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Thin Thin Khaing


Thin Thin Khaing (born 4 May 1978) is an athlete from Myanmar. She competes in archery. Thin represented Myanmar at the 2004 Summer Olympics. She placed 38th in the women's individual ranking round with a 72-arrow score of 622. In the first round of elimination, she faced 27th-ranked Malgorzata Sobieraj of Poland. Thin forced a tie-breaker by tying the match at 151 after the regulation 18 arrows. She then matched Sobieraj arrow for arrow through the three tie-breaker arrows, shooting two 9s and an 8. Unfortunately for Thin, Sobieraj's final arrow was slightly closer to the center of the target, allowing Sobieraj to advance and eliminating Daw Thin with a final rank of 39th overall in women's individual archery. Thin Thin Khaing Thin Thin Khaing

Thin Thin Khaing


Daw is her title which means about the same as mrs or ms in Englsih, it is not part of her name which is Thin Thin Khaing. Burmese names also do not have first/familynames! Waerth 06:03, 27 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Thinning


Thinning is in forestry a type of selective cutting primarily undertaken to make the forest more profitable in an upcoming final felling. Most of the harvest in thinnings is pulpwood as only mature trees are suitable for timber. In agriculture and gardening, thinning is the selective removal of seedlings or young plants to allow adequate space for the remaining plants to grow efficiently. In large-scale farming, techniques like precision seeding and transplanting can eliminate the need for thinning by starting plants at their optimum spacing. On a smaller scale, such as a home vegetable garden, thinning can be used as a way to make maximum use of space for certain crops. For example, beets, carrots, green onions and others can be planted densely, and then thinned to make room for continued growth, and also as a harvest of baby vegetables (beet greens, baby carrots, baby onions). Category:Forestry sv:Gallring (skogsbruk)

Thins


Thins is one of the largest brand of potato chips released in Australia and is owned by the Snack Brands Australia. Thins were originally owned by The Smith's Snackfood Company who introduced the North American brand, Lay's to Australia under the ''Thins'' moniker, with the marketting slogan, ''Thins, not as thick as some''. However after the product was sold to Snack Brands Australia, The Smith's Snackfood Company produced a line of potato chips under the 'Lays' brand name. Effectively, this results in their being two lines of potato chips released in Australia, owned by seperate companies but are effectively the same product, even sharing similar packaging since the Thins packet was designed off the Lays ones released in North America. As with Lay's sold in Australia, the most popular flavours are ''Chicken'', ''Original'' and ''Salt & Vinegar''. Category:Snack foods

Thin Client


A Thin client is a computer (client) in client-server architecture networks which has little or no application logic, so it has to depend primarily on the central server for processing activities. The word "thin" refers to the small boot image which such clients typically require - perhaps no more than required to connect to a network and start up a dedicated web browser. '''

Introduction

In designing a client-server application, there is a decision to be made as to which parts of the task should be done on the client, and which on the server. This decision can crucially affect the cost of clients and servers, the robustness and security of the application as a whole, and the flexibility of the design to later modification or porting. One design question is how application-specific the client software should be. Using standardized client software such as a Web browser or X11 display can save on development costs, since one does not need to develop a custom client—but one must accept the limitations of the standard client. Depending on the outcome of these decisions we might say that we use either a thin client or a thick/fat client (or a mixture of both).

Definitions

A thin client may be a program or a device for the execution of thin-client application programs. Unfortunately, however, there is no precise definition (in quantifiable terms) for when the client program or device may be called a thin client or not. However, it is widely accepted that a Windows XP boot image, which requires at least a DVD-ROM to store and copy onto a boot device, is "fat", while an X11 server or Linux boot image plus web browser, which typically fit on a floppy or jump drive, are by contrast quite "thin". There are also Windows thin clients of similar size.
Application Program
A thin client as an application program communicates with an application server and relies for most significant elements of its business logic on a separate

The Thin Man


The Thin Man is the title of the first of six comic detective films starring William Powell and Myrna Loy as Nick and Nora Charles, a hard-drinking and flirtatious married couple who banter wittily as easily as they solve crimes. Their dog, the Wire-Haired Fox Terrier, Asta, played by Skippy, was also a popular character. Completed in 1934 and nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, the film was directed by W.S. Van Dyke from a script by Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich; the screenplay was based on the novel by Dashiell Hammett, supposedly based on his relationship with playwright Lillian Hellman. Also appearing in the film were Maureen O'Sullivan, Nat Pendleton, Minna Gombell, Cesar Romero, Porter Hall, Henry Wadsworth, William Henry, Harold Huber and Natalie Moorhead. The "Thin Man" of the title was actually the murder victim, but the name was thought by virtually everyone to refer to Nick Charles, and it was used in the titles of the sequels, although no one ever called him that. (This is similar to the situation with ''Frankenstein'', where the name of the doctor who created the "monster" was applied to his creature in the film sequels to the novel.) This movie was followed by five more in the series: :''After the Thin Man'' (1936) :''Another Thin Man'' (1939) :''Shadow of the Thin Man'' (1941) :''The Thin Man Goes Home'' (1944) :''Song of the Thin Man'' (1947) The 1934 film has been selected for preservation in the United States' National Film Registry. There were also a radio series starring (at first) Les Damon and Claudia Morgan and a half-hour weekly TV series produced by MGM and shown on NBC for three seasons from 1957-1960. The TV series starred Peter Lawford (who became a hot item then, because his wife's brother John F. Kennedy was the successful candidate in the presidential election of 1960) and Phyllis Kirk as Nick and Nora Charles. Jack Albertson had a recurring role as well. In 1975, Craig Stevens and Jo Ann

The Thin Man


I've done all of the movie pages I've been working on in the same manner. Do you want to go back and change all of them? -- Zoe ----- Well, I don't know. Probably not, though if they read poorly then yes, I will. Usually publicists and agents are the only people who mention awards before plot. And if you're defensive about your writing, it might be less stressful to write where others can't edit it freely. :-) Cheers, Koyaanis Qatsi, Tuesday, July 9, 2002 :I'm more than happy for people to edit my things when it's important to make things right, but when you're changing things just for the sake of making them fit your idea of what it should look like, then there's no point in my making any contributions, is there? And what makes you the arbiter of what these entries should look like? -- Zoe ::Zoe, I don't think that is the point KQ is making. Different people have different ideas on the way articles should look and be arranged. It just so happens, that in wikipedia we tend to ''define'' a subject before going into the details. That's why KQ did a little rearranging -- so that the reader can first get an idea on what the movie is about before learning the awards it got. It's a matter of taste, but also a quasi-non-policy convention here. --maveric149, Wednesday, July 10, 2002 :::As I said, I have no problem with others changing my entries. Funny though, I got a "well done" from Danny yesterday. But now I'm told that what I'm doing is wrong. It seems like it's a matter of taste, but I'm told that there's a certain form that I should follow. Can you please tell me what that form is? -- Zoe ::::As with all good articles, first define what the subject ''is'' by stating important info. For a movie that would be a very general, one or maybe two sentence statement about the genre/plot (year of release, director, main actors and awards can be sprinkeled here or there within the definition. A definition should be about as informative as: "Alien is a science


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Ultra Thin Watch
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