What is an index card?
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What is an index card?
Is it a special type of card, or what?
"Weirdism - don't you ever call someone weird. Everybody is unique, therefore to be normal is to be weird. So really the weird ones are the normal ones and the normal ones are the weird ones. That's my analogy."
Re: What is an index card?
An index card is heavy paper stock cut to a standard size. Index cards are often used for recording individual items of information that can then be easily rearranged and filed. The most common size in the United States and Russia is 3 in by 5 in (76 by 127 mm), hence the common name 3-by-5 card. Other sizes widely available include 4 in by 6 in (102 by 152 mm), 5 in by 8 in (127 by 203 mm) and ISO-size A7 (74 mm by 105 mm). Cards are available in blank, ruled and grid styles in a variety of colors. Special divider cards with protruding tabs and a variety of cases and trays to hold the cards are also sold by stationers.
As the name implies, index cards were widely used in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to create an index to large collections of documents. A major law firm, for example, might have a room full of metal cabinets with drawers designed to hold index cards. Clerks might fill out several cards for an individual document or legal case, allowing them to be filed alphabetically under a number of terms.
Edge-notched card
One innovation based on the index card was the edge-notched card, which was an index card with prepunched holes near the edges. Users of this system assigned a category to each hole position, and then notched out the hole when a card fit a category. To locate all cards that matched a category, a long, thin rod or "needle" was inserted through the corresponding holes in a tray of cards, the cards were lifted out of the tray, and all of the cards with notched holes dropped out of the stack. The system could also be used to locate all the cards that belonged to one or more categories at once by using more than one needle.
Modern use
While computers have largely supplanted index cards and especially edge-notched cards, index cards are still a popular way of organizing ideas, quotes, vocabulary words, and references while researching and writing books, articles, and term papers, and for managing any kind of free-form information (for example the Hipster PDA).
The 4 by 6 inch (102 by 152 mm) and A6 (105 by 148 mm) sizes are the only standard sizes that qualify for "postcard rate" when mailed through the United States Postal Service.
As the name implies, index cards were widely used in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to create an index to large collections of documents. A major law firm, for example, might have a room full of metal cabinets with drawers designed to hold index cards. Clerks might fill out several cards for an individual document or legal case, allowing them to be filed alphabetically under a number of terms.
Edge-notched card
One innovation based on the index card was the edge-notched card, which was an index card with prepunched holes near the edges. Users of this system assigned a category to each hole position, and then notched out the hole when a card fit a category. To locate all cards that matched a category, a long, thin rod or "needle" was inserted through the corresponding holes in a tray of cards, the cards were lifted out of the tray, and all of the cards with notched holes dropped out of the stack. The system could also be used to locate all the cards that belonged to one or more categories at once by using more than one needle.
Modern use
While computers have largely supplanted index cards and especially edge-notched cards, index cards are still a popular way of organizing ideas, quotes, vocabulary words, and references while researching and writing books, articles, and term papers, and for managing any kind of free-form information (for example the Hipster PDA).
The 4 by 6 inch (102 by 152 mm) and A6 (105 by 148 mm) sizes are the only standard sizes that qualify for "postcard rate" when mailed through the United States Postal Service.
Re: What is an index card?
Have you got a picture of one? Thanks for the info, though. 

"Weirdism - don't you ever call someone weird. Everybody is unique, therefore to be normal is to be weird. So really the weird ones are the normal ones and the normal ones are the weird ones. That's my analogy."
Re: What is an index card?
A word of advice. Only buy the plain (not lined) cards. That way the celebrity can't sign on the lined side. You shoud be able to pick up a pack of 50 for about 79 cents.

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Re: What is an index card?
aamir wrote:Have you got a picture of one? Thanks for the info, though.

Some are lined, some are plain. {thumb2}
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Re: What is an index card?
I live in the UK, lol.dobie516 wrote:A word of advice. Only buy the plain (not lined) cards. That way the celebrity can't sign on the lined side. You shoud be able to pick up a pack of 50 for about 79 cents.
And thanks, Shambler, I know them to be called revision cards but what the heck.
"Weirdism - don't you ever call someone weird. Everybody is unique, therefore to be normal is to be weird. So really the weird ones are the normal ones and the normal ones are the weird ones. That's my analogy."
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Re: What is an index card?
Yeah I'm from the UK too, I call them flash cards lol.aamir wrote:I live in the UK, lol.dobie516 wrote:A word of advice. Only buy the plain (not lined) cards. That way the celebrity can't sign on the lined side. You shoud be able to pick up a pack of 50 for about 79 cents.
And thanks, Shambler, I know them to be called revision cards but what the heck.
I've sent a few index cards out but the celebs has never signed them, they've always sent their own pic


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