Yup...
Uptime is fine, CPU/men is fine. I'd even be fine with grabbing a few ssd's for the task...
But 2-3gbps is a non-starter, not to mention 2 contacts.
Yup...
Uptime is fine, CPU/men is fine. I'd even be fine with grabbing a few ssd's for the task...
But 2-3gbps is a non-starter, not to mention 2 contacts.
It shouldn't be slanted, I'm going to go with "not to code", or your local building code didn't adopt IRC for stairs.
(At least for the slant I'm picturing in my head it would not be to code)
3/4" min to 1-1/4" max is code, with a 9/16" nosing. No nose is doable, but with a min step depth of 11", generally youre not seeing that outside of commercial spaces (and typically concrete).
Not sure where you are (or if your stairs are even up to code), but that's what they are referring to.
built during
When was your home built?
I believe I can sum it up:
Don't
(This message brought to you in conjunction with my most recent experience of 200ish lines of useless generated code a coworker excitedly sent to me to review, and the letters L & M.)
I'd say too narrow, goals vary between people greatly, and the routine you'd use for general fitness will be different than the one you'd focus on as a runner or cyclist, and different than someone focusing on support muscles for back or knee pain, or to lose weight.
Its also good to change the routine over time, to change the angle and movement patterns, etc.
Yup, with some common breakouts would be a great add...
And maybe a recommended calendar for rotation?
Kind of.
You'll need some basic understanding of muscle groupings especially for compound movements, and a basic understanding of what to work consecutively or where you'd need a break in between.
Overall seems neat though, I'm going to be spinning up a local copy.
Looks like exercise recommendations based on what equipment you have and what muscles you want to work, but not a routine, no.
To be clear - Americans do not call it that.
Shit mouthpieces of shit companies seem to be trying to make it a thing.
3 are for the family, 3 are for work stuff, 3 are for me as toys.
(Plus a Mac mini and a p330 as spare desktops for me, thus the -ish)
For my wife's PT, I received a recent bill of $5300. Insurance reduced to $1100. I owed the copay.
That said, just for PT for my wife, I'm past your cap every month of the year, and I pay extra for the coverage I have.
Yeah its bad.