We have a long, deep folk memory not only of the Blitz which, of course, was the most colossal disaster in London--over 40, 000 died in that--but also the provisional IRA bombing campaign in the '70s and into the '80s.
But IBM also coded into Deep Blue a memory bank of Kasparov's playing tendencies.
He influenced a whole generation of young people, teachers and historians, thanks to his deep loyalty to the memory of the deceased.
In both cases, Easterling and Duerson exhibited symptoms of repetitive head trauma: memory lapses, anger and deep depression, according to family and friends.
The notion that deep-brain stimulation may have benefits for memory was prompted in part by serendipity.
The capital required is huge, the number of firms with deep enough pockets very small, and the memory of the earlier gas-price collapse induced by America's deregulation is fresh.
And the disasters are etched deep in the public (or at least journalistic) memory: the Cuban Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1961, for example, or the Iran-contra affair in the 1980s.
"Her memory will no doubt continue to divide opinion and stir deep emotion, " he said.
The details of that event are carved in my memory by an emotional chisel that has left permanent, deep-rutted scars.
In the last year or so, those dizzy fantasies and their sensations had stopped, cut off as abruptly as if someone had pulled a switch, only the memory of them left like markers on the surface above deep water.
Secondly, they showed that the amount of deep sleep could be used to predict how well people would do on memory tests.
But Kobe, deep in debt, needs new capital to survive, and is now leaving the memory-chip business.
ECONOMIST: Semiconductors: America, memory-chip Lazarus | The
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