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  2. Tissot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissot

    Tissot was founded in 1853 by Charles-Félicien Tissot and his son Charles-Émile Tissot in the Swiss city of Le Locle, in the Neuchâtel canton of the Jura Mountains area. [2] The father and son team worked as a casemaker (Charles-Félicien Tissot) and watchmaker (Charles-Emile). His son having expressed an interest in watchmaking from a young ...

  3. Pointing-out instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointing-out_instruction

    The pointing-out instruction (Tibetan: ངོ་སྤྲོད་, Wylie: ngo sprod, THL: ngo trö) is an introduction to the nature of mind in the Tibetan Buddhist lineages of Mahāmudrā and Dzogchen. In these traditions, a lama gives the pointing-out instruction in such a way that the disciple successfully recognizes the nature of mind.

  4. File:Two-point Equidistant with Tissot's Indicatrices of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Two-point_Equidistant...

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  5. Tissot's indicatrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissot's_indicatrix

    The Behrmann projection with Tissot's indicatrices The Mercator projection with Tissot's indicatrices. In cartography, a Tissot's indicatrix (Tissot indicatrix, Tissot's ellipse, Tissot ellipse, ellipse of distortion) (plural: "Tissot's indicatrices") is a mathematical contrivance presented by French mathematician Nicolas Auguste Tissot in 1859 and 1871 in order to characterize local ...

  6. Nicolas Auguste Tissot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolas_Auguste_Tissot

    Nicolas Auguste Tissot (French:; March 16, 1824 – July 14, 1907) was a French cartographer, who in 1859 and 1881 published an analysis of the distortion that occurs on map projections. He devised Tissot's indicatrix , or distortion circle, which when plotted on a map will appear as an ellipse whose elongation depends on the amount of ...

  7. Charles-Joseph Tissot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles-Joseph_Tissot

    Charles Tissot learned English, German, Spanish, Latin, Greek, as well as drawing through this upbringing. [4] Tissot studied at Lycée Charlemagne and continued at the Faculty of Law in Dijon. Admitted to the newly founded École d'administration , [5] he became a consul student in Tunis in 1852. He married in this city to Valentine-Marie ...

  8. Mathey-Tissot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathey-Tissot

    Mathey-Tissot is a Swiss watch maker of prestige watches, originally established in 1886 by Edmond Mathey-Tissot at Les Ponts-de-Martel in the canton of Neuchâtel in Switzerland. Mathey-Tissot is an independent watchmaker, with its headquarters in Geneva. It is not associated with Tissot, another Swiss watchmaking firm.

  9. Glion Institute of Higher Education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glion_Institute_of_Higher...

    Established in 1962 as the Institut International de Glion, the school was founded by Swiss professors Walter Hunziker and Frédéric Tissot on the site of the former Grand Hôtel Bellevue, in Montreux, Switzerland. The initial class consisted of fifteen students from five different countries, studying courses delivered in French.