HOWARD CUSHING BOZENHARD
Pilots at Washington Dr, Rochester, NY

License number
New York A0197191
Issued Date
Aug 2015
Expiration Date
Aug 2017
Category
Airmen
Type
Authorized Aircraft Instructor
Address
Address
56 Washington Dr, Rochester, NY 14625

Personal information

See more information about HOWARD CUSHING BOZENHARD at radaris.com
Name
Address
Phone
Howard Bozenhard, age 72
56 Washington Dr, Rochester, NY 14625
(585) 387-0211
Howard C. Bozenhard
Rochester, NY
(585) 387-0211
Howard C Bozenhard, age 72
56 Washington Dr, Rochester, NY 14625
(716) 387-0211
(585) 387-0211

Professional information

See more information about HOWARD CUSHING BOZENHARD at trustoria.com
Howard Bozenhard Photo 1
Howard Bozenhard

Howard Bozenhard

Location:
Rochester, New York Area
Industry:
Computer Software
Skills:
Able to understand complex systems, Perl, MS-DOS, MS Office Suite, SQL, HTML, XML, SharePoint, Lotus Notes, User Interface Design, Training & Development, Teaching, Requirements Management, Rational RequisitePro, Team Leadership, Remote Management, Remote Support, Remote Monitoring, Attention To Detail, Self Starter, Versatile, Remote Desktop


Howard Bozenhard Photo 2
Film Processing System

Film Processing System

US Patent:
5473402, Dec 5, 1995
Filed:
Dec 22, 1993
Appl. No.:
8/171582
Inventors:
Francis C. Long - Rochester NY
Walter C. Slater - Prattsburg NY
Thomas J. Murray - Leroy NY
Bradley C. DeCook - Rochester NY
Howard C. Bozenhard - Rochester NY
Assignee:
Eastman Kodak Company - Rochester NY
International Classification:
G03D 308, G03D 1300
US Classification:
354298
Abstract:
A film processing system that removes film strips from their cartridges, splices the strips together for processing and printing, and then separates the strips for return and reattachment to the same cartridge from which they were removed. The empty cartridges are maintained during processing in a magazine in the same sequential order and corresponding batch as the spliced film strips, to facilitate matching of the film strips and cartridges at the end of the process. According to other features, the spliced roll of film strips is unwound and rewound after development, once for electronically scanning the film strips to capture electronic representations of the developed images, and again for optically printing the developed images onto photographic paper. The film strips include magnetically recorded information, representing conditions of camera exposure, that are captured during scanning before printing.