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Other Added - A Light Hearted Look At The World Of Metric Conversions
Is Now the Time for a Play about the War in Iraq? science world- Kelvin. The only difference with this scale is that although each degree is the same, it starts at "absolute zero" which is the coldest that anything in the universe can get! There are no negative Kelvin values as you cannot get any colder than this, not even in the flat I used to live in four years ago! This makes the freezing point of water 273.15K (warm by comparison) and the boiling point adding an additional hundred degrees to 373.15K. On an odd note, degrees Kelvin is not normally given in degrees and the circle symbol is not used, just the "K".Everone knows that comedy is mostly about timing. If you hit upon the right nerve (is a funny bone a nerve?) at the right time then, usually, you don't even have to be original or even marginally funny to win laughs. The audience laughs just at the reference (i.e. "How about Michael Jackson?") and may fall into hysterics at a gifted comic's pause.Of course the other element in comedy is distance. The funniest jokes might fall flat if the audience remains in grief or on edge (it might be too soon for "Now that John Ritter's dead, can we agree that three's a crowd?"). We may be past the days of "tarring and feathering", but if somebody decides to throw something at you, chances are it won't be a cake or a pie (which used to, at least, be good for laughs). So, it's important to b The Meter and its derivatives The meter was originally defined by the French as the length between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar (which was desig How Dreamweaver Templates Work Early measurement units in ancient historyThis article describes how Dreamweaver implements templates. Technically, to use Dreamweaver templates, you don't need to know any of the information given in this article; but it is handy to know something about what's going on under the hood in case you need to troubleshoot a Dreamweaver template based document.Templates are a tool that is used in many computer applications including Microsoft Word, AutoCAD, and other office automation and design products. Templates are useful when you have a group of documents that share many similar design features. You implement the common features one time in the template, and then just customize the template with the individual features of each document.Templates are Used Only at Design TimeIt is important People have been measuring things for a very long time. The earliest measurement units known date back to five or six thousand years in Egypt which included length and weight and used a decimal system. As time went on, units of length started making references to body parts so that normal people could make a rough estimate of the units. We are all familiar with feet and yards; a foot was obviously relating to someone's (rather large!) foot and a yard was measured from the fingertips to the shoulder. It seems that the people that standardized these units must have been giants since they are all a lot longer than the average person today. Over time, more and more units were created for various purposes such as the acre for area. "Acre" is an old English term for "field" and was meant to be the area of land that could be ploughed in one day using a yoke and oxen. A farmer with seven acres of land could then immediately deduce that it would take a week to plough his farm. After a while it became necessary to standardize all of these measurement units and so various methods were put into place to try to make sure that everyone was referring to the same quantity when quoting a number of a certain measure. For instance, a yard became defined as the length of a pendulum for the period of the swing to equal one second- here we see the scientists creeping into the subject to try to pit these units against the laws of nature. In 1789, the French Revolution took place and after cutting the heads off of all the dignitaries decided to structure their society around knowledge and philosophy and, thus, were the first to adopt the metric system which was in the main, based around scientific observation and natural laws rather than the rather arbitrary units used beforehand. The Celsius and Fahrenheit scales The metric system adopted centigrade as the unit of temperature (now more commonly known as the Celsius scale). Previously, by far the most common temperature scale in use was Fahrenheit. This was, again, based on the human body in part where 100 degrees would be the normal human body temperature and 0 degrees bizarrely was established as the "stabilized temperature when equal amounts of ice, water, and salt are mixed". The human body temperature was later found to actually be about 98 degrees, which added more confusion to the scale. Celsius created a very logical scale based on water- 0 degrees was the freezing point and 100 degrees was the boiling point. Everything in between was carved into 100 degrees and this was the unit of temperature. A much more logical approach and easily recreated by experiment so that thermometers and other instruments could be calibrated. Since then another scale closely related to Celsius has been used in the science world- Kelvin. The only difference with this scale is that although each degree is the same, it starts at "absolute zero" which is the coldest that anything in the universe can get! There are no negative Kelvin values as you cannot get any colder than this, not even in the flat I used to live in four years ago! This makes the freezing point of water 273.15K (warm by comparison) and the boiling point adding an additional hundred degrees to 373.15K. On an odd note, degrees Kelvin is not normally given in degrees and the circle symbol is not used, just the "K". The Meter and its derivatives The meter was originally defined by the French as the length between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar (which was design Email Newsletter Lists and Daily Defection were created for various purposes such as the acre for area. "Acre" is an old English term for "field" and was meant to be the area of land that could be ploughed in one day using a yoke and oxen. A farmer with seven acres of land could then immediately deduce that it would take a week to plough his farm.For those who put out newsletter via the Internet by emailing them to subscribers, you may have noticed a bizarre trend in the amount of daily defections. Sometimes Ezine editors might assume it was something that they said or put into their newsletter that offended someone in some way and they clicked on the unsubscribe and checked out.What you may not know is often it has nothing to do with your online newsletter, your editing or the content in the email online newsletter. In fact more often than not the real reason is that the person has a time management problem and is finding them selves over loaded with information and some of it just has to go.Additionally did you know that when some one clicks unsubscribe on one email news letter that on average within the same After a while it became necessary to standardize all of these measurement units and so various methods were put into place to try to make sure that everyone was referring to the same quantity when quoting a number of a certain measure. For instance, a yard became defined as the length of a pendulum for the period of the swing to equal one second- here we see the scientists creeping into the subject to try to pit these units against the laws of nature. In 1789, the French Revolution took place and after cutting the heads off of all the dignitaries decided to structure their society around knowledge and philosophy and, thus, were the first to adopt the metric system which was in the main, based around scientific observation and natural laws rather than the rather arbitrary units used beforehand. The Celsius and Fahrenheit scales The metric system adopted centigrade as the unit of temperature (now more commonly known as the Celsius scale). Previously, by far the most common temperature scale in use was Fahrenheit. This was, again, based on the human body in part where 100 degrees would be the normal human body temperature and 0 degrees bizarrely was established as the "stabilized temperature when equal amounts of ice, water, and salt are mixed". The human body temperature was later found to actually be about 98 degrees, which added more confusion to the scale. Celsius created a very logical scale based on water- 0 degrees was the freezing point and 100 degrees was the boiling point. Everything in between was carved into 100 degrees and this was the unit of temperature. A much more logical approach and easily recreated by experiment so that thermometers and other instruments could be calibrated. Since then another scale closely related to Celsius has been used in the science world- Kelvin. The only difference with this scale is that although each degree is the same, it starts at "absolute zero" which is the coldest that anything in the universe can get! There are no negative Kelvin values as you cannot get any colder than this, not even in the flat I used to live in four years ago! This makes the freezing point of water 273.15K (warm by comparison) and the boiling point adding an additional hundred degrees to 373.15K. On an odd note, degrees Kelvin is not normally given in degrees and the circle symbol is not used, just the "K". The Meter and its derivatives The meter was originally defined by the French as the length between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar (which was desig Vices and Virtues in Marriage: Faithfulness vs Adultery laws of nature.We all have particular Character traits that make us who we are. These are the virtues and vices that we carry around in our heart and mind. The question is are we actually using our virtuous character traits to live our life with? Or are we allowing our vices to overwrite the virtues of who we are?Are we awarding our marriage with the importance it deserves or are we behaving lazy by not contributing the positive aspects of our self into the marriage? Ask your self. Who am I? What does my marriage mean to me? Am I done growing? Am I happy with me?I don’t think we ever stop growing spiritually or mentally. I believe we continue to learn and to grow until we pass on. The amount of spiritual and mental growth we accomplish is all up to what we believe in and what we do wi In 1789, the French Revolution took place and after cutting the heads off of all the dignitaries decided to structure their society around knowledge and philosophy and, thus, were the first to adopt the metric system which was in the main, based around scientific observation and natural laws rather than the rather arbitrary units used beforehand. The Celsius and Fahrenheit scales The metric system adopted centigrade as the unit of temperature (now more commonly known as the Celsius scale). Previously, by far the most common temperature scale in use was Fahrenheit. This was, again, based on the human body in part where 100 degrees would be the normal human body temperature and 0 degrees bizarrely was established as the "stabilized temperature when equal amounts of ice, water, and salt are mixed". The human body temperature was later found to actually be about 98 degrees, which added more confusion to the scale. Celsius created a very logical scale based on water- 0 degrees was the freezing point and 100 degrees was the boiling point. Everything in between was carved into 100 degrees and this was the unit of temperature. A much more logical approach and easily recreated by experiment so that thermometers and other instruments could be calibrated. Since then another scale closely related to Celsius has been used in the science world- Kelvin. The only difference with this scale is that although each degree is the same, it starts at "absolute zero" which is the coldest that anything in the universe can get! There are no negative Kelvin values as you cannot get any colder than this, not even in the flat I used to live in four years ago! This makes the freezing point of water 273.15K (warm by comparison) and the boiling point adding an additional hundred degrees to 373.15K. On an odd note, degrees Kelvin is not normally given in degrees and the circle symbol is not used, just the "K". The Meter and its derivatives The meter was originally defined by the French as the length between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar (which was desig How Men And Women Try To Trick Each Other the human body in part where 100 degrees would be the normal human body temperature and 0 degrees bizarrely was established as the "stabilized temperature when equal amounts of ice, water, and salt are mixed". The human body temperature was later found to actually be about 98 degrees, which added more confusion to the scale.What is the most infamous male stereotype when it comes to dating? Certainly the one about men trying every trick in the book to get a woman to sleep with him has to head the list. No need to elaborate. There are plenty of web sites that I can refer all y’all to (regardless of gender) if you want to see how that works. As we touched upon in the last newsletter, there are plenty of “pick-up artists” specializing in helping men tune up their trickery.The truth is, however, that men don’t necessarily have the market cornered when it comes to keeping their intentions under the table. Women are quite capable of their fair share. My belief is that the most common brand of dating trickery proffered by women tends to fly under the radar a bit easier, however, and therefore is ha Celsius created a very logical scale based on water- 0 degrees was the freezing point and 100 degrees was the boiling point. Everything in between was carved into 100 degrees and this was the unit of temperature. A much more logical approach and easily recreated by experiment so that thermometers and other instruments could be calibrated. Since then another scale closely related to Celsius has been used in the science world- Kelvin. The only difference with this scale is that although each degree is the same, it starts at "absolute zero" which is the coldest that anything in the universe can get! There are no negative Kelvin values as you cannot get any colder than this, not even in the flat I used to live in four years ago! This makes the freezing point of water 273.15K (warm by comparison) and the boiling point adding an additional hundred degrees to 373.15K. On an odd note, degrees Kelvin is not normally given in degrees and the circle symbol is not used, just the "K". The Meter and its derivatives The meter was originally defined by the French as the length between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar (which was desig Build Rapport by Mirroring science world- Kelvin. The only difference with this scale is that although each degree is the same, it starts at "absolute zero" which is the coldest that anything in the universe can get! There are no negative Kelvin values as you cannot get any colder than this, not even in the flat I used to live in four years ago! This makes the freezing point of water 273.15K (warm by comparison) and the boiling point adding an additional hundred degrees to 373.15K. On an odd note, degrees Kelvin is not normally given in degrees and the circle symbol is not used, just the "K".Traditionally, salespeople look for something in the office that begs a question. For example, "Is that your sailfish on the wall?"How many times do you think that prospect has been asked that question? How often do you think the prospect hears a salesperson ask about the family portrait on the desk, last night's baseball game, etc.? The prospect anticipates these questions. Verbal skill is actually a very small part of the rapport quotient. Non-verbal communication goes a long way toward establishing rapport with your prospect.This may seem to suggest the need to learn to read body language. But it's not as simple as interpreting (guessing) what your prospect's body language is saying. The fact is, people feel comfortable with people who are like themselves! So, as a p The Meter and its derivatives The meter was originally defined by the French as the length between two marks on a platinum-iridium bar (which was designed to represent 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the north pole through Paris). The bar would be kept in Paris and additional bars could be made against this "master copy" for general use. Since then it has been redefined against universal physics as the distance travelled by light in absolute vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second. All other metric measurements for length, area and volume are derived from this unit. A kilometer is a thousand meters, a millimeter is a thousandth of a meter and so on. Area measurements can either be the square equivalents of the meter (a meter squared is the area covered by a square of one meter by one meter) or the commonly used land unit the hectare which is 10,000 square meters. Similarly, the volume measurements are the cubic counterparts; a liter being 10 centimeters by 10 centimeters by 10 centimeters. Derivatives of this include the milliliter (a thousandth of a liter) which is one centimeter cubed. Another unit used for extremely large distances is the Parsec and the Lightyear which are based on the speed of light in a vacuum. The metric Mass and Weight measurements Weight, or for the pedants out there, Mass is measured against the properties of pure water. The Kilogram unit of weight (which is surprisingly the ISO unit rather than the Gram) is the mass of one liter of water. A gram then follows as a thousandth of a kilogram etc. Note that a metric ton (or Tonne) is one thousand kilograms and should not be confused with the imperial/ English measurements of short and long ton. Countries that have not yet caught up Despite the fact that the future of measurements is clearly metric, there are several countries that seem to be clinging on to their old ways. The United Kingdom may be metric officially but it took a recent law to force shop keepers from continuing to sell their goods in pounds and ounces "and use those damn French units!", all of the roads are still in Miles and have Miles-per-Hour speed limits and the weather forcasters still quote both Celsius and Fahrenheit. However, since the price of gas shot up during the first Gulf war they now buy their petrol in liters since it sounds a lot less expensive. There are three remaining countries which have not adopted the metric system at all- Liberia, Myanmar and the United States. I'm pretty sure I know which country is going to be the last!
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