I Car Soft V3

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Eboni Kleifgen

unread,
Aug 5, 2024, 12:03:04 PM8/5/24
to AJ Squared CBD Gummies
Toughleather palms make them perfect for cold-weather tasks at home or digging your car out of a snowbank, while a thin construction with touchscreen functionality, articulated fingers, and a breathable soft-shell back mean it can work as a liner.

I use a smart list to suppress leads who have soft bounced a minimum number of 3 times for any email sent to them (A lead can only soft bounce 1 time per email, so this would be any 3 soft bounces for any set of emails ever sent to a recipient?).


Suppressing useless data from Marketo is only necessary to comply with your licence limitations. With regards to email, Marketo will always filter out invalid emails and black listed from any email (batch or trigger)


I would rather suspend them for a while (e.g. 1 month) if they have had multiple (e.g.) soft bounces in a quite short duration (1 months), then put them back to normal, and delete them do this if it keeps happening.


'nother wrinkle is that soft bounces can result from a mere typo in the domain name. If the mistyped domain name doesn't exist, that's "soft" -- there's no firm thumbs-down response from a mailserver, so it isn't "hard," as strange as that might seem.


Related to the same suppression smart list I brought up on initial question, but does it make sense to Marketing Suspend leads that have experienced multiple Hard Bounces? I have a recurring batch campaign that will suspend emails with multiple Hard Bounces, but after the first hard bounce occurs the email will be marked invalid and Marketo will automatically exclude them from future sends right?


That same smart list also suppresses any leads that have an Email Invalid, Black Listed, Marketing Suspended or Unsubscribed status set to 'true.' But is this even necessary, since Marketo will supposedly exclude these people from a send automatically? Can an email hard bounce and not be marked 'Email Invalid'?


Our Soft Silk Mohair comprises 70 % traceable, RMS-certified kid mohair and 30 % cruelty-free mulberry silk. This combination of kid silk and Mulberry Silk makes for the softest, fluffiest and most luxurious silk mohair. With more than 80 beautiful colors, our Soft Silk Mohair is a lace-weight yarn that can be worked alone or double-stranded for light, fluffy knitwear or sown together with our Merino yarn.


Our mohair is RMS certified. RMS stands for Responsible Wool Standard, and the certification ensures that animals, farmers and the environment are treated respectfully. The certificate protects the Five Freedoms of Animal Welfare: freedom from hunger and thirst, discomfort, pain, injury and disease; freedom to express normal behavior; and freedom from fear and distress.



Equally, RMS farms protect soil health, biodiversity and native species, and the RMS certification protects social welfare, working conditions and health safety of farmers and workers. The complete RMS document from Textile Exchange can be found here.



Our silk is cruelty-free. Silk is made of silk threads that come from silkworms' cocoons. The cocoons are made of one single very, very long thread. In conventional silk production, the cocoons are boiled, leaving the silkworms to die. This way, the long, intact silk thread can be used. Our silk is made of silk threads from broken cocoons, where the silkworms have evolved into moths and escaped from the cocoon. The broken cocoon is now many short pieces of silk thread. These short silk fibers are made into yarn. This is a very time-consuming process, and the final result is less smooth than other silk because long silk threads make a smoother final silk product.


Like many others, I feel burned out because I lost to capitalism a long time ago. I lost before I existed; before my grandmothers were teenagers with their firstborns (my absentee parents), both still grieving the early losses of their fathers to war and illness. Capitalism is a cold indestructible mass that embraces no one. Even for the winners of capitalism, the only way to persist is to develop toxic politics and relationships.


The desperation, exhaustion, and hopelessness in both the content of my thoughts and the method of capturing my thoughts exist because I work to live without getting to actually live, or process living.


Being an artist within an economic system that favors private property, capital accumulation, wage labor, a price system, and competitive markets belittles my practice into a hobby. I am an amateur with no artist statement, thesis show, or MFA. The money I invest in creating art is a temporary loan to myself that I feel pressured to repay quickly by attempting to exhibit wherever the crowds are.


The monetary motivations of capitalism can be a comfortable place to some because it is known. Capitalism is a well-established masculine monoculture of stoicism, competitiveness, dominance, and aggression that relies on dependencies and power structures. I lose my autonomy in it as a sensitive introvert. If I could exist in an undefined space instead, I could use the ambiguity to nourish my emotional needs and create soft definitions of what it means to be.


Self-publishing breaks down barriers between an artist and an audience. It lets the artist define what is publishable or not. I decided to publish the rejection poem myself on my own internet: the email inboxes of my friends. I called it Email Blog.


Email Blog became my monthly newsletter where I explored topics that caught my attention, like the discomfort of boredom or the comfort of rain sounds, and connected them with personal anecdotes. I ended each email with underlines from whatever I was currently reading and one of my unpublished poems. To avoid making it all about me, I offered custom poems based on subscriber-submitted words and created public Google Docs with abstract doodles to crowd-source interpretations.


Email Blog cleared my backlog of unpublished works that silently prevented me from moving forward. After a couple of years, I opened up enough space to see the act of contributing to the stressful inbox load of others was counterintuitive to how I wanted to contribute. Forcing my voice to fit in with marketing emails and Amazon order confirmations was a quick way to lose my voice.


Needing to take my voice offline, I decided to extend Email Blog into its current form: Mail Blog. Through it, I encourage an exchange of physical trades and letters instead of emails. In its easy-to-mail, simple zine format, my voice, and the eyes of anyone who reads it, can be free of the screen, and harder to lose.


I fund Mail Blog by siphoning money from the man (i.e. the paycheck I get from my corporate job). I redistribute it into the communication commons in a format that costs me one Forever stamp to send, and source supplies from creative reuse shops when possible to keep it affordable. By giving work away for free, my expectations, and the expectations of the readers, can stay soft. It is a fresh start for me to expand and build my definition of what it means to be an artist and where I can be an artist.


The Aposma Mask, a conceptual soft robotic prosthetic, is made to enhance the emotions of the wearer using colorful liquid actuated through internal channels of the mask. The project was created as part of a Masters thesis project by Sirou Peng, Adi Meyer and Silvia Rueda, students at the ...


The content on this site is drawn from projects carried out in a number of research labs. Our aim is to improve and expand the toolkit by welcoming feedback and contributions from the soft robotics community. To read more about the development of the Soft Robotics Toolkit please read some of our publications, detailing the research behind this resource. If you have an interest in advancing the field and engaging with this community, please contact us!


After a long time doing some background work, bringing on new people, and a temporary hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the SRT is active again! We are planning on bringing you some new and exciting new opportunities to learn and enage with the broader SRT community. Check back here soon for more information...


Sofreliner Tough is a multi-award, self-cure chairside soft denture reline material, providing patient comfort and satisfaction up to two years in one short, simple application. Sofreliner Tough is suitable for relining upper, lower, partial or full dentures, as well as those that need relief for irritated tissues after surgery, teeth extraction, or implant procedures.


Offering superior tear resistance, Sofreliner Tough ensures patient satisfaction for up to 2 years. With a simple procedure, the entire denture relining process can be completed in only one appointment.


The real advantage of Sofreliner is the ability to dispense chairside and offer the patient comfort in one office visit. There is no improvement if processed outside the mouth, and does not require pressure to cure.


Soft Matter provides a unique forum for the communication of significant advances in interdisciplinary soft matter research. There is a particular focus on the interface between chemistry, physics, materials science, biology and chemical engineering. Research may report new soft materials or phenomena, encompass their design, synthesis, and use in new applications; or provide fundamental insight and observations on their behaviour. Experimental, theoretical and computational soft matter approaches are encouraged.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages