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North Dakota voters — polls close tomorrow, June 9th. Vote NO on Measure 1 and protect your right to citizen initiatives. Like and share this with every North Dakotan you know. #VoteNo #Measure1 #NorthDakota
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8 things that scream “junior Power BI developer”: - Hardcoding values - Using one giant flat table - Not testing totals, blanks, or edge cases - Building visuals before modeling the data properly - Naming measures: Measure1, Test2, Sales final v3 FIXED - Using calculated columns that should’ve been measures - Ignoring performance until the report takes 12 seconds to load - Bringing all filtering options to the users because it’s impossible to decide what is relevant What else?
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Agreed. 7 Christmas' without you, Mom. Love & miss you more than you'll ever know. Can't wait to get to heaven to see you again! Say hi to Brian and Joseph for me! Big hug & love beyond measure1
Once your mom is gone, Christmas is never quite the same again. The season still arrives with lights and decorations, but the warmth she brought can never be replaced. The little things she did, the way she made everyone feel loved, and the comfort of knowing she was there are missed more than ever during this time of year. You feel her absence in the traditions that now feel different, in the moments you instinctively want to share with her, and in the quiet spaces where her voice used to be. Christmas becomes a mix of gratitude for the memories and heartache for what’s been lost. You smile for others, but deep down, your heart knows who is missing. Yet even in her absence, her love remains. It lives on in the memories she created, the lessons she taught, and the love she poured into her family. Christmas may never feel the same again, but a mother’s love doesn’t end. It stays with us, guiding us, comforting us, and reminding us that we were loved in the most beautiful way. 🤍🎄 ✨Credit to perspective owner.
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Heavy beans in the chili for good measure1!! d=OP
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x = height of box h = height of can ≈ 4.83” d = diameter of can ≈ 2.6” measure1 = x - h d measure2 = x h - d measure2 - measure1 = 2h - 2d > 0 measure2 - measure1 ≈ 4.46”
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Below is a comprehensive comparative table of 15 key time poverty formulas frequently cited in reputable academic literature. Each entry presents: 1.Formula Details (with mathematical structure) 2.Underlying Assumptions 3.Key Variables (including units of measurement, when specified) 4.Context of Application 5.Methodology (how the formula is developed or applied) 6.Indicator Type (with a brief rationale) References appear in proper APA format, including DOIs where available. Following the table, you will find a summary comparing and contrasting these formulas with respect to methodological approaches, data requirements, socio-economic relevance, and strengths/limitations. Comparative Table of Time Poverty Formulas #Formula DetailsUnderlying AssumptionsKey VariablesContext of ApplicationMethodologyIndicator TypeReference 1Vickery’s (1977) Basic Time-Poverty FormulaWhere:  = Leisure time;  = Allocated time;  = Time spent in paid/unpaid work)1. Individuals have a fixed “allocated time” that must be split between work and non-work activities.2. “Leisure” is any remaining time after necessary work (paid or unpaid) is accounted for.3. Assumes a universal threshold of minimum leisure time needed for well-being.-  (hours/week or hours/day)-  (hours/week)-  (hours/week)Developed with U.S. and Canadian data to highlight the notion that some groups have very little “free” or leisure time once work obligations are satisfied.Uses time-use surveys to quantify total allocated time and total work time, then infers time poverty from minimal leisure thresholds.Absolute Time Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Uses a fixed threshold (e.g., ) to identify individuals whose leisure time falls below a certain minimum.Vickery, C. (1977). The time-poor: A new look at poverty. Journal of Human Resources, 12(1), 27–48. doi.org/10.2307/145597 2Kalenkoski et al. (2011) Threshold FormulaWhere:  = Time poverty indicator;  = Necessary time;  = Committed time;  = Median discretionary time)1. Individuals or households are considered time-poor if the sum of necessary and committed time exceeds 60% of the median discretionary time in the population.2. “Necessary” and “committed” activities (e.g., sleeping, personal care, paid work, essential household chores) are assumed to be universal for all but vary in intensity across individuals.-  (hours/day)-  (hours/day)-  (hours/day)- 0.60 (a chosen fraction of population median discretionary time)Applied primarily to the United States; also adapted to other contexts (e.g., Guinea by Bardasi & Wodon) to analyze time poverty among working-age adults and different demographic groups.Empirical strategy uses large-scale time-use data (e.g., American Time Use Survey) to calculate median discretionary time, then identifies individuals who fall below 40% (i.e., have 60% or more of that time consumed by necessary/committed tasks).Relative Time Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Defines time poverty relative to a population-based (median) threshold, capturing distributional variations in available discretionary time.Kalenkoski, C. M., Hamrick, K. S., & Andrews, M. (2011). Time poverty thresholds and rates for the U.S. population. Social Indicators Research, 104(1), 129–155. doi.org/10.1007/s11205-010-9… 3Bardasi & Wodon (2010) Adapted Threshold FormulaSimilar structure to Kalenkoski, but  may vary based on context.1. Similar assumptions on necessary and committed time as Kalenkoski et al.2. The coefficient  (a fraction of median discretionary time) can be adapted based on local norms or policy objectives.-  (hours/day)-  (hours/day)-  (hours/day)-  = fraction of MDTUsed in Guinea to measure time poverty among different demographic groups (gender, rural/urban).Uses time-use surveys and local definitions of “necessary” and “committed” tasks. The fraction  was set to 60% in the Guinea application but can be adjusted for different contexts.Relative Time Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Maintains a relative threshold of discretionary time based on median or mean reference values.Bardasi, E., & Wodon, Q. (2010). Working long hours and having no choice: Time poverty in Guinea. Feminist Economics, 16(3), 45–78. doi.org/10.1080/13545701.201… 4Ghosh (2011) Formula for Time Deficit/SurplusWhere:  = Time deficit (if positive) or surplus (if negative);  = Hours in income-generating activity;  = Available time)1. Focuses on the gap between actual hours worked for income and the available time individuals have.2. Implies that exceeding available time signals a time deficit, while being below it indicates surplus.-  (hours/day or hours/week)-  (hours/week of income-generating work)-  (hours/week of “free” or flexible time)Discussed in broader theoretical contexts, without a specific empirical geography.Conceptual or theoretical approach, using a basic time-budget identity to highlight time deficits or surpluses; typically combined with household income data in further analysis.Absolute Time Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Considers a fixed notion of “available” time to detect a deficit.Ghosh, J. (2011). Time poverty and the poverty of economics (Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 690). Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. levyinstitute.org/pubs/wp_69… 5Time Deficit to Reach the Poverty LineWhere:  = Required work hours to reach the income poverty line;  = Available time)1. Individuals need a certain number of paid hours () to cross the income poverty line.2. Assumes if  exceeds , the household is in a time deficit that prevents escaping income poverty through work alone.-  (hours/week)-  (hours needed to earn a poverty-line wage)-  (hours/week available for work)Not specified to a region but used conceptually to highlight how required work hours might exceed actual available time (especially for caregivers, single parents, etc.).Derived from combining income poverty thresholds with time-use data. The formula identifies a shortfall in time that correlates directly with insufficient earnings potential.Combined Time and Income Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Relates time requirements to meet an income poverty line, showing how time constraints can drive or reinforce income poverty.Ghosh, J. (2011). Time poverty and the poverty of economics (Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 690). Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. 6Vickery Modification (via Ghosh, 2011)Where:  = Conventional income measure;  = Time deficit;  = Price of market substitutes1. Acknowledges that a time deficit  imposes hidden costs on households because they cannot perform unpaid household production, thus requiring market substitutes.2. Adjusts income downward if  is positive (time deficit).-  (time-adjusted household income)-  (original household income)-  (hours of time deficit)-  (monetary cost per hour of substitutable household production)Conceptual model for incorporating the monetary cost of unmet household production into standard income poverty measures.Income adjustment method that adds “time deficiency costs” to poverty calculations. Often used with household-level time-use data plus local market replacement cost estimates.Combined Time and Income Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Integrates time deficits into an income-based measure by subtracting the value of lost household production.Ghosh, J. (2011). Time poverty and the poverty of economics (Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 690). Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. 7Time-Adjusted IncomeWhere:  = Earned income;  = Wage rate;  = Total time available;  = Labor time)1. Treats unutilized labor time as a potential resource, effectively converting time into “shadow income.”2. Assumes all non-labor time could be used for paid work at wage .-  (time-adjusted income)-  (actual monetary income)-  (wage/unit time)-  (total hours/week or day)-  (hours/week or day spent in paid work)Theoretical scenario illustrating how total time can translate into potential earnings, used to analyze constraints that limit actual income.Extension of standard income-poverty measure by including the monetized value of available but unused work hours; requires reliable wage data and accurate time-use diaries.Combined Time and Income Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Addresses time as an economic resource, combining time availability and income.Ghosh, J. (2011). Time poverty and the poverty of economics (Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 690). Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. 8Necessary Employment TimeWhere:  = Hours needed to earn the poverty-level income , given wage 1. Relates directly to the income poverty line, indicating how many hours of paid work are minimally required at a given wage to escape poverty.2. Does not account for unpaid or care responsibilities that might reduce actual available working hours.-  (hours/week or day)-  (poverty-level income)-  (wage rate)Applied in theoretical contexts to demonstrate the link between wages and required working hours.Combines labor market data (wages) with poverty thresholds to estimate time needed for an individual or household to reach at least the poverty line.Combined Time and Income Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Connects minimum wage-based labor time to the income poverty threshold, highlighting the interplay between time availability and income adequacy.Ghosh, J. (2011). Time poverty and the poverty of economics (Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 690). Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. 9Available Time for Income GenerationWhere:  = Available time;  = Personal care;  = Non-substitutable household production;  = Essential substitutable household production1. Weekly total time is 168 hours (24×7).2. Subtracts out personal care (sleep, hygiene), non-substitutable chores, and essential substitutable tasks to define remaining time for paid work or leisure.3. Assumes a “minimum necessary” standard for each category.-  (hours/week)-  (hours/week)-  (hours/week)-  (hours/week)Often used in discussions of how much time remains after essential activities, highlighting why some households may be chronically time-poor.Aggregates self-reported or normative estimates for personal care, essential chores, and substitutable tasks (e.g., cooking). Provides a baseline for subsequent time-poverty or time-deficit calculations.Absolute Time Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Uses a fixed, universal weekly time budget (168 hours) to define “available” time after essential tasks.Ghosh, J. (2011). Time poverty and the poverty of economics (Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 690). Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. 10Wladis et al. (2023) Demographic ModelWhere:  = Outcome;  = Vector of demographic/time variables;  = Online enrollment indicator1. Treats “time poverty” as an explanatory variable associated with demographic factors and enrollment status (online vs. face-to-face).2. Assumes that limited time resources negatively affect academic outcomes.-  (student academic outcome, e.g., GPA or course completion)-  (time poverty or demographic variables)-  (binary or % of online enrollment)-  (coefficients)Large urban community college in the U.S., focusing on online course takers vs. non-online.Uses multiple regression to quantify how time poverty (alongside demographic factors) correlates with student success. Self-reported time constraints are used.Other Indicator → “Context-Specific Indicators”Explanation: Designed specifically for the educational context, linking time poverty to student outcomes in online vs. in-person formats.Wladis, C., Hachey, A. C., & Conway, K. (2023). Time poverty: A hidden factor connecting online enrollment and academic outcomes. The Journal of Higher Education, 94(5), 805–834. doi.org/10.1080/00221546.202… 11Wladis et al. (2023) Direct Time Poverty EffectWhere:  = Academic outcome;  = Time poverty measure1. Isolates the direct effect of time poverty on academic outcomes.2. Assumes time poverty can be measured reliably (often via surveys of perceived “not enough time”).-  (course grade, completion, etc.)-  (time-poverty index or self-reported time constraint)-  (regression coefficients)Same U.S. community college population; highlights direct correlation between time poverty and student success.A reduced regression model focusing on time poverty alone. Survey or administrative data are used to measure time constraints and academic outcomes.Other Indicator → “Subjective Indicators”Explanation: Relies heavily on self-reported time constraints as a subjective measure of time poverty.Wladis, C., Hachey, A. C., & Conway, K. (2023). Time poverty: A hidden factor connecting online enrollment and academic outcomes. The Journal of Higher Education, 94(5), 805–834. 12Time Poverty Gap (PG)Where:  = Headcount index of time poverty;  = Average time gap ratio for the time poor1. Analogous to the income poverty gap measure but applied to time deficits.2. Assumes a reference threshold of time (e.g., minimum required leisure or discretionary time).-  (aggregate gap in hours or ratio)-  (proportion of individuals classified as time-poor)-  (mean shortfall in time compared to threshold)Applied in developing country contexts (e.g., Guinea by Bardasi & Wodon) to measure the average deficit among time-poor individuals or households.Uses time-poverty headcount data plus the average shortfall of hours below a time-poverty line. Helps assess intensity of time poverty among those who fall below the threshold.Other Indicator → “Intensity Indicators”Explanation: Focuses on the extent (gap) of time poverty among those identified as time-poor, akin to a poverty gap measure in income studies.Bardasi, E., & Wodon, Q. (2010). Working long hours and having no choice: Time poverty in Guinea. Feminist Economics, 16(3), 45–78. 13Squared Time Poverty Gap (SPG) (Adapted for time use by analogy)1. Gives greater weight to individuals with larger time deficits, mirroring the squared poverty gap for income.2. Implies that the severity of time poverty grows disproportionately as individuals fall further from the time threshold.-  (aggregate index)-  (total population)-  (individual i’s time or hours worked)-  (time-poverty line)-  (# of time-poor individuals)Used conceptually or empirically (e.g., in Bardasi & Wodon’s approach) to capture inequality among the time-poor.Adapts Foster-Greer-Thorbecke (FGT) measures to time data. Requires measuring how far each time-poor individual is below the threshold, then summing the squared gaps.Other Indicator → “Intensity Indicators”Explanation: Similar to a squared poverty gap in income-based measures, capturing the distribution of deficits among time-poor individuals.Bardasi, E., & Wodon, Q. (2010). Working long hours and having no choice: Time poverty in Guinea. Feminist Economics, 16(3), 45–78. 14Poverty Headcount Ratio (P0)Extended to time poverty by substituting time thresholds for 1. Measures the proportion of a population that is “poor” (or time-poor) by falling below a threshold.2. Does not capture how far below the threshold individuals fall (no intensity measure).-  (ratio between 0 and 1)-  (total population)-  (welfare metric—in time-poverty applications, hours available or discretionary time)-  (time-poverty line)Common across countries as a straightforward measure of poverty incidence. For time poverty, “poor” is redefined as “time-poor.”Basic headcount approach from Foster-Greer-Thorbecke methods, substituting time-based cutoffs in place of income-based poverty lines.Multidimensional Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Often used in an income context, but also extended to time use; can be integrated into broader poverty indices as one dimension.Jolliffe, D., & Prydz, E. B. (2016). Estimating international poverty lines from comparable national poverty lines (Policy Research Working Paper No. 7606). World Bank. doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-76… 15Poverty Severity Index (P2)For time poverty,  = fraction of time deficit for individual .1. Extends the poverty gap by squaring it, giving higher weight to individuals farthest below the threshold (severe time deficits).2. Requires that a time gap () be defined relative to a time-poverty line .-  (index that increases with severity)-  (total population)-  (time deficit of individual i)-  (time-poverty line)Used for deeper analysis of how severe time poverty is, especially in contexts aiming to identify those with extremely low discretionary time.Follows the Foster-Greer-Thorbecke (FGT) methodology. In time-poverty studies,  is the difference between the threshold (e.g., minimal required leisure or discretionary hours) and the individual’s actual hours.Multidimensional Poverty IndicatorExplanation: Parallel to the severity index for income poverty, capturing inequality among the time-poor and integrable into multi-dimensional indices.Jolliffe, D., & Prydz, E. B. (2016). Estimating international poverty lines from comparable national poverty lines (Policy Research Working Paper No. 7606). World Bank. Summary of the Compared Formulas Below is a synthesis of how these 15 formulas compare and contrast in terms of methodological approaches, data requirements, relevance to socio-economic contexts, and strengths/limitations. 1. Methodological Approaches •Absolute vs. Relative Thresholds: •Formulas such as Vickery’s  or Ghosh’s time-budget approach  rely on absolute concepts of time poverty (fixed thresholds of required personal/household time). •By contrast, Kalenkoski et al. (2011) and Bardasi & Wodon (2010) use relative thresholds (e.g., 60% of median discretionary time), capturing how one’s time compares to the broader population. •Combined Time and Income Perspectives: •Several formulas from Ghosh (2011) integrate income and time (e.g., , ), providing a more holistic picture of poverty. These measures highlight that lacking time can compound or even cause income poverty if individuals cannot work enough hours to earn an adequate income. •Intensity and Severity Measures: •Some formulas adapt the well-known Foster-Greer-Thorbecke (FGT) family to time deficits (e.g., , , ). Such approaches measure how far below the time-poverty line individuals fall, not just whether they are below it. •Context-Specific or Subjective Measures: •Wladis et al. (2023) provide regression-based formulas that treat “time poverty” as an explanatory variable, focusing on educational outcomes. These measures often use subjective or self-reported time constraints and examine how limited time impacts online course performance. 2. Data Requirements •Time-Use Surveys: Most of these formulas (Vickery, Kalenkoski, Bardasi & Wodon, Ghosh) rely on time-use diaries or large-scale time-use data (e.g., the American Time Use Survey). Accurate reporting of paid and unpaid work, personal care, and discretionary time is crucial. •Income and Wage Data: Combined formulas (Ghosh, Vickery modification) also need household income records, poverty lines, and wage rates to translate time deficits into monetary implications. •Self-Reported vs. Observational Data: Wladis et al. use self-reported measures of time constraints, requiring detailed survey instruments. Measures of “feeling rushed” or “not enough time” are inherently subjective but capture qualitative dimensions standard time diaries may miss. 3. Relevance to Socio-Economic Contexts •Developing vs. Developed Countries: •The Kalenkoski and Bardasi & Wodon thresholds have been applied in both high-income (United States) and lower-income (Guinea) settings, illustrating broad relevance. •Ghosh’s conceptual frameworks target contexts where unpaid household production is critical (often more pronounced in low- and middle-income countries, especially for women). •Gender and Care Work: Many of these time-poverty formulas are especially relevant in contexts with significant unpaid care responsibilities, often leading to higher time-poverty rates among women. •Educational Contexts: Wladis et al. highlight how time poverty affects student outcomes in higher education, especially among working adults or those with caregiving responsibilities. 4. Strengths and Limitations •Strengths •Holistic Assessment: Combined time-and-income measures provide a richer picture of overall poverty. •Distributional Insights: Gap and severity measures (e.g., , , ) uncover the intensity and inequality of time poverty, not just incidence. •Context-Specific Adjustability: Formulas like Bardasi & Wodon allow customizing the threshold fraction () for local norms. •Limitations •Data-Intensive: Most formulas require granular time-use surveys, which can be costly or prone to reporting errors. •Subjective vs. Objective Tension: Some measure only objective deficits (hours short of a threshold), ignoring subjective feelings of time pressure; others rely on self-reported time stress, which can vary by individual perception. •Cultural and Contextual Variations: Assumptions (e.g., 168 hours/week, standard personal care time) may not capture cultural differences in norms or responsibilities. •Exclusion of Quality Dimensions: Even the more advanced formulas rarely address the quality or flexibility of time, focusing on quantitative deficits instead. Concluding Remarks The formulas surveyed represent a broad spectrum of approaches to defining, measuring, and analyzing time poverty. On one end, absolute indicators set fixed thresholds of required time for essential tasks; on the other, relative indicators situate an individual’s time constraints within the broader population’s distribution of discretionary time. Combined time-and-income formulas emphasize that time poverty and income poverty often interact, while intensity and severity measures help policymakers gauge the depth and distribution of time deficits. Finally, context-specific or subjective approaches illustrate growing recognition of how perceived time pressure influences outcomes—especially in modern, flexible, or online work/educational environments. For researchers and policymakers, choosing the appropriate formula depends on local data availability, cultural norms, and policy objectives. As the field evolves, a key challenge remains integrating both objective and subjective dimensions of time poverty into robust, multidimensional frameworks that account for the complexities of modern life—particularly unpaid care roles, flexible work arrangements, and the psychological impacts of feeling “pressed for time.”
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1/ Most people waste time writing basic prompts. But what if you could create entire project frameworks, delegate tasks, and manage teams with a single prompt? That's exactly what my first premium prompt does - it's a complete systems architect for any team size. Prompt #1: #CONTEXT: You are an expert systems architect specializing in designing optimal task delegation frameworks for teams of varying sizes working on diverse projects. Your task is to create a comprehensive, hierarchical task delegation framework tailored to a team of [number] members working on a [project type]. The framework should clearly define roles, responsibilities, communication channels, and accountability measures to ensure seamless project execution and successful outcomes. #ROLE: Expert systems architect specializing in designing optimal task delegation frameworks for teams of varying sizes working on diverse projects. #RESPONSE GUIDELINES: 1. Start with a team overview, including the team size and project type. 2. Outline the delegation framework, including: - Project Lead responsibilities and delegation - Functional Leads responsibilities and delegation - Team Member roles, responsibilities, and reporting structure 3. Define communication channels and their purposes. 4. List accountability measures to ensure project success. #TASK CRITERIA: 1. Clearly define roles, responsibilities, communication channels, and accountability measures. 2. Ensure the framework is tailored to the specific team size and project type. 3. Focus on creating a hierarchical structure that promotes seamless project execution and successful outcomes. 4. Avoid ambiguity in role definitions and responsibilities. #INFORMATION ABOUT ME: - Team size: [number] - Project type: [project type] #RESPONSE FORMAT: Team Overview: - Size: [number] - Project Type: [project type] Delegation Framework: 1. Project Lead - Responsibilities: - [responsibility1] - [responsibility2] - [responsibility3] - Delegation: - [delegation1] - [delegation2] 2. Functional Leads - [functional_lead1] - Responsibilities: - [responsibility1] - [responsibility2] - Delegation: - [delegation1] - [delegation2] - [functional_lead2] - Responsibilities: - [responsibility1] - [responsibility2] - Delegation: - [delegation1] - [delegation2] 3. Team Members - [team_member_role1] - Responsibilities: - [responsibility1] - [responsibility2] - Reporting to: [functional_lead] - [team_member_role2] - Responsibilities: - [responsibility1] - [responsibility2] - Reporting to: [functional_lead] 4. Communication Channels - [channel1]: [purpose] - [channel2]: [purpose] - [channel3]: [purpose] 5. Accountability Measures - [measure1] - [measure2] - [measure3]
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⏳ Last chance! The final FARGODOME Open House on Measure #1 is at 5pm tonight. Don’t miss your chance to ask, share, and learn the facts! 🏟️ 🔗 fargodome.com/events/detail/… #Measure1 #Fargo #FARGODOME
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Denim is not a fabric; it is a remedial measure1—for those who can’t be trusted not to lose, tear, or otherwise ruin adult clothes. It’s for people who aren’t in control of themselves or their lives. Denim tells me you want to die. You see a lot of so-called lesbians in denim.
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It is. If you understood the history of the Jews would understand why when the great Rabbi Moshe Feinstein called the US a “society of kindness” he really spoke for all American Jews. There are always majorities and minorities. How the majority treats minorities is the measure1/n
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Replying to @Mossie633
(”☆ ☆)塗装がMeasure1だったり、まだ全体的に装備少なくてスッキリしてたり、後年と結構印象ちがいますね・・・
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Total BS as tonight's #VAElectionResults Prove!! Not only did #VADemsKeepSenate, but VAHouseDelegate @pwcdanica was ELECTED To The #VASen!! Most Likely Kept the House! #OHVotersPassed #Measure1 by 60% to guarantee Abortion #OHConstitution! And #KYGov @AndyBeshearKY WON by 6%!!
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that's a lot of sub-domains, twitter. [ "0.twitter .com", "2011.twitter .com", "2012.twitter .com", "2013.twitter .com", "2014.twitter .com", "2015.twitter .com", "30secondstomars.twitter .com", "6nations.twitter .com", "aa.twitter .com", "about-staging.twitter .com", "about.twitter .com", "aboveandbeyond.twitter .com", "ac.twitter .com", "access.twitter .com", "acmaredcarpet.twitter .com", "acmawards.twitter .com", "ads-api-sandbox.twitter .com", "ads-api.twitter .com", "ads-beta.twitter .com", "ads-bidder-api-sandbox.twitter .com", "ads-bidder-api-sandbox3.twitter .com", "ads-bidder-api-sandbox4.twitter .com", "ads-bidder-api-sandbox6.twitter .com", "ads-bidder-api-sandbox8.twitter .com", "ads-bidder-api.twitter .com", "ads-dev.twitter .com", "ads-staging.twitter .com", "ads.twitter .com", "advertising.twitter .com", "aem-demo-dev.twitter .com", "aem-demo.twitter .com", "afl.twitter .com", "altmx.twitter .com", "amplify.twitter .com", "analytics.twitter .com", "analyticsbeta.twitter .com", "anywhere.twitter .com", "api-0-4-1.twitter .com", "api-0-4-2.twitter .com", "api-0-4-3.twitter .com", "api-0-4-4.twitter .com", "api-0-4-5.twitter .com", "api-0-4-6.twitter .com", "api-0-4-7.twitter .com", "api-0-4-8.twitter .com", "api-2-0-0.twitter .com", "api-22-0-0.twitter .com", "api-25-0-0.twitter .com", "api-29-0-0.twitter .com", "api-31-0-0.twitter .com", "api-32-0-0.twitter .com", "api-39-0-0-39-4-2.twitter .com", "api-39-0-0-39-4-3.twitter .com", "api-39-0-0-c.twitter .com", "api-39-4-2-39-0-0.twitter .com", "api-39-4-2-39-4-2.twitter .com", "api-39-4-2-39-4-3.twitter .com", "api-39-4-3-39-4-2.twitter .com", "api-39-4-3-39-4-3.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-0-1.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-4-1.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-4-2.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-4-3.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-5-1.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-5-2.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-6-1.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-6-2.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-6-3.twitter .com", "api-41-0-0-41-6-4.twitter .com", 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"mta4.e.twitter .com", "mta5.e.twitter .com", "mta6.e.twitter .com", "mta64.e.twitter .com", "mta65.e.twitter .com", "mta66.e.twitter .com", "mta67.e.twitter .com", "mta68.e.twitter .com", "mta69.e.twitter .com", "mta7.e.twitter .com", "mta70.e.twitter .com", "mta71.e.twitter .com", "mta72.e.twitter .com", "mta73.e.twitter .com", "mta8.e.twitter .com", "mta9.e.twitter .com", "mttr.twitter .com", "mtv.twitter .com", "mx.twitter .com", "mx1.twitter .com", "mx2.twitter .com", "mx3.twitter .com", "mx4.twitter .com", "myprivacy.twitter .com", "nabc.twitter .com", "nascar.twitter .com", "nationalgeographic.twitter .com", "neptune.twitter .com", "net.twitter .com", "nfl.twitter .com", "nhl.twitter .com", "niche-api-staging.twitter .com", "nike.twitter .com", "nikebreaking2.twitter .com", "nll.twitter .com", "ns-twt.twitter .com", "nwhl.twitter .com", "o4.events.twitter .com", "opensource.twitter .com", "operator.twitter .com", "oscars.twitter .com", "overwatch.twitter .com", "overwatchwc.twitter .com", "partner-stream.twitter .com", "partners-api.twitter .com", "partners-dev.twitter .com", "partners-staging.twitter .com", "partners.twitter .com", "partnerstream2.twitter .com", "pay.twitter .com", "payments.twitter .com", "pbs.twitter .com", "pdxa.twitter .com", "people.twitter .com", "pgachampionship.twitter .com", "pgatourlive.twitter .com", "pic.twitter .com", "platform-eb.twitter .com", "platform-next.twitter .com", "platform.twitter .com", "playerschamp.twitter .com", "policy.twitter .com", "polygon.twitter .com", "pop-api.twitter .com", "portugaltheman.twitter .com", "postmaster.local.twitter .com", "postmaster.twitter .com", "preferencecenter-staging.twitter .com", "preferencecenter.twitter .com", "presidentielle.twitter .com", "privacy-staging.twitter .com", "privacy.twitter .com", "probe-t.twitter .com", "probe.twitter .com", "pt.twitter .com", "publish.twitter .com", "publisher.twitter .com", "pulse.twitter .com", "qua2.twitter .com", "qud1.twitter .com", "qus1.twitter .com", "rainbow6.twitter .com", "rally.twitter .com", "rdma.twitter .com", "records.twitter .com", "redbull.twitter .com", "redcarpet.twitter .com", "redzone.twitter .com", "research.twitter .com", "reverb.twitter .com", "rockinrio.twitter .com", "rogit.atla.twitter .com", "rogit.local.twitter .com", "rogit.pdxa.twitter .com", "rogit.qus1.twitter .com", "rogit.smf1.twitter .com", "rogueone.twitter .com", "rollandgarros.twitter .com", "ru.twitter .com", "rules.twitter .com", "s.twitter .com", "sa.twitter .com", "safety.twitter .com", "samanthabee.twitter .com", "sambee.twitter .com", "sao-api.twitter .com", "scotus.twitter .com", "scribe.twitter .com", "sdcc.twitter .com", "search.twitter .com", "search2.twitter .com", "service-proxy.qua2.twitter .com", "service-proxy.qud1.twitter .com", "service-proxy.qus1.twitter .com", "sffilm.twitter .com", "shopping.twitter .com", "showtime.twitter .com", "showtimeboxing.twitter .com", "sin-api.twitter .com", "sites.twitter .com", "sitestream-admin.twitter .com", "sitestream.twitter .com", "skyboxing.twitter .com", "skynews.twitter .com", "smf-api.twitter .com", "smf1.twitter .com", "sms-atla.twitter .com", "sms-be-vip.twitter .com", "sms-be.twitter .com", "sms-smf1.twitter .com", "sms.twitter .com", "soccer.twitter .com", "solareclipse.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-aa.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ab.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ac.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ad.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ae.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-af.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ag.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ah.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ai.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-aj.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ak.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-al.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-am.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-an.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ao.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ap.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-aq.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ar.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-as.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-at.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-au.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-av.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-aw.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ax.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ay.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-az.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ba.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bb.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bc.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bd.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-be.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bf.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bg.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bh.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bi.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bj.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bk.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bl.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bm.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bn.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bo.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bp.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bq.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-br.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bs.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bt.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bu.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bv.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bw.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bx.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-by.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-bz.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ca.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-cb.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-cc.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-cd.twitter .com", "spring-chicken-ce.twitter .com", "spring-chicken.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-aa.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ab.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ac.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ad.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ae.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-af.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ag.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ah.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ai.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-aj.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ak.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-al.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-am.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-an.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ao.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ap.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-aq.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ar.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-as.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-at.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-au.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-av.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-aw.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ax.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ay.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-az.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ba.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bb.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bc.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bd.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-be.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bf.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bg.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bh.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bi.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bj.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bk.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bl.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bm.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bn.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bo.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bp.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bq.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-br.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bs.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bt.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bu.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bv.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bw.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bx.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-by.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-bz.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ca.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-cb.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-cc.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-cd.twitter .com", "spruce-goose-ce.twitter .com", "spruce-goose.twitter .com", "ss.twitter .com", "stadium.twitter .com", "staging-aem-author-application.twitter .com", "staging-snappytv.twitter .com", "staging1-atla-stream-data-api.twitter .com", "staging1-smf1-partnerstream1.twitter .com", "staging2-partner-stream.twitter .com", "staging2-smf1-partnerstream1.twitter .com", "stanford.twitter .com", "start.twitter .com", "static.twitter .com", "stories.twitter .com", "stream.twitter .com", "streetgigs.twitter .com", "studio.twitter .com", "support.twitter .com", "sxsw.twitter .com", "syd-api.twitter .com", "syndication.twitter .com", "takeflight-staging.twitter .com", "takeflight.twitter .com", "tales.twitter .com", "td.twitter .com", "tdapi.twitter .com", "tdweb.twitter .com", "theemawards.twitter .com", "thegameawards.twitter .com", "thegoldenglobes.twitter .com", "themmahour.twitter .com", "thestarters.twitter .com", "tinteractive-staging.twitter .com", "tinteractive.twitter .com", "tnf.twitter .com", "tnt.twitter .com", "tommynow.twitter .com", "ton-kf.twitter .com", "ton.twitter .com", "tpop-api-o.twitter .com", "tpop-api.twitter .com", "tr.twitter .com", "train.twitter .com", "translate.twitter .com", "transparency-staging.twitter .com", "transparency.twitter .com", "tv-api.twitter .com", "tw-ton.twitter .com", "tweet.twitter .com", "tweetdeck.twitter .com", "twemoji-dev.twitter .com", "twemoji.twitter .com", "twitter .com", "tyo-api.twitter .com", "uclfinal.twitter .com", "ufes.twitter .com", "uk.twitter .com", "ukelection.twitter .com", "university.twitter .com", "upload-0-4-2.twitter .com", "upload-0-4-5.twitter .com", "upload-0-4-6.twitter .com", "upload-0-4-7.twitter .com", "upload-0-5-0.twitter .com", "upload.twitter .com", "urls-real.api.twitter .com", "userstream.twitter .com", "verification.twitter .com", "vice.twitter .com", "video.twitter .com", "vine.twitter .com", "vivelatino.twitter .com", "vmas.twitter .com", "warmup.twitter .com", "watchstadium.twitter .com", "webstyleguide.twitter .com", "wimbledon.twitter .com", "wnba.twitter .com", "wwdc.twitter .com", "wwe.twitter .com", "www.debate.twitter .com", "www.debates.twitter .com", "search.twitter .com", "www.tnf.twitter .com", "www.twitter .com", "www1-backup.twitter .com", "www2.twitter .com", "www3-backup.twitter .com", "www4.twitter .com", "xbox.twitter .com", "xstream.twitter .com", "yearinreview.twitter .com", "youngthegiant.twitter .com", "zacbrown.twitter .com", "zacbrownband.twitter .com", "zbb.twitter .com", "zedd.twitter .com", "zero.twitter .com" ]
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4 Jan 2023
Replying to @64005000YY
失礼します。ダミー軌道を作って任意の角度を実現した後それに線路AをMeasure1-3でくっつけるか、線路Aを仮置きで伸ばしたのちMeasure3の半径指定でBと合流させ、曲線長が適切か仮置き部を吟味する方法がよろしいかと思います。雑ですが過去に書いた図を添付しておきます。
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Kuddos to our third graders for leading our Monday Morning Gathering! Well done STARS! (And our shade structure got to protect us from the beautiful and well-desired sun for the first time since its completion!) 🤗🌞💙🌟💙☀️ #laderastarsacademy🌟💙 #cvusdforward #measure1
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11 Jul 2022
This works too, select dim, measure1, measure2 from table group by all ;
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All this talk about "see what zulum is doing in Borno" with scarce resources is at best deceptive.. The Nigerian North East of which Borno is epicenter has been at the forefront of global humanitarian donation support..& all that handouts have contributed in no small measure1/
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Replying to @deNutrients
Jennifer,can you rec'mend accurate mg.scale?Twitts disapp'ed NiacinGuy's DM-answer2 my question re: precise mg scale 2get4 accurate admin Bulk Supplements Niacin Pwdr I'd bought (No reply2 email left via his site awhile back).Too many fails trying2 see & measure1/5 teasp.!Thanks
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