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Gear available for purchase is listed here: docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1zrBzcCe2moh0CvZkhUuWSKXi2...
My car is now for sale.. for more details please follow the link -> spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pk6Rtqqsf6w60kmtWQo3RZg
Providing interactive computational tools that meet data analysis needs so you can devote more time to the productive side of your business.
Central Desktop provides simple project collaboration tools for business teams. Our tools help your business organize and share information efficiently, communicate with others and collaborate on projects.
On-Demand Team Collaboration Platform. Central Desktop provides web-based tools for business teams to manage projects, create intranets and easily collaborate with customers through extranets. The Central Desktop platform combines real-time collaboration via web meetings and web conferencing with anytime collaboration via task and project management. Central Desktop is an affordable collaboration platform ideal for SMBs ( Small, Medium-sized Businesses ) and teams located in larger organizations.
Keywords: project collaboration, team collaboration, web collaboration, web-based project software, collaboration tool, wiki, customer extranet, sharepoint alternative, enterprise wiki, intranet, extranet, salesforce appexchange, web databases, customer portal, partner portal, task management
it's pretty sparse and I'm still waiting for my laptop, phone connection and "stuff" but what i'm working on now only requires a calculator, a pencil & eraser and a ruler!
THAC-60
SN 6935992
For Price and other details, click here docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AvuT_mseTsdddGlDMy1H...
black horizontal air curtain merchandiser is perfectly sized for placement in popular impulse merchandising locations in grocery stores, convenience stores, coffee shops and delis! This 60" wide, 14.8 cubic foot horizontal air curtain merchandiser features a three-tiered floor design and safety shielded fluorescent interior lighting to ensure optimum visibility and merchandising flexibility.
Its attractive, black powder coated steel exterior and white aluminum interior liner with stainless steel floor will look great for years to come. A 3/4 hp compressor, CFC-free R134a refrigerant, and high density, "Ecomate" foamed-in-place polyurethane insulation help maintain cabinet temperatures between 35 and 40 degrees Fahrenheit, which is perfect for grab-and-go bottled juices, prepackaged snacks, and more. The condensing unit is easily accessible from the front of the cabinet and slides out for easy maintenance.
The True THAC-60 black 60" horizontal air curtain merchandiser is UL and NSF Listed, and requires a 115V electrical connection.
Overall Dimensions:
Left to Right: 60 1/8"
Front to Back: 30 1/8"
Height: 43 3/8"
link to full specification sheet: www.webstaurantstore.com/specsheets/890THAC60 BK.pdf
The Eatery Diet App Review
Sam Costello
ipod.about.com/od/DietApps/fr/The-Eatery-Diet-App-Review.htm
The Good
Makes tracking your meals easy
Get often-useful feedback on your food choices
Most meals elicit 15+ ratings
The Bad
Only as good as its users
No built-in nutritional information or advice
The Price
Free
If you're seeking to eat healthier or lose weight, tracking the food you eat is crucial. But how to do it? Some people use food diaries that they write down in notebooks. Others may use spreadsheets or custom-made forms. If you who own an iOS device, though, there are many apps that let you track your food intake. The Eatery not only does this, but also adds the wisdom of its other users to give you a rating on the healthiness of your meals.
In many ways, The Eatery is an effective meal-tracking app, but as is true of many crowdsourced tools, it's only as helpful as its users.
Tracking Your Intake
The Eatery works using two very basic functions. First, take a photo of every meal you eat using the iPhone or iPod touch's built-in digital camera. When you take the photo, add an optional note about the meal and then rate it on a scale from fit to fat. Each meal, with your rating, is then added to your feed.
Each time you add a new photo to your feed, you're also shown photos snapped by other users of The Eatery and asked to rate their meals. Meals are shown anonymously (you won't see the name of the person whose meal you're rating; you don't have to be too worried about someone you know finding out you ate Belgian waffles for dinner--again) and you can skip photos if you don't know how nutritious a meal is or can't figure out what the photo shows.
Just as you rate others' meals based on their photos, your photos are shown to other users who rate them. As time passes after your meal, more and more users rate your meal, giving you a rough, user-driven sense of how well or badly you're eating. In my experience, it's fairly common to draw 15-30 ratings of a meal over a day or two, so you're getting a pretty solid cross-section of opinion.
Using those crowdsourced ratings for each meal, The Eatery then compiles a composite score for how healthy you're eating every week, using a 0 (unhealthy) to 100 (very healthy) scale.
With your meal history available to scroll through at any time, it's very easy to get a real idea of exactly what you've been eating and identify trouble spots. For instance, my meals are extremely healthy, but my snacks are much more mixed, so I know that trying to improve the health of my snacks can improve the overall quality of my nutrition. It also makes it easier to discover that what might seem like an occasional candy bar is actually three a week--a big problem if you're trying to lose weight.
Another interesting aspect of using the app is that, when you know that other people will see and rate your meals, you tend to want to eat healthier foods. No one wants to draw a negative rating. That game-ification or mild peer coercion can be a big help in getting you to eat better.
The Wisdom of Crowds?
Those are the strengths of The Eatery, but it has its weaknesses, weaknesses that lie in the thing that most often causes diets to fail: people themselves.
Since the app has its users--regular people--rate each other's meals, the ratings are only as good as the nutrition knowledge of the people doing the rating. And, if the rates of obesity and diabetes in the U.S. are any indication, the nutrition knowledge of the average America is a bit low (putting it charitably). How else to explain that healthy meals like a lentil and quinoa salad would draw unhealthy ratings?
All things considered, the users on the whole are likely to rate food correctly. That lentil-quinoa salad ended up with 10+ more positive ratings than negative ones, but the negatives still distorted the overall rating.
Luckily, a fair proportion of users seem to be outside the U.S., so the different diets of other countries may help balance out some of the unhealthiness or lack of knowledge among some U.S. users.
The other drawback I found in The Eatery also results from the app depending so heavily on crowdsourcing. The crowd can be wise, but it generally can't be expert.
Knowing that your food is unhealthy can be useful, but only if you already understand something about nutrition. If you don't know what you don't know, finding out that a meal wasn't that healthy can leave you stuck. You know it was bad, but you don't know why or how you could change it to make it more healthy. This is where expertise could be valuable. If the developers of The Eatery could find a way to not only rate our meals, but also give us guidance based on those ratings, the app would truly create a virtuous pairing.
The Bottom Line
If you want to get a handle on your nutrition, The Eatery can be a powerful tool. It won't necessarily tell you what to eat, but it will help you identify patterns in your meals and snacks, track your food, and get a sense of how healthy other people think it is.
And, when it comes to eating well and losing weight, understanding what you're putting in your body is a major factor.
What You'll Need
An iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad running iOS 4.2 or higher.
Optimization Modeling with Spreadsheets
Author: Kenneth R. Baker
Synopsis: Ideal for students in management and engineering, this volume covers model building and includes tutorials on the use of Excel's Solver, and, at a more advanced level, Frontline Systems' Premium Solver.
Publisher: South-Western College Publishing, 2005
Kenneth R. Baker is the Nathaniel Leverone Professor of Management at Tuck School of Business, an Adjunct Professor at Thayer School, and Co-Director of Thayer School's Master of Engineering Management Program.
My car is now for sale.. for more details please follow the link -> spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pk6Rtqqsf6w60kmtWQo3RZg
This template is prepared for understanding the deflection characteristics of a structural beam under a specific loading conditions. This template aids in stress and deflection calculations for structural beam bending free and guided on one end, rigid one end with single load. SpreadsheetWEB version of the template allows to carry out the calculations online.
Download it at
The Tandy/Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 100, circa 1983, was one of the precursors to the modern laptop. The functions were fairly limited but the size and battery power were well received. This computer was actually made by Kyocera, now a brand name recognized worldwide as a manufacturer of popular cell phone and PDA hybrids. This particular model was used by Smithsonian curator Paul Ceruzzi to construct elaborate spreadsheets for this compact computer to track home finances and mortgage payments.
The National Semiconductor 103A electronic calculator, circa 1978-1981, called the "checkbook balancer," comes in a checkbook and is designed to assist in balancing checking accounts.
The National Museum of American History (NMAH), administered by the Smithsonian Institute, collects, preserves and displays American heritage in the areas of social, political, cultural, scientific and military history. The museum, which first opened in 1964 as the Museum of History and Technology, is located on the National Mall in one of the last structures designed by McKim, Mead & White. It was renamed in 1980, and closed for a 2-year, $85 million renovation by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP from 2006 to 2008.
The Smithsonian Institution, an educational and research institute and associated museum complex, administered and funded by the government of the United States and by funds from its endowment, contributions, and profits from its shops and its magazines, was established in 1846. Although concentrated in Washington DC, its collection of over 136 million items is spread through 19 museums, a zoo, and nine research centers from New York to Panama.
Houston First's accounting team recently participated in a working pizza luncheon to develop new business processes and procedures for the Ungerboeck software system. On January 1, Houston First switched to Ungerboeck to replace Concentrics as our booking and event software. Working through the processes are, from left, Demi Hoang, Teresa Ngao Fischer, Sandra Ha, Karen Tang and Rudy Garcia.
This is a screenshot of a little program I designed to help crafters keep track of the inventory they have out on consignment. It is a spreadsheet containing 5 sheets like this one for up to five stores where you have items on consignment. It will calculate both crafter's and store's share of the sale and generate graphs on % and values of sold, available and removed items.
My car is now for sale.. for more details please follow the link -> spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pk6Rtqqsf6w60kmtWQo3RZg
Time to get real about knit gifts! I made a spreadsheet. Festivities start Christmas Eve, so I have until the 23rd to finish. I have 15 gifts on my list, 1 is done. 14 left, 36 days, ~2.5 days per project, as of today.
btw, i used the datedif formula, even if google calls it the "drunk cousin" of the formula family.