Isoyama Station
Isoyama Station (磯山駅, Isoyama-eki) is a railway station on the Nagoya Line in Suzuka, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Kintetsu Railway. Isoyama Station is 56.0 rail kilometers from the terminus of the line at Kintetsu Nagoya Station.[1]
Isoyama Station 磯山駅 | |
---|---|
Isoyama Station | |
Location | 2-12-16 Isoyama, Suzuka, Mie (三重県鈴鹿市磯山二丁目12-16) Japan |
Operated by | Kintetsu Railway |
Line(s) | Nagoya Line |
History | |
Opened | 1915 |
Traffic | |
Passengers (FY2016) | 1,624 daily |
Lines
Station layout
Isoyama Station has two opposed side platforms.
Platforms
1 | ■ Nagoya Line | for Tsu, Toba, Osaka Namba, Kashikojima |
2 | ■ Nagoya Line | for Kintetsu Yokkaichi, Kuwana, Nagoya |
Adjacent stations
« | Service | » | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Nagoya Line | ||||
Express (急行): Does not stop at this station | ||||
Tsuzumigaura | Local (普通) | Chisato |
History
Isoyama Station opened on September 10, 1915 as a station on the Ise Railway. The Ise Railway became the Sangu Express Electric Railway’s Ise Line on September 15, 1936, and was renamed the Nagoya Line on December 7, 1938. After merging with Osaka Electric Kido on March 15, 1941, the line became the Kansai Express Railway's Nagoya Line.[2] This line was merged with the Nankai Electric Railway on June 1, 1944 to form Kintetsu.[2]
gollark: I don't know exactly what its instruction set is like. But if it has finite-sized addresses, it can probably access finite amounts of memory, and thus is not Turing-complete.
gollark: *Languages* can be, since they often don't actually specify memory limits, implementations do.
gollark: It's not Turing-complete if it has limited memory.
gollark: Not *really*. In languages with an abstract model that doesn't specify limited memory sizes, yes, but PotatOS Assembly Language™'s addresses are 16 bits, so you can't address any more RAM than that.
gollark: Technically it's not even going to be Turing-complete because of the limited address space, unlike in BF.
References
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