Idid the firmware update yesterday (1/3). Today (1/4) going to check my 5 v2 cams. Only one seems fine. The other 4 stopped recording to my fairly new SD cards on Feb 2 just after 6:40pm. And still getting a cam showing offline which was my constant issue prior to this firmware update. Restarting router fixed that a few times a couple days ago but always came back. Today I have now power cycled all cameras and restarted router and same thing but 2 camera seems to be working (3 still not recording to sd). The offline went away. Firmware Vers 4.9.9.1851
cam 211252436 157 KB
cam 311252436 188 KB
Any ideas? Thanks
After Yesterday is the seventh studio album by folk singer-songwriter John Gorka. It was released on October 20, 1998, by Red House Records. The album marked Gorka's return to Red House, after five albums with Windham Hill/High Street Records. This was heralded as a homecoming-of-sorts as Red House had issued Gorka's debut, I Know in 1987. The album also marks several changes in the life of the artist himself. Themes of parenting and family life first heard here on songs such as, "When He Cries" and "Cypress Trees" have now become a regular feature of Gorka's subsequent albums.
The album was well received by both reviewers and folk music radio DJs. The album debuted at number two on the Folk Music Radio Airplay Chart for October and held the number one position in November 1998.[8]
"Heroes" was actually written by Gorka sometime in the 1980s. Gorka's copy of the lyrics were stolen, however, and the song was forgotten until Gorka relearned it from Hugh Blumenfeld a decade later. Blumenfeld tells this story:
In Sideways, Miles is at the bottom of several bottles of wine. He is hungover and late. He is pretending at emotions, he is sneering and wide-eyed when he smiles. He is middle-aged and stuck and completely, utterly in love.
He loves wine because wine allows him to disguise his drunkenness with culture, to make him feel like he is the man he was always meant to be, the kind of man who is revered and respected for his stunning intellect. In the same kind of way you find the people at the local trivia night who were always a little bit better than average in school and know obscure facts that nobody cares about. Miles is of the same ilk.
The threads that tie them together are their shared history and immaturity. As far as it appears, neither has matured at all beyond the age of 18. Two grown men stuck in the emotional state of college freshmen.
Yet the two have an intimate and sincere moment together deep into the night, despite (or perhaps aided by) getting drunk off of an unknown quantity of wine. She asks him why he is so interested in the varietal Pinot Noir. He stammers:
During that wine tasting trip to Santa Barbara county, just after Sideways came out, I was only beginning to learn about wine. I tried all the various Pinot Noirs the wineries had laid out for me, like so many other consumers eager to snap up the latest Hollywood-inspired trend. And I was repulsed. Pinot Noirs were bitter, too smoky, too peppery. I gravitated to the lush, juicy Zinfandels and the bold, oaky Chardonnays. After tasting all day, experiencing everything the region had to offer, I purchased a sweet, Jolly Rancher-esque ros to bring back with us to my apartment in Los Angeles.
I have been drawn to this movie for reasons I cannot understand .It is such a great character study. There is complexity to Miles, Jack , and Maya and the movie reveals those character traits in its own time . You mentioned the boost Pinot got , but Merlot sales plummeted as a result of this movie as well. I enjoyed your article so much . You helped me understand why I am drawn to it . Well done you !!
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When I first started learning about punctuation, I found out that you should always have commas after words such as "today," "sometimes," "yesterday," and so on. Today, I found a website that disagrees, it says:
As in many languages, in English, commas represent the pauses that a speaker would include when saying the sentence out loud. In this way it mirrors the natural rhythm of the language, which varies considerably between different dialects and different individuals.
So most rules that seem to require commas before or after certain words or phrases are simply guidelines to help you organize your English sentences. It's a good idea to learn these guidelines, and understand what purpose they serve, but then pay attention to how native speakers talk and write, and develop your own personal style.
That being said: words like "tomorrow" and "yesterday" may be followed by a comma if you wish to help separate it from the next word or phrase in the sentence. Sometimes this helps understand the sentence better:
The comma helps separate the ending "y" of "someday" and the starting "y" of "you" in the same way that a speaker might insert a pause there. The comma is not necessary, and it does not change the meaning of the sentence, but it does change the rhythm of the sentence to mimic natural speech patterns.
Born in 1934 in Queens, New York, she studied piano at the Mannes Music School in Manhattan and stumbled into modeling after she began babysitting the infant of a model who soon connected Phyllis with her agent.
Phyllis and her daughter Beth are on a humbling path together. Frustrating and sad perhaps, but also beautiful. A reversal of who is the caregiver, offering unconditional patience, comfort, and sanctuary. Together they are finishing the last chapter of a beautiful adventure.
Juanita described that she was born in 1939, one of seven children, and grew up in Winston Salem, NC. After graduating high school, she moved in with an older sister in New York City to attend City College. During that time, she met her future husband, Alonso (Al), who was from Tuskegee, AL and a NYC police officer. She continued her studies at New York University, earning a PhD in clinical psychology. For 28 years she worked with adolescents and adults at Bellevue Hospital. After retiring, Juanita and Al moved to Chesapeake, Virginia.
Born in January 1934, William (Bill) Foggle grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts. He attended Dartmouth College and joined the Army upon graduation. After the Army, Bill returned to Springfield, got married, and joined his father Jacob (Jack) in the family furniture business.
And yet despite the millions of individuals and families affected, dementia is often a taboo subject with limited public awareness or discourse. A diagnosis can become a mechanism for segregating those affected from society, making it easy to see only the label instead of the individual.
The typical narrative about dementia tends to focus on the clinical diagnosis or medical status of an individual, and is all too often depicted using fear, despair and vulnerability. This narrow and incomplete view of dementia quickly becomes a powerful means to distance oneself from their humanity. By focusing only on the narrowest of views, that narrative does little to change the stigma of those living with the disease. In many ways, showing the stereotypical perspectives only makes it easier to continue ignoring the burgeoning health crisis and the individuals themselves.
To give the audience courage to act in ways large and small, you must show the whole story - the fear, loss and despair, but also the love, connection, dignity, and powerful humanity that always remain - in the subjects, in the care-partners, and in the families and communities. That is the only path to evolve the narrative and have a positive social change.
Please consider sharing your story if you, or someone you love, are living with dementia. I am continually looking for people to participate in this project. The more stories we tell, the stronger our message becomes. Together we can change the stigma of those living with the disease and use empathy as a means for connection and understanding.
Doctors advise that I will likely write and communicate with declining articulation, until the lights dim, but other functions will continue to ebb, as they are now. Daily exercise and writing are my succor to reboot and reduce confusion.
The only way to face this demon is head-on, through faith, hope, and humor, as this disease robs self-awareness, diminishes function. Empathy is the pathway to understanding and compassion, and gives power and purpose to address this burgeoning health crisis.
Helen's family was displaced when the Japanese invaded in 1932. Later, during high school and nursing school, China was again at war with Japan. Despite the war, Helen pursued her dream of becoming a nurse and midwife. She married just before the end of World War II and, a year later, almost died from typhoid fever.
When civil war broke out in China, her husband was sent to Taiwan, with family in tow, to open a bank branch. Little did they know the Cultural Revolution was taking root in China and they would not see their parents, relatives, or their homeland for 30 years! Helen and her husband had five wonderful daughters and she enjoyed a long career as a midwife in Taiwan, delivering hundreds of babies. In 1978 they emigrated to the United States and settled in Philadelphia to be near their daughters.
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