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I'm going to meet with a vitamin company today that wants to sponsor my sister and I as an athlete team.
It's nothing big as far as sponsor and sports go, but it sure seems fantastic to me! I'm so excited. I meet them after work today.
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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All the Very best Loctrice!!!!
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Maybe you should tweet about it.
Seriously, sponsors want ads, so the more followers you tell about your product the more you will get from other products.
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I'm not on social media at the moment. If they sponsor me, then I will create an athlete account on facebook, and possibly start twitter.
The only social network I'm on right now is bodybuilding.com
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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Just remember, sponsorship isn't altruistic. Practice saying, "I would like to thank Vitamin A for my win, without Vitamin A I couldn't have done it" and then drink the vitamin A water with label towards the camera.
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So will you be doing those telemarketing advertisements now?
Congratulations and all the best!
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My sister and I do grappling (BJJ) tournaments and local obstacle courses like the spartan race, and tough mudders.
I do MMA (cage) fighting, but my sister doesn't (yet).
Pretty much local amateur sporting events.
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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If you get real good, a local hospital may sponsor you. Send your victims opponents to
Hogan
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If I ask, it's OK to say who the sponsor is? I suppose we'll will have to wait until the sponsorship is in place.
Good luck then!
I saw a format you can use, Get pumped![^]
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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Yeah, I'll make a post if I get it and say who it is. Until I'm for sure, I should probly wait.
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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Good call. Don't want to do anything to risk annoying them unnecessarily.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Congrats
Along with Antimatter and Dark Matter they've discovered the existence of Doesn't Matter which appears to have no effect on the universe whatsoever!
Rich Tennant 5th Wave
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That would be sweet... nothing like getting paid to do something you love to do anyway.
Good luck!
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No way, I learnt that trick with programming. Sports will remain my hobby forever
Elephant elephant elephant, sunshine sunshine sunshine
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That is totally bizarre. Where did that car come from?
Marc
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looks like the Samsung 840-Pro in my desktop is dying (?). it corrupted my VS2005 and VS2012 installs so that the IDEs would start, but the compilers would crash. running the installer's repair seems to have fixed them, for now.
Samsung's diag tool says the drive is perfectly fine, however.
anyone else ever experience anything like that?
modified 18-Apr-14 8:32am.
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Hopefully you don't have an older motherboard with the Sandybridge bug? This could explain such behaviour.
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I hope you will all reply and talk about this a bit more. I am looking into upgrading my older laptop (Toshiba Satellite) to an SSD. What is the sandybridge bug?
Amazon Reviews
I've seen numerous people -- on Amazon.com reviews of various SSDs -- say their SSD worked great for 1 week, 3 weeks, 5 months and then just totally and completely died.
Known Issues?
Is this a known issue? Can someone talk about number of lifetime read/writes? Does some software just read/write so much they kill the SSDs? Is the technology not valid with Windows 7, 8? etc?
I appreciate the community's response to these. Very interested.
Thanks,
~Newton
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newton.saber wrote: What is the sandybridge bug?
Basically Intel got something wrong in their ICH6 chipset for Sandybridge processors, known more correctly as the Cougar Point chipset flaw. Over time the Sata II ports would begin to fail - the more you used them, the faster the failure. Intel claim(ed) that no actual data loss would occur as the disk simply went off-line - having had a motherboard with the bug I beg to differ. The flaw was discovered in January 2011 and Intel halted all production until it was cured.
That said, my first Samsung SSD (an older PM800) also failed after about 13 months, but a firmware flash and "re-format" seemed to repair it. I only use it as a portable data drive now though.
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I also had one of those boards, and the problem (at least in my case) was exactly as Intel described it--ports simply disappeared.
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Unless you're trying to run a write heavy server on a consumer SSD, you'll never hit the write limit on an SSD before its flash dies of old age in 5-10 years. Because it's a write failure not a read problem and the way flash is written consists of trying to set a value repeatedly until it succeeds it's not a source of data loss.
Lastly, the write limits are extremely conservative. Tech Report[^] has been doing a long term write torture test of SSDs; and despite being at ~10x the drives warrantied write limits, none of the drives have came close to loosing enough flash blocks to be visible to the user as a drop in capacity. This is because some of the total capacity is set aside by the controller both to handle failures (HDDs do this too), but also for performance boosting reasons.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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I and another local developer have been using SSDs for the past 4 years. I have a 256GB SSD tucked away in my old development machine... it's somewhere in the house (wife just reported present location). I have had ZERO problems, and frankly, the speed increase is so dramatic, I just won't go back to rotating platters...
In doing my research, the one failure characteristic I was able to determine is "instant death". One day the drive is there, the next it isn't. Since I've had standard drives do this to me, I consider it a wash. As always, BACKUPS BACKUPS BACKUPS. The write limits are so high that I'm sure my laptop will die before the memory will die.
Charlie Gilley
<italic>You're going to tell me what I want to know, or I'm going to beat you to death in your own house.
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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