Voice of God

Voice of God may refer to:

Religion

  • Bath ḳōl (Hebrew, lit. daughter of a voice), a heavenly or divine voice which proclaims God's will or judgment in Judaism
  • Vox dei (Latin "voice of god"), a concept of divine revelation in Christianity
  • People called the "Voice of God"

  • Bob Sheppard, public-address announcer for New York Yankees baseball games from 1951 to 2007 and for New York Giants football games from 1956 to 2005
  • Don LaFontaine, narrator of many film trailers
  • Reed Hadley, narrator of numerous "docudrama" feature films and television programs
  • Harry Kalas, Philadelphia Phillies broadcaster, narrated several NFL Films Productions from 1984 until his death in 2009
  • John Facenda, Philadelphia newscaster who narrated several NFL Films Productions from 1966 to 1984
  • Morgan Freeman, narrator of films and a portrayer of God in Bruce Almighty and Evan Almighty
  • Leonard Nimoy, narrator of films and games, especially for his appearance in the computer game Civilization IV
  • Warwick Merry, National Speakers Association of Australia Voice over specialist and Master MC
  • Baté

    Baté is a village in Somogy county, Hungary.

    External links

  • Street map (Hungarian)

  • McDonnell XP-67

    The McDonnell XP-67 "Bat" or "Moonbat" was a prototype for a twin-engine, long-range, single-seat interceptor aircraft for the United States Army Air Forces. Although the design was conceptually advanced, it was beset by numerous problems and never approached its anticipated level of performance. The project was cancelled after the sole completed prototype was destroyed by an engine fire.

    Design and development

    Origins

    In 1940, the U.S. Army Air Corps issued Request for Proposal R-40C, requesting designs for a high-speed, long-range, high-altitude interceptor intended to destroy enemy bombers. The specifications were very bold, encouraging manufacturers to produce radical aircraft that would outperform any existing fighter in the world at the time. The aerospace parts manufacturer McDonnell Aircraft, eager to begin manufacturing its own aircraft, responded to the proposal with drawings and specifications of the proposed Model I, which would be powered by an unusual geared drivetrain with a single Allison V-3420 engine buried in the fuselage powering twin wing-mounted pusher propellers in the wings. However, 22 other manufacturers also issued proposals to meet the Army’s request; the McDonnell proposal had relatively unimpressive anticipated performance, and its odd drivetrain was unproven. The Model I fell in 21st place when the 23 proposals were examined and scored. The proposals that were accepted included the similarly ill-fated XP-54, XP-55, and XP-56. Despite the apparent setback, Air Corps leaders were impressed by the nascent company’s efforts, and granted McDonnell a $3,000 contract to re-engineer the aircraft.

    Metasyntactic variable

    A metasyntactic variable is a placeholder name used in computer science, a word without meaning intended to be substituted by some objects pertaining to the context where it is used. The word foo as used in IETF Requests for Comments is a good example.

    By mathematical analogy, a metasyntactic variable is a word that is a variable for other words, just as in algebra letters are used as variables for numbers. Any symbol or word which does not violate the syntactic rules of the language can be used as a metasyntactic variable. For specifications written in natural language, nonsense words are commonly used as metasyntactic variables.

    Metasyntactic variables have a secondary, implied meaning to the reader (often students), which makes them different from normal metavariables. It is understood by those who have studied computer science that certain words are placeholders or examples only and should or must be replaced in a production-level computer program.

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