SFK Lyn

Ski- og Fotballklubben Lyn (lit. "Ski and Football Club Lightning") is a Norwegian alliance sports club from Nordre Aker, Oslo. It has two sections; for association football and Nordic skiing. Until 2010 they had a third section, for top-level association football, named FK Lyn. In the skiing is also embedded orienteering, triathlon and track and field.

General history

The club was founded as IF Lyn on 3 March 1896. It originated in St. Hanshaugen, and was a club for boys aged 12 to 14. The first sports were association football (the club was a founding member of the Football Association of Norway in 1902), cross-country skiing and ski jumping. Other sports like ice hockey, bandy, orienteering and tennis were tried but later discontinued. The club colors are red, white and blue.

FK Lyn

FK Lyn was the name of the top-level football section. It consisted of a men's senior team, a B team and a men's junior team. It fielded for many decades as SFK Lyn until top and grassroots football was divided into two. The elite section held the name FC Lyn Oslo for some years. It took over the history, records and achievements of SFK Lyn's football section.

Lyn

Lyn or LYN may refer to:

A surname, variant of Lynn

In television and film:

  • Euros Lyn, Welsh director for television
  • Lyn Ashley, Australian actress who worked in the United Kingdom on television during the 1960s
  • Lyn Brown (journalist), African American anchorwoman
  • Lyn Collingwood, Australian television and film actress
  • Lyn Harding, British actor
  • Lyn James, actress
  • In biochemistry:

  • Lyn, a Src-Family Kinase
  • Inanimate entities:

  • Lynx (constellation), standard abbreviation
  • In other fields:

  • LYN, the IATA Code for Lyon–Bron Airport
  • Lyn, a photography image editing and database application for Apple's Mac OS X platform
  • Lyn Fotball, Norwegian football club from Oslo established in 1896
  • Lyn, a character from the Fire Emblem series
  • Lyn (singer), South Korean singer
  • Lyn Brown (politician), British politician
  • Lyn Hejinian, United States poet, essayist, translator and publisher
  • Lyn (locomotive), a British narrow gauge railway locomotive built in 1897 for the Lynton and Barnstaple Railway
  • Lyn Me, a character in the Star Wars universe
  • LYN

    Tyrosine-protein kinase Lyn is a protein that in humans is encoded in humans by the LYN gene.

    Lyn is a member of the Src family of protein tyrosine kinases, which is mainly expressed in hematopoietic cells, in neural tissues liver, and adipose tissue. In various hematopoietic cells, Lyn has emerged as a key enzyme involved in the regulation of cell activation. In these cells, a small amount of LYN is associated with cell surface receptor proteins, including the B cell antigen receptor (BCR),CD40, or CD19. The abbreviation Lyn is derived from Lck/Yes novel tyrosine kinase, Lck and Yes also being members of the Src kinase family.

    Function

    Lyn has been described to have an inhibitory role in myeloid lineage proliferation. Following engagement of the B cell receptors, Lyn undergoes rapid phosphorylation and activation. LYN activation triggers a cascade of signaling events mediated by Lyn phosphorylation of tyrosine residues within the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAM) of the receptor proteins, and subsequent recruitment and activation of other kinases including Syk, phosholipase Cγ2 (PLCγ2) and phosphatidyl inositol-3 kinase. These kinases provide activation signals, which play critical roles in proliferation, Ca2+ mobilization and cell differentiation. Lyn plays an essential role in the transmission of inhibitory signals through phosphorylation of tyrosine residues within the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motifs (ITIM) in regulatory proteins such as CD22, PIR-B and FCγRIIb1. Their ITIM phosphorylation subsequently leads to recruitment and activation of phosphatases such as SHIP-1 and SHP-1, which further downmodulate signaling pathways, attenuate cell activation and can mediate tolerance. In B cells, Lyn sets the threshold of cell signaling and maintains the balance between activation and inhibition. Lyn thus functions as a rheostat that modulates signaling rather than as a binary on-off switch.

    Lyn (singer)

    Lee Se-jin (born on Seoul, South Korea on 9 November 1981) is a South Korean R&B singer known professionally as Lyn. She has released ten full albums to date.

    Biography

    Lyn was born in Seoul, South Korea on 9 November 1981. She graduated from Seoul High School and attended University of Seoul.

    Career

    Lyn was first scouted by an agency because of her voice and from there, she first made her debut under her real name, Lee Se-jin, and released an album. The album sold poorly and was barely known. Lyn then took some time off to train vocally. She made a comeback in 2002 under the name Lyn with her supposedly first album Have You Ever Have A Broken Heart?. It was very successful and was able to shoot her up to one of the top R&B female solo singer of the year. After a surprise two years hiatus, Lyn released her second album Can U See The Bright. The album was very successful, surpassing her previous album with her popular single, "사랑했잖아" (Used To Love). Due to its popularity, the song was eventually covered on another successful singer Lee Seung-gi's album, released in late 2006. Lyn released her third album, The Pride of the Morning, on March 7, 2007, and sold 15,358 copies in that month, placing second in the Music Industry Association of Korea's monthly chart. Again, it was a success and was once again reclaim her title as one of the best R&B female singer. Overall her album sold 25,171 copies. Lyn then released more albums afterwards, and did not become very successful, but in 2009 she made a comeback with her 5th album called 'Let Go, Let In, It's a New Day'. In early 2012, she released her 7th album title 'Love Fiction'.

    Sound Forge

    Sony Sound Forge (formerly known as Sonic Foundry Sound Forge) is a digital audio editing suite by Sony Creative Software which is aimed at the professional and semi-professional markets.

    A limited version sold as Sound Forge Audio Studio provides an inexpensive entry-level digital audio editor; it was formerly known as Sonic Foundry's Sound Forge LE.

    By 2003, Sonic Foundry, the parent company of Sound Forge faced losses and tough competition from much larger companies and as a result, agreed to sell its desktop audio and music production product family to Sony Pictures Digital for $18 million.

    The software initially had Windows 3.x support, but after version 3.0 all 16-bit support was dropped. Additionally, Windows 95 support was dropped after Sound Forge 5.0.

    Features

  • Real-time sample level wave editor
  • Stereo and Multi-channel Recording
  • High resolution audio support: 24-Bit, 32-Bit, 64-bit (IEEE float) 192 kHz
  • Video support including AVI, WMV, and MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 (both PAL and NTSC) for use in frame by frame synchronisation of audio and video
  • SFK (disambiguation)

    SFK may refer to:

  • SoundForge peak audio file extension
  • Something for Kate, Australian rock band
  • Siófok-Kiliti Airport, Hungary (IATA code)
  • SFK Lyn, Norwegian sports club
  • SFK 2000, women's football club from Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • SFK Varavīksne, Latvian football club
  • ŠFK Prenaks Jablonec, Slovak football team,
  • SFK Nová Ves nad Váhom, Slovak football team
  • SFK 2000

    WFC SFK 2000 Sarajevo (BIH) is a women's football club based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The club competes in the highest level of women's football in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Bosnian women's football championship. The club was established in June 2000; the name was chosen from a lower-tier men's football club which is now defunct.

    Following its foundation, the club quickly won the national championship, and has subsequently dominated women's football in the country, winning 12 consecutive titles. The club has participated in the UEFA Women's Cup from 2003 onwards but never reached the final rounds. In the 2009–10 UEFA Women's Champions League, when the competition was rebranded and reorganized, the side started in the round of 32 but lost to Russia's Zvezda 2005 Perm 8–0 on aggregate. In the next two years the team had to go through the qualifying phase, failing both times, but in the 2012–13 UEFA Women's Champions League they managed to qualify after hosting the qualifying phase in Sarajevo and defeating two clubs which played the round of 32 of the previous season of the Women's champions league.

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