[ noun ] a school teaching mechanical and industrial arts and the applied sciences <noun.group>
To those who say we can't afford to build more high tech weapons, the answer should be that we can't afford not to.
'We are looking for jobs with more brain power required, not just brawn power.' However, Malaysia's manufacturing sector has yet to mature into a high tech, skills based industry.
Bush on Wednesday proposed easing restrictions on sales of sophisticated computers and other high tech products to the Soviet Union and East Bloc.
L. Keith Mullins, emerging-growth-stock analyst at Morgan Stanley, also likes the group, because he too believes that small tech stocks won't fall much more.
The recession in the Northeast stems from the decline of real estate, high tech and the securities markets, i.e., the sectors most sensitive to the high capital gains rate.
The stock market narrowly gained ground today as investors snapped up blue chip and high tech issues.
Hartford, for example, decided to go high tech.
Science in Pakistan is a peculiar blend of high tech and high faith.
The government is now emphasising the need to encourage investment from domestic sources: but a lot of foreign expertise and capital is necessary to develop high tech industries. The Malaysian economy is running ahead at full steam.
In short, high tech is revolutionizing the business of catching criminals.
But the uncertain outlook for earnings still makes tech stocks risky, cautioned Mitchell Meisler, executive vice president for Shearson Lehman Brothers.
The State Department last fall temporarily froze liberalization of high tech sales to China to protest alleged sales of Chinese Silkworm missiles to Iran, but lifted the freeze in March.
"The reason we have the COCOM is to make sure you don't transfer militarily sensitive or significant information or tech, and my concern is that I'm not satisfied that we are protecting that technology under that decsion," Cheney said.