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I'm not so sure - it's had some (but varying) success in other countries. My naive hope would be that ~100 or so people directly involved in the process would allow meaningful discussion rather than the targeted social media crap that's aimed at large sections of the population.
Much like a jury on a specific case, vs "no smoke without fire", "take back control", "'comin' over 'ere, takin' our jobs" type appeals to prejudice or insecurity -
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HHV selling off all their bikes on 28/29 Jan, £100 a pop
https://www.hernehillvelodrome.com/news/the-great-hhv-hire-track-bike-sale
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back zip pocket of shorts. main reason I stuck with an iPhone mini
also have a flip belt mentioned below which works, though on longer runs I tend to go with a Salomon belt (https://www.wiggle.co.uk/salomon-advanced-skin-belt) as I can put a collapsible water bottle in too - and the phone in the back zip pocket of it
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Yeah, to echo ^, look at the guttering certainly. I had similar in the recent deluge where the guttering at the front had gathered moss all in one spot, which caused the water to collect, all spill in the same place, catch the lip on the way over which directed it straight back onto the brickwork.
Always must've dried out as quickly as it got wet until recently when I found the bay window ceiling dripping onto the lounge floor...
Finding a tin of rool seal in the basement confirmed that it'd probably happened before too for the prev owners :/
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seems like 'routable mapping' is the term for Garmin
https://www.garmin.com/en-GB/c/sports-fitness/running-smartwatches/?FILTER_FEATURE_SUBTRACKING_MAPPING=routable_mapI've got the Fenix 6 Pro and loading a GPX on is pretty straightforward. It'll show the route on the map and then beep or buzz when I'm approaching a turn so I don't miss it.
Forerunner 945 is basically the Fenix 6 Pro series in its triathlon variant
Forerunner 955 is Fenix 7
Epix is posh Fenix with AMOLED screen(things like Forerunner 745 does breadcrumb trails, but not overlaid on a map)
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Yes, but the point is the same. They're not expenses in the sense that it's £44M of posh lunches. Staff for an office are counted as expenses, so it's still real people doing work.
And it's also not necessarily the case that if staffing costs go from £90M to £105M that everyone's just had a 17% payrise while nurses are striking - the number of staff will likely be different.
The headline figures in the tweet are so without detail or nuance as to be useless. -
the combinations formula would be for a slightly different question actually - out of 10 (n) people, how many ways are there to select 3 (r) people.
for your specific one, 3 people with a yes no choice then it'll be 8 possible combinations: 2^3
the way to build up those would be
assume 1 person2 possibilities
doesn't send a card - let's call that 0
sends a card - call that 1so 1, 0
then for the 2nd person, you do the same choice, but append the list of choices you had before
e.g.
00, 01, 10, 11then for the 3rd, same again - take the 4 from the list above, and duplicate, but with 0 before one set and 1 before the next
000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110, 111and so on. each time the possible choices double
4 people: 16 possibilities
5 people, 32 possibilities
6: 64 -
combinations and permutations pretty much covers it
If you wanted to check how many combinations there were when, say, 3 from 10 sent you a card
then from a 'n, choose r' type calc then n=10, r=3 and the number of combinations would be 120
https://www.calculatorsoup.com/calculators/discretemathematics/combinations.phpin your example, if you just have two choices then you'd probably most often find it illustrated as a binary tree 3 levels deep
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what, this sort of thing? surely not