Contents

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

Prefix [link]

Religion and mythology [link]

  • Pan (god), a god of nature in Greek mythology
    • Pan flute, a wind instrument he is often depicted playing

Science and technology [link]

Astronomy [link]

Chemistry [link]

Computing [link]

Geology [link]

  • Dry lake, or Pan, an ephemeral water body contained in a shallow, flat basin
  • Gold panning, a simple placer mining technique
  • Salt pan (geology), a shallow depression holding a playa, salt lake or related feature

Geography [link]

Multimedia Technologies [link]

  • Pan and scan, technique for reproducing wide-screen films on narrow TV screens
  • Panchromatic black-and-white film
  • Panning (audio), the spread of a monaural signal in a stereo or multi-channel sound field
  • Panning (camera), a movement of a film or video camera (rotating on a vertical axis)

Medical technology [link]

Zoology [link]

  • Pan, a genus of apes composed of the Common Chimpanzee and the Bonobo

Film [link]

Food and drink [link]

Fiction [link]

Honorifics [link]

Music [link]

  • Pan, short for steelpan, an acoustic instrument
  • Pan (The Blue Hearts), an album by the Japanese band The Blue Hearts
  • Pan, a Filipino rock band; see Yano
  • Pan, an opera by Carl Venth
  • Pan, a Danish prog/psych/blues rock band from the early 1970s
  • Pan, a Turkish band that performed Bana Bana at the Eurovision Song Contest 1989
  • Pan pipes, a musical instrument
  • Panning (audio), placement of a sound source in a stereo field using pan control or pan pot
  • Pan's People, a British dance troupe on Top of the pops

Publishing [link]

International ISO Standards [link]

Acronym [link]

The acronym PAN can refer to:

Government, politics, and organizations [link]

Other [link]

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Pan

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).

Pan (White)

Pan is a public artwork by sculptor Roger White located at the Indiana World War Memorial Plaza in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. This work was originally surveyed in 1993 as part of the Smithsonian's Save Outdoor Sculpture! program. A former water fountain, this piece is part of a National Historic Landmark District.

Description

It is a bronze figure of Pan sitting on a limestone tree stump. Pan is nude and his furry proper right knee is bent upwards to his chest with his other leg hangs over the side of the stump. The satyr holds a pan flute in his hand, holding it up to his mouth, as if playing it for nearby Syrinx.

Information

Pan was originally designed by Myra Reynolds Richards. Richards' original Syrinx and Pan sculptures were dedicated in 1923. Eventually, both pieces were stolen, with Syrinx disappearing in 1959 and Pan c. 1970. The parks department commissioned Adolph Wolter to replace the pieces, and in 1973 they were reinstalled in their current location in University Park at the Indiana World War Memorial Plaza. However, Wolter's Pan would eventually be stolen as well, and sculptor Roger White was commissioned to replace the piece. Pan was replaced in 1980 by White.

Pan (newsreader)

Pan is a news client for multiple operating systems, developed by Charles Kerr and others. It supports offline reading, multiple servers, multiple connections, fast (indexed) article header filtering and mass saving of multi-part attachments encoded in uuencode, yEnc and base64; images in common formats can be viewed inline. Pan is free software available for Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, OpenSolaris, and Windows.

Pan is popular for its large feature set. It passes the Good Netkeeping Seal of Approval 2.0 set of standards for newsreaders.

Name

The name Pan originally stood for Pimp-ass newsreader. As Pan became an increasingly popular and polished application, the full name was perceived to be unprofessional and in poor taste, so references to it have been removed from the program and its website.

See also

  • List of Usenet newsreaders
  • Comparison of Usenet newsreaders
  • References

    External links

  • Official website
  • Pan (horse)

    Pan (1805 circa 1822) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. In a career that lasted from June 1808 to July 1814 he had six different owners, ran twenty times and won nine races. His most important success came on his only appearance as a three-year-old in 1808 when he won the Derby as a 25/1 outsider. Pan won another eight races over the next four seasons, running mainly in match races at Newmarket. He raced for two more years without success before being retired as a nine-year-old in 1814.

    Background

    Pan's dam Arethusa, who was bred by the Prince of Wales, was one of the most successful broodmares of her era: apart from Pan she produced the leading stallion Walton the Derby winner Ditto and the Ascot Gold Cup winner Lutzen. Pan's sire St. George finished fifth in the 1792 Derby and raced up to the age of ten, winning many matches and Plate races. Pan was his most successful offspring. Pan was owned in his early racing career by his breeder, Sir Hedworth Williamson of Whitburn, near Sunderland.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×