I purchased an Apple Watch 3 in October. I let it be my task master in the beginning and made it my goal to close all 3 rings. Iâ(TM)ve done so on all it 4 rest days. And, I have gone from 235 to 225. I am also seeing my glucose levels in the âoenormalâ range of 95-130 and reduced my meds for Tupe 2. My clothes fit better and I have to replace my dress shirts that now fit me like a tent. My suites all fit well again as well.
Is the watch the reason? Not directly. But, it did effect a behavioral change in me. Seeing my numbers drop is encouragement. Closing the rings gamefies the process.
I track everything using the Health, Activity, and Zones apps. I am 54, 6ft 1 with Type 2 diabetes from sitting on my ass when I was younger. So, say what you want, but it is working for me. My aim is to get to 200 by spring.
That I even had this problem in he first case. This is one tech bubble I wasnâ(TM)t on the bleeding edge for...now, I am shut out.
Hereâ(TM)s a question for those familiar with BTC...can you purchase fractional BTC on exchanges? If so, I would assume the easiest path would be to accept fractional BTC payments in lieu of standard cash for goods and services. And, how is that not bartering in the eyes of the tax law?
Seriously...just wondering how to get in on this now.
As someone who suffers from the occasional AFIB and bigemeni heartbeat, I was dismayed that a condition of joining the study is NOT knowing if you have AFIB.
You discover this AFTER downloading the app and applying.
As for keeping the data local... it is send to a machine learning algorithm to help it learn to detect arrhythmia. Keeping that data simply wonâ(TM)t work.
All this being said, I have found my AppleWatch invaluable as an aid to getting healthier. I received mine in late October. By concentrating on closing the rings every day, I have lost seven pounds and have had all my glucose readings in range for the past 3 weeks. Yes, exercise and diet alone probably would have done it. But, having the little taskmaster pushing me and giving a slight incentive worked for me and made the exercise regime and weight loss effort fun. Yes, I now weigh 223 pounds ( and 73 inches). I am not short and stout (there, either).
Given that the average electric bill per household per month is substantially less that $7,000 (price of BTC), its economically viable to keep doing this. The cost to the environment is another thing. Letâ(TM)s just hope that some of those bitcoins are put towards research to mitigate the environmental cost.
You have heard the screaming goat, right? Thatâ(TM)s not pleasure.
Honestly, getting back to the story....a language for which advice is riddled with security holes should scare the crap out of you? Imagine hiring one of these so-called experts. Your business would be in jeopardy because they donâ(TM)t know what they donâ(TM)t know.
I wonder what the net effect will be on the cost to users? Will it reduce costs or, ultimately, raise them? Perhaps, this is explained in the article...guess I should read it.
Yup. Many errors are detected at compile time. And, given the speed of the Borland Pascal and Delphi compilers, there was little time wasted. This resulted in most errors being of the run time variant. Strong debugging tools make it a breeze to knock them out.
Needless to say, neither the compiler nor debugger saved you from a piss poor algorithm or design.
There is little change from the 7 to the 8. And, the price of the X is staggering. Granted, the AR stuff is cool. But, is the ability to create an animated emoji worth the several hundred dollars over the 8.
The Apple Watch Series 3 has a minor network issue. It will be fixed. Heck, I've seen something similar on my 6 Plus. It would be nice, when switching to a another network, to verify the signal strength AND connectivity before making the jump. Surprised this got past QA yet again.
Still, I now have a reason to consider the Series 3. But, I'm not running out yet to buy it.
So many on here seem to think that a college degree is not required for certain IS/IT related positions. They taut how college degrees are useless.
Well, here you go - she had a BA and MFA. She is obviously intelligent and capable of learning. Her work background had her working in at least two tech related positions given the companies for which she worked.
The comments made by former coworkers indicate she is organized and able to lead her teams. Ultimately, that's what get you an executive job.
However, the details of the role as "Professional" in those organizations leaves much to be desired (ie. as no details). And, it's frightening to think that someone unwilling (or unable) to disclose their achievements AND rise to the the level of CSO at a major organization..hell...what is this what I have I been doing wrong? I am infinitely more qualified.
I look forward to the investigative reports that will come from this. But, while I would like to see them responsible for providing the ability to lock/unlock our profiles at will, the reality is that many more companies are accumulating and tracking us. I read the other day that there are upwards of 4500 credit agencies that, while on a smaller scale than Equifax, are selling and using our credit histories.
As a person who's information was leaked by the OPM and, supposedly, being monitored and protected by Equifax, I am very concerned. Something has to be done. I just don't know what that something is.
1. Immediately protect ALL customers by allowing users to lock and unlock their profiles across all the major credit bureaus at ZERO cost the user. 2. Provide lifelong monitoring of profiles and credit activity at ZERO cost. 3. Investigate the insider trading. 4. Remove protections for Equifax against class action lawsuits for any damages that result. 5. Figure out who the F allowed this happen. I am betting an insider did it.
Then, establish a CENTRAL system to coordinate credit activity (but, not have the profiles themselves) so that protection of one's credit is a very simple process.
Some guy in America keeps resetting my password and I can't get to my adult dating sites anymore!
Actually, I have experienced this same scenario with two different individuals - one in Europe and one in Australia. The former is a result of them signing up for the european version of gmail (google.com). I don't think they get my email. But, I get mail intended for them. I've closed quite a few shopping accounts that she opened up. Heck, if I were in London, I could have picked up packages she had waiting because I had the credentials and the stuff was prepaid.
The one in Australia is a different sort. I think I pissed him off. He registered my email address with a many different spammers using an alias. They don't often acknowledge the "unsubscribe" request or just give you a big FU. That shit can be hard to filter with gmail unless they use the same pattern. Thankfully, that was the case and now it goes to trash by default.
How, exactly, is this Apple's fault? This is a developer programming error based on a lack of understanding how to represent large numbers on systems with limited WORD sizes. Even on the ancient 6502 or Z80 (8 bit processors), we knew how to write code that could handle numbers that far exceed 2^31. And, before they start talking about performance, I need to ask, how many frames per second do you need to render a chess game?
The developers need to place the blame with themselves where it belongs.
I may turn off my AT&T Visual Mail and just use Google Voice. It transcribes the calls and, optionally, sends an email with the info. It's what I do with recruiters.
To be fair, I am not a fan of outsourcing or H1B. But, as written, this article and study is grossly targeting Indian developers. There is no control group. And, the sample is limited to one group. It is not scientific in any way other than to say they used statistics.
Let's see how those of other nationalities and the products of their education system fare in a similar test.
Why not tackle the problem at it's source by cleaning the air and outlaw cigarettes? Anyplace where you have to wear a HEPA filter mask on a daily basis has bigger problems that need solving fast. I am hypothesizing that lung cancer deaths will fall significantly by fixing those two items.
Whoa! Blueprints for a bridge is a very bad analogy for tutorial code. Seldom do you see certified bridge engineers cutting a pasting features of a bridge design into another another. Concept may be applied but only after due diligence.
Similarly, unless the tutorial is on writing or securing code/services, it should only be considered an introduction to a topic or concept.
I purchased an Apple Watch 3 in October. I let it be my task master in the beginning and made it my goal to close all 3 rings. Iâ(TM)ve done so on all it 4 rest days. And, I have gone from 235 to 225. I am also seeing my glucose levels in the âoenormalâ range of 95-130 and reduced my meds for Tupe 2. My clothes fit better and I have to replace my dress shirts that now fit me like a tent. My suites all fit well again as well.
Is the watch the reason? Not directly. But, it did effect a behavioral change in me. Seeing my numbers drop is encouragement. Closing the rings gamefies the process.
I track everything using the Health, Activity, and Zones apps. I am 54, 6ft 1 with Type 2 diabetes from sitting on my ass when I was younger. So, say what you want, but it is working for me. My aim is to get to 200 by spring.
That I even had this problem in he first case. This is one tech bubble I wasnâ(TM)t on the bleeding edge for...now, I am shut out.
Hereâ(TM)s a question for those familiar with BTC...can you purchase fractional BTC on exchanges? If so, I would assume the easiest path would be to accept fractional BTC payments in lieu of standard cash for goods and services. And, how is that not bartering in the eyes of the tax law?
Seriously...just wondering how to get in on this now.
Trumpâ(TM)s Twitter Tweets could be used as some kind of super fuel?
What if we run this system inside the Trump Reality Distortion Field... Will it produce enough power to keep Bitcoin mining economical?
As someone who suffers from the occasional AFIB and bigemeni heartbeat, I was dismayed that a condition of joining the study is NOT knowing if you have AFIB.
You discover this AFTER downloading the app and applying.
As for keeping the data local ... it is send to a machine learning algorithm to help it learn to detect arrhythmia. Keeping that data simply wonâ(TM)t work.
All this being said, I have found my AppleWatch invaluable as an aid to getting healthier. I received mine in late October. By concentrating on closing the rings every day, I have lost seven pounds and have had all my glucose readings in range for the past 3 weeks. Yes, exercise and diet alone probably would have done it. But, having the little taskmaster pushing me and giving a slight incentive worked for me and made the exercise regime and weight loss effort fun. Yes, I now weigh 223 pounds ( and 73 inches). I am not short and stout (there, either).
Given that the average electric bill per household per month is substantially less that $7,000 (price of BTC), its economically viable to keep doing this. The cost to the environment is another thing. Letâ(TM)s just hope that some of those bitcoins are put towards research to mitigate the environmental cost.
You have heard the screaming goat, right? Thatâ(TM)s not pleasure.
Honestly, getting back to the story....a language for which advice is riddled with security holes should scare the crap out of you? Imagine hiring one of these so-called experts. Your business would be in jeopardy because they donâ(TM)t know what they donâ(TM)t know.
Seems that appearing incompetent and compromising the privacy information for millions at $0.63 a head is the way to go.
Why didn't I think of this????
I, wish I could sell snake oil this well.
I wonder what the net effect will be on the cost to users? Will it reduce costs or, ultimately, raise them? Perhaps, this is explained in the article...guess I should read it.
Yup. Many errors are detected at compile time. And, given the speed of the Borland Pascal and Delphi compilers, there was little time wasted. This resulted in most errors being of the run time variant. Strong debugging tools make it a breeze to knock them out.
Needless to say, neither the compiler nor debugger saved you from a piss poor algorithm or design.
There is little change from the 7 to the 8. And, the price of the X is staggering. Granted, the AR stuff is cool. But, is the ability to create an animated emoji worth the several hundred dollars over the 8.
The Apple Watch Series 3 has a minor network issue. It will be fixed. Heck, I've seen something similar on my 6 Plus. It would be nice, when switching to a another network, to verify the signal strength AND connectivity before making the jump. Surprised this got past QA yet again.
Still, I now have a reason to consider the Series 3. But, I'm not running out yet to buy it.
NVM...I need to learn to count sentences and find a keyboard that doesn't stick on certain letters.
How so?
So many on here seem to think that a college degree is not required for certain IS/IT related positions. They taut how college degrees are useless.
Well, here you go - she had a BA and MFA. She is obviously intelligent and capable of learning. Her work background had her working in at least two tech related positions given the companies for which she worked.
The comments made by former coworkers indicate she is organized and able to lead her teams. Ultimately, that's what get you an executive job.
However, the details of the role as "Professional" in those organizations leaves much to be desired (ie. as no details). And, it's frightening to think that someone unwilling (or unable) to disclose their achievements AND rise to the the level of CSO at a major organization..hell...what is this what I have I been doing wrong? I am infinitely more qualified.
I look forward to the investigative reports that will come from this. But, while I would like to see them responsible for providing the ability to lock/unlock our profiles at will, the reality is that many more companies are accumulating and tracking us. I read the other day that there are upwards of 4500 credit agencies that, while on a smaller scale than Equifax, are selling and using our credit histories.
As a person who's information was leaked by the OPM and, supposedly, being monitored and protected by Equifax, I am very concerned. Something has to be done. I just don't know what that something is.
1. Immediately protect ALL customers by allowing users to lock and unlock their profiles across all the major credit bureaus at ZERO cost the user.
2. Provide lifelong monitoring of profiles and credit activity at ZERO cost.
3. Investigate the insider trading.
4. Remove protections for Equifax against class action lawsuits for any damages that result.
5. Figure out who the F allowed this happen. I am betting an insider did it.
Then, establish a CENTRAL system to coordinate credit activity (but, not have the profiles themselves) so that protection of one's credit is a very simple process.
Last night (8/2), CBS was still advertising and promoting a Sept 20th date.
Maybe, that's just for the series premier with the series itself being delayed?
Many apps are built with tools like Xamarin or Appcelerator which require a large run-time library. This is downloaded for each app and not shared.
I would be concerned if native apps were of this size.
Some guy in America keeps resetting my password and I can't get to my adult dating sites anymore!
Actually, I have experienced this same scenario with two different individuals - one in Europe and one in Australia. The former is a result of them signing up for the european version of gmail (google.com). I don't think they get my email. But, I get mail intended for them. I've closed quite a few shopping accounts that she opened up. Heck, if I were in London, I could have picked up packages she had waiting because I had the credentials and the stuff was prepaid.
The one in Australia is a different sort. I think I pissed him off. He registered my email address with a many different spammers using an alias. They don't often acknowledge the "unsubscribe" request or just give you a big FU. That shit can be hard to filter with gmail unless they use the same pattern. Thankfully, that was the case and now it goes to trash by default.
How, exactly, is this Apple's fault? This is a developer programming error based on a lack of understanding how to represent large numbers on systems with limited WORD sizes. Even on the ancient 6502 or Z80 (8 bit processors), we knew how to write code that could handle numbers that far exceed 2^31. And, before they start talking about performance, I need to ask, how many frames per second do you need to render a chess game?
The developers need to place the blame with themselves where it belongs.
I may turn off my AT&T Visual Mail and just use Google Voice. It transcribes the calls and, optionally, sends an email with the info. It's what I do with recruiters.
I wonder if there will be someway to stop this? If somebody has an idea (short of giving up our cell phones) for a project, let us know.
This is just like getting spam...Who is going to pay for upgrading our voicemail if we can't block it?
To be fair, I am not a fan of outsourcing or H1B. But, as written, this article and study is grossly targeting Indian developers. There is no control group. And, the sample is limited to one group. It is not scientific in any way other than to say they used statistics.
Let's see how those of other nationalities and the products of their education system fare in a similar test.
Why not tackle the problem at it's source by cleaning the air and outlaw cigarettes? Anyplace where you have to wear a HEPA filter mask on a daily basis has bigger problems that need solving fast. I am hypothesizing that lung cancer deaths will fall significantly by fixing those two items.
Still, it's a pretty interesting tool.
Just saying.
Whoa! Blueprints for a bridge is a very bad analogy for tutorial code. Seldom do you see certified bridge engineers cutting a pasting features of a bridge design into another another. Concept may be applied but only after due diligence.
Similarly, unless the tutorial is on writing or securing code/services, it should only be considered an introduction to a topic or concept.
That usually happens AFTER you have consumed it resulting in a big bang in your clothes.