter: (3) Proerosia, at which prayers were offered for an abundant harvest, before the land was plowed for sowing. It was also called Proarktouria, an indication that it was held before the rising of Arcturus. The festival took place, probably sometime in September, at Eleusis. (4) Thalysia,…

  • Proesch, Gilbert (British artist)

    Gilbert & George: …collaborative team made up of Gilbert Proesch (b. September 17, 1943, Dolomites, Italy) and George Passmore (b. January 8, 1942, Plymouth, Devon, England), whose dynamic and often humorous insertion of themselves into their art proved an important chapter in postwar British conceptual art.

  • proestrus (reproductive cycle)

    dog: Reproductive cycle: The first stage is called proestrus. It begins with mild swelling of the vulva and a bloody discharge. This lasts for about 9 days, although it may vary by 2 or 3 days. During this phase the bitch may attract males, but she is not ready to be bred and…

  • Proetus (Greek mythology)

    Proetus, in Greek mythology, a king of Argos, grandson of Danaus. He quarreled with his twin brother, Acrisius, and divided the kingdom with him, Proetus taking Tiryns, which he fortified with huge blocks of stone carried by the Cyclopes. Proetus had three daughters with Stheneboea (called Anteia

  • Profaci, Joseph (American criminal)

    Joseph Profaci was one of the most powerful bosses in U.S. organized crime from the 1940s to the early 1960s. Twice arrested and once imprisoned for a year in his native Sicily, he emigrated to the United States in 1921 and, thereafter, though arrested several times, managed always to avoid prison.

  • profanation (religion)

    sacrilege, originally, the theft of something sacred; as early as the 1st century bc, however, the Latin term for sacrilege came to mean any injury, violation, or profanation of sacred things. Legal punishment for such acts was already sanctioned, in the Levitical code of ancient Israel. The

  • profanity (language)

    profanity, language that is considered socially offensive due to being vulgar, obscene, or irreverent. The term profanity is often used in a religious sense to refer to language that is blasphemous, sacrilegious, or sometimes merely secular. In a broader sense, profanity is often referred to as

  • Profelis aurata (mammal)

    golden cat: …of the family Felidae: the African golden cat (Profelis aurata), or the Asian golden cat (Catopuma temminckii), also known as Temminck’s cat.

  • profesor inútil, El (work by Jarnés)

    Benjamín Jarnés: …was established by his second, El profesor inútil (1926; “The Useless Professor”), a series of episodes with little narrative action that point out a professor’s ineptitude and inability to tell reality from unreality. Similar motifs occur in El convidado de papel (1928; “The Paper Guest”), in which erotic pictures and…

  • Professeur Taranne, Le (play by Adamov)

    Arthur Adamov: Le Professeur Taranne (performed 1953) was about a university professor unable to live up to his public role; though the play is dictated by the absurd logic of a dream, the construction and characterizations are firm and clear. In his best known play, Le Ping-pong…

  • profession

    classical scholarship: The rise of professionalism: Associated with Germany was the movement toward what may be called professionalism during the second half of the 19th century. Though Wolf’s example in founding a classical periodical in the vernacular had been followed elsewhere (e.g., the English Classical Journal, 1810–29), journals written primarily…

  • Profession of Faith (statement by Valdes)

    Waldenses: Early history: …this council Valdes made his Profession of Faith (which still survives); it is a statement of orthodox beliefs such as accused heretics were required to sign. Valdes, however, did not receive the ecclesiastical recognition that he sought. Undeterred, he and his followers (Pauperes, “Poor”) continued to preach; the archbishop of…

  • Profession of Faith of a Savoyard Vicar, The (essay by Rousseau)

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Years of seclusion and exile of Jean-Jacques Rousseau: …foi du vicaire savoyard (1765; The Profession of Faith of a Savoyard Vicar) Rousseau sets out what may fairly be regarded as his own religious views, since that book confirms what he says on the subject in his private correspondence. Rousseau could never entertain doubts about God’s existence or about…

  • Profession of Teaching (work by Monroe [1901])

    teaching: Stereotype of the teacher: Writing in the Profession of Teaching in 1901, a Boston educator, James P. Monroe, said:

  • Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (American organization)

    Ronald Reagan: First days: …of air traffic controllers, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO)—one of the few unions to endorse Reagan in the 1980 election—walked off their jobs, demanding higher pay and better working conditions. As federal employees, the PATCO members were forbidden by law to strike, and Reagan, on the advice of…

  • Professional Bowlers Association of America (American sports organization)

    Don Carter: …and first president of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA; founded in 1958). He began bowling as a boy while working as a pinsetter. He built his own lane in the basement of the family home, and in 1953 he joined the St. Louis Budweiser team. Carter was bowler of the…

  • Professional Chess Association (chess organization)

    chess: The world championship and FIDE: …of a new organization, the Professional Chess Association (PCA). Before Kasparov defeated Short in London in late 1993 in the first PCA championship, FIDE disqualified Kasparov and organized its own world championship match, won by Karpov.

  • professional confidence (law)

    privileged communication, in law, communication between persons who have a special duty of fidelity and secrecy toward each other. Communications between attorney and client are privileged and do not have to be disclosed to the court. However, in the wake of terrorist attacks against the United

  • Professional Correctness: Literary Studies and Political Change (work by Fish)

    Stanley Fish: …a Good Thing, Too (1994), Professional Correctness: Literary Studies and Political Change (1995), The Trouble with Principle (1999), and How Milton Works (2001). How to Write a Sentence: And How to Read One and Winning Arguments: What Works and Doesn’t Work in Politics, the Bedroom, the Courtroom, and the Classroom…

  • professional cramp (physiology)

    cramp: Professional or occupational cramp is a functional spasm affecting certain muscles that are used constantly in a daily occupation. At first there is a gradually increasing difficulty, or clumsiness, in making the movements required for the work at hand. Writers, for example, cannot move the pen or…

  • professional education

    library: Training institutes: …the education and training of professionals have come from librarians or their professional associations. In the United States the first university school for librarians was established in 1887 by Melvil Dewey at Columbia University. The American Library Association (ALA) pursued a policy of accreditation in an effort to ensure that…

  • professional fraternity

    fraternity and sorority: The membership of professional fraternities is limited to students and faculty members engaged in a particular field of specialization. Membership qualifications are broader than for the social groups and emphasize activities designed to develop professional competency rather than social life. The first professional fraternity, Kappa Lambda, was founded…

  • Professional Golfers Association (British sports organization)

    golf: British tournaments and players: …for the formation of the Professional Golfers Association in 1901. This body is responsible for professional tournaments in Great Britain and for the biennial Ryder Cup match (for professionals) when it is played there.

  • Professional Golfers’ Association of America (American sports organization)

    Professional Golfers’ Association of America (PGA of America), organization formed in the United States in 1916 at the instigation of Rodman Wanamaker, a Philadelphia businessman, with the stated purpose of promoting interest in professional golf, elevating the standards of the game, and advancing

  • professional liability insurance

    insurance: Professional liability insurance: Known as malpractice, or errors-and-omissions, insurance, professional liability contracts are distinguished from general business liability policies because of the specialized nature of the liability. Professional persons requiring liability contracts include physicians and surgeons, lawyers, accountants, engineers, and insurance agents. Important differences between…

  • professional networking (social interaction)

    networking, the development, maintenance, or use of social or professional contacts for the purpose of exchanging information, resources, or services. A professional network can be thought of as a web or series of interconnected webs—whereby links or ties exist between focal individuals and the

  • professional organization

    teaching: Educational associations and teachers’ unions: Professional groups all over the world have organized for collective action to do two quite different things. One objective of a professional organization is to improve the economic status and the working conditions of its members. A second broad objective is to improve the service…

  • professional painters (Chinese art)

    Dai Jin: …was later placed within the lineage of “professional” painters and held in lesser regard in contrast to the school of literary “amateurs,” who were more concerned with personal expression and who were then represented in the Wu school in which Shen Zhou held an equivalent place of leadership.

  • Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (American organization)

    rodeo: Origins and history: …(RCA) in 1945 and the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) in 1975, and its rules became accepted by most rodeos.

  • Professional Sports Championships by City

    There are four professional team-sports leagues that are the most prestigious in North America: Major League Baseball (MLB), the National Basketball Association (NBA), the National Football League (NFL), and the National Hockey League (NHL). These leagues feature the highest level of competition in

  • professional support system (information system)

    information system: Professional support systems: Professional support systems offer the facilities needed to perform tasks specific to a given profession. For example, automotive engineers use computer-aided engineering (CAE) software together with virtual reality systems to design and test new models as electronic prototypes for fuel efficiency, handling,…

  • Professional Women’s Hockey League (North American sports organization)

    Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL), organization of professional women’s ice hockey teams in North America. The PWHL was formed in 2023 with six teams, three in the United States and three in Canada, and played its the inaugural season in 2024. Similar to the National Hockey League (NHL),

  • professional wrestling (entertainment)

    Vince McMahon: ) is an American professional wrestling impresario who used showmanship and tireless promotion to make wrestling, formerly a niche entertainment, into a vastly lucrative industry. With his wife, Linda McMahon, he founded World Wrestling Entertainment, a multibillion-dollar company.

  • Professional, The (film by Besson [1994])

    Natalie Portman: Early life and first films: …film role in Léon (1994; The Professional). She starred opposite French actor Jean Reno as an adolescent girl training to be an assassin after her parents have been murdered. Hershlag assumed her maternal grandmother’s last name at this time in order to protect herself from unwanted attention as a result…

  • professionalism

    professionalism, the standards, practices, or motivations associated with a profession. The concepts of professionalism, profession, and professionalization have received considerable and sometimes critical attention in sociology. In early British and American analyses, professionalism was

  • professionalization

    professionalism: …as a successful ideology and professionalization as a process of dominance over an occupation or a market. Professionalization, according to that interpretation, was intended to promote professionals’ own occupational self-interest with respect to salary, status, and power, as well as monopoly protection of an occupational jurisdiction. Professionalization was a process…

  • Professionals, The (film by Brooks [1966])

    The Professionals, American western film, released in 1966, that was an action-packed, testosterone-driven adventure featuring an all-star cast. Four fortune hunters are hired by rich land baron Joe Grant (played by Ralph Bellamy) to ride into Mexico and rescue his young wife, Maria (Claudia

  • Professor and the Madman, The (film by Shemran [2019])

    John Boorman: Later career and honors: Boorman also cowrote the drama The Professor and the Madman (2019).

  • Professor Andersen’s Night (novel by Solstad)

    Dag Solstad: …Dignity); Professor Andersens natt (1996; Professor Andersen’s Night); and 17. Roman (2009; “Novel 17”). He won the Swedish Academy’s Nordic Prize in 2017.

  • Professor Andersens natt (novel by Solstad)

    Dag Solstad: …Dignity); Professor Andersens natt (1996; Professor Andersen’s Night); and 17. Roman (2009; “Novel 17”). He won the Swedish Academy’s Nordic Prize in 2017.

  • Professor Beware (film by Nugent [1938])

    Elliott Nugent: …Burns and Gracie Allen; and Professor Beware (1938), starring Harold Lloyd, in his penultimate film, as a hapless Egyptologist.

  • Professor Griff (American rapper)

    Public Enemy: …1966, New York City), and Professor Griff (original name Richard Griffin; b. August 1, 1960, Long Island).

  • Professor Hieronimus (work by Skram)

    Amalie Skram: …two autobiographical novels from 1895, Professor Hieronimus and På St. Jørgen (“At St. Jorgen’s”), in which she gives an artistically controlled but thinly veiled description of her own treatment for a nervous disorder at a mental institution in Copenhagen. English translations of both novels were published in one volume, Under…

  • Professor Longhair (American singer and musician)

    Professor Longhair was an American singer and pianist who helped shape the sound of New Orleans rhythm and blues from the mid-1940s. As a young boy living in New Orleans, Byrd learned the rudiments of music from his mother. He constructed his own instruments and played and danced in the streets for

  • Professor Marvel (fictional character)

    The Wizard of Oz: Plot summary: …on the road with fortune-teller Professor Marvel, a well-meaning charlatan, Dorothy is persuaded to return home to her family. Before they can be reunited, however, she is knocked unconscious during a tornado.

  • Professor of Desire, The (novel by Roth)

    Philip Roth: …As a Man (1974), and The Professor of Desire (1977), were followed by one of Roth’s most important novels, The Ghost Writer (1979), which introduced an aspiring young writer named Nathan Zuckerman, who is Roth’s alter ego. Two later novels, Zuckerman Unbound (1981) and The Anatomy Lesson (1983), trace his…

  • Professor Unrat (work by Heinrich Mann)

    Heinrich Mann: …provincial schoolmaster, Professor Unrat (1905; Small Town Tyrant), became widely known through its film version Der blaue Engel (1928; The Blue Angel). His Kaiserreich trilogy—consisting of Die Armen (1917; The Poor); Der Untertan (1918; The Patrioteer); and Der Kopf (1925; The Chief)—carries even further his indictment of the

  • Professor’s House, The (novel by Cather)

    The Professor’s House, novel by Willa Cather, published in 1925, in which the protagonist, a university professor, confronts middle age and personal and professional loneliness. Professor Godfrey St. Peter has completed his significant academic work on Spanish explorers in North America. His

  • Professor, The (novel by Brontë)

    The Professor, first novel written by Charlotte Brontë. She submitted the manuscript for publication in 1847, at the same time that her sisters found publishers for their novels Agnes Grey and Wuthering Heights. The Professor was rejected for publication during the author’s lifetime but was

  • Professor, the (Canadian magician and sleight-of-hand artist)

    Dai Vernon was a Canadian magician and sleight-of-hand artist who was one of the 20th century’s most renowned practitioners of “up-close” magic and card tricks. (Read Harry Houdini’s 1926 Britannica essay on magic.) Fascinated with magic from age six, he decided to become a professional conjurer

  • Professores Burdigalenses (work by Ausonius)

    Decimus Magnus Ausonius: …poems on deceased relatives, and Professores Burdigalenses, on the professors of Burdigala; these are delightful portraits that give a valuable picture of provincial Gallic life.

  • Profiat, Don (Jewish astronomer, physician, and translator)

    Jacob ben Machir ibn Tibbon was a French Jewish physician, translator, and astronomer whose work was utilized by Copernicus and Dante. He was highly regarded as a physician and served as regent of the faculty of medicine at the University of Montpellier. He was the grandson of the renowned

  • Profil (Norwegian literary magazine)

    20th-century Norwegian literature: After World War II: This so-called Profil group, named after a journal, includes Tor Obrestad, Dag Solstad, Espen Haavardsholm, and Edvard Hoem. Many of their novels freely mixed documentary materials with fiction, as in Obrestad’s Sauda! Streik! (1972; “Sauda! Strike!”), but what united them all was a shared belief in the…

  • Profile Records (American company)

    Profile Records: “Run This Way”: Hip-hop was scorned by the established music industry as a novelty idiom until 1986, when Run-D.M.C. enrolled Aerosmith’s vocalist, Steven Tyler, and guitarist, Joe Perry, to take part in a revival of the hard rockers’ hit “Walk This Way” from 10 years earlier. Released on…

  • Profile Records: “Run This Way”

    Hip-hop was scorned by the established music industry as a novelty idiom until 1986, when Run-D.M.C. enrolled Aerosmith’s vocalist, Steven Tyler, and guitarist, Joe Perry, to take part in a revival of the hard rockers’ hit “Walk This Way” from 10 years earlier. Released on the Profile label, the

  • Profile, the (mountain face, New Hampshire, United States)

    Franconia Notch: …the Great Stone Face or the Profile), was located on Cannon Mountain. Comprising ledges of granite (48 feet [15 meters] high) shaped like a face on the mountainside 1,200 feet (366 meters) above Profile Lake, it collapsed in 2003 despite numerous efforts to protect it. Echo Lake, at the head…

  • profiler (measurement instrument)

    atmosphere: Measurement systems: Remote-sensing systems called profilers have been developed to provide almost continuous measurements of wind and, somewhat less accurately, of moisture and temperature throughout the lowest 10 km (6 miles) of the atmosphere. Winds are estimated by using an upward-looking Doppler radar, while temperature and moisture profiles are evaluated…

  • Profiles in Courage (work by Kennedy)

    John F. Kennedy: Congressman and senator: …period that he worked on Profiles in Courage (1956), an account of eight great American political leaders who had defied popular opinion in matters of conscience, which was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1957. Although Kennedy was credited as the book’s author, it was later revealed that his assistant Theodore…

  • Profiles of the Future (work by Clarke)

    history of technology: The quality of life: …of contemporary seers, in his Profiles of the Future (1962), are worth recalling in this context. Thinking ahead to the countless aeons that could stem from the remarkable human achievement summarized in the history of technology, he surmised that the all-knowing beings who may evolve from these humble beginnings may…

  • profiling (geology)

    Earth exploration: Electrical and electromagnetic methods: …given area by means of profiling methods, in which the location of an array of electrodes is altered but the same spacing between the component electrodes is maintained. Sounding methods enable investigators to pinpoint variations of resistivity with depth. In this case, electrode spacing is increased and, correspondingly, the effective…

  • profit (economics)

    profit, in business usage, the excess of total revenue over total cost during a specific period of time. In economics, profit is the excess over the returns to capital, land, and labour (interest, rent, and wages). To the economist, much of what is classified in business usage as profit consists of