NET

NET or Net may refer to:

  • Net (device), fibers woven in a grid-like structure
  • Net (textile), any textile in which the warp and weft yarns are looped or knotted at their intersections
  • Brooklyn Nets, a basketball team
  • The Net (1995 film), a film starring Sandra Bullock
  • Cricket nets a safe netted environment for practicing cricket
  • Fishing net, a net used for fishing

In computing and communication:

  • Computer network, collection of computers and devices
  • Telecommunications network, collections of terminals, links, and nodes to facilitate telecommunication
  • Internet, global system of interconnected computer networks
  • Network: Computation In Neural Systems, scientific journal
  • An electronic network connection in a netlist, which shows the connectivity of an electronic design

In business and finance as an antonym of gross:

  • Net (economics), the amount remaining after deductions
  • Net worth, total assets minus total liabilities
  • Net metering, electricity policy
  • Net 30, form of trade credit
  • Net profit, gross profit minus overhead and interest
  • Net weight, weight of a product, not counting packaging
  • Net pay, salary after deductions

NET as an acronym may refer to:

In broadcast and media:

  • National Educational Television, predecessor of PBS in the United States
  • Nebraska Educational Telecommunications, Nebraska
  • New Evangelization Television, New York
  • National Empowerment Television, a defunct politically conservative cable network from the 1990s, also called America's Voice
  • NET S.A., Cable television operator in Latin America
  • New Hellenic Television, Greece
  • Never Ending Tour, musician Bob Dylan's tour since 1988
  • North East Tonight (or North East Today), a British regional news programme
  • NET Television (Malta), a Maltese television station
  • Nihon Educational Television, the former name of TV Asahi, Japan

In science and psychology:

  • Neuroendocrine tumor, cancers of the interface between the endocrine and nervous system
  • N-Ethyltryptamine, psychedelic drug
  • Neutrophil Extracellular Traps, extracellular fibers
  • Neuro Electric Therapy, treatment for anxiety
  • Neuro Emotional Technique, holistic medicine
  • Norepinephrine transporter, neurotransmitter transporter
  • Non-equilibrium thermodynamics, branch of study
  • Net flux, proportional amount to the concentration difference across a membrane, the surface area of the membrane, and the membrane permeability constant

In mathematics:

  • Net (mathematics), a generalization of a sequence similar to a filter
  • Net (polyhedron), an arrangement of polygons that can be folded up to form a polyhedron
  • ε-nets in probability theory, computational geometry, and metric spaces
  • Net, a linear system of divisors of dimension 2
  • Local net of operator algebras in quantum field theory

In other uses:

  • National Education Trust, English non-profit
  • National Eligibility Test, Indian entrance examination
  • New Earth Time, alternative naming system for time of day
  • New English Translation of the Bible
  • Nottingham Express Transit, British tramway
  • Noise-equivalent target, detection system
  • NET Act, No Electronic Theft Act in the United States

.net or .NET may refer to:

  • .net, an Internet top-level domain
  • .net (magazine), British monthly periodical
  • .NET Framework, software framework for Microsoft Windows
  • .NET Messenger Service, an old name for Microsoft Messenger service
  • .NET Passport, an old name for Microsoft account

Famous quotes containing the word net:

    Here’s a fish hangs in the net like a poor man’s right in the law; ‘twill hardly come out.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    The violent illiteracies of the graffiti, the clenched silence of the adolescent, the nonsense cries from the stage-happening, are resolutely strategic. The insurgent and the freak-out have broken off discourse with a cultural system which they despise as a cruel, antiquated fraud. They will not bandy words with it. Accept, even momentarily, the conventions of literate linguistic exchange, and you are caught in the net of the old values, of the grammars that can condescend or enslave.
    George Steiner (b. 1929)

    The history of literature—take the net result of Tiraboshi, Warton, or Schlegel,—is a sum of a very few ideas, and of very few original tales,—all the rest being variation of these.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)