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  2. Live for Speed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_for_Speed

    Live for Speed (LFS) is a racing simulator developed by a three-person team comprising Scawen Roberts, Eric Bailey, and Victor van Vlaardingen with its latest release in 2024. The main focus is to provide a realistic racing experience for the online multiplayer game and to allow single player races against AI cars.

  3. LFE (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LFE_(programming_language)

    A full read–eval–print loop (REPL) for interactive development and testing (unlike Erlang's shell, the LFE REPL supports function and macro definitions) Pattern matching; Hot loading of code; A Lisp-2 separation of namespaces for variables and functions; Java inter-operation via JInterface and Erjang; Scripting abilities with both lfe and ...

  4. LFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LFS

    Live for Speed, a series of computer racing simulator; Linux From Scratch, a kit for building Linux distributions; Large File Summit, an industry initiative to form large file support

  5. Bass management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_management

    The LFE channel is a separate channel that contains low frequencies only, and it was originally added to magnetic 70mm-movie soundtracks in the 1970s, to be reproduced through subwoofers. [5] It is designed to be amplified by 10 dB on playback and summed into the signal going to the subwoofer.

  6. Log-structured File System (BSD) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log-structured_File_System...

    The Log-Structured File System (or LFS) is an implementation of a log-structured file system (a concept originally proposed and implemented by John Ousterhout), originally developed for BSD. It was removed from FreeBSD and OpenBSD ; the NetBSD implementation was nonfunctional until work leading up to the 4.0 release made it viable again as a ...

  7. Low-frequency effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-frequency_effects

    The widely used 5.1-channel audio system consists of five full-range main (Left, Center, Right, Left rear Surround, and Right rear Surround) plus a Low-Frequency Effects (LFE) channel. Many typical home theater systems, especially home theater in a box systems, are incapable of accurately reproducing LFE in the 20 Hz range.

  8. Linux From Scratch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_From_Scratch

    LFS Live CD contains all the source packages (in the full version of the Live CD only), the LFS book, automated building tools and (except for the minimal Live CD version) an Xfce GUI environment to work in. The official LFS Live CD is no longer maintained, and cannot be used to build the LFS version7 or later. [9]

  9. LFE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LFE

    The word LFE may refer to: Low-frequency effects, a channel used in surround sound; Lambda Phi Epsilon, a nationally recognized Asian-interest fraternity based in the United States; Leicester Forest East, a settlement community to the west of Leicester, UK; Lisp Flavoured Erlang, a dialect of Erlang with Lisp-like syntax