Whisper is a sound produced by whispering
Whisper or Whispers may refer to:
Whispers is the title of the second studio album by singer-songwriter & producer Thomas Anders, released in 1991. The album was produced by Paul Muggleton & Mike Paxman (Nick Kamen) and mixed by Stephen W Tayler. Some tracks for the album were provided by songwriters of Roxette (Per Gessle) and Jennifer Rush (Candy DeRouge). It features a remake of The Stylistics' classics Can't Give You Anything (But My Love). Backing vocals were provided by Judie Tzuke and Don Snow (ex-Squeeze). The Sweet Hello, The Sad Goodbye, Can't Give You Anything (But My Love) and True Love were released as singles.
Trish Thuy Trang (born December 15, 1980) is a Vietnamese American singer and songwriter.
She was born in Saigon, Vietnam on December 15, 1980. When she was young, she was already familiar with American music styles by listening to Madonna, Mariah Carey and Sheryl Crow. As a result, her music is a mix of Asian pop and western pop and R&B. Her parents saw the passion she had for music and encourage her into piano lessons. Later on, she started to learn different types of artistic skill that nurtured her talent and let her be where she is today. Some of the skills she learned include: singing in the choir, sewing, painting, drawing, and poetry. After a while, karaoke become famous at home, and as Trish displayed her amazing singing skill, friends encouraged her to send a demo to Asia Entertainment. Asia Entertainment was amazed at her skill in fluently singing both English and Vietnamese that they accepted her.
She writes and produces a majority of her own music and lyrics. She appears on Asia Entertainment videos for the Vietnamese music community and collaborates with Asia Entertainment and Triple T Productions for CD productions. Trish Thuy Trang is one of the first Vietnamese singers to appear on iTunes, where her fourth CD Trish can be downloaded. Her fifth album, entitled Shades of Blue, was released in April 2008. Her 6th album, entitled "Whispers" was released in 2010.
In particle physics, a kaon /ˈkeɪ.ɒn/, also called a K meson and denoted K, is any of a group of four mesons distinguished by a quantum number called strangeness. In the quark model they are understood to be bound states of a strange quark (or antiquark) and an up or down antiquark (or quark).
Kaons have proved to be a copious source of information on the nature of fundamental interactions since their discovery in cosmic rays in 1947. They were essential in establishing the foundations of the Standard Model of particle physics, such as the quark model of hadrons and the theory of quark mixing (the latter was acknowledged by a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2008). Kaons have played a distinguished role in our understanding of fundamental conservation laws: CP violation, a phenomenon generating the observed matter–antimatter asymmetry of the universe, was discovered in the kaon system in 1964 (which was acknowledged by a Nobel Prize in 1980). Moreover, direct CP violation was also discovered in the kaon decays in the early 2000s.
KAON (Karlsruhe ontology) is an ontology infrastructure developed by the University of Karlsruhe and the Research Center for Information Technologies in Karlsruhe. Its first incarnation was developed in 2002 and supported an enhanced version of RDF ontologies. Several tools like the graphical ontology editor OIModeler or the KAON Server were based on KAON.
There are ontology learning companion tools which take non-annotated natural language text as input: TextToOnto (KAON-based) and Text2Onto (KAON2-based). Text2Onto is based on the Probabilistic Ontology Model (POM).
In 2005, the first version of KAON2 was released, offering fast reasoning support for OWL ontologies. KAON2 is not backward-compatible with KAON. KAON2 is developed as a joint effort of the Information Process Engineering (IPE) at the Research Center for Information Technologies (FZI), the Institute of Applied Informatics and Formal Description Methods (AIFB) at the University of Karlsruhe, and the Information Management Group (IMG) at the University of Manchester.