Beep

Beep may refer to:

  • Beep (smart card), a contact less card payment scheme in the Philippines initially intended for use in LRT and MRT stations
  • Beep (sound), a single tone onomatopoeia, generally made by a computer or a machine
  • Beep (soft drink), a Canadian fruit drink
  • Beep test, oxygen uptake measuring multi-stage fitness test
  • Basis point, one part per ten thousand
  • BEEPS, Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey
  • Science and technology

  • BEEP, a network protocol framework
  • Beep (locomotive), a locomotive built in 1970
  • Beep Media Player, an audio player
  • Entertainment

  • "Beep" (The Pussycat Dolls song), a 2006 song performed by the Pussycat Dolls
  • "Beep!!" (Superfly song), a 2011 song performed by Superfly
  • "Beep" (Bobby Valentino song), a 2008 song performed by Bobby Valentino
  • Beep (video game), a 2011 2D-platforming action and adventure game by Big Fat Alien
  • See also

  • Beep, beep (disambiguation)
  • BEP (disambiguation)
  • Beeb (disambiguation)
  • Beeper (disambiguation)
  • Beep (sound)

    A beep is a short, single tone, typically high-pitched, generally made by a computer or other machine. The term has its origin in onomatopoeia.

    The word "beep-beep" is recorded for the noise of a car horn in 1929, and the modern usage of "beep" for a high-pitched tone is attributed to Arthur C. Clarke in 1951.

    Use in computers

    In some computer terminals, the ASCII character code 7, bell character, outputs an audible beep. The beep is also sometimes used to notify the user when the BIOS is not working or there is some other error during the start up process, often during the power-on self-test (POST). A beep is also made when holding down too many keys at the same time, as the computer often cannot handle the processes. It is also used to cover up swearing in some television shows, but in this case, it's often spelled like "bleep."

    Use in transport

    Beeps are also used as a warning when a truck or bus is reversing. It can also be used to define the sound produced by a car horn. Colloquially, beep is also used to refer to the action of honking the car horn at someone, (e.g., "Why did that guy beep at me?"), and is more likely to be used with vehicles with higher-pitched horns. "Honk" is used if the sound is lower pitched (e.g. Volkswagen Beetles beep, but Oldsmobiles honk).

    Beep (video game)

    Beep is a 2D-platforming action and adventure game originally released on 3 March 2011 by studio Big Fat Alien for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. The Linux version arrived on Gameolith on 12 July 2011 and in the Ubuntu Software Center on 22 July 2011.

    Gameplay

    In Beep, the player controls an alien robot who must find gold in order to advance his race. The player begins in a spaceship and is able to navigate to different planets within the solar system. When arriving at a level on a planet, a robot is deployed and the player must control the robot through the level. Collecting gold unlocks new levels and planets; there are 24 levels total. In each level, the player controls a four-wheeled robot, attacking enemy robots with lasers and using an anti-gravity beam to move objects and platforms in order to access different parts of the level. In some instances, players must stack dead enemies' bodies in order to advance. Environments include swamp, ice, desert, and caves. The game is heavily physics-based and allows the robot to jump, glide, swim, and cling to surfaces.

    Fischer

    Fischer is a German surname, derived from the profession of the fisherman. The name Fischer is the fourth most common German surname. The English version is Fisher.

    People with the surname include:

    A – E

  • Abraham Fischer (1850–1913) South African public official
  • Adam Fischer (1888–1968), Danish sculptor
  • Ádám Fischer (born 1949), Hungarian conductor
  • Alfred Fischer (judge) (1919–2004), German judge
  • Alfred Fischer (architect) (1881–1950), German architect
  • Annie Fischer (1914–1995), Hungarian pianist
  • Andrea Fischer (born 1960), German politician
  • Anton Fischer (bobsleigh), German bobsledder
  • Artur Fischer (1919-2016), German inventor (fischertechnik, plastic dowel)
  • Axel Fischer (born 1966), German politician (CDU)
  • Batty Fischer (18771958), Luxembourg dentist and amateur photographer
  • Bernd Fischer (disambiguation)
  • Bernd Fischer (mathematician) (born 1936), German mathematician
  • Birgit Fischer (born 1962), German kayaker
  • Bobby Fischer (1943–2008), American world chess champion 1972–1975
  • Patent Ochsner

    Patent Ochsner is one of Switzerland's best-known rock bands, all of whose studio albums but one have topped the Swiss charts. Hailing from Bern, they perform songs in Swiss German.

    Current line-up (2006)

  • Büne Huber (vocals)
  • Monic Mathys (bass)
  • Andi Hug (drums)
  • Christian Brantschen (keyboard, accordion)
  • Menk Grossniklaus (saxophone)
  • Disu Gmünder (guitar)
  • Pascal Steiner (keys and wind instruments)
  • Daniel Woodtli (trumpet)
  • History

    Patent Ochsner was formed in Bern in 1990 by singer Büne Huber and four other musicians. The lineup would change several times during the years. The band got their name from a ubiquitous type of Swiss dustbin and trash containers, manufactured by J. Ochsner AG and stamped with "Patent Ochsner".

    In 1991, they released their debut "Schlachtplatte" (butcher plate; a traditional dish containing different types of meat and sausages). As the song "Bälpmoos" (about Belpmoos, Bern's regional airport) got huge radio airplay on Swiss radio stations they became quite famous in Switzerland. The ballad "Scharlachrot" (Scarlet) would increase their popularity.

    Fischer (automobile)

    The Fischer was a brass era automobile manufactured in Detroit, Michigan by the G.J. Fischer Company in 1914. It was a light car (rather than a cyclecar), built as a two- or four-seater model, including a sedan. It had a Perkins four-cylinder water-cooled 1.2L engine. It had a selective transmission and shaft drive. The two-seater cost $525, and the sedan cost $845. The Fischer brothers, all 7 of them lived in Flint, Michigan.

    References

  • Georgano, G.N. (1968). The Complete Encyclopedia of Motorcars, 1885 to Present. 

  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Song And Dance Brigade

    by: Fischer Z

    Rub your eyes and look again.
    Facial features takes the strain.
    But don't back-a-don't back away.
    Idle hours lost their charm.
    They won't do you any harm.
    But don't back-a-don't back away.
    Chorus
    They won't recognise your long experience.
    Working dance halls on your own.
    They can't mechanize the song and dance brigade.
    They'll only nitice when you've gone.
    It's over today, it's over today.
    But don't back-a-don't back-a-don't back-a-don't back
    -a-don't back-a-back away.
    See that twinkle in your eyes.
    Prcious moments never die.
    So don't back-a-back away.
    In the time that you've been on.
    A generation's come and gone.
    So don't back-a-back away.
    Chorus
    They won't recognise your long experience etc.




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