Twice may refer to:
Twice is a novel by bestselling author Lisa Unger writing as Lisa Miscione. It is the third book featuring Lydia Strong.
Twice (ISSN-0892-7278) is a trade publication and web site owned by NewBay Media serving the information needs of retailers, distributors and manufacturing representatives in the consumer electronics and major appliance industries. TWICE is an acronym for This Week In Consumer Electronics.
The editor-in-chief was Stephen Smith, until June 2014. He is now Editor at Large. Current Editor in Chief is John Laposky. The editorial offices located in New York, New York, USA.
Established in 1986, TWICE magazine is published twice monthly with an extra issue in January and September. Common topics covered include consumer electronics and major appliance retailing and distribution, custom home installation and networking, home and portable audio and video equipment, digital imaging, portable digital communication devices, small office and home office products and technology, computer technology and accessories.
TWICE.com offers live, continually updated daily breaking news and product coverage, "TWICE on the Scene Video" interviews with industry executives, industry blogs, photo galleries and "By The Numbers" statistical stories and research. Readers can register to receive a daily eNewsletter and Breaking News alerts as they occur.
LSB may refer to:
In computing, bit numbering (or sometimes bit endianness) is the convention used to identify the bit positions in a binary number or a container for such a value. The bit number starts with zero and is incremented by one for each subsequent bit position.
When the bit numbering starts at zero for the least significant bit the numbering scheme is called "LSB 0". This bit numbering method has the advantage that for any unsigned number the value of the number can be calculated by using exponentiation with the bit number and a base of 2. The value of an unsigned binary integer is therefore
where bi denotes the value of the bit with number i, and N denotes the number of bits in total.
Similarly, when the bit numbering starts at zero for the most significant bit the numbering scheme is called "MSB 0".
The value of an unsigned binary integer is therefore
ALGOL 68's elem operator is effectively "MSB 1 bit numbering" as the bits are numbered from left to right, with the first bit (bits elem 1) being the "most significant bit", and the expression (bits elem bits width) giving the "least significant bit". Similarly, when bits are coerced (typecast) to an array of Boolean ([ ]bool bits), the first element of this array (bits[lwb bits]) is again the "most significant bit".
I understand The problem
Never thought that it would leave me empty
I don't expect you leave me something...
I could hold on to
Crashing windows made you feel so lucky
Being caught was like a whole new beating
Now, you're gone I'm feeling so unlucky
Way too much guilt...but now
[Chorus]
You've been lying in that small box for 42 days, But I'm still left behind, oh yeah
Are you thinkin' I've got something I didn't say? There's nothing else to say........
Many people tried to save you somehow
They could never reach you quite as I did
I've been living your life til it crumbled
My anger's fading now
[Chorus]
[Solo]
They'd question all your problems; shameless, What's your problem, is it self explaining?
I don't think they worry too much about you, I find it hard sometimes
Life's a bitch, ain't it? Hardly fakin' it.
Aren't you really fuckin' sick of it all?
Lengths and silences, no words just violence
We've been taking our chances..............