Living

Living may refer to:

  • Life, a condition that distinguishes organisms from inorganic objects and dead organisms
  • a living species is one that is not extinct
  • Personal life, the course of an individual human's life
  • Human living
  • Human condition
  • Living wage, refers to the minimum hourly wage necessary for a person to achieve some specific standard of living
  • Living or Benefice, in canon law, a position in a church that has attached to it a source of income
  • Music

  • Living 2001–2002, a live album by the John Butler Trio
  • Living (Paddy Casey album), 2003
  • Living (Judy Collins album), 1971
  • Other

  • Martha Stewart Living, a magazine by Martha Stewart
  • Living (UK TV channel) and Livingit, television channels in the United Kingdom and Ireland
  • Living (1950s TV series), a Canadian informational television series
  • Living (novel), a 1929 novel by Henry Green
  • Living (New Zealand TV channel), a New Zealand television station
  • Living (TV series), a local daytime show format airing on CBC Television
  • Living (EP)

    The Living EP is the first EP from The band Josephine Collective on the Warner Bros. record company. Produced by the legendary John Feldmann it is a "perfect blend of stuck-in-your-head choruses and smooth melodies". "Living" is the prelude to Josephine Collective's debut full length on Warner Brothers Records We Are The Air.

  • "Living" - 3:14
  • "Lye" - 2:57
  • "Crack My Heart" - 3:49
  • "We Killed The American Dream" - 3:39
  • http://www.smartpunk.com/product.php?item_id=21758

    Living (1950s TV series)

    Living was a Canadian informational television series which aired on CBC Television from 1954 to 1955.

    Premise

    Elaine Grand of Tabloid hosted this series on topics geared towards women such as child rearing, gardening and homemaking. Various subjects were covered by interviews with experts such as cooking with Eristella Langdon, crafts with Peter Whittall (who later hosted Mr. Fixit), design with John Hall, fashion with Iona Monahan, family medical topics with physician S.R. Laycock and gardening with Lois Lister. The show also covered more serious topics such as senior citizens concerns, adoption and drinking water fluoridation.

    Scheduling

    This half-hour series was broadcast at 7:30 p.m. on various selected weeknights from 3 May 1954 until 1 July 1955. The closure of Living coincided with Grand's departure for television projects in the United Kingdom such as Lucky Dip and Sharp at Four.

    References

    External links

  • Allan, Blaine (1996). "Living". Queen's University. Retrieved 7 May 2010. 
  • Pan

    Pan and panning can have many meanings as listed below in various categories.

    Prefix

  • Pan- as a prefix (Greek πᾶν, pan, "all", "of everything", "involving all members" of a group), e.g.:
  • Pan-American
  • Pan-Americanism
  • Pan-Africanism
  • Pan-Arabism
  • Pan-Asian
  • Pan-Celticism
  • Pan-European
  • Pan-Germanism
  • Pan-Iranism
  • Pan-Islamism
  • Pan-Scandinavianism
  • Pan-Somalism
  • Pan-Slavism
  • Panathinaikos
  • Panegyric
  • Pangaea
  • Pantheism
  • Panentheism
  • Pantheon, a term in Greek Mythology
  • Pantheon, an ancient building in Rome
  • Pan (programming language)

    The pan configuration language allows the definition of machine configuration information and an associated schema with a simple, human-accessible syntax. A pan language compiler transforms the configuration information contained within a set of pan templates to a machine-friendly XML or json format.

    The pan language is used within the Quattor toolkit to define the desired configuration for one or more machines. The language is primarily a declarative language where elements in a hierarchical tree are set to particular values. The pan syntax is human-friendly and fairly simple, yet allows system administrators to simultaneously set configuration values, define an overall configuration schema, and validate the final configuration against the schema.

    Implementation

    The compiler panc serves as the defacto reference implementation of the language and is implemented in Java, at present it is not possible to execute the compiler with OpenJDK.

    A configuration is defined by a set of files, called templates, written in the pan language. These templates define simultaneously the configuration parameters, the configuration schema, and validation functions. Each template is named and is contained in a file having the same name. The syntax of a template file is simple:

    Pan (1995 film)

    Pan (also released under the title Two Green Feathers) is a 1995 Danish/Norwegian/German film directed by the Danish director Henning Carlsen. It is based on Knut Hamsun's 1894 novel of the same name, and also incorporates the short story "Paper on Glahn's Death", which Hamsun had written and published earlier, but which was later appended to editions of the novel. It is the fourth and most recent film adaptation of the novel—the novel was previously adapted into motion pictures in 1922, 1937, and 1962.

    Production

    In 1966 Carlsen had directed an acclaimed version of Hamsun's Hunger. Thirty years later he returned to Hamsun to make Pan, a book he called "one big poem". The film was produced primarily with Norwegian resources, and classified as a Norwegian film; Carlsen later expressed his dissatisfaction with the film's promotion by the Norwegian Film Institute, saying that the Institute had preferred to promote films with Norwegian directors. Carlsen said that he had decided to incorporate the "forgotten" material from "Glahn's Death" in order to find a "new angle" for filming the book. The Glahn's Death portion was filmed in Thailand, standing in for the India location in the novel (the 1922 film version had placed this material in Algeria).

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×