This channel is dedicated to women of a certain age who are trying to balance work life, elder care, volunteering, religious life, family life, etc, and still maintain some sanity. A wise friend once said it's important to learn something new every year. I try. Now get off this screen and go outside.
Cool! I find the cushion too thin. I love the shape of it, and find it comfortable for 5 minutes then it becomes painful 😂 need more padding. I will try this!
The headrest used to be flat. Now they have a huge cylinder; took the supplied foam out and used 2 inch foam. Have a feeling lawyers said the chair was dangerous for sleeping with your head back.
Last century the lumbar support was over an inch higher and the chair felt floaty as soon as you sat down. The seat base doesn't have any sag after 25 years. Foam doesn't last forever, replaced that.
here's a suggestion, I have health problem, I found that the Ikea poang chair is right for me, however the the angle was not right, so I rolled up two towels into log and put them under each side of the chair, this made it easier for me to get out
Now you have a broken arrow to shoot at. During unstable weather, as it is now, I use tent stakes to secure my backstop and target mat. You'll need a tool to drive in the stake and pull it out.
The best diy target is get a big plastic tote pack it with old blankets tape 2 or 3 floor foam panels it will last a long time when the panels were out just tape 2 more
I've watched a lot of math book review and what I would buy for proof it is those 3 book ... Proofs: A Long-Form Mathematics Textbook by Jay Cummings it's seem a book on more general approach not on the specific topic of geometry but I'm sure it's must be very useful to understanding proof as I can tell by comment & review of people on this book ... the review of the book is here ... check out ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-M1RrI3gXVsU.html . Also another book who is worth to mention is this one , How to Prove It: A Structured Approach Paperback - July 18 2019 by Daniel J. Velleman (Author) here the review ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-wQWUe2kmwEQ.html . An beginner approch to proof is this book ... How to Read and Do Proofs: An Introduction to Mathematical Thought Processes Paperback - Oct. 25 2004 by Daniel Solow (Author) the short review is here ru-vid.comqvh2yhpHyHA . Here is another video who math sorcerer talk about proof recommendation & book ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vdMsuZ-8DWU.html Also thank you for your video . Have fun with geometry proof .
The reason there wasn't any of that seaweed junk on the south side is because the camp over there cleaned it up for the summer camp season last year. I've lived here since 1982 and yes, the Amish are horrible out there. Also summer 2023 was the first time I've seen seaweed like that. It was sooo bad.
I know this isn’t the usual on your channel but please do the pre algebra to algebra to precalculus sequence next precalculus also has proofs one level ahead
Hi. I have come out of my archery comfort zone. I am looking at ILF bows for 3D. Your work has added to my interest. I am not likely to put sights on the bow. You never know. I had not considered ILF before either. Thanks for the content. Keep it up.
1) Euclid’s Elements. 2)Coxeter’s Inroduction to Geometry & Geometry Revisited. 3) I.F. Sharygin, Problems in Plane Geometry, or any of the Mir Publications on geometry. This is the way. The geometry of the schools is horrid. You have not seen geometry until you’ve studied something like this set of books. But really, Euclid must be read, in my opinion.
Is Sharigyn good as an intro? I find that most geometry problem books really hate triangles and hastily move on to circles after just one rudimentary chapter on triangles. I think triangles is where the idea of geometry forms. I found only one problems book that properly covers triangles: Aref and Wernick.
50m 32#. Your reports have increased the likelihood of my getting my Hoyt Pro Medalest out of storage. It has been in hibernation fast asleep. Perchance to tune it up for carbon arrows 🏹 . 1:01
Wns ff string has a thin center serving, which I hate most, but ready-made string from FlexSpanish is better; their center serving is slightly thicker, whether 16 strand or 18 strand. Flex produces various materials, ff plus, 8125, 8190, and any material of dyneema from SK75 to SK99, like their carrera dyneema Sk99 strings, which have very low creep.
Nice smooth draw. You are smart to go light at a short distance after an injury or arm failure. Any serious archer has experienced them. Light and short is the key followed by a round with the regular bow. Good work.. I have a vedio request. It's fun. If you have access to a "swim noodle". When you get back to distance around the barn set the "noodle" on its end like a willow wand of English legend. Hint: I wouldn't record the first attempt. It is something we do in the Fall. You might enjoy doing this when your shoulder/arm heal. Thank you for the work.
Not that hard. Pay attention before you order and watch the video Yakima created. If your car is too tall to reach the roof wouldn’t you have challenges with any rack? I agree that tightening is the hardest part. Yakima needs to make it much more evident, how tight it needs to be, and provide better instructions. Their video makes it look much simpler than it is. The installation inside the car is quite easy, although it might damage some sensitive vehicles. The “HD strap” on the exterior is much harder to get right. They want you to leave the clip floating and not touching your car or the load which gives you very little leeway to tighten it. You literally have to spend 40 minutes to get that perfect. I let the tightening clip mechanism touch my load, which hopefully won’t damage it. They also need to include instruction on how to feed the strap into the tightening clip, which frankly, if you’re not savvy with these things, you could definitely get wrong very easily. I give the product an a minus but C minus for instruction.
You don't sound too impressed. It actually might be quite good if used appropriately. First look over and understand the worked examples. Then put it away for a week and go back to the examples but don't look at the solution; try to work it out yourself. Then compare your solution with his solution to see how you did and to understand any problems. When you learn what you can from that, then go to the next example. Work through all the worked examples that way. When done, then it's time to go on to the actual exercises. Spend a good deal of time working on one: really try to find the solution yourself without looking. It could take 2 or 3 hours. Then look at the hints if needed. Finally check your solution and understand any mistakes. I think you would gain a lot like that. It doesn't look like a book that you would just sit down and crank through in short order, more of a longer effort.
If u want a glimpse into proofs in higher mathematics...beyond the school level...you should definitely check out "An Introduction to Proofs and mathematical vernacular"...doesn't cover geometry, but covers basic proofs structures in areas used in research math at a rudimentary level..like number theory, polynomials, vector spaces and discrete math
Would not recommend that for multiple reasons. First of vector spaces should not be discussed in an intro to proofs course. And she probably would need algebra 2 - precalc and some calc 1 before that. In general for intermediate LA you also generally want some abstract algebra (in particular groups) since vectorspaces are commutative groups with a scalar multiplication, although our undergrad does LA before group theory probably due to the importance of LA in a lot of fields. The best book by for on proofs is the book by velleman. There really isn't anything that beats that imo.