Visible file

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Kardex filing cabinets, 20th century Old kardex file cabinet.jpg
Kardex filing cabinets, 20th century

A visible file or kardex (a generic trademark referring to a prominent purveyor) is a filing system for overlapping cards fixed in shallow drawers.

A version was commercialized by Kardex. The Library Bureau company commercialized the similar L. B. Speedac, [1] while yet another brand was the Index Visible System.

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The Tonawanda Kardex was an American football team active between 1916 and 1921. It played its games in Tonawanda, New York, a suburb of Buffalo with close ties to North Tonawanda, New York where American Kardex was founded. The team is most notable for its one game as a member of the American Professional Football Association in the 1921 season. They are easily the shortest-lived team in the league's history, and the shortest-lived known team in North American major league sports history.

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George Glover "Buck" MacDonald was an American football guard in the National Football League for the Canton Bulldogs, New York Brickley Giants and the Tonawanda Kardex. He attended Lehigh University. Buck was the first Nova Scotian NFL player. He started his career for the Canton Bulldogs where he played 2 games before joining the New York Brickley Giants and later the Tonawanda Kardex.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Rand Jr.</span> American industrialist (1886–1968)

James Henry Rand Jr. was an American industrialist who revolutionized the business record industry. He founded American Kardex, an office equipment and office supplies firm which later merged with his father's company, the Rand Ledger Corporation. Rand later bought out and merged with several other companies, notably the Remington Typewriter Company, to form Remington Rand. In 1955, Rand merged his corporation with the Sperry Corporation to form Sperry-Rand, one of the earliest and largest computer manufacturing companies in the United States.

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The 1921 Tonawanda Kardex season was their sole season in the young American Professional Football Association (APFA), in which they played only one game. The team finished 0–1 in league play, and tied for eighteenth place in the league.

Kardex has been the name or part of the name of companies tracing back to Rand Ledger founded in 1898, which were closely associated with the development of the index card as a common business data storage device, and which were also associated with the entities that eventually became part of Unisys.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Library Bureau</span>

The Library Bureau was a business founded by Melville Dewey in 1876 to provide supplies and equipment to libraries. The Library Bureau quickly became a one-stop vendor for supplies and equipment a library might need. By 1900, its lengthy, well illustrated catalog was widely distributed.

Kardex may refer to:

References

  1. The Magazine of Business47:294 (1925)