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Limit

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Limit ( Japanese : リミット , Hepburn : Rimitto ) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Keiko Suenobu .

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26-460: (Redirected from Limits ) [REDACTED] Look up limit in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. [REDACTED] Wikiquote has quotations related to Limit . Limit or Limits may refer to: Arts and media [ edit ] Limit (manga) , a manga by Keiko Suenobu Limit (film) , a South Korean film Limit (music) ,

52-780: A capital of 1 billion yen. The Science and Technology Promotion Foundation has the television broadcasting license and facility management rights, while Tokyo Channel 12 Production is responsible for program arrangement and production, and advertising business. As Mainichi Broadcasting invested in the establishment of Tokyo Channel 12 Production Company, a network relationship was actually formed between Tokyo Channel 12 and Mainichi Broadcasting System during this period. Some programs of Tokyo Channel 12 were broadcast in Kinki through Mainichi Broadcasting . In 1969, Tokyo Channel 12 Production once again increased its capital by 1 billion yen, of which Nihon Keizai Shimbun invested 600 million yen, becoming

78-411: A function as a specified point is approached from below or from above Limit inferior and limit superior Limit of a net Limit point , in topological spaces Limit (category theory) Direct limit Inverse limit Other uses [ edit ] Limits (BDSM) , activities that a partner feels strongly about, and to which special attention is paid limits.h , the header of

104-521: A general purpose standard library of the C programming language Els Límits , a village in the municipality of La Jonquera, Catalonia Limit order , a type of order to buy a security at no more (or sell at no less) than a specific price on an exchange Speed limit , the maximum speed at which road vehicles may legally travel on particular stretches of road Setting limits , a life skill for protecting against having personal values compromised or violated A concept developed by Eugenio Trías : Being

130-467: A strong backlash from the labor union and led to a four-year dispute between the two. In 1967, Tokyo Channel 12 changed its reconstruction plan again, extending the daily broadcast time to 8 hours and 10 minutes, and Requesting companies in the financial sector to donate funds for reconstruction and restart advertising activities. At the same time, four other private TV stations in Tokyo and NHK also formed

156-482: A way to characterize harmony "Limit" (song) , a 2016 single by Luna Sea "Limits", a 2019 song by Paenda; see Austria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 Limits (collection) , a collection of short stories and essays by Larry Niven The Limit , a Dutch band "The Limit", an episode from Adventure Time "The Limit", an episode from The Amazing World of Gumball " The Limit

182-414: Is Just Me ", a documentary film about world's longest triathlon. Mathematics [ edit ] Limit (mathematics) , the value that a function or sequence "approaches" as the input or index approaches some value Limit of a function (ε,_δ)-definition of limit , formal definition of the mathematical notion of limit Limit of a sequence One-sided limit , either of the two limits of

208-764: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . TV Tokyo JOTX-DTV (channel 7), branded as TV Tokyo , is a Japanese television station that serves as the flagship of the TX Network . It is owned and operated by TV Tokyo Corporation , itself a subsidiary of the TV Tokyo Holdings Corporation , in turn controlled by Nikkei, Inc. It is headquartered in the Sumitomo Fudosan Roppongi Grand Tower in Roppongi , Minato, Tokyo . TV Tokyo

234-472: Is on their way to an exchange camp when the bus driver passes out and causes the bus to drop from a cliff. The few survivors gather together and try to survive until rescue arrives. A live-action drama version of the manga aired on TV Tokyo between July 12, 2013, and September 27, 2013. Cast Kurtuluş Lisesi , a Turkish television series adaptation was announced in August 2021. The series had aired on

260-572: Is one of the five private broadcasters based in Tokyo, and the last to have started its broadcasts on VHF. The predecessor of TV Tokyo was Tokyo Channel 12, which was broadcast using the bandwidth returned by the US military stationed in Japan. However, similar to Nihon Educational Television (NET TV), which was also a private educational television station, Tokyo Channel 12 faced a serious business crisis after its launch due to low ratings. Nikkei, Inc. took over

286-456: Is the being of limit See also [ edit ] All pages with titles containing limit Limited (disambiguation) Limitation (disambiguation) Limitless (disambiguation) Unlimited (disambiguation) No Limits (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Limit . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

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312-406: The 1964 Tokyo Olympics , Tokyo Channel 12 set aside all programs other than higher education for Olympic broadcasts, with the longest broadcast time among the flagship stations. However, due to the extremely low ratings of Tokyo Channel 12’s educational programs (in the first year of its launch, the average daily ratings of Tokyo Channel 12 were only 1% and only 2% during prime time). as well as

338-547: The Nikkei and MBS signed a memorandum of understanding which stipulated that Tokyo Channel 12 should share programs with Nihon Educational Television (NET, now TV Asahi ), this arrangement lasted until 1975. In October 1977 Tokyo Channel 12 Production was renamed Tokyo Channel 12, Ltd. ( 株式会社東京12チャンネル , Kabushiki-gaisha Tōkyō Jūni-channeru ) ; and shortened the channel's name to Tokyo Channel 12 ( 東京12チャンネル , Tōkyō Jūni-channeru ) , dropping "Science TV" from its name. At

364-520: The "Science TV Coordination Committee" to assist in the reconstruction of Tokyo Channel 12 and provide broadcasting parts Program. These measures halved the accumulated losses of Tokyo Channel 12 to approximately 1.743 billion yen in 1967. On March 28, 1968, Tokyo Channel 12 began broadcasting color programs. As the operating conditions of Tokyo Channel 12 were in trouble again in 1968, the Science and Technology Promotion Foundation decided to abandon

390-619: The Japanese economy being in a securities recession at the time, Tokyo Channel 12 fell into serious operating difficulties after it started broadcasting. In the first year of broadcasting, it recorded a deficit of 1.38 billion yen. In 1966, Tokyo Channel 12 decided to shorten daily broadcasting to 5 hours and 30 minutes, and attempts are made to rebuild by requesting donations from powerful financial companies, laying off employees, and suspending advertising business activities. However, Tokyo Channel 12 planned to lay off 200 people. This triggered

416-619: The Turkish digital streaming platform GAIN in January, 2024. Carlo Santos of Anime News Network (ANN) gave volume 1 a B−. Rebecca Silverman, also of ANN, gave it a B. By July 17, 2011, volume 5 had sold 30,934 copies in Japan. By December 18, 2011, volume 6 had sold 32,754 copies in Japan. In the week of October 14 to 20, 2012, volume 1 ranked in second place in the list of The New York Times Manga Best Sellers . It has sold 10 million copies in Japan. This manga -related article

442-407: The broadcasting license, it immediately invited Kurata, the then president of Hitachi Production Co., Ltd., to serve as the head of the television business headquarters and began preparations for the launch. At noon on April 12, 1964, Tokyo Channel 12 officially launched (broadcasting as Science TV Tokyo Channel 12 Television ( 科学テレビ東京12チャンネルテレビ , Kagaku Terebi Tōkyō Jūni-channeru Terebi ) );

468-645: The first program broadcast was the special program "The Birth of Tokyo Channel 12", and the NHK Symphony Orchestra concert, the 90-minute TV series "The Shore of Sorrow" and variety shows such as "Good Night 21st Century" were broadcast. On the first day of broadcast, Tokyo Channel 12's average full-day ratings were 2.1%, and the average prime-time ratings were 3.4%. When Tokyo Channel 12 was launched, its main programs were mainly industrial high school lectures, supplemented by news, social education, TV dramas, foreign movies and other programs. During

494-404: The largest shareholder of Tokyo Channel 12 Production. In 1970, Tokyo Channel 12 achieved 100% colorization of evening prime-time programs and achieved profitability for the first time in the same year through business activities. On October 24, 1973, Tokyo Channel 12 Production Co., Ltd. changed its company name to Tokyo Channel 12 Co., Ltd. (Tokyo 12 Channel Co., Ltd.), officially taking over

520-489: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Limit&oldid=1225319068 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Limit (manga) This manga focuses on Mizuki Konno, a typical high school junior at Yanno Prefectural High School. A group of high school girls

546-502: The majority of programs were set to be science and technology education programs; the rest were to be general education and news programs. However, after this decision was issued, three other companies participating in the bidding, including Central Educational Broadcasting, raised objections to the Postmaster General, and the debate was not concluded until 1969. After the Science and Technology Promotion Foundation obtained

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572-793: The operation of Tokyo Channel 12 from the Science and Technology Promotion Foundation. On November 1 of the same year, as the Ministry of Post and Post abolished the educational television license in the Keihin area, Tokyo Channel 12 was officially transformed into a comprehensive television station, and the program broadcast ratio was changed to 20% of educational programs, 30% of educational programs, and other programs 50%. In March 1975, due to Mainichi Broadcasting joining JNN, Tokyo Channel 12 terminated its relationship with Mainichi Broadcasting Network and strengthened cooperation with Kinki local independent stations SUN TV and Kinki Broadcasting. In 1969,

598-529: The operation of Tokyo Channel 12 in 1969 and officially converted it into a comprehensive television station in 1973. In 1981, Tokyo Channel 12 was renamed TV Tokyo. On July 2, 1960, the Japan Science and Technology Promotion Foundation applied to the Ministry of Post for a television broadcast license for the VHF12 channel returned by the U.S. military stationed in Japan. As part of the license application,

624-436: The previous method of soliciting donations from the financial sector and instead invited the financial sector to inject capital to rebuild the television department. On July 1 of the same year, twenty companies in the Japanese financial circle, including Mainichi Broadcasting, Hitachi Manufacturing Co., Ltd., and Nissan Motor, invested in the establishment of Tokyo Channel 12 Production Company (Tokyo Twelve Channel Co., Ltd.) with

650-752: The same time, the station moved to Shiba Park . A month later, it became a general-purpose TV station along with NET. On April 1, 1978, Tokyo launched a new production company, Softx. In 1981, it was again renamed, this time to Television Tokyo Channel 12, Ltd. d/b/a TV Tokyo ; the current Japanese name of the company was also assumed in the same year. In 1983, TV Tokyo formed the Mega TON Network (now TX Network ) with TV Osaka , and Aichi Television Broadcasting . The company shifted its head offices from Shiba Park to Toranomon in December 1985. On October 4, 1999, Tokyo's production company Softx

676-487: Was renamed TV Tokyo MediaNet. In 2004, TV Tokyo MediaNet was shortened to MediaNet. On June 25, 2004, the company assumed its current English name TV Tokyo Corporation. After the digital transition, the channel began broadcasting on digital channel 7. On November 7, 2016, TV Tokyo moved its headquarters to the new building at Sumitomo Fudosan Roppongi Grand Tower from its old studios in Toranomon. The network initially used

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