The Box

The Box may refer to:

Boxes

  • Box (torture), a method of solitary confinement
  • Police interrogation room
  • "Thinking outside the box", an expression meaning "thinking unconventionally"
  • The penalty box in ice hockey
  • A nickname for Area 51
  • Places

  • The Box Soho, an x-rated club in Soho, London, and sister club to the Manhattan club
  • Books

  • The Box (Grass book), by Günter Grass
  • The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger, by Marc Levinson
  • Film and TV

  • The Box, a 1967 Oscar-winning short animation by Fred Wolf
  • The Box (2003 film), starring James Russo
  • The Box (2007 film), starring Gabrielle Union
  • The Box (2009 film), starring Cameron Diaz
  • Television

  • The box, British slang for a television set
  • The Box (UK and Ireland TV channel), a music video television formerly known as Video Jukebox Network
  • The Box (UK and Ireland TV channel)

    The Box is a television channel in the United Kingdom and Ireland. The channel is one of many within The Box Plus Network, a joint venture between Channel Four Television Corporation and Bauer Media Group. The channel mainly broadcasts music videos, although it also features other music-related programming from 4Music. The channel broadcasts from 07:00 to 03:00 (or 20 hours) every day, with teleshopping being shown during the channel's downtime.

    History

    The channel was brought to the United Kingdom by Vincent Monsey (of Radio Caroline fame) and his partner Liz Laskowski, who discovered the channel in Miami in 1991 as The Jukebox Network. The UK company, Video Jukebox Network International Limited, was formed in 1991 and the channel was launched in April 1992 as The Box in the early days of cable television, carried by four operators United Artists, Telewest in London and Bristol, Nynex in the south of England, and Videotron which is also based in London.

    Containerization

    Containerization is a system of intermodal freight transport using intermodal containers (also called shipping containers and ISO containers) made of weathering steel. The containers have standardized dimensions. They can be loaded and unloaded, stacked, transported efficiently over long distances, and transferred from one mode of transport to another—container ships, rail transport flatcars, and semi-trailer trucks—without being opened. The handling system is completely mechanized so that all handling is done with cranes and special forklift trucks. All containers are numbered and tracked using computerized systems.

    The system, developed after World War II, dramatically reduced transport costs, supported the post-war boom in international trade, and was a major element in globalization. Containerization did away with the manual sorting of most shipments and the need for warehousing. It displaced many thousands of dock workers who formerly handled break bulk cargo. Containerization also reduced congestion in ports, significantly shortened shipping time and reduced losses from damage and theft.

    SL2

    SL2 may refer to:

  • SL2 (group), British DJ and dance rave act
  • Leicaflex SL2, a Leica mechanical reflex camera favoured by press photographers
  • SL2, dirigeable airship used for bombing Warsaw in WWI
  • SL2, car in the Saturn S-Series
  • SL2 flavivirus, clones in cancer research
  • SL2 RNA, a non-coding RNA involved in trans splicing in lower eukaryotes
  • SL postcode area, the Slough postal region covering Farnham
  • the mathematical structure SL2 (F), special linear group
  • Special linear Lie algebra \mathfrak{sl}_2
  • Skylab 2 (SL-2), a NASA space mission
  • Situational Leadership II, a leadership theory developed by Paul Hersey
  • Silver Line (MBTA)

    The Silver Line is the bus rapid transit (BRT) system of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). It currently operates four routes in two sections that were built in separate phases.

    The first section has two routes from Dudley Square in Roxbury, mostly via Washington Street, to Boston's Downtown Crossing (SL5) and South Station (SL4), using articulated buses operating in reserved lanes. The second section runs from South Station Under to South Boston (SL2) and to Logan Airport in East Boston (SL1). It runs dual-mode buses, partly in a dedicated bus tunnel and partly on shared roadway, including surface streets, the Ted Williams Tunnel, and airport roads. Riders can transfer between the sections and to other lines at South Station; transfers there between SL1, SL2, and the Red Line—but not SL4—are within fare control. At South Station, however, a transfer from SL1, SL2, and the Red Line to SL4 (and vice versa) can be made by walking alongside streets.

    Speed and schedule performance have disappointed some transit advocates and the Silver Line routes fall far short of the minimum BRT Standard promulgated by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP). Some sections have an exclusive right-of-way, but other sections are bogged down by street running in congested mixed traffic. As of September 2014, a contract has been awarded for the first phase of an extension to Chelsea, Massachusetts, largely in reserved right-of-way; other extensions of the Silver Line are being studied as well.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    The Box

    by: Randy Travis

    On the top shelf in the closet in the workshop where he spent his extra time
    Was a dusty wooden box but I had never noticed till that time
    Then we set it on the table and carefully we opened up the top
    And stared into the memories daddy kept inside the box
    There was a letter from mama when
    She went out to Reno to help her sister out in sixty two
    And a flower from Hawaii when they went on vacation
    It was the first time that my daddy ever flew
    And the pocket knife I gave to him on fathers day
    Years ago I thought it had been lost
    We all thought his heart was made of solid rock
    But that was long before we found the box
    I guess we always knew it, but 'I love you' was hard for him to say
    Some men show it easily and some just never seem to find the way
    But that night I began to see a softer side of someone I had lost
    I saw the love he kept inside the first time when we opened up the box
    There was a picture that was taken
    When he and mom were dating standin' by his 1944
    And the faded leather Bible, he got when he was baptized
    I guess no one understood him like the Lord
    And the poem that he had written about his wife and children
    The tender words he wrote were quite a shock
    We all thought his heart was made of solid rock
    But that was long before we found the box
    We all thought his heart was made of solid rock




    ×