- Oct 2024
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Hewillfallasleepnow:here,inhisfather’sarms,longbeforetheyreachthehouse,beforetheycomeupontheaccident.Breathingthesweetfumesofpineneedles.Feelingthroughthefather’sfleshthewarmthofflowingblood,whichishisbloodtoo
Martin has realized how strong, brave, and amazing his son is, all in a positive light. With Sebastian in danger, Martin has realized how much love he has for him, and wants to restore their relationship as a healthy and average father and son relationship. He wants his son to feel loved, and comes to the realization thatches disability does not define him.
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nstartscallingforherbaby.Shiningthelightintotheditch;intothetrees;finallyontotheroad,whereitfindsfirstatinyred-stripedsneaker,thenherotherson,herhumanson,sittinginthedirt,staring,mesmerizedbythewreck
Isabel realizes she had left her other son alone, and that he could have almost died. She realized she had so much attention on Sebastian that she didn't even think about the safety of her three year old. This is when her guilt kicks in.
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Heneedsawand.Withoutawand,hewillnever,everfindthem
Kaden showed his innocence earlier in the story, but does even more in this instance. He believes a magic wand could fix what was happening to him, and that magic will protect him and his brother from unfortunate events.
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No,hedoesn’twanthissontovanish.Hejustwantshimtobenormal.
Martin has a similar view to many people in society on disability. Unfortunately, people with disabilities dehumanize people with disabilities, and treat them as less than, just because they aren't fitting the stereotypes of a "normal person"
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Ittookanhour,maybemore;yetthedaywasfarfromover,thesunstillwarmandhighoverheadwhensheheardherselfsay,inabrokenwhisper,Lookatyou,littleman.Lookatyoustandingup
Sebastian, almost fully by himself was able to stand and walk.He may have not done it in the traditional way, because as described he was shaking and appeared to be having a seizure in the process, but he was successful and Isabel could not have been happier.
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butnow,intheoutdoors,heobservedeverythingwithwideeyesandsquawkedlikeatropicalbird
I feel as though doctors and parents never gave Sebastian a chance to experience an average life so far, they may have not let him do certain things because they may have thought he couldn't handle it. Although they are finally realizing he is thriving in the environments they thought were maybe too difficult for him to handle.
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Jump,Kadenhadwhispered.Downthehall,they’dbeensaying,Goaway.Allofhim.Kadenopenedthebackdoor.Go,brother
Kaden noticed the horrible treatment towards his brother by his parents, and had good intentions in mind. He was such an innocent three year old, and didn't think anything of Sebastians disabilities because that was all he has ever known for Sebastian. He wanted his brother to be free and feel happiness, after noticing how their parents treated him.
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Youjustwishhe’dgoaway,shesaidtooloudly.Untrue.Notjusthalfofhim.Allofhim
Sebastian was seen as a burden by Martin, and Martin did not want to "deal with" Sebastian and his disability for the rest of his life. He didn't want to congratulate any of Sebastians successes, because he just wished he would not be able to function and not be around.
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Martinwalkedovertohimandplacedahandonhishead,andsaid,Wecan’tlethimdothis
It is supposed to be a good thing, Sebastian being able to walk. As an initial reaction, Martin realized that his son is "getting used to" functioning with his disabilities. Martin gives the impression throughout the story that he wants his son to be "normal", and not get used to living with his disabilities before its too late to perform surgeries.
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Hethinks:mysonwalkedtoday.Anyotherparentwouldbefilledwithaclearandsimplehappiness.ForMartin,itisalltoomuch
in the end, Martin is really shocked and happy at the fact that his son can walk, and that he can perform some natural bodily functions, even with his disability.
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Iwantedtoseemybrotherrun.Mybrotherisahorse.
Kaden, the three year old brother also describes his infant brother as a horse. Although, I believe this is in a more innocent way. Kaden doesn't understand societies view on disabled people at such a young age, so he has created his own majestic, powerful meaning of his brother being a horse. It wasn't about his looks to Kaden, it was about his personality.
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Heintendstocallthepolice,reportamissingperson.!endecides,withequalimpulsiveness,againsttheidea.Whatkindofdescriptionwouldhegive?Howcanheexplainwhenhehimselfdoesnotunderstand?
I also find this line interesting. The fact that in the way of his sons safety, Martin wouldn't call the police to report that he is missing because he claims he cannot describe how his son looks. He seems to refuse to accept the fact that his son does not look like the average person, and almost seems embarrassed that he looks the way he does.
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Shethinks:hecantakecareofhimself
This is shocking to me. No mother should think that their three year old child can take care of themselves in the dark, alone in the middle of the night. They are nowhere near the age and maturity of being able to take care of themselves for any amount of time.
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Nowhecan’thearanythingbutcricketsmarchingcloserandcloserinthedark
The boy is terrified being alone in the dark and quiet, hence the line "he can't hear anything but crickets marching closer and closer in the dark". He fears for his safety and hints at the fact that he feels something bad may happen to him.
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healwaysunderstandsthattheabandonmentisnotreallygoingtooccur.Yethereheisnow.Leftbehind
This reminds me of the description of a "glass child". A glass child is the sibling of someone who has mental or medical issues, and doesn't require the most attention from parents. The three year old brother was left behind and forgotten about once Sebastian ran away, and wasn't informed of the parents leaving him by himself in the middle of the night.
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Sheisthinkingonlyofherbaby.Whereheis,howtoreachhim.Buteverythoughtofhimfeelssomehowlikeathoughtaboutherself
Going along with my previous idea of the mothers guilt, she seems to want to reassure herself that she is fine and her son is in danger and he is who the focus should be on. Although, in the back of her mind she still fears for herself.
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Itseemsverywrongtoher,inthesemoments,tobefrightenedforherself.Butsheis
The mother feels very frightened in the woods in the middle of the night by herself. She feels this guilt of being nervous for herself because she can only imagine how her infant is feeling, who is not old enough to take care of himself.
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flickofthetail,theshuffleofhooves.Asheboundsdeeperintothemazeoftrees,night’sfirststarappearsintheeclipt
They continue to dehumanize Sebastian, continuing with the horse references they related him to because of his disabilities.
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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However, there remain considerable gaps in understanding that prevent a thorough assessment of whether current MNP exposures contribute to significant human infertility or disease.
The research isn't there to prove MNPs significantly contribute to infertility.
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In rodent models, exposure to phthalates and BPA can induce alterations in DNA methylation patterns (70–73), histone modifications (73, 74), and non-coding RNA expression within the germline. These changes can disrupt normal epigenetic programming during critical windows of spermatogenesis, leading to impaired sperm development, reduced sperm quality, and compromised fertility
Phthalates and BPA were other chemicals I want to research.
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distinct changes in reproductive hormone signalling are observed, with reductions in the circulating concentrations of estradiol (E2) and anti-mullerian hormone (AMH), and increased concentrations of LH, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and testosterone
Changes in reproductive hormones
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MNPs have been found in a diverse range of biological samples, including blood (30, 31), urine (32), sputum (33), feces (34, 35), and breast milk (36, 37). Further, MNP accumulation has been identified in numerous organ systems including lung (38–43), colon and spleen (44)
MNPs are present in many parts of the body
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MNPs can cross the physiological barriers of the lungs, gut, and skin
MNPs are small enough to cross barriers of the lungs, gut, and skin bypassing regulatory organs to process the chemicals
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There is concern that chemicals contained within MNPs, or those absorbed to their surface, can be carried into the human body and released into various tissue beds (24). In this way, MNPs act as a vehicle for toxic exposure to a number of xenobiotics, which may bypass typical physiological defences such as drug-metabolizing enzymes in the gut and liver and induce direct effects to the cells/tissues surrounding the internalized MNPs (25).
MNPs can expose people to xenobiotics by bypassing the gut, liver, and effect surrounding cells.
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However, polyethylene, polypropylene and polystyrene are the three most common occurring polymers (5), being found in a countless number of household and personal care products (9, 10), cosmetic products (11), toothpaste (10, 12, 13) and plastic food containers (14).
MNPs vary in chemicals, shapes, and are found in household, personal care, plastic food containers and cosmetic products.
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Microplastics are omnipresent in our environment, being found in large quantities in oceans, rivers, ground water, sediments and soil environments, sewage, and even the air we breathe
MPs result from the breakdown of larger plastics. not only are MPs everywhere, they're resistant to biodegradation.
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microplastic accumulation was observed in the human placenta, raising important questions related to the biological effects of these contaminants on the health of pregnancies and offspring
microplastic dangerous to pregnant women and infants
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www.biorxiv.org www.biorxiv.org
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different lengths of time
I might be missing it somewhere but the two time points do not appear to be in the figure or figure legend -- from the text it appears maybe the bottom row is 2 hours?
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The Office S4.E8 The Deposition, Nov 15, 2007<br /> https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1031476/
Michael is put in an awkward position when Jan sues Dunder Mifflin for wrongful termination and he is deposed as a witness.
Jan: Remember, it's not just a pattern. It's a pattern of disrespect and inappropriate behaviors.
Michael "Dis-ray." My friend Dis Ray got new specs. Dis Ray Spect. My friend In-A-Pro drives a Prius with his behind neighbor.
Jan: Does this work for you?
Michael: Yep.
Michael Scott makes up some truly incredible (bad) mnemonics to try to memorize specific phrases for a deposition.
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As you write the draft, you’ll crystallize some elements of your thinking, elements you can pick out later and use.
The author means you will find hidden gems that come to light in your mind that you might want to consider writing about because these thoughts were not there before you start writing your first draft. They're saying in order to have the ideas and completion you want you must start somewhere.
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writing is not rapturous. In fact, the only way I can get anything written at all is to write really, really shitty first drafts
personal connection; as a person who took creative writing in high school I found this to be immensely true for me. I take writing very seriously and writer's block can be a headache. I found myself going though this less when I started asking myself questions and writing down the first couple sentences that came to mind. Good or bad it will get the creative gear rotating.
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They do not type a few stiff warm-up sentences and then find themselves bounding along like huskies across the snow.
simile; literary device. comparing 2 things using the words "like" or "as". The writer here is trying to explain it's not the easiest to create your 'perfect writing' but that should not be an excuse to type up something stale and unoriginal. He does this by comparing 'finished' ragged work to a husky carrying on in the snow.
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Even so, many of my nonfiction writer colleagues have embraced her prescription.
extended metaphor: comparing the fact that even though an audience can be used to one ideal they can still embrace and even appreciate the author's work. In this sense nonfiction writers found themselves captivated in a novel they usually wouldn't personally relate to. titles, looks, brands, and even books can be deceiving you never know who can take a piece from your work ypu just have to start it.
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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1:04:44 Debt mirrors in NATURE as the seeds, plants, trees, flowers, roots, soil, water, nutrients, pollinators, worms, rock and minerals - WE ARE IN DEBT TO NATURE - NATURE GIVES US SURPLUS
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1:03:51 By getting people used to DEBT being SAVINGS, they can focus on the REAL things that matter
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1:02:29 The national debt is a historical record of the cumulative money that a government spent dollars than it took out which were transformed into US Treasuries
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1:00:18 We should not even use the term borrowing
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56:48 The USA borrows money from China IS NOT TRUE. China converts its dollars from selling stuff to the USA to a US treasury bond which earns them interest rtaher than just sitting in a checking account
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56:12 When the Community Treasury spends more of its money, people in the community have more to spend
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53:36 A community can set up a CONTRIBUTION which everyone agrees to pay in the currency issued by the community issuer 53:48 Therefore a Debt Free Currency System really means a COMMUNITY TRIBUTE money system where the debt is a contribution to the community, payable in the currency of the issuer 55:45 A community can set up its own CENTRAL BANK that sets the interest rate at zero for the money in the community
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53:04 Money is the debt of the issuer
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50:32 Currency is the governments I.O.U. 52:04 When the government gets its tax, it no longer has the debt so it burns the currency which was an I.O.U.
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48:52 Example of a Community Currency
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40:40 UMKC created its own currency - the Buckaroo 40:42 Students had to pay buckaroos to get their grades
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28:08 UMKC is one kilometre from our location in Kansas - literally at the end of 53rd street where we live :-)
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26:30 Bernard Lietaer - founder of the EURO
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25:38 MMT changes our view on the nature of money
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22:32 In early colonial times, once taxes are paid in paper money, the money was burned
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18:59 Warren Mosler 19:49 Government does not need dollars, citizens need dollars 20:18 Warren is not an economist - he is not trying to defend economic theory - he is a financial trader watching the operation of money
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18:47 Stephanie Skelton was sceptical at the start too
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16:08 During the war, the USA moved 50% of the nations production to WAR. It woudl take a simple political decison to move 50% of the nations production to peace if peace is as profitable as war
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14:22 The government spends money into existence
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11:42 For a currency issuer, funding the money is NEVER the problem
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9:31 Jared Bernstein fails to answer this question coherently. "I dont get it" !!
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5:49 95% of the problems with policy is the language used to describe the policy
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5:17 Let us evolve beyond the BATTLE FOR IDEAS through Dialogue
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4:28 Let us create the money at community level
Tags
- In early colonial times, once taxes are paid in paper money, the money was burned
- US Treasuries and Cash are both USA assets - not liabilities
- Selling Treasuries is NOT BORROWING
- Move 50% of production to peace if peace is as profitable as war
- A community can set up a CONTRIBUTION which everyone agrees to pay in the currency issued by the community issuer
- Warren is not an economist - he is not trying to defend economic theory - he is a financial trader watching the operation of money
- Therefore a Debt Free Currency System really means a COMMUNITY TRIBUTE money system where the debt is a contribution to the community, payable in the currency of the issuer
- it no longer has teh debt
- It's really a FREE MONEY system - Stef Kuypers is right!!
- Currency is the governments I.O.U.
- Government does not need dollars, citizens need dollars
- The national debt is a historical record of the cumulative money that a government spent dollars than it took out which were transformed into US Treasuries
- By getting people used to DEBT being SAVINGS, they can focus on the REAL things that matter
- Community Treasury Deficit increases community members savings and spending power
- The debt clock might as well say Private Sector Wealth
- Chores are taxes
- USA does not borrow money from China
- Students had to pay buckaroos to get their grades
- Money is the debt of the issuer
- Example of a Community Currency
- We should not even use the term borrowing
- Debt mirrors in NATURE as the seeds, plants, trees, flowers, roots, soil, water, nutrients, pollinators, worms, rock and minerals - WE ARE IN DEBT TO NATURE - NATURE GIVES US SURPLUS
- UMKC created its own currency - the Buckaroo
- The debt we leave to our grandchildren is THEIR FINANCIAL WEALTH
- A community can set up its own CENTRAL BANK that sets the interest rate at zero for the money in the community
- The US Dollar is a US Tax Credit
- USA moved 50% of production to War
- UMKC is one kilometre from our location in Kansas - literally at the end of 53rd street where we live :-)
- Warren Mosler
- Stephanie Skelton was sceptical at the start too
- MMT changes our view on the nature of money
- 95% of problems is WORDS
- 1996
- BATTLE FOR IDEAS THROUGH DIALOGUE
- The dollar bill is a debt of the federal reserve
- Bernard Lietaer - founder of the EURO
- The currency is a credit and debit relationship
- The norm for a currency issuer is to be in DEFICIT so that people can SAVE the currency
- When the Community Treasury spends more of its money, people in the community have more to spend
- For a currency issuer, funding the money is NEVER the problem
- The government spends money into existence
- When the government gets its tax, it no longer has the debt so it burns the currency which was an I.O.U.
- Jared Bernstein does not know why the government borrows its own money
- create the money
- Federal Reserves are on the Liability side of its balance sheet
- When tax is paid
- Demurrage
- The currency itself is the governments debt
- Everybody agrees to contribute to the community and the currency with which this is tracked is the I.O.U.
Annotators
URL
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doc-04-1g-prod-01-apps-viewer.googleusercontent.com doc-04-1g-prod-01-apps-viewer.googleusercontent.com
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On the contrary, there is a gradual transition betweenthe two extremes', and also it is possible, as it has heen pointed out,for contradictory systems of order to exist at the same time. In thatcase each is "valid" precisely to the extent that there is a probabilitythat action will in fact be oriented to it
frequently not just one "valid" order and it's not "valid" or "invalid" there's a spectrum
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hefact that the order is recognized as valid in his society is madeevident by the fact that he cannot violate it openly without punish-ment. But apart from this limiting case, it is very common forviolation of an order to be confined to more or less numerous partialdeviations from it, or for the attempt to be made, with varying degreesof good faith, to justify the deviation as legitimate
deviations from order are not always outright or direct contrasts to a rule
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The transitionsbetween orientation to an order from motives of tradition or of ex-pediency to the case where a belief in its legitimacy is involved areempirically gradual.
Orientation towards maxims (some rationality or establish duty) --> maxims are traditional and habitual --> maxims are legitimate
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attitude
most of the time maxims held bc it is habitual
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which he fulfills partly because disobediencewould be disadvantageous to him but also because its violation wouldhe abhorrent to his sense of duty (of course, in varying degrees).
due what they're told because of the rules but also for their own sense of duty
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this way there arise similarities, uni-formities, and continuities in their attitudes and actions which are oftenfar more stable than they would be if action were oriented to a systemof nonns and duties which were considered binding on the members ofa group
social norms for the sake of being social norms are not the binding agent of actors to their normal action- there is a practical, rational motive in there
Annotators
URL
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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constant
Unnecessary information, and inaccurate. The 10mL of liquid were measured out each time and would have varied slightly.
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Total
This methods is cut closer to the lab procedure we were given as students rather than the lab procedure we create based off the lab. There are too many subsections, which are too short and make it hard to follow. 12.
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ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
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In the circumstances in which theSauvages are, if we abandon them,they will unquestionably have the occasionto surrender to the english whoexpect that moment every day.
Here is another example that demonstrates how missionaries and conversion were tools of colonialism. The fear that if the missionaries are not with the Mi'kmaq the willsurender to the British confirms that although the missionaries may truly want to save souls and create true Christians the act of converting Indigenous peoples to Catholicism was still ultimately an imperial act.
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online.clackamas.edu online.clackamas.edu
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each beverage including cranberryjuice, Dr. Pepper, and the 4% sugar.
If materials are going to be listed out like this, they should have been mentioned at the start of the sugar density section as part of a 'materials required'.
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ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub
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3It will also be necessary thatI have 3 Ecclesiastics at thismission. 2 to go withSauvages who will separateinto two bands to gohunting and the other to stayin the village with theelderly, women andchildren.
This is another example of how missionaries had to adapt their teachings and practices to suit the Mi'kmaq way of life. More missionaries were necessary than in European settlements where societies were sedentary and revolved around the church. In European settlements people came to the church, but to serve Mi'kmaq communities missionaries had to travel to and with them and adapt their religious teachings and practices to suit the Mi'kmaq lifestyle.
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this will also ensurethis part of l’acadie againstenemy attacks, as allthese sauvages could stormat the right time onthose who would dare
This speaks to what we discussed in class that missionaries did operate as imperial agents. They saw Indigenous people as potential allies, particularly in a potential battle or war. They saw converting "all these sauvages" as a way to ensure Acadie. By converting them they thought that they could create allies for the French crown, strong enough allies to fight alongside them.
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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Questions 6-7 were then completed using thecreated scatter plot and its given equation.
Reader does not have access to the same materials. The content of the questions in the packet should be written out if relevant to the report, or completely omitted if not.
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The mass of a 50 mL beaker was measured using an electronic balance.
Perhaps listing out the materials required first would make this easier to follow.
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Excel was used to create a scatter plot of the density in g/mL against the percent sugar.
This is fine. Could be better with something like, "Excel was used to create a graph, and the given equation used to complete the questions was based on the trendline."
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Questions 1-5 in the lab packet were then completed using analyticalthinking.
Reports should be written under the assumption that the reader does not have access to the same materials, and so that anyone could replicate the procedure.
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Questions 1-5 in the lab packet were then completed using analyticalthinking
Mention of the lab packet is unnecessary, as it doesn't relate to procedure. It is also too vague and would not help future chemists working through the lab.
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The
This paragraph should have an indentation.
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online.clackamas.edu online.clackamas.edu
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Graph 1
As other people have said, it is not labeled; but not only that the numbers do not indicate what is a percentage and what is the density. That alone is done before even making the graph, so data may not be reliable.
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surfingcomplexity.blog surfingcomplexity.blog
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If we want people to see these things as real, we have to integrate them into narrative descriptions of incidents.
Who are the best story tellers of our time?
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Without a narrative schema to anchor it, the pandemic all but vanished from public discourse soon after it ended.
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In The 1918 Flu Faded in Our Collective Memory: We Might ‘Forget’ the Coronavirus, Too, Scott Hershberger speculated in Scientific American along similar lines about why historians paid little attention the Spanish Flu epidemic, even though it killed more people than World War I (emphasis mine):
There seems to be an inherent value higharchy here for what makes an epic story, Corona was sold as a very epic story, 1918 spanish flu, not so much
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We use stories to make sense of the world. What that means is that when events occur that don’t fit neatly into a narrative, we can’t make sense of them. As a consequence, these sorts of events are less salient, which means they’re less real.
Ya Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow - Wikipedia author Yuval talks about this a lot
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Local file Local filePsyc 2536
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No pressure/outside motivation• No motivating instructions during study, then told there was a big cash prize for bestperformance• Told at the beginning about the cash prize23
- There was no difference between these two groups
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Does feedback need to be immediate?
- What's important is that you review it regularly, but the feedback doesn't have to be immediate as long as we take the time to learn from the feedback
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Testing
- Turn the learning objectives into questions and answer them
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Gradually increasing practice-test interva
- When studying flashcards, say it out loud or write it down so you'll be able to identify the error
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Total Time Hypothesis
- More time you spend studying something, the better you'll learn it
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Anesthesia has 3 components
- Anesthesia doesn't resemble sleep since the general feeling of passing time doesn't appear after waking up from anathesia
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pdx.pressbooks.pub pdx.pressbooks.pub
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Are you more likely to behave aggressively in real life after watching people behave violently in dramatic situations on the screen?
Here's what a public annotation looks like. You can add links to these annotations too: OAI at PSU
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uh.edu uh.edu
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Each ofthese domains have also shown unique relevance
Important to differentiate physical, cognitive, and social concerns that are caused by anxiety and depression.
For AUD/SUD in particular, examples of these could be... 1. Fear of becoming an alcoholic 2. Fear of physical symptoms and health defects related to alcoholism 3. Fear of being seen by others as an alcoholic
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Local file Local file
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astounded toresist
astounded with the fact that he sees wine, or that his friend is chaining him up? Seems to be the wine, but I first though it was the fact that his friend was chaining him up
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which I had difficulty inrecognising as that of the noble Fortunato.
jesus. This reminds me of the Nutty Putty cave incident. Someone was trapped upside down for 27 hours, and you couldn't even make out his final words since it was basically just gurgling.
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A succession of loud and shrill screams, bursting suddenly fromthe throat of the chained form,
This is terrifying. Fortunato has no escape
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I heard the furious vibrations of thechain
Okay man Fortunato's tryna leave now I thought he was your friend
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The Amontillado!” ejaculated my friend, not yet recoveredfrom his astonishment
first EJACULATED HUH????? Also he really just cares about the wine
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Throwing the links about his waist
wow yeah he just chained him up what on earth
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fettered
restrained with chains or manacles, typically around the ankles. Woah you just straight up chained your friend?
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flambeaux rather to glow than flame
It's cold, dark, the air is awful, Fortunato is barely able to walk, it feels grim
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You? Impossible! A mason?
Narrator is a mason? also, what is the brotherhood?
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had I givenFortunato cause to doubt my good wil
Is this more like a karma situation? do good and you will be lucky? Is Fortunato a someone? <br /> I wrote that before finding out it was just a character. Maybe this is just saying Fortunato was not justified in doing harm to the narrator.
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“The nitre!” I said; “see, it increases. It hangs like moss uponthe vaults. We are below the river’s bed. The drops of moisturetrickle among the bones. Come, we will go back ere it is too late.Your cough—”
Narrator yet again telling fortunato to turn back
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trailhead.salesforce.com trailhead.salesforce.com
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you want to limit the results when the query is very broad to one or two letters
This limit clause won't go away even if the user types more than 2 letters, though.
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as the user types into the field, letter by letter
Is there a way to define a debounce timer?
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Local file Local file
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neoliberalism
Neoliberalism is both a political philosophy and a term used to signify the late-20th-century political reappearance of 19th-century ideas associated with free-market capitalism. The term has multiple, competing definitions, and is often used pejoratively. (Wiki)
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Given chronic problems with mould, mice, overcrowding and under-maintainedbuildings, most residents of Cayce Homes were in favour of the redevelopment.Yet, many were concerned with how the redevelopment would impact their fami-lies, and whether they in fact were the intended beneficiaries. One resident, MsAudrey mentions: ‘the plan they got is good. But is it for us? That’s the mainthing.’ Another resident adds: ‘Or is it just for them?” Observed during the courseof this study, a core group of six to eight Cayce United residents organized aroundthree primary goals related to the redevelopment: 1) no resident displacement,2) the creation of job opportunities and 3) the integration of needed social supports.As Cayce United worked to mobilize their neighbours, educate the community,shape the public narrative of the redevelopment and win resident goals, residentorganizers – and those who worked alongside them (myself included) – were oftenstymied by the same questions that challenge many scholars of neighbourhoodinequality. What will produce more equitable outcomes in urban communities?How can positive social change occur? Who can (and ought to) be involved intransforming urban neighbourhoods? These are theoretical questions, and theanswers vary based upon the theoretical perspectives used.
Very similar to the circumstances of the Dudley Triangle.
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www.mckinsey.com www.mckinsey.com
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Without the right gen AI operating model in place, it is tough to incorporate enough structure and move quickly enough to generate enterprise-wide impact.
Without AI being set up properly it could set up any of these institutions up for failure, but if it is then it could have a enterprise-wide impact.
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The financial-services companies that have best managed the transition to gen AI already had a high level of organizational agility, allowing them to quickly rework processes and flexibly pool resources, either by locating them in a central hub or by creating ad hoc, centrally coordinated, agile squads to execute use cases.
It is already having an increasing affect in Productivity and more specifically in the organization field.
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The nascent nature of gen AI has led financial-services companies to rethink their operating models to address the technology’s rapidly evolving capabilities, uncharted risks, and far-reaching organizational implications
These industries are realizing that there are more positives in adding AI and how AI could positively increase their productivity and numbers.
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where a central team is in charge of gen AI solutions, from design to execution, with independence from the rest of the enterprise—can allow for the fastest skill and capability building for the gen AI team.
able to increase productivity.
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A great operating model on its own, for instance, won’t bring results without the right talent or data in place.
This shows how AI isn't just a quick fix and something to instantly get you results rather you have to work on it so then it could be more productive in the long run.
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Generative AI (gen AI) is revolutionizing the banking industry as financial institutions use the technology to supercharge customer-facing chatbots, prevent fraud, and speed up time-consuming tasks such as developing code, preparing drafts of pitch books, and summarizing regulatory reports.
It seems to already having a positive affect on the banking community
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gen AI could add between $200 billion and $340 billion in value annually, or 2.8 to 4.7 percent of total industry revenues, largely through increased productivity.1
This shows the massive impact AI is having and how much money is being made because of it and provides facts how it has increased from 2.8 to 4.7%
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openreview.net openreview.net
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the rewards are divided through by the standard deviation of a rolling dis-counted sum of the reward
big reward shaping
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we find that they dramatically affect the performanceof PPO. To demonstrate this, we start by performing a full ablation study on the four optimizationsmentioned above
All these little optimizations in the implementation of PPO have a big impact on it's performance.
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rsginc.github.io rsginc.github.io
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nt_desc <- filter(variable_list, str_detect(variable, "no_travel")) %>% select(variable, description)
The column has been changed from variable to variable_unified and from description to description_unified
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weighted_hhs <- tbi$hh[!is.na(hh_weight) & hh_weight > 0, hh_id] tbi <- lapply( tbi, function(dt) { dt <- dt[hh_id %in% weighted_hhs] } )
The new data includes 10 elements instead of 8. To align them first create variable_list <- tbi$metaData_variables and values_list <- tbi$metaData_values before deleting the two additional elements tbi<- tbi[1:8]
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introverts will stop belittling themselves. Support the Next Generation of Content Creators Invest in the diverse voices that will shape and lead the future of journalism and art. donate now
This article angers me far beyond what it should. It is supposed to be a call to action for society to stop treating introverts like they're inferior. As an introvert myself I feel belittled reading this. Like I'm the victim and that it is a negative trait to be an introvert. While it's supposed to be a positive trait according to the article (Oh look, I'm introverted and that makes me a GREAT leader). All it does is just list the author's problems with being an introvert, but all of what she did list is barely traits of being an introvert, it's traits of being a coward with no self-confidence and a victim complex. Being an introvert or an extrovert is neither good nor bad, it's just what it is.
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eing introverted and shy do not go hand in hand. The so-called “shyness” I experienced from an early age was truly just anxiety surrounding meeting new people. I, as a person, was not shy, but rather introverted.
this shows how the way she is labelled doesnt define her. The outside appeance isnt always what is true on the inside
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While her words were meant to calm me, they, in fact, did the opposite. Why can’t I just be normal?
the effect of the label of being shy on the author
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ome, I was “the shy kid.” To others, I wa
diction and perspective: shows how the other peoples opinions affect how the author views herself
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www.phenomenalworld.org www.phenomenalworld.org
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This failure also has also created constituencies among various types of domestic manufacturers opposed to the kind of market liberalization inherent to sanctions relief—undermining a core belief held by Western policymakers that sanctions can spur behavior changes in countries like Iran through bottom-up pressure, including from business lobbies.
Nice point
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blogs.lse.ac.uk blogs.lse.ac.uk
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Littler’s work shows in great detail how the narrative of ‘hard work’ and ‘making it’ I note above has become so present and alive in Global North societies (2) – and it’s by drawing this kind of sharp attention to the way such destructive narratives are mobilised, and who they work for, that we position ourselves to challenge and reject them.
The Tirukkuṟaḷ, a Tamil text from the "Global South" that is at least 1500 year old, contains "narratives of 'hard work'". The idea that this is somehow a Global North concept is woefully ignorant.
Couplet 620:
Who strive with undismayed, unfaltering mind, At length shall leave opposing fate behind.
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Local file Local file
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Connecting Linkbetween twoSentences orParagraphs,
Miles, 1905 uses an arrow symbol with a hash on it to indicate a "connecting link between two Sentences or Paragraphs, etc."
It's certainly an early example of what we would now consider a hyperlink. It actively uses a "pointer" in it's incarnation.
Are there earlier examples of these sorts of idea links in the historical record? Surely there were circles and arrows on a contiguous page, but what about links from one place to separate places (possibly using page numbers?) Indexing methods from 11/12C certainly acted as explicit sorts of pointers.
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An omission,e.g. to befilled in after-wards.
When was the use of the caret first made for indicating the insertion of material?
Eustace Miles has an example from 1905.
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Special Marks on Cards
Eustace Miles suggests the use of "special marks on cards" (annotations) in the top left corners, though he doesn't provide specific examples of how they might be used in practice. He does mention "The Abbreviations and Marks need be clear only to the Writer [sic] himself. They save ever so much time."
- "X": As contrasted with—
- "Q": Quotation
- Black triangle in corner: important
- Arrow pointing to corner of card: As compared with
- Angled parallel lines in the bottom right corner of card: End of Paragraph (or Chapter).
- Arrow pointing to the corner of card with hash mark: Connecting Link between two Sentences or Paragraphs, etc.
- Upside down V (or caret): An omission, e.g. to be filled in afterwards
- ?: A doubtful point
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Special Marks on Cards
In Miles' visual examples of cards, he presents them in portrait (rather than landscape) orientation.
This goes against the broad grain of most standard card index filing systems of the time, but may be more in line with the earlier French use of playing cards orientation.
His portrait orientation also matches with the size ratios seen in his Card-Tray suggestion on p187. https://hypothes.is/a/llEgpIf4Ee-dVfcaIGUryQ
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no false economy r
He's repeating (and thus emphasizing) the admonition that a card system is not expensive, particularly in relation to the savings in time and effort.
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There should also be a Card-Tray, or abox with compartments in it, such as shown in thefollowing illustration. Of course the Tray might havean open top.
Miles suggests using a Card-Tray (in 1899) with various compartments and potentially an open top rather than some of the individual trays or card index boxes which may have been more ubiquitous
This shows a slight difference at the time in how an individual would use one of these in writing versus how a business might use them in drawers of 1, 2, 3 or cabinets with many more.
The image he shows seems more reminiscent of a 5x3" library charging tray than of some of the business filing appliances of the day and the decade following.
very similar to the self-made version at https://hypothes.is/a/DHU_-If6Ee-mGieKOjg8ZQ
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A great help towards Arrangement and Clearnessis to have Cards of different sizes and shapes, and ofdifferent colours, or with different marks on them
Miles goes against the grain of using "cards of equal size", but does so to emphasize the affordance of using them for "Arrangement and Clearness".
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The Cards can be turned afterwards.
Miles admits that one can use both sides of index cards in a card system, but primarily because he's writing at a time (1899) when, although paper is cheap (which he mentions earlier), some people may have an objection to the system's use due to the expense, which he places at the top of his list of objections. (And he does this in a book in which he emphasizes multiple times the ideas of selection and ordering!)
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and of course writing only on one side of the Card ata time.
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And the same will apply to the objection that theSystem is unusual. Seldom have there been any newsuggestions which have not been condemned as ' un-us
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Objections to the Card-System,
Miles lists the following objections: - expense - inconvenience - unusual (new, novel)
Notice that he starts not with benefits or affordances, but with the objections.
What would a 2024 list of objections look like? - anachronism - harder than digital methods - lack of easier search - complexity - ... others?
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At first, also, it might be thought that the Cardswould be inconvenient to use, but the personal ex-perience of thousands shows that, at any rate forbusiness-purposes, exactly the reverse is true
Miles' uses the ubiquity of card systems (even at the writing in 1899, prior to publication) within business as evidence for bolstering their use in writing and composition.
(Recall that he's also writing in the UK.)
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Good Practice for this will be to studyLoisette's System of Memory, e.g. in "How to Remember"(see p. 264) ; in fact Loisette's System might be calledthe Link-System ; and Comparisons and Contrasts willvery often be a great help as Links.
Interesting to see a mention of Alphonse Loisette here!
But also nice to see the concept of linking ideas and association (associative memory) pop up here in the context of note making, writing, and creating card systems.
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include anything which links one Ideato another. See further " How to Remember " (to bepublished in February, 1900, by Warne & Co.).
This book was finally published in 1905. The introduction was written in 1899 and the mentioned Feb 1900 publication of How to Remember didn't happen until 1901.
Miles, Eustace Hamilton. How to Remember: Without Memory Systems or with Them. Frederick Warne & Co., 1901.
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If the Letter is important, especially if it be aBusiness-Letter, there should be as long an interval as isfeasible between the writing and the sending off.
writing and waiting is useful in many instances, and particularly for clarity of expression.
see also: <br /> - angry letter https://hypothes.is/a/6OoqHofyEe-1mtOohGA63w - diffuse thinking<br /> - typewriter (waiting) <br /> - editing (waiting) https://hypothes.is/a/VxRNeofvEe-5n1dpCEM48Q
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fter the Letter has been done it should beread through, and should (if possible) be read out loud,and you should ask yourself, as you read it, whetherit is clear, whether it is fair and true, and (last but notleast) whether it is kind. Putting it in another way,you might ask yourself, ' What will the person feel andthink on reading this ? ' or, * Should I eventually besorry to have received such a Letter myself? ' or, again,'Should I be sorry to have written it, say a yearhe
Recall: Abraham Lincoln's angry letter - put it in a drawer
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You can prepare your Letters any-where, even in the train, and so save a great deal oftime ; and it may be noticed here that the idlenessof people, during that great portion of their lives whichthey spend in travelling and waiting, can easily beavoided in this way.
Using a card system, particularly while travelling, can help to more efficiently use one's time in preventing idleness while travelling and waiting.
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s we have often said before, paper is so cheap thatthere is no need for such economy.
Compare this with the reference in @Kimmerer2013 about responsibility to the tree and not wasting paper: https://hypothes.is/a/pvQ_4ofxEe-NfSOv5wMFGw
where is the balance?
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The third reading should again be a slow reading,
relationship to Adler's levels of reading?
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But in my opinion nothing can excuse the laziness ofa great number of Editors. When the Writers arepoor and have staked a great deal on their Writings,then the laziness is simply disgusting : in fact, it amountsto cruelty. It is concerned with some of the verysaddest tragedies that the world has ever seen, andI only mention it because it is very common and be-cause itis as well that the novice should know what toexpect.
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Another Article I sent to a Paper, and after twentyweeks, and after many letters (which enclosed stampedand addressed envelopes), I was told that the Articlewas unsuitable for the Paper.
Even in 1905 writers had to wait interminably after submitting their writing...
it's only gotten worse since then...
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Very few have the strength of mind tokeep back for a whole week a piece of Writing whichthey have finished. Type-writing sometimes necessitatesthis interval, or at any rate a certain interval.
The process of having a work typewritten forced the affordance of creating time away from the writing of a piece. This allows for both active and diffuse thinking on the piece as well as the ability to re-approach it with fresh eyes days or weeks later.
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When an Article or Book has been written, it must betype-written before it is sent to the Editor or Publisher,that is to say, unless it has been ordered beforehand orunless you are well known. The reason is not simplythat Type-writing looks better than ordinary writing,and that it is easier to read, but it actually is a fact thatfew Editors or Publishers will read anything that is notType- written.
Even as early as 1905 (or 1899 if we go by the dating of the introduction), typewritten manuscripts were de rigueur for submission to editors and publishers.
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Type-writing (see p. 369) is becoming more and morecommonly used, and for certain purposes it is indispen-s
Note that he's writing in 1899 (via the introduction), and certainly not later than 1905 (publication date).
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Carlyle
One of the major values of fame is that it often allows the dropping of context in communication between people.
Example: Carlyle references in @Miles1905
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Carlyle
It bears noting in this book on writing and composition, Miles (nor the indexer if it was done by someone else) never uses Carlyle's first name (Thomas) in any of the eleven instances in which it appears, as he's famous enough in the context (space, time) to need only a single name.
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General Hints on Preparing Essays etc., in Rhyme.
One ought to ask what purpose this Rhyme serves?
- Providing emphasis of the material in the chapter;
- scaffolding for hanging the rest of the material of the book upon, and
- potentially meant to be memorized as a sort of outline of the book and the material.
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WITH A RHYME.
did I miss the "rhyme" in this section or is he using a more figurative sense (as in "rhyme or reason")?
Ha! Didn't get far enough, it's on page 36, but also works the other way as well.
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IN this Chapter I shall try to summarise the main partof this work, so that those who have not the time orthe inclination to go right through it may at any rategrasp the general plan of it, and may be able to referto any particular Chapter or page for further informa-tion on any particular topic.
This chapter is essentially what one ought to glean from skimming the TOC, the Index, and doing a brief inspectional read (Adler, 1972).
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In these two latter sections it is aswell to emphasise the general advice, " Try a thing foryourself before you go to anything or anyone for infor-mation." You should try (if there is time) to work outthe subject beforehand ; and then, after you have reador listened to the information, you should note it downin a special Note-book, and if possible make certain ofunderstanding it, of remembering it, and of using it.
Echoes of my own advice to "practice, practice, practice".
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Interest is required especially in the Beginning,
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But, the more heexamines the subject, and the more he goes by hispersonal experience, the more he will find it worthwhile to spend time on, and to practise carefully,fthisfirst department of Composition, as opposed to the mereExpression^] Indeed one might almost say that, if thisfirst department has been thoroughly well done, that isto say, if the Scheme of Headings and Sub-Headingshas been well prepared, the Expression will be a com-paratively easy matter.
Definition of the "first department of composition": <br /> The preparation (mise en place) for writing as opposed to the actual expression of the writing. By this he likely means the actions of Part II (collecting, selecting, arranging) of this book versus Part III.
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Humour is to be classed as a Rhetoricalweapon, and indeed as one of the most powerful.
Tags
- card index for writing
- zettelkasten boxes
- How to Read a Book
- definitions
- weaponization of language
- travelling
- Thomas Carlyle
- card index for business
- novelty
- card index
- technology in the classroom
- Alphonse Loisette
- objections
- economies of scale
- idleness
- proofreading
- quotes
- associative memory
- put the letter in a drawer
- time away
- open questions
- being cheap
- writing and waiting
- Eustace Hamilton Miles
- laziness
- beginning
- fresh eyes
- inspectional reading
- cruelty
- rhetoric
- caret
- card system
- editors' marks
- paper
- typewriters (adoption)
- publishing timelines
- typewriter affordances
- card index as productivity system
- editors (publishing)
- expectations
- write only on one side
- portrait vs. landscape orientations
- humor
- interest
- writing affordances
- the unknown
- charging trays
- rhyme for memory
- kindness
- technology
- writing advice
- composition
- context
- indexing methods
- insertions
- rhyme
- 1899
- humanity
- rhetorical weapons
- 1905
- writing with empathy
- preparation
- cards of equal size
- note taking affordances
- waiting
- empathy
- annotations
- productivity
- fame
- practice, practice, practice
- first department of composition
- rhyme or reason
- submissions (writing)
- media studies
- technopanic
- idea links
- diffuse thinking
- hyperlinks
- card system for business
- patience
- color codes
- fear
- reading practices
- intellectual history
- mise en place
- letter-writing
- toxic capitalism
Annotators
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pulitzercenter.org pulitzercenter.org
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Enslavers and thecourts did not honor kinship ties tomothers, siblings, cousins. In mostcourts, they had no legal standing.Enslavers could rape or murder their
This shows that people don't like slaves so much that they don't want them to have a family and they can do anything to their slaves like they own the slaves which is very cruel.
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Hundreds of black veterans werebeaten, maimed, shot and lynched.
This just shows the amount of hate for people with a darker skin color which is just completely un human.
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Despite the guarantees of equal-ity in the 14th Amendment, theSupreme Court’s landmark Plessy v.Ferguson decision in 1896 declaredthat the racial segregation of blackAmericans was constitutional.
Even though slavery ended this quote is explaining that the effects of slavery was racism which was never ending or it would take a very long time to end.
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They had no claim to their own chil-dren, who could be bought, sold andtraded away from them on auctionblocks alongside furniture and cattleor behind storefronts that advertised‘‘Negroes for Sale.’
This quote shows how the African slaves were treated especially with their children which were separated away from them and sold to other people to work or one day become another slave and those kids would not know anything about them or their families.
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www.sciencedirect.com www.sciencedirect.com
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The widespread availability and addictive nature of the loot box system makes it crucial to regulate such monetization practices to protect vulnerable individuals such as young people, lonely individuals, and problem gamblers.
This last section maybe a good solution to the issue of loot box addiction.
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the study looked at financial consequences and the role of problem gambling in these associations.
Both problem gambling and financial consequences are a good aspect to look at the issue of online gambling and loot boxes.
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With respect to H1, Loneliness had a positive association with Loot Box Purchasing
Helps strengthens the previous claim of lonely individuals being vulnerable to loot boxes.
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Therefore, the positive association between Loot Box Purchasing and Indebtedness was indirect and mediated through Problem gambling.
The connection between loot boxes and indebtedness may be indirect. However, researching further in problem gambling may produce help claims that strength the research question.
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Loot box purchasing was measured with a single-item “How have your online consumer habits changed during the coronavirus pandemic regarding the following services in comparison to your previous habits: Loot box purchases in digital games”
Need to find further studies for after the pandemic but this can be a good baseline on how individuals can be affected by the 'predatory monetization schemes' as previously mentioned in the journal.
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Increased loot box purchasing is positively associated with indebtedness.Given that gambling activities and loot box purchasing often co-occur
This overall feeling of indebtness can help strength the claim of the similarity of hopelessness that gambling produces to what loot boxes produce.
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Loot box expenditure can add to financial strain caused by excessive gambling (Hing et al., 2022), but it might be problem gambling that plays a major role in debt problems among loot box buyers
Potentially looking for cases of severe loot box addictions can help improve the claim of how these loot boxes mask the true nature of online gambling.
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‘predatory monetization schemes’ are designed to make players both financially and psychologically committed to a game with a purpose of spending more and more money.
Good to further look into as these 'predatory monetization schemes' could be a point to bring up in how these loot boxes can change the perception of online gambling by posing as a lighter form of online gambling in a way?
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Loot boxes are commonly juxtaposed with forms of gambling and generally perceived as a gambling-like activity
The term gambling-like activity can be key in placing loot boxes as an activity closely linked to gambling.
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roblem gambling is more common among those of lower income (Hahmann et al., 2021), but gambling can further worsen the situation leading to severe financial problems such as indebtedness
Good point to bring up in the dangers of gambling.
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Studies have found that loneliness is a risk factor for problem gambling
Potentially a good angle to describe the individuals that might be the most vulnerable to loot boxes and online gambling in general.
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Several studies have found associations between loot box purchasing and poorer mental health and distress
These studies would be helpful in strengthening the claim on how those how are mentally struggling are the most vulnerable. These studies can also supplement the potentially connection to how loot box purchasing can have adverse affects on mental health. However, this claim will require additional research using multiple sources and studies.
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Concerns have been raised particularly in relation to ‘loot boxes’ that present a controversial form of in-game purchases in pursuit of randomized rewards such as weapons or cosmetic features
Good definition for what a loot box is. Also helps present the loot box as a form of in-game purchase based on luck.
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The chance-based nature of loot boxes is often juxtaposed with mechanisms of gambling, and these gambling-like mechanisms make them potentially addictive for players
Strong point that be used as an argument on why loot boxes can hurt individuals with its similarities to gambling. This can also help show how loot boxes promote a form of online gambling.
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learn.cantrill.io learn.cantrill.io
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Hello there, folks.
Thanks once again for joining.
Now that we've got a little bit of an understanding of what problem cloud is solving, let's actually go ahead and define it.
So what we'll talk about is technology on tap, a common phrase that you might have heard about when talking about cloud.
What is it and why would we say that?
Then what we're actually going to do is walk through the NIST definition of cloud.
So there are five key properties that the National Institute of Standards and Technology does use to determine whether or not something is cloud.
So we'll walk through that.
So we've got a good understanding of what cloud is and what cloud is not.
So first things first, technology on tap.
Why would we refer to cloud as technology on tap?
Well, let's have a think about the taps we do know about.
When you want access to water, if you're lucky enough to have access to a nice and easy supply of water, all you really need to do is turn on your tap and get access to as little or as much water as you want.
You can turn that on and off as you require.
Now, we know that that's easy for us.
All we have to worry about is the tap and paying the bill for the amount of water that we consume.
But what we don't really have to worry about is everything that goes in behind the scenes.
So the treatment of the water to bring it up to drinking standards, the actual storage of that treated water, and then the transportation of that through the piping network to actually get to our tap.
All of that is managed for us.
We don't need to really worry about what happens behind the scenes.
All we do is focus on that tap.
We turn it on if we want more.
We turn it off when we are finished.
We only pay for what we consume.
So you might be able to see where I'm going with this.
This is exactly what we are talking about with cloud.
With cloud, however, it's not water that we're getting access to, it is technology.
So if we want access to technology, we use the cloud.
We push some buttons, we click on an interface, we use whatever tool we require, and we get access to those servers, that storage, that database, whatever it might be that we require in the cloud.
Now again, behind the scenes, we don't have to worry about the data centers that host all of this technology, all of these services that we want access to.
We don't worry about the physical infrastructure, the hosting infrastructure, the storage, all the different bits and pieces that actually get that technology to us, we don't need to worry about.
And how does it get to us?
How is it available all across the globe?
Well, we don't need to worry about that connectivity and delivery as well.
All of this behind the scenes when we use cloud is managed for us.
All we have to worry about is turning on or off services as we require.
And this is why you can hear cloud being referred to as technology on tap, because it is very similar to the water utility service.
Utility service is another name you might hear cloud being referred to, because it's like water or electricity.
Cloud are like these utility services where you don't have to worry about all the infrastructure behind the scenes.
You just worry about the thing that you want access to.
And really importantly, you only have to pay for what you use.
You turn it on if you need it, you turn it on if you don't, you create things when you need them, delete them when you don't, and you only pay for those services when you have them, even though they are constantly available at your fingertips.
Now, compare this to the scenario we walked through earlier.
Traditionally, we would have to buy all of the infrastructure, have it sitting there idly, even if we weren't using it, we would still have had to pay for it, set it up, power it and keep it all running.
So this is a high level of what we are talking about with cloud.
Easy access to servers when you need them, turn them off when you don't, don't worry about all that infrastructure behind the scenes.
But that's a high level definition.
So let's now walk through what the NIST use as the key properties to define cloud.
One of the first properties you can use to understand whether something is or is not cloud is understanding whether or not it provides you on demand self service access, where you can easily go ahead and get that technology without even having to talk to humans.
So what do I really mean by that?
Well, let's say you're a cloud administrator, you want to go ahead and access some resources in the cloud.
Now, if you do want access to some services, some data, some storage and application, whatever it might be, while you're probably going to have some sort of admin interface that you can use, whether that's a command line tool or some sort of graphical user interface, you can easily use that to turn on any of the services that you need, web applications, data, storage, compute and much, much more.
And you don't have to go ahead, talk to another human, procure all of the infrastructure that runs behind the scenes.
You use your tool, it is self service, it is on demand, create it when you want it, delete it when you don't.
So that's on demand self service access and one of the key properties of the cloud.
Next, what I want to talk to you about is broad network access.
Now, this is where we're just saying, if something is cloud, it should be easy for you to access through standard capabilities.
So for example, if we are the cloud administrator, it's pretty common when you're working with technology to expect that you would have command line tools, web based tools and so on.
But even when we're not talking about cloud administrators and we're actually talking about the end users, maybe for example, accessing storage, it should be easy for them to do so through standard tools as well, such as a desktop application, a web browser or something similar.
Or maybe you've gone ahead and deployed a reporting solution in the cloud, like we spoke of in the previous lesson.
Well, you would commonly expect for that sort of solution that maybe there's also a mobile application to go and access all of that reporting data.
The key point here is that if you are using cloud, it is expected that all of the common standard sorts of accessibility options are available to you, public access, private access, desktop applications, mobile applications and so on.
So if that's what cloud is and how we access it, where actually is it?
That's a really important part of the definition of cloud.
And that's where we're referring to resource pooling, this idea that you don't really know exactly where the cloud is that you are going to access.
So let's say for example, you've got your Aussie Mart company.
If they want to deploy their solution to be available across the globe, well, it should be pretty easy for them to actually go ahead and do that.
Now, we don't know necessarily where that is.
We can get access to it.
We might say, I want my solution available in Australia East for example, or Europe or India or maybe central US for example.
All of these refer to general locations where we want to deploy our services.
When you use cloud, you are not going to go ahead and say, I want one server and I want it deployed to the data center at 123 data center street.
Okay, you don't know the physical address exactly or at least you shouldn't really have to.
All you need to know about is generally where you are going to go and deploy that.
Now, you will also see that for most cloud providers, you've got that global access in terms of all the different locations you can deploy to.
And really importantly, in terms of all of these pooled resources, understand that it's not just for you to use.
There will be other customers all across the globe who are using that as well.
So when you're using cloud, there are lots of resources.
They might be in lots of different physical locations and lots of different physical infrastructure and in use by lots of different customers.
And you don't really need to worry about that or know too much about it.
Another really important property of the cloud is something referred to as rapid elasticity.
Now elasticity is the idea that you can easily get access to more or less resources.
And when you work with cloud, you're actually going to commonly hear this being referred to as scaling out and in rather than just scaling up and down.
So what do I mean by that?
Well, let's say we've got our users that need to access our Aussie Mart store.
We might decide to use cloud to host our Aussie Mart web application.
And perhaps that's hosted on a server and a database.
Now, when that application gets really busy, for example, if we have lots of different users going to access it at the same time, we might want to scale out to meet demand.
That is to say, rather than having one server that hosts our web application, we might actually have three.
And if that demand for our application decreases, we might actually go ahead and decrease the underlying resources that power it as well.
What we are talking about here is scaling in and out by adding or decreasing the number of resources that host our application.
This is different from the traditional approach to scalability, where what we would normally do is just add CPU or add memory, for example.
We would increase the size of one individual resource that was hosting our solution.
So that's just elasticity at a high level and it's a really key property of cloud.
Now, we'll just say here that if you are worried about how that actually works behind the scenes in terms of how you host that application across duplicate resources, how you provide connectivity to that, that's all outside the scope of this beginners course, but it's definitely covered in other content as well.
So when you're using cloud, you get easy access to scale in and out and you should never feel like there are not enough resources to meet your demand.
To you, it should just feel like if you want a hundred servers, for example, then you can easily get a hundred servers.
All right, now the last property of cloud that I want to talk to you about is that of measuring service.
When we're talking about measuring service, what we're talking about is the idea that if you are using cloud to host your solutions, it should be really easy for you to go and say, I know what this is costing, I know where my resources are, how they are performing and whether there are any issues and I can control the types of resources and the configuration that I use that I'm going to deploy.
So for example, it should be easy for you to say, how much is it going to cost me for five gigabytes of storage?
What does my bill look like currently and what am I forecasted to be using over the remainder of the month?
Or maybe you want to say that certain services should not be allowed to be deployed across all regions.
Yes, cloud can be accessed across the globe, but maybe your organization only works in one part of a specific country and that's the only location you should be able to use.
These are the standard notions of measuring and controlling service and it's really common to all of the cloud providers.
All right, everybody.
So now you've got an understanding of what cloud is and how you can define it.
If you'd like to see more about this definition from the NIST, then be sure to check out the link that I've included for this lesson.
So thanks for joining me, folks.
I'll see you in the next lesson.
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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IBMT involves learning that requires experience and explicit instruction. To ensure appropriate experience, coaches (qualified instructors) are trained to help novices practice IBMT properly. Instructors received training on how to interact with experimental and control groups to make sure they understand the training program exactly.
I would be interested to see if traditional focused meditation would have similar results.
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Although no direct measures of brain changes were used in this study, some previous studies suggest that changes in brain networks can occur. Thomas et al. (40) showed that, in rats, one short experience of acute exposure to psychosocial stress reduced both short- and long-term survival of newborn hippocampal neurons. Similarly, the human brain is sensitive to short experience. Naccache et al. (41) showed that the subliminal presentation of emotional words (<100 ms) modulates the activity of the amygdala at a long latency and triggers long-lasting cerebral processes (41).
Let's review these other studies as well.
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However, the lengthy training required has made it difficult to use random assignment of participants to conditions to confirm these findings.
Interesting.
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a group
What is the size and composition of the group? Edit: Addressed further down.
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may be easier to teach to novices because they would not have to struggle so hard to control their thoughts.
Very interesting. I thought the whole purpose of meditation WAS the struggle to control the thoughts. I thought that is where the benefits came from.
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Thought control is achieved gradually through posture and relaxation, body–mind harmony, and balance with the help of the coach rather than by making the trainee attempt an internal struggle to control thoughts in accordance with instruction.
Certainly would make it more approachable.
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The main effect of the training session was significant only for the executive network [F(1,78) = 9.859; P < 0.01]. More importantly, the group × session interaction was significant for the executive network [F(1,78) = 10.839; P < 0.01], indicating that the before vs. after difference in the conflict resolution score was significant only for the trained group
This would imply improved equanimity, but perhaps not long term focus improvement.
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Performance of the ANT after 5 days of IBMT or control. Error bars indicate 1 SD. Vertical axis indicates the difference in mean reaction time between the congruent and incongruent flankers. The higher scores show less efficient resolution of conflict.
This particular study seems to show that the change in focus efficiency was actually better in the control group than the experiment group.
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learn.cantrill.io learn.cantrill.io
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Hey there everybody, thanks for joining.
It's great to have you with me in this lesson where we're going to talk about why cloud matters.
Now to help answer that question, what I want to do firstly is talk to you about the traditional IT infrastructure.
How did we used to do things?
What sort of challenges and issues did we face?
And therefore we'll get a better understanding of what cloud is actually doing to help.
We can look at how things used to be and how things are now.
So what we're going to do throughout this lesson is walk through a little bit of a scenario with a fictitious company called Ozzymart.
So let's go ahead now, jump in and have a chat about the issues that they're currently facing.
Ozzymart is a fictitious company that works across the globe selling a range of different Australia related paraphernalia.
Maybe stuffed toys for kangaroos, koalas and that sort of thing.
Now they've currently got several different applications that they use that they provide access to for their users.
And currently the Ozzymart team do not use the cloud.
So when we have a look at the infrastructure hosting these applications, we'll learn that Ozzymart have a couple of servers, one server for each of the applications that they've got configured.
Now the Ozzymart IT team have had to have gone and set up these servers with windows, the applications and all the different data that they need for these applications to work.
And what it's also important to understand about the Ozzymart infrastructure is all of this is currently hosted on their on-premises customer managed infrastructure.
So yes, the Ozzymart team could have gone out and maybe used a data center provider.
But the key point here is that the Ozzymart IT team have had to set up servers, operating systems, applications and a range of other infrastructure to support all of this storage, networking, power, cooling.
Okay, these are the sorts of things that we have to manage traditionally before we were able to use cloud.
Now to help understand what sort of challenges that might introduce, let's walk through a scenario.
We're going to say that the Ozzymart CEO has gone and identified the need for reporting to be performed across these two applications.
And the CEO wants those reports to be up and ready by the end of this month.
Let's say that's only a week away.
So the CEO has instructed the finance manager and the finance manager has said, "Hey, awesome.
You know what?
I've found this great app out there on the internet called Reports For You.
We can buy it, download it and install it.
I'm going to go tell the IT team to get this up and running straight away."
So this might sound a little bit familiar to some of you who have worked in traditional IT where sometimes demands can come from the top of the organization and they filter down with really tight timelines.
So let's say for example, the finance manager is going to go along, talk to the IT team and say, "We need this Reports For You application set up by the end of month."
Now the IT team might be a little bit scared because, hey, when we look at the infrastructure we've got, it's supporting those two servers and applications okay, but maybe we don't have much more space.
Maybe we don't have enough storage.
Maybe we are using something like virtualization.
So we might not need to buy a brand new physical server and we can run up a virtual Windows server for the Reports For You application.
But there might just not be enough resources in general.
CPU, memory, storage, whatever it might be to be able to meet the demands of this Reports For You application.
But you've got a timeline.
So you go ahead, you get that server up and running.
You install the applications, the operating system data, all there as quickly as you can to meet these timelines that you've been given by the finance manager.
Now maybe it's not the best server that you've ever built.
It might be a little bit rushed and a little bit squished, but you've managed to get that server up and running with the Reports For You application and you've been able to meet those timelines and provide access to your users.
Now let's say that you've given access to your users for this Reports For You application.
Now let's say when they start that monthly reporting job, the Reports For You application needs to talk to the data across your other two applications, the Aussie Mart Store and the Aussie Mart Comply application.
And it's going to use that data to perform the reporting that the CEO has requested.
So you kick off this report job on a Friday.
You hope that it's going to be complete on a Saturday, but maybe it's not.
You check again on a Sunday and things are starting to get a little bit scary.
And uh-oh, Monday rolls around, the Reports For You report is still running.
It has not yet complete.
And that might not be so great because you don't have a lot of resources on-premises.
And now all of your applications are starting to perform really poorly.
So that Reports For You application is still running.
It's still trying to read data from those other two applications.
And maybe they're getting really, really slow and let's hope not, but maybe the applications even go off entirely.
Now those users are going to become pretty angry.
You're going to get a lot of calls to the help desk saying that things are offline.
And you're probably going to have the finance manager and every other manager reaching out to you saying, this needs to be fixed now.
So let's say you managed to push through, perhaps through the rest of Monday, and that report finally finishes.
You clearly need more resources to be able to run this report much more quickly at the end of each month so that you don't have angry users.
So what are you going to do to fix this for the next month when you need to run the report again?
Well, you might have a think about ordering some new software and hardware because you clearly don't have enough hardware on-premises right now.
You're going to have to wait some time for all of that to be delivered.
And then you're going to have to physically and store it, set it up, get it running, and make sure that you've got everything you need for reports for you to be running with more CPU and resources next time.
There's a lot of different work that you need to do.
This is one of the traditional IT challenges that we might face when the business has demands and expectations for things to happen quickly.
And it's not really necessarily the CEO or the finance manager's fault.
They are focused on what the business needs.
And when you work in the technology teams, you need to do what you can to support them so that the business can succeed.
So how might we do that a little bit differently with cloud?
Well, with cloud, we could sign up for a cloud provider, we could turn on and off servers as needed, and we could scale up and scale down, scale in and scale out resources, all to meet those demands on a monthly basis.
So that could be a lot less work to do and it could certainly provide you the ability to respond much more quickly to the demands that come from the business.
And rather than having to go out and buy all of this new infrastructure that you are only going to use once a month, well, as we're going to learn throughout this course, one of the many benefits of cloud is that you can turn things on and off really quickly and only pay for what you need.
So what might this look like with cloud?
Well, with cloud, what we might do is no longer have that on-premises rushed server that we were using for reports for you.
Instead of that, we can go out to a public cloud provider like AWS, GCP or hopefully Azure, and you can set up those servers once again using a range of different features, products that are all available through the various public cloud providers.
Now, yes, in this scenario, we are still talking about setting up a server.
So that is going to take you some time to configure Windows, set up the application, all of the data and configuration that you require, but at least you don't need to worry about the actual physical infrastructure that is supporting that server.
You don't have to go out, talk to your procurement team, talk to a different providers, wait for different physical infrastructure to be delivered and licensing and software and other assets.
With cloud, as we will learn, you can really quickly get online and up and running.
And also, if we had that need to ensure that the reports for you application was running with lots of different resources at the end of the month, it's much easier when we use cloud to just go and turn some servers on and then maybe turn them off at the end of the month when they are no longer acquired.
This is the sort of thing that we are talking about with cloud.
We're only really just touching on the service about what cloud can do and what cloud actually is.
But my hope is that through this lesson, you can understand how cloud changes things.
Cloud allows us to work with technology in a much different way than we traditionally would work with our on-premises infrastructure.
Another example that shows how cloud is different is that rather than using the reports for you application, what we might in fact actually choose to do is go to a public cloud provider and go to someone that actually has a equivalent reports for you solution that's entirely built in the cloud ready to go.
In this way, not only do we no longer have to manage the underlying physical infrastructure, we don't actually have to manage the application software installation, configuration, and all of that service setup.
With something like a reporting software that's built in the cloud, we would just provide access to our users and only have to pay on a per user basis.
So if you've used something like zoom for meetings or Dropbox for data sharing, that's the sort of solution we're talking about.
So if we consider this scenario for Aussie Mart, we have a think about the benefits that they might access when they use the cloud.
Well, we can much more quickly get access to resources to respond to demand.
If we need to have a lot of different compute capacity working at the end of the month with cloud, like you'll learn, we can easily get access to that.
If we wanted to add lots of users, we could do that much more simply as well.
And something that the finance manager might really be happy about in this scenario is that we aren't going to go back and suggest to them that we need to buy a whole heap of new physical infrastructure right now.
When we think about traditionally how Aussie Mart would have worked with this scenario, they would have to go and buy some new physical servers, resources, storage, networking, whatever that might be, to meet the needs of this reports for you application.
And really, they're probably going to have to strike a balance between having enough infrastructure to ensure that the reports for you application completes its job quickly and not buying too much infrastructure that's just going to be sitting there unused whilst the reports for you application is not working.
And really importantly, when we go to cloud, we see this difference as not having to buy lots of physical infrastructure upfront as being referred to as capital expenditure versus operational expenditure.
Really, what we're just saying here is rather than spending a whole big lump sum all at once to get what you need, you can just pay on a monthly basis for what you need when you need it.
And finally, one of the other benefits that you'll also see is that we're getting a reduction in the amount of different tasks that we have to complete in terms of IT administration, set up of operating systems, management of physical infrastructure, what the procurement team has to manage, and so on.
Again, right now we're just talking really high level about a fictitious scenario for Aussie Mart to help you to understand the types of things and the types of benefits that we can get access to for cloud.
So hopefully if you're embarking on a cloud journey, you're gonna have a happy finance manager, CEO, and other team members that you're working with as well.
Okay, everybody, so that's a wrap to this lesson on why cloud matters.
As I've said, we're really only just scratching the surface.
This is just to introduce you to a scenario that can help you to understand the types of benefits we get access to with cloud.
As we move throughout this course, we'll progressively dive deeper in terms of what cloud is, how you define it, the features you get access to, and other common concepts and terms.
So thanks for joining me, I'll see you there.
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“I do not wantmy wife to take up with any otherman; if she does, this real estate goesto my estate.” The wife re-married.Does she own the realty in fee simple?
The more apparent search item here is "fee simple". However, another search item is whether or not a promise to not remarry, which could come at a detriment, is with consideration and is legally enforceable.
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SOTs generated by the anomalous Hall effect inFM/NM/FM multilayers were predicted 13 and experimentallyrealized14
Is this normal?
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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Marrim thinks they will still find a way to smoke. “Kids break the rules — that’s the way of the world,” she said. “We were all kids and we tried it for the first time,” she added. “Might as well do it in the safety of a lounge.”
Marrim feels that hookah is a big part of her life because it helped her feel liberated even though she was looked as shameful because she is a women but that did not stop her she would make her own hookah when she was younger to smoke some hookah she's not wrong kids like to break the rules
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the chemicals in hookah smoke are similar to those found in cigarette smoke.
due to hookah being Tabaco that you inhale in to your lungs so it's still a health problem because you get smoke in your lungs.
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birthdays, graduations, that time you cried over the crush who didn’t like you back or showed off your smoke ring skills to your friends. “It’s like a rite of passage here when you start smoking hookah,” Marrim said.
The hookah lounge is more then a place to smoke it a place where people to together to celebrate special events like birthdays or to relief dome stress or hang with friends.
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thewasteland.info thewasteland.info
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on the other side
The water that has only recently brought about death to an unfortunate sailor and has seemingly threatened “Gentile[s]” and “Jew[s]” and even us, the readers, now becomes the force an absence of which leads to death. What if the “death by water” that Madame Sosotris warned about was not the drowning but the death brought by its lack? This absence—spiritual and physical—defines the drought that pervades society.
In essence, that warning has already become true. In the search of meaning, the earthly desires have drowned humanity. What comes after it is stillness: a period of profound spiritual drought. This lack of spiritually induces apocalypse: a cycle of life seemingly becomes broken. The silence in the mountains does not give way to voice, and stillness, described in The Death of Water, that follows the storm does not imply recovery; instead, it leads to further destruction. There is no resurgence after the storm, only desolation.
This desolation is no less overwhelming than the indulgence that preceded it. The absence of water—a metaphor for spiritual sustenance—is inescapable. The mountains, once symbols of “solitude,” “silence” and reflection are now dry and barren. The use of “even” in these lines underscores the notion of the totality of this spiritual drought. There is no refuge, no shelter, not “even” in the mountains.
Eliot further juxtaposes biblical light, associated with Christ as “the sun shineth in his strength,” as described in Revelations, with thunder, transforming it into a symbol of apocalypse – the thunder itself represents a loud rumbling or crashing noise after a lightning flash. This choice of title and imagery seems to suggest that divine intervention may have already occurred—unrecognized and unheeded, leaving only a loud noice as its product. What if Jesus is already here “walking beside” us? Left unrecognized, however, he does not intervene. This notion is underscored by the repetition of the question regarding the personality of this third creature: “Who is the third who walks always beside you?” In the second reiteration of the question, however, “beside” changes to “on the other side.” This divine creature, most likely Christ, is present, yet now isolated, by the walls of mountains we ourselves have built.
The tragedy of this drought, thus, seems to lie not in the absence of divine intervention, but in humanity’s inability to recognize it. In this contemporary world, it is not the storm that destroys; it is the stillness after, where the absence of recognition leads to a deeper decay. The apocalypse has already begun (or potentially has almost reached its culmination), not in fire or flood, but in silence and spiritual blindness.
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www.shutterfly.com www.shutterfly.com
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Thanksgiving is a time to reflect on the things we’re grateful for and to share that gratitude with the people who matter most. Along with gathering around the table, sending a heartfelt card is a meaningful way to reach out to friends, family, and co-workers—especially those who can’t join you in person. A thoughtful message can remind them how much they’re loved and appreciated. Whether you’re sending Thanksgiving cards or inviting loved ones to celebrate with you, these Thanksgiving messages and well wishes will help express your gratitude this season. function scrollListener(){document.getElementById("carousel-product-list-wrapper").addEventListener("scroll",scrollListener)}function scrollListener(){manageArrowsVisibility()}function manageArrowsVisibility(e=0){var t,l,s,r=document.getElementById("carousel-product-list-wrapper");r&&(e=r.scrollLeft+e,t=r.offsetWidth,r=r.scrollWidth,l=document.getElementById("apc-left-arrow"),s=document.getElementById("apc-right-arrow"),e<=0?(l.classList.add("disable"),s.classList.remove("disable")):e+t<r?(l.classList.remove("disable"),s.classList.remove("disable")):r<=e+t&&(l.classList.remove("disable"),s.classList.add("disable")))}function handleArrowClick(e){var t,l=document.getElementById("carousel-product-list-wrapper");l&&(scrollAmount=0,t=setInterval(function(){"left"===e?(manageArrowsVisibility(-10),l.scrollLeft-=10):(manageArrowsVisibility(10),l.scrollLeft+=10),720<=(scrollAmount+=10)&&window.clearInterval(t)},25))} .apc-spinner{display:flex;width:72px;position:absolute;text-align:center;justify-content:space-around}.apc-spinner>div{width:18px;height:18px;background:#aaa;border-radius:100%;display:inline-block;-webkit-animation:sk-bouncedelay 1.4s ease-in-out infinite both;animation:sk-bouncedelay 1.4s ease-in-out infinite both}.apc-spinner .bounce1{-webkit-animation-delay:-.32s;animation-delay:-.32s}.apc-spinner .bounce2{-webkit-animation-delay:-.16s;animation-delay:-.16s}@-webkit-keyframes sk-bouncedelay{0%,80%,to{-webkit-transform:scale(0)}40%{-webkit-transform:scale(1)}}@keyframes sk-bouncedelay{0%,80%,to{-webkit-transform:scale(0);transform:scale(0)}40%{-webkit-transform:scale(1);transform:scale(1)}}.shimmer-background{position:absolute;width:100%;height:100%;background:#fff;flex-direction:column;z-index:3}.shimmer-background,.shimmer-thumb{display:flex;align-items:center;justify-content:center}.shimmer-thumb{width:70%;height:55%;background:#ebedf0;margin:10%}.shimmer-text{width:50%;height:16px;background:#ebedf0;border-radius:8px;margin-bottom:4%}.apc-product-wrapper{background:0 0;padding:4px;display:flex;flex-direction:column;justify-content:center;align-items:center;margin:0 auto;box-sizing:content-box;max-width:280px}.mobile .apc-product-wrapper{height:250px}.grid-layout .apc-product-wrapper{height:295px;width:calc(20% - 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Well-written paragraph, reads very smoothly. 1. First sentence states what Thanksgiving is all about. 2. Second and third smoothly transition from the first into the need for sending messages for Thanksgiving. 3. Last hints at some of the tangible options to be discussed, then summarizes the value of Thanksgiving messages.
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docdrop.org docdrop.orgview1
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"You guys are no help. Literally no help. Why do you guys have me in here?" she protested. Sofia's step-grandfather was so angry with the school administrators (and perhaps intimidated by them) that Lola tried to intervene. (He tells us that when he was growing up here in the 1950s, all the parents were involved in the schools, but now they are completely uninterested. "They would rather let others do it, but then no one gets involved."
Nowadays, I think that's the case for a lot of schools in the U.S.. Many parents aren't involved in school affairs as back in the day. parents actually cared about their children's education and the material they're being taught, but now parents just send kids to these schools and are not involved whatsoever.
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Local file Local file
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Cyber-EnabledNetworks
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Has the capacity to be entwined with other crimes such as extortion
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Intensifies amid the rise of ais
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Mafia networks
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Only 18 of them in Canada
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They're mainly held in Ontario and Quebec but have connections to more than 10 countries
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They're very violent
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Active in the private business sector where they commit money laundering
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Extortion
- Force or threats are used to obtain money
Eg. Co-op extortion 1. Perpetrator threatened to release sensitive data to the public if certain demands weren't made
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Piracy
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The crime of stealing intellectual property and distributing them either for a reduced price or for free
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Eg. Zlibrary
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Causes financial consequences to the movie producer and its promoter and other associated with the production of the movie
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What would be the difference between piracy and buying something and selling it at a thrifting site at a reduced price?
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Manga mura
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inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net
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Responsibility to the tree makes everyone pause before beginning.Sometimes I have that same sense when I face a blank sheet of paper.For me, writing is an act of reciprocity with the world; it is what Ican give back in return for everything that has been given to me. Andnow there’s another layer of responsibility, writing on a thin sheet oftree and hoping the words are worth it. Such a thought could make aperson set down her pen.
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learn.cantrill.io learn.cantrill.io
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Welcome back and in this lesson I want to talk through another type of storage.
This time instant store volumes.
It's essential for all of the AWS exams and real-world usage that you understand the pros and cons for this type of storage.
It can save money, improve performance or it can cause significant headaches so you have to appreciate all of the different factors.
So let's just jump in and get started because we've got a lot to cover.
Instant store volumes provide block storage devices so raw volumes which can be attached to an instance presented to the operating system on that instance and used as the basis for a file system which can then in turn be used by applications.
So far they're just like EBS only local instead of being presented over the network.
These volumes are physically connected to one EC2 host and that's really important.
Each EC2 host has its own instant store volumes and they're isolated to that one particular host.
Instances which are on that host can access those volumes and because they're locally attached they offer the highest storage performance available within AWS much higher than EBS can provide and more on why this is relevant very soon.
They're also included in the price of any instances which they come with.
Different instance types come with different selections of instant store volumes and for any instances which include instant store volumes they're included in the price of that instance so it comes down to use it or lose it.
One really important thing about instant store volumes is that you have to attach them at launch time and unlike EBS you can't attach them afterwards.
I've seen this question come up a few times in various AWS exams about adding new instant store volumes after instance launch and it's important that you remember that you can't do this it's launch time only.
Depending on the instance type you're going to be allocated a certain number of instant store volumes you can choose to use them or not but if you don't you can't adjust this later.
This is how instant store architecture looks.
Each instance can have a collection of volumes which are backed by physical devices on the EC2 host which that instance is running on.
So in this case host A has three physical devices and these are presented as three instant store volumes and host B has the same three physical devices.
Now in reality EC2 hosts will have many more but this is a simplified diagram.
Now on host A instance 1 and 2 are running instance 1 is using one volume and instance 2 is using the other two volumes and the volumes are named ephemeral 0, 1 and 2.
Roughly the same architecture is present on host B but instance 3 is the only instance running on that host and it's using ephemeral 1 and ephemeral 2 volumes.
Now these are ephemeral volumes they're temporary storage as a solutions architect or a developer or an engineer you need to think of them as such.
If instance 1 stored some data on ephemeral volume 0 on EC2 host A let's say a cat picture and then for some reason the instance migrated from host A through to host B then it would still have access to an ephemeral 0 volume but it would be a new physical volume a blank block device.
So this is important if an instance moves between hosts then any data that was present on the instant store volumes is lost and instances can move between hosts for many reasons.
If they're stopped and started this causes a migration between hosts or another example is if host A was undergoing maintenance then instances would be migrated to a different host.
When instances move between hosts they're given new blank ephemeral volumes data on the old volumes is lost they're wiped before being reassigned but the data is gone and even if you do something like change an instance type this will cause an instance to move between hosts and that instance will no longer have access to the same instant store volumes.
This is another risk to keep in mind you should view all instant store volumes as ephemeral.
The other danger to keep in mind is hardware failure if a physical volume fails say the ephemeral 1 volume on EC2 host A then instance 2 would lose whatever data was on that volume.
These are ephemeral volumes treat them as such their temporary data they should not be used for anything where persistence is required.
Now the size of instant store volumes and the number of volumes available to an instance vary depending on the type of instance and the size of instance.
Some instance types don't support instant store volumes different instance types have different types of instance store volumes and as you increase in size you're generally allocated larger numbers of these volumes so that's something that you need to keep in mind.
One of the primary benefits of instance store volumes is performance you can achieve much higher levels of throughput and more IOPS by using instance store volumes versus EBS.
I won't consume your time by going through every example but some of the higher-end figures that you need to consider are things like if you use a D3 instance which is storage optimized then you can achieve 4.6 GB per second of throughput and this instance type provides large amounts of storage using traditional hard disks so it's really good value for large amounts of storage.
It provides much high levels of throughput than the maximums available when using HDD based EBS volumes.
The I3 series which is another storage optimized family of instances these provide NVMe SSDs and this provides up to 16 GB per second of throughput and this is significantly higher than even the most high performance EBS volumes can provide and the difference in IOPS is even more pronounced versus EBS with certain I3 instances able to provide 2 million read IOPS and 1.6 million write IOPS when optimally configured.
In general instance store volumes perform to a much higher level versus the equivalent storage in EBS.
I'll be doing a comparison of EBS versus instance store elsewhere in this section which will help you in situations where you need to assess suitability but these are some examples of the raw figures.
Now before we finish this lesson just a number of exam power-ups.
Instance store volumes are local to an EC2 host so if an instance does move between hosts you lose access to the data on that volume you can only add instance store volumes to an instance at launch time if you don't add them you cannot come back later and add additional instance store volumes and any data on instance store volumes is lost if that instance moves between hosts if it gets resized or if you have either host failure or specific volume hardware failure.
Now in exchange for all these restrictions of course instance store volumes provide high performance so it's the highest data performance that you can achieve within AWS you just need to be willing to accept all of the shortcomings around the risk of data loss its temporary nature and the fact that it can't survive through restarts or moves or resizes.
It's essentially a performance trade-off you're getting much faster storage as long as you can tolerate all of the restrictions.
Now with instance store volumes you pay for it anyway it's included in the price of an instance so generally when you're provisioning an instance which does come with instance store volumes there is no advantage to not utilizing them you can decide not to use them inside the OS but you can't physically add them to the instance at a later date.
Just to reiterate and I'm going to keep repeating this throughout this section of the course instance store volumes are temporary you cannot use them for any data that you rely on or data which is not replaceable so keep that in mind it does give you amazing performance but it is not for the persistent storage of data but at this point that's all of the theory that I wanted to cover so that's the architecture and some of the performance trade-offs and benefits that you get with instance store volumes go ahead and complete this video and when you're ready join me in the next which will be an architectural comparison of EBS and instance store which will help you in exam situations to pick between the two.
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learn.cantrill.io learn.cantrill.io
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Welcome back and in this lesson I want to talk about the Hard Disk Drive or HDD-based volume types provided by EBS.
HDD-based means they have moving bits, platters which spin little robot arms known as heads which move across those spinning platters.
Moving parts means slower which is why you'd only want to use these volume types in very specific situations.
Now let's jump straight in and look at the types of situations where you would want to use HDD-based storage.
Now there are two types of HDD-based storage within EBS.
Well that's not true, there are actually three but one of them is legacy.
So I'll be covering the two ones which are in general usage.
And those are ST1 which is throughput optimized HDD and SC1 which is cold HDD.
So think about ST1 as the fast hard drive not very agile but pretty fast and think about SC1 as cold.
ST1 is cheap, it's less expensive than the SSD volumes which makes it ideal for any larger volumes of data.
SC1 is even cheaper but it comes with some significant trade-offs.
Now ST1 is designed for data which is sequentially accessed because it's HDD-based it's not great at random access.
It's more designed for data which needs to be written or read in a fairly sequential way.
Applications where throughput and economy is more important than IOPS or extreme levels of performance.
ST1 volumes range from 125 GB to 16 TB in size and you have a maximum of 500 IOPS.
But and this is important IO on HDD-based volumes is measured as 1 MB blocks.
So 500 IOPS means 500 MB per second.
Now their maximums HDD-based storage works in a similar way to how GP2 volumes work with a credit bucket.
Only with HDD-based volumes it's done around MB per second rather than IOPS.
So with ST1 you have a baseline performance of 40 MB per second for every 1 TB of volume size.
And you can burst to a maximum of 250 MB per second for every TB of volume size.
Obviously up to the maximum of 500 IOPS and 500 MB per second.
ST1 is designed for when cost is a concern but you need frequent access storage for throughput intensive sequential workloads.
So things like big data, data warehouses and log processing.
Now ST1 on the other hand is designed for infrequent workloads.
It's geared towards maximum economy when you just want to store lots of data and don't care about performance.
So it offers a maximum of 250 IOPS.
Again this is with a 1 MB IO size.
So this means a maximum of 250 MB per second of throughput.
And just like with ST1 this is based on the same credit pool architecture.
So it has a baseline of 12 MB per TB of volume size and a burst of 80 MB per second per TB of volume size.
So you can see that this offers significantly less performance than ST1 but it's also significantly cheaper.
And just like with ST1 volumes can range from 125 GB to 16 TB in size.
This storage type is the lowest cost EBS storage available.
It's designed for less frequently accessed workloads.
So if you have colder data, archives or anything which requires less than a few loads or scans per day then this is the type of storage volume to pick.
And that's it for HDD based storage.
Both of these are lower cost and lower performance versus SSD.
Designed for when you need economy of data storage.
Picking between them is simple.
If you can tolerate the trade-offs of ST1 then use that.
It's super cheap and for anything which isn't day to day accessed it's perfect.
Otherwise choose ST1.
And if you have a requirement for anything IOPS based then avoid both of these and look at SSD based storage.
With that being said though that's everything that I wanted to cover in this lesson.
Thanks for watching.
Go ahead and complete the video and when you're ready I'll look forward to you joining me in the next.
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pm.nlx.com.proxy.library.vanderbilt.edu pm.nlx.com.proxy.library.vanderbilt.edu
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The conclusion we would draw is apparent; — if there is a similarity of minds discernible in the whole human race, can dissimilitude of forms or the gradations of complexion prove that the earth is peopled by many different species of men?
The question: what matters more? Hearts/minds? Or Complexion?
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learn.cantrill.io learn.cantrill.io
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Welcome back and in this lesson I want to continue my EBS series and talk about provisioned IOPS SSD.
So that means IO1 and IO2.
Let's jump in and get started straight away because we do have a lot to cover.
Strictly speaking there are now three types of provisioned IOPS SSD.
Two which are in general release IO1 and its successor IO2 and one which is in preview which is IO2 Block Express.
Now they all offer slightly different performance characteristics and different prices but the common factors is that IOPS are configurable independent of the size of the volume and they're designed for super high performance situations where low latency and consistency of that low latency are both important characteristics.
With IO1 and IO2 you can achieve a maximum of 64,000 IOPS per volume and that's four times the maximum for GP2 and GP3 and with IO1 and IO2 you can achieve a 1000 MB per second of throughput.
This is the same as GP3 and significantly more than GP2.
Now IO2 Block Express takes this to another level.
With Block Express you can achieve 256,000 IOPS per volume and 4000 MB per second of throughput per volume.
In terms of the volume sizes that you can use with provisioned IOPS SSDs with IO1 and IO2 it ranges from 4 GB to 16 TB and with IO2 Block Express you can use larger up to 64 TB volumes.
Now I mentioned that with these volumes you can allocate IOPS performance values independently of the size of the volume.
Now this is useful for when you need extreme performance for smaller volumes or when you just need extreme performance in general but there is a maximum of the size to performance ratio.
For IO1 it's 50 IOPS per GB of size so this is more than the 3 IOPS per GB for GP2.
For IO2 this increases to 500 IOPS per GB of volume size and for Block Express this is 1000 IOPS per GB of volume size.
Now these are all maximums and with these types of volumes you pay for both the size and the provisioned IOPS that you need.
Now because with these volume types you're dealing with extreme levels of performance there is also another restriction that you need to be aware of and that's the per instance performance.
There is a maximum performance which can be achieved between the EBS service and a single EC2 instance.
Now this is influenced by a few things.
The type of volumes so different volumes have a different maximum per instance performance level, the type of the instance and then finally the size of the instance.
You'll find that only the most modern and largest instances support the highest levels of performance and these per instance maximums will also be more than one volume can provide on its own and so you're going to need multiple volumes to saturate this per instance performance level.
With IO1 volumes you can achieve a maximum of 260,000 IOPS per instance and a throughput of 7,500 MB per second.
It means you'll need just over four volumes of performance operating at maximum to achieve this per instance limit.
Oddly enough IO2 is slightly less at 160,000 IOPS for an entire instance and 4,750 MB per second and that's because AWS have split these new generation volume types.
They've added block express which can achieve 260,000 IOPS and 7,500 MB per second for an instance maximum.
So it's important that you understand that these are per instance maximums so you need multiple volumes all operating together and think of this as a performance cap for an individual EC2 instance.
Now these are the maximums for the volume types but you also need to take into consideration any maximums for the type and size of the instance so all of these things need to align in order to achieve maximum performance.
Now keep these figures locked in your mind it's not so much about the exact numbers but having a good idea about the levels of performance that you can achieve with GP2 or GP3 and then IO1, IO2 and IO2 block express will really help you in real-world situations and in the exam.
Instance store volumes which we're going to be covering elsewhere in this section can achieve even higher performance levels but this comes with a serious limitation in that it's not persistent but more on that soon.
Now as a comparison the per instance maximums for GP2 and GP3 is 260,000 IOPS and 7,000 MB per second per instance.
Again don't focus too much on the exact numbers but you need to have a feel for the ranges that these different types of storage volumes occupy versus each other and versus instance store.
Now you'll be using provisioned IOPS SSD for anything which needs really low latency or sub millisecond latency, consistent latency and higher levels of performance.
One common use case is when you have smaller volumes but need super high performance and that's only achievable with IO1, IO2 and IO2 block express.
Now that's everything that I wanted to cover in this lesson.
Again if you're doing the sysops or developer streams there's going to be a demo lesson where you'll experience the storage performance levels.
For the architecture stream this theory is enough.
At this point though thanks for watching that's everything I wanted to cover go ahead and complete the video and when you're ready I look forward to you joining me in the next.
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Disease: Von Willebrand Disease (VWD) type 1
Patient(s): 13 yo, female and 14 yo, female, both Italian
Variant: VWF NM_000552.5: c.820A>C p. (Thr274Pro)
Dominant negative effect
Heterozygous carrier
Variant located in the D1 domain on VWF
Phenotypes:
heterozygous carriers have no bleeding history
reduced VWF levels compatible with diagnosis of VWD type 1
increased FVIII:C/VWF:Ag ratio, suggests reduced VWF synthesis/secretion as possible phathophysiological mechanism
Normal VWFpp/VWF:Ag ratio
Modest alteration of multimeric pattern in plasma and platelet multimers
plasma VWF showed slight increase of LMWM and decrease of IMWM and HMWM
Platelet VWF showed quantitative decrease of IMWM, HMWM, and UL multimers
In silico analysis:
SIFT, ALIGN, GVD Polyphen 2.0, SNP&GO, Mutation Taster, Pmut all suggest damaging consequences.
PROVEAN and Effect suggest neutral effect
according to ACMG guidelines this variant was classified as pathogenic
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genius.com genius.com
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Sorry boy, but I've been hit by purple rain
Ventura Highway, track 14 on the album Here & Now by America (1972-11-04)
It’s unsure whether a connection between this lyric and the famous Prince song (which was released 12 years after “Ventura Highway”) exists, but at least two journalists from The San Diego Union and the Post-Tribune wrote that Prince got the phrase “Purple Rain” from here.
Asked to explain the phrase “purple rain” in “Ventura Highway,” Gerry Beckley responded: “You got me.”
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