Keenan and Jones met through a mutual friend in 1989.[4] After Keenan played for Jones a tape recording of his previous band project, Jones was so impressed by his voice that he eventually talked his friend into forming a new band.[4] They started jamming together while searching for a drummer and a bass player. Carey happened to live above Keenan and was introduced to Jones by Tom Morello, an old high school friend of Jones and former member of Electric Sheep.[5] Carey began playing in their sessions because he "felt kinda sorry for them", as other invited musicians were not showing up.[6] Tool's lineup was completed when a friend of Jones introduced the members to bassist D'Amour.[7] Early on, the band fabricated the story that it formed because of the pseudophilosophy "lachrymology".[8] Although "lachrymology" was also cited as an inspiration for the band's name, Keenan later explained the members' intentions differently: "Tool is exactly what it sounds like: It's a big dick. It's a wrench. ... we are ... your tool; use us as a catalyst in your process of finding out whatever it is you need to find out, or whatever it is you're trying to achieve."[9]
The official Google tool for testing your structured data to see which Google rich results can be generated by the structured data on your page. You can also preview how rich results can look in Google Search.
Unfortunately, data presented by Google Keyword Planner is meant to be used for paid advertising inside Google Ads platform. The keywords that you will find with this tool might be too generic and not very descriptive. In other words, barely useful for content marketing, blogging, or SEO.
Keyword Planner - is a tool created for advertisers and is not meant for content creation or SEO. Yes, it does contain valuable data about keywords such as competition, suggested bid, average monthly searches, etc.
The tool uses a woman's personal medical and reproductive history and the history of breast cancer among her first-degree relatives (mother, sisters, daughters) to estimate absolute breast cancer risk-her chance or probability of developing invasive breast cancer in a defined age interval.
The tool may underestimate risk in Black women with previous biopsies and Hispanic women born outside the United States. Because data on American Indian/Alaska Native women are limited, their risk estimates are partly based on data for White women and may be inaccurate. Further studies are needed to refine and validate these models.
Introducing Hootsuite Advanced Analytics, the only social analytics tool that shows your paid, organic, and web metrics side by side. Find out exactly how you're driving value at every stage of the customer journey.
These questions are solely intended to help you determine whether you may be eligible to submit the Application for Naturalization (N-400). This tool does not determine if you are actually eligible for citizenship. After you submit your application, USCIS will review your information and determine if you are eligible for citizenship through naturalization.
"The Community Tool Box is the most robust one-stop, go-to, high quality resource for tools and skills to build healthier communities that I know of. Further, the team's ongoing commitment to learning, and to making this asset richer every day, keeps the Tool Box fresh and ever-relevant."
The Better Trade Tool empowers users to advance efforts in supply chain transparency as well as strategic sourcing priorities. This innovative tool integrates existing reporting developed by the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) with U.S. import trade data, including Harmonized Tariff Schedule codes.
The Better Trade Tool is intended to serve as a resource for users interested in learning about labor exploitation risks in global supply chains. Consider adding the Better Trade Tool to your compliance, sourcing, trade, and supply chain toolbox.
The Better Trade Tool aims to provide users an increased level of visibility into the goods imported into the U.S. from the countries included in ILAB reporting. The fact that goods are identified as being produced by forced or child labor in a particular country does not indicate that the specific goods imported into the U.S. were produced by child labor, forced labor, or forced or indentured child labor. Rather, it indicates that the goods may have been produced under higher risk conditions for these violations, based on ILAB's research pertaining to the findings of forced and child labor in goods and countries around the world. The information in this tool does not constitute legal advice. We encourage users to utilize the findings gathered from this tool to inform their social compliance and supply chain transparency efforts.
Lighthouse is an open-source, automated tool for improving the quality of web pages. You can run it against any web page, public or requiring authentication. It has audits for performance, accessibility, progressive web apps, SEO, and more.
To export a report as a gist from the CLI version of Lighthouse, manually create a gist and copy-paste the report's JSON output into the gist. The gist filename containing the JSON output must end in .lighthouse.report.json. See Share reports as JSON for an example of how to generate JSON output from the command line tool.
Developers use many different technologies (backend/CMS/JavaScript frameworks) to build their web pages. Instead of only surfacing general recommendations, Lighthouse is now able to provide more relevant and actionable advice depending on the tools used.
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), in collaboration with the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR), developed a downloadable Security Risk Assessment (SRA) Tool to help guide you through the process. The tool is designed to help healthcare providers conduct a security risk assessment as required by the HIPAA Security Rule. The target audience of this tool is medium and small providers; thus, use of this tool may not be appropriate for larger organizations.
This application can be installed on computers running 64-bit versions of Microsoft Windows 7/8/10/11. All information entered into the tool is stored locally on the user's computer. HHS does not collect, view, store, or transmit any information entered into the SRA Tool.
The Security Risk Assessment Tool at HealthIT.gov is provided for informational purposes only. Use of this tool is neither required by nor guarantees compliance with federal, state or local laws. Please note that the information presented may not be applicable or appropriate for all health care providers and organizations. The Security Risk Assessment Tool is not intended to be an exhaustive or definitive source on safeguarding health information from privacy and security risks. For more information about the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules, please visit the HHS Office for Civil Rights Health Information Privacy website.
Please leave any questions, comments, or feedback about the SRA Tool using our Health IT Feedback Form. This includes any trouble in using the tool or problems/bugs with the application itself. Also, please feel free to leave any suggestions on how we could improve the tool in the future.
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