Possible remains of a lysorophian have also been found from La Machine, France, although they may belong to an aïstopod.
Enigma machine | Rage Against the Machine | Automated teller machine | Victor Talking Machine Company | Soft Machine | The Time Machine | Linotype machine | Vickers machine gun | DeLorean time machine | Darne machine gun | Rube Goldberg machine | MG 17 machine gun | The Wolseley Sheep Shearing Machine Company | Machine Head (band) | Machine Head | KPV heavy machine gun | slot machine | machine | ShKAS machine gun | PK machine gun | machine pistol | Love Removal Machine | Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine | American Machine and Foundry | Zouk Machine | Wayback Machine | virtual machine | Turing machine | Tribal Machine | Tin Machine |
In 2008 Delarozière severed his 21-year collaboration with Royal de Luxe to focus on his own company, La Machine.
In the warehouses of the former shipyards in Nantes, the Machines of the Isle is created by two artists, François Delarozière (La Machine) and Pierre Orefice (Manaus association), visualising a travel-through-time world at the crossroads of the "imaginary worlds" of Jules Verne and the mechanical universe of Leonardo da Vinci.
He began writing science fiction under the pseudonym of Albert Higon and penned two space operas for the Rayon Fantastique imprint of publishers Hachette and Gallimard: Aux Étoiles du Destin Destiny's Stars (1960), featuring a cosmic battle between the alien races: the T’Loons and the incomprehensible Glutons, and La Machine du Pouvoir The Machine Of Power (1960), which won the 1960 Jules Verne Award.