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Terry Vance (born November 26, 1953, in Bristol, Virginia) is an American former professional motorcycle drag racer, racing team owner and manufacturer of high performance parts for motorcycles. [1] He is a fourteen-time motorcycle drag racing national champion.
Andrew Hines (born May 25, 1983 in Villa Park, California) is a six-time National Hot Rod Association Pro Stock Motorcycle champion. [1] He was the flagship Screamin' Eagle/Vance & Hines Harley-Davidson V-rod. Andrew follows in the footsteps of his brother and crew chief, Matt Hines (NHRA Champion 1996, 97, 98).
FP4 may refer to: CFP4, an International Civil Aviation Organization airport code for McQuesten Airport, Yukon, Canada; FP4 plus, a black-and-white photographic film by Ilford Photo, latest version being called FP4 Plus or FP4+ Fourth Framework Programme (FP4), a European Union funding scheme for research projects; The Roland FP4, an electric piano
Fairphone 4 is a smartphone designed and marketed by Fairphone.It succeeds the Fairphone 3+ and was succeeded by the Fairphone 5.It was announced on 30 September 2021, and was available for order from 25 October 2021 [3] to December 2024 [4].
Several earlier 16-bit floating point formats have existed including that of Hitachi's HD61810 DSP of 1982 (a 4-bit exponent and a 12-bit mantissa), [2] Thomas J. Scott's WIF of 1991 (5 exponent bits, 10 mantissa bits) [3] and the 3dfx Voodoo Graphics processor of 1995 (same as Hitachi).
Double-precision floating-point format (sometimes called FP64 or float64) is a floating-point number format, usually occupying 64 bits in computer memory; it represents a wide range of numeric values by using a floating radix point.
The fine, even grain produced is beneficial for digital scanning. FX-55 is particularly suitable for high-tech grain films which normally have less underexposure latitude than the traditional types such as Ilford Pan F+, FP4+ and HP5+ films and Kodak Plus X and Tri-X Pan.
Trump v. Vance, 591 U.S. 786 (2020), was a landmark [1] [2] US Supreme Court case arising from a subpoena issued in August 2019 by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. against Mazars, then-President Donald Trump's accounting firm, for Trump's tax records and related documents, as part of his ongoing investigation into the Stormy Daniels scandal.