FIT (magazine)
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FIT (magazine)
Fit or FIT may refer to: Health and medicine * Epileptic seizure * Feature integration theory * Fecal immunochemical test * Physical fitness ** Physical attractiveness (colloquial) * Tantrum Education * Fashion Institute of Technology, in New York City, United States * Florida Institute of Technology, in Melbourne, Florida, United States * Fortune Institute of Technology, in Kaohsiung, Taiwan * Faculty of Information Technology, in Prague, Czech Republic Entertainment * Fitt/fit, a division of Old or Middle English poetry * ''Fit'' (film), a 2010 British film * FitTV, a cable television network * '' Wii Fit'', a 2007 video game * Fit, in contract bridge * Fit (TV series), a CBBC original series; see 2013 in British television Mathematics * Curve fitting * Finite integration technique * First isomorphism theorem * Five intersecting tetrahedra Sport * FIT (''Federazione Italiana Tennis'') Technology * Fit (manufacturing) * Engineering fit * Failures in time ...
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Epileptic Seizure
An epileptic seizure, informally known as a seizure, is a period of symptoms due to abnormally excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain. Outward effects vary from uncontrolled shaking movements involving much of the body with loss of consciousness ( tonic-clonic seizure), to shaking movements involving only part of the body with variable levels of consciousness ( focal seizure), to a subtle momentary loss of awareness (absence seizure). Most of the time these episodes last less than two minutes and it takes some time to return to normal. Loss of bladder control may occur. Seizures may be provoked and unprovoked. Provoked seizures are due to a temporary event such as low blood sugar, alcohol withdrawal, abusing alcohol together with prescription medication, low blood sodium, fever, brain infection, or concussion. Unprovoked seizures occur without a known or fixable cause such that ongoing seizures are likely. Unprovoked seizures may be exacerbated by stress or ...
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Fit (TV Series)
Fit or FIT may refer to: Health and medicine * Epileptic seizure * Feature integration theory * Fecal immunochemical test * Physical fitness ** Physical attractiveness (colloquial) * Tantrum Education * Fashion Institute of Technology, in New York City, United States * Florida Institute of Technology, in Melbourne, Florida, United States * Fortune Institute of Technology, in Kaohsiung, Taiwan * Faculty of Information Technology, in Prague, Czech Republic Entertainment * Fitt/fit, a division of Old or Middle English poetry * ''Fit'' (film), a 2010 British film * FitTV, a cable television network * ''Wii Fit'', a 2007 video game * Fit, in contract bridge * Fit (TV series), a CBBC original series; see 2013 in British television Mathematics * Curve fitting * Finite integration technique * First isomorphism theorem * Five intersecting tetrahedra Sport * FIT (''Federazione Italiana Tennis'') Technology * Fit (manufacturing) * Engineering fit * Failures in time, or fa ...
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Honda Fit
The Honda Fit (Japanese: ホンダ・フィット, Hepburn: ''Honda Fitto'') or Honda Jazz is a small car manufactured and marketed by Honda since 2001 and now in its fourth generation. It has a five-door hatchback body style and is considered a supermini in the United Kingdom, a subcompact car in the United States, and a light car in Australia. Marketed worldwide and manufactured at ten plants in eight countries, sales reached almost 5 million by mid-2013. Honda uses the "Jazz" nameplate in Europe, Oceania, the Middle East, Africa, Hong Kong, Macau, Southeast Asia and India; and "Fit" in Japan, Sri Lanka, China, Taiwan and the Americas. Sharing Honda's global small car platform with the City, Airwave, first-generation Mobilio, Freed and HR-V/Vezel, the Fit is noted for its one-box or monospace design; forward-located fuel tank; configurable seats that Honda calls "Magic Seats", that fold in several ways to accommodate cargo in varying shapes and sizes— and cargo volu ...
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Google Fit
Google Fit is a health-tracking platform developed by Google for the Android operating system, Wear OS and Apple Inc.'s iOS. It is a single set of APIs that blends data from multiple apps and devices. Google Fit uses sensors in a user's activity tracker or mobile device to record physical fitness activities (such as walking, cycling, etc.), which are measured against the user's fitness goals to provide a comprehensive view of their fitness. History Google Fit was announced at the Google I/O conference on June 25, 2014. A software development kit for Google Fit was released on August 7, 2014. Fit launched to the public on October 28, 2014. In August 2018, Google announced a revamp to its Android Fit platform which adds activity goals based on activity recommendations from the American Heart Association and the World Health Organization. The updates are meant to help Fit better provide metrics for activities other than walking and encourage users to engage in activities that w ...
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Flight Interception Trap
A flight interception trap (or FIT) is a widely used trapping, killing, and preserving system for flying insects. It is especially well-suited for collecting beetles, since these animals usually drop themselves after flying into an object,
rather than flying upward (in which case a Malaise trap is a better option). Flight Interception Traps are mainly used to collect flying species which are not likely to be attracted to bait or light.


Construction

The basis of any Flight Interception Trap consists of an upright placed see-through barrier under which one or more small basins are placed. The barrier may co ...
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Failures In Time
Failure rate is the frequency with which an engineered system or component fails, expressed in failures per unit of time. It is usually denoted by the Greek letter λ (lambda) and is often used in reliability engineering. The failure rate of a system usually depends on time, with the rate varying over the life cycle of the system. For example, an automobile's failure rate in its fifth year of service may be many times greater than its failure rate during its first year of service. One does not expect to replace an exhaust pipe, overhaul the brakes, or have major transmission problems in a new vehicle. In practice, the mean time between failures (MTBF, 1/λ) is often reported instead of the failure rate. This is valid and useful if the failure rate may be assumed constant – often used for complex units / systems, electronics – and is a general agreement in some reliability standards (Military and Aerospace). It does in this case ''only'' relate to the flat region of the bat ...
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Engineering Fit
Engineering fits are generally used as part of geometric dimensioning and tolerancing when a part or assembly is designed. In engineering terms, the "fit" is the clearance between two mating parts, and the size of this clearance determines whether the parts can, at one end of the spectrum, move or rotate independently from each other or, at the other end, are temporarily or permanently joined. Engineering fits are generally described as a "shaft and hole" pairing, but are not necessarily limited to just round components. ISO is the internationally accepted standard for defining engineering fits, but ANSI is often still used in North America. ISO and ANSI both group fits into three categories: clearance, location or transition, and interference. Within each category are several codes to define the size limits of the hole or shaft - the combination of which determines the type of fit. A fit is usually selected at the design stage according to whether the mating parts need to be accu ...
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Fit (manufacturing)
In precision mechanics, fit refers to the degree of 'looseness' with which a shaft is inserted into a bored hole. This coupling is related to the tolerance or allowance of both parts' dimensions. The shaft and the orifice must be of a similar diameter, otherwise there will not be a correct adjustment. With this in mind, measurements have been internationally standardised according to ISO regulation to ensure the interchangeability of items and their mass production. Tolerance values are designated with a capital letter in the case of orifices and lower case letters in the case of shafts. The lower the value the higher the machining costs, as a greater precision is required. Maximum and minimum clearance The maximum clearance of a fit is the difference between the upper bound of the orifice diameter and the lower bound of the shaft diameter. : maximum clearance = maximum orifice diameter – minimum shaft diameter The minimum clearance meanwhile is the difference between the l ...
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Italian Tennis Federation
The Italian Tennis Federation ( it, Federazione Italiana Tennis, FIT) is the national governing body for the Tennis sport in Italy. History The FIT was born in Florence in 1910 with just 26 affiliated clubs. Davis and Fed Cup ATP Cup United Cup Presidents Here are the 110 years of presidents of the ''Italian Tennis Federation''. *1910: Marquess Piero Antinori *1913 - 1927: Beppe Croce *1928: Augusto Turati *1929 - 1938: Alessandro Lessona *1939: Attilio Fontan *1940 - 1941: Erberto Vasellia *1943: Giorgio de' Stefani (Regent Presidential Committee) *1944: Riccardo Sabbadini (Regent CONI) *1949 - 1956: Aldo Tolusso *1958 - 1969: Giorgio de' Stefani *1969 - 1973: Luigi Orsini *1973 - 1976: Giorgio Neri *1976 - 1988: Paolo Galgani *1988 - 1989: Mario Pescante (Commissary) *1989 - 1998: Paolo Galgani *1998 - 2000: Francesco Ricci Bitti *2000: Gianguido Sacchi Morsiani (Commissary) *2000: Luigi Tronchetti Provera (Commissary) *from 2001: Broadcast The federation also has a sat ...
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Five Intersecting Tetrahedra
The compound of five tetrahedra is one of the five regular polyhedral compounds. This compound polyhedron is also a stellation of the regular icosahedron. It was first described by Edmund Hess in 1876. It can be seen as a faceting of a regular dodecahedron. As a compound It can be constructed by arranging five tetrahedra in rotational icosahedral symmetry (I), as colored in the upper right model. It is one of five regular compounds which can be constructed from identical Platonic solids. It shares the same vertex arrangement as a regular dodecahedron. There are two enantiomorphous forms (the same figure but having opposite chirality) of this compound polyhedron. Both forms together create the reflection symmetric compound of ten tetrahedra. It has a density of higher than 1. As a stellation It can also be obtained by stellating the icosahedron, and is given as Wenninger model index 24. As a facetting It is a faceting of a dodecahedron, as shown at left. Group t ...
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First Isomorphism Theorem
In mathematics, specifically abstract algebra, the isomorphism theorems (also known as Noether's isomorphism theorems) are theorems that describe the relationship between quotients, homomorphisms, and subobjects. Versions of the theorems exist for groups, rings, vector spaces, modules, Lie algebras, and various other algebraic structures. In universal algebra, the isomorphism theorems can be generalized to the context of algebras and congruences. History The isomorphism theorems were formulated in some generality for homomorphisms of modules by Emmy Noether in her paper ''Abstrakter Aufbau der Idealtheorie in algebraischen Zahl- und Funktionenkörpern'', which was published in 1927 in Mathematische Annalen. Less general versions of these theorems can be found in work of Richard Dedekind and previous papers by Noether. Three years later, B.L. van der Waerden published his influential ''Moderne Algebra'' the first abstract algebra textbook that took the groups-rings-fields a ...
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