plc

listen to the pronunciation of plc
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A public limited-liability company/corporation
A programmable logic controller
power line communication
public limited company (sometimes partially or fully capitalized as PLC or Plc)
Also used as slang for Peace Love and Care
Planeta Rica, Columbia - internationale Fughafen-Kennung
Physical Link Control (unter IOS)
Preventive Load Control
Power LIne Carrier (-"IEEE Standard Dictionary")
Programmable Logic Controller
(Ticaret) (programmable logic controller) A device using programmed, custom instructions to provide automated monitoring and control functions by evaluating a set of inputs. Used to automate complex functions in machining, packaging, materials handling or other applications
A class of industrially hardened devices that provides hardware interface for input sensors and output actuators PLCs can be programmed using relay ladder logic to control the outputs based on input conditions and / or algorithms contained in the memory of the PLC
Public Limited Company Same as Ltd
Abbreviation for planar lightwave circuit A device which incorporates a planar waveguide
A UK public limited company
A Programmable Logic Controller is a controller which stores instructions to command a device, such as a valve, to which it is connected to start up, operate and shut down
Project Leader Council
Payload Carrier, part of the Payload Module of the Polar Platform
A type of computer used to perform low level controlling and monitoring of hardware, such as power supplies, vacuum controllers, and radiation safety systems The acronym stands for "programmable logic controller"
Public Limited Company Denotes any company which has share capital of at least a fixed amount
Power Line Carrier See HomePlug Powerline Alliance
In Britain, plc means a company whose shares can be bought by the public and is usually used after the name of a company. plc is an abbreviation for `public limited company'. Compare Ltd. British Telecommunications plc. public limited company a large company in Britain which has shares that the public can buy. Guinness PLC Imperial Chemical Industries PLC Rolls Royce PLC BP PLC British Petroleum Co. PLC British American Tobacco PLC B.A.T Industries PLC 1976-98
A programmable logic controller (PLC) uses programmed logic instructions to control banks of inputs and outputs which interface timed switch actuation to external electro-mechanical devices
Programmable Logic Controller These computers replace relay logic and usually have PID controllers built into them PLCs are very fast at processing discrete signals (like a switch condition) The most popular PLC manufacturer's are Allen Bradley, Modicon, GE, and Siemens (or TI)
Program Lead Chapter
A Public Limited Company in the UK is a company limited by shares and having an authorised share capital of not less than £50,000
the transmission of communication signals across utility powerlines or existing home wiring Frequencies may range from 8 kHz to 200 kHz and above and power levels are normally low (in the 1 to 20 watt range) The advantages of these systems include their ability to send signals over very long transmission lines (more than 100 miles) and their reliability However, they are limited in the amount of information they can transport because of narrow bandwidths Their low-frequency signals are severely attenuated by capacitor banks and transformers and can be overcome
Programmable Logic Controller Also know as a programmable controller, these devices are used for machine control and sequencing
Programmable Logic Control Program - A PMAC background task A PMAC may have up to 32 of these programs, numbered 0 to 31 PLC 0 is used for special purpose - high speed applications PLCs 1 to 31 execute at a lower priority
Programmable logic controller A highly reliable special-purpose computer used in industrial monitoring and control applications PLCs typically have proprietary programming and networking protocols, and special-purpose digital and analog I/O ports
Programmable Logic Controller Used to control the functions of a Memcor® CMF system
See: Programmable Logic Controller (PLC)
RISC-based device (typically) that is designed for high-speed, real-time industrial environments
Program Leadership Council; UO/E leadership group that includes regional directors, program leaders and others who meet monthly
Powerline Communication (Low Voltage): A technology that makes it possible to use the powerlines of energy distribution grids (electrical network) as a means of voice or data transmission The electrical network becomes a means of communication
public limited liability company in Britain
GB plc
The British commercial community considered as a single organization; or the commercial interests of Britain considered as a whole
UK plc
The United Kingdom commercial community considered as a single organization; or the commercial interests of the United Kingdom considered as a whole
B.A.T Industries PLC
formerly British-American Tobacco Company Ltd. (1902-76) and B.A.T Industries PLC (1976-98) British conglomerate that is one of the world's largest manufacturers of tobacco products. The company's international headquarters are in London, while its chief American subsidiary, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, is headquartered in Louisville, Ky. Its acquisitions have included the American Tobacco Company (1994), which represents such cigarette brands as Pall Mall and Lucky Strike; Rothmans International (1999), known for its Dunhill and Rothmans brands; and Canada's largest cigarette company, Imperial Tobacco (2000)
B.A.T Industries PLC 1976-98
formerly British-American Tobacco Company Ltd. (1902-76) and B.A.T Industries PLC (1976-98) British conglomerate that is one of the world's largest manufacturers of tobacco products. The company's international headquarters are in London, while its chief American subsidiary, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, is headquartered in Louisville, Ky. Its acquisitions have included the American Tobacco Company (1994), which represents such cigarette brands as Pall Mall and Lucky Strike; Rothmans International (1999), known for its Dunhill and Rothmans brands; and Canada's largest cigarette company, Imperial Tobacco (2000)
BP PLC
formerly Anglo-Persian Oil Co., Ltd., British Petroleum Co. PLC, and BP Amoco British petrochemical corporation. Formed in 1909 as the Anglo-Persian Oil Co., Ltd., to finance an oil-field concession granted by the Iranian government to William Knox D'Arcy, it became one of the largest oil companies in the world, with oil fields and refineries in Alaska and the North Sea. The British government was for many years BP's largest single stockholder, but by the late 1980s it had turned over the company to private ownership. In 1987 BP consolidated its U.S. interests by acquiring the Standard Oil Co. In 1998 it merged with Amoco (formerly Standard Oil of Indiana) to form BP-Amoco. In addition to oil and natural gas, it produces chemicals, plastics, and synthetic fibres. Its headquarters are in London
British Aerospace PLC
British aircraft manufacturer (part of European consortium)
British American Tobacco PLC
formerly British-American Tobacco Company Ltd. (1902-76) and B.A.T Industries PLC (1976-98) British conglomerate that is one of the world's largest manufacturers of tobacco products. The company's international headquarters are in London, while its chief American subsidiary, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, is headquartered in Louisville, Ky. Its acquisitions have included the American Tobacco Company (1994), which represents such cigarette brands as Pall Mall and Lucky Strike; Rothmans International (1999), known for its Dunhill and Rothmans brands; and Canada's largest cigarette company, Imperial Tobacco (2000)
Guinness PLC
Manufacturer of distilled liquors and brewer of a distinctive, dark, creamy stout. It originated in Dublin, where Arthur Guinness bought a small brewery in the late 18th century. From 1799 the brewery produced only Guinness stout, which became known as the national beer of Ireland. Incorporated in 1886 as Arthur Guinness Son and Co. Ltd., it did not become a public limited company until 1982. In 1955, to help settle trivia disputes in pubs, it began publishing The Guinness Book of Records, which has become perhaps the best-selling book (annually) in the world. In 1997 it merged with Grand Metropolitan PLC, the parent company of Burger King, to form the London-based Diageo PLC
Imperial Chemical Industries PLC
Major British chemical corporation. It was founded in 1926 as Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd. to amalgamate four major British chemical companies. Between World Wars I and II, ICI was a major competitor of IG Farben. Today it produces industrial chemicals, paints, and explosives; its drug, pesticide, and specialty chemical concerns were split off into a new corporation, Zeneca Group PLC, in 1993. ICI's headquarters are in London
Reed Elsevier Group plc
{i} world leading publisher and information provider operating in four core markets (Science & Medical, Legal, Education and Business to Business) having its principal operations in North America and Europe and jointly owned by its two parent companies - Reed Elsevier PLC and Reed Elsevier NV
More: www. reedelsevier.com
Rolls-Royce PLC
British manufacturer of aircraft engines and propulsion and power systems and, for much of the 20th century, a maker of luxury automobiles. Charles S. Rolls, a pioneer motorist and aviator, and Henry Royce, an engineer and carmaker, incorporated Rolls-Royce Ltd. in 1906. The firm's handsome, immaculately engineered cars included the Silver Ghost (introduced 1906 as "40/50 hp" model), a series of Phantoms (1925), the Silver Dawn (1949), Silver Cloud (1955), Silver Shadow (1965), and Silver Seraph (1998). In 1931 Rolls-Royce acquired Bentley Motors Ltd., another maker of fine cars. Rolls-Royce also developed a series of notable piston and jet aircraft engines, beginning with the Eagle (1914); eventually its turbine-engine operations accounted for the largest part of its sales. A fixed-price contract with Lockheed Aircraft (see Lockheed Martin Corp.) to produce an engine for its L-1011 TriStar jetliner drove Rolls-Royce into bankruptcy in 1971. It was split into two companies: its jet-engine division was taken over by the British government and later privatized as Rolls-Royce PLC, while its automobile operations were restructured into Rolls-Royce Motor Holdings Ltd. and privatized. The latter was acquired in 1980 by Vickers Ltd., which sold it to Volkswagen AG in 1998 as part of a novel agreement in which BMW AG would take over the manufacture of cars with the Rolls-Royce name in 2003, while Volkswagen retained the Bentley line
plc
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