Slow Fast

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Jul 14, 2024, 1:49:27 AM7/14/24
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The max size of one segment is indeed set to 1 GB and the time periode to begin a new segment is set at 1 day. Today the big file of 524mb still exist... and there is no new mdf file of today... i don't know at what time of the day WinCC exaclty begins a new segment.
The things u say could make sence... I wait a bit for a new segment file.

But don't you think it's strange that about the same files are in the tag logging slow folder while there are no tags that are archived with a cycle greater than 1 minute. (check attachment for my configuration for the tag logging slow)

slow fast


تنزيل الملف > https://lpoms.com/2z024f



You need to give people time, lots of it, in order for your interactions with them to be fruitful. Trying to shortcut relationships is like cutting your workout in half. Sure you got through it faster, but what benefit do you really expect to get from that?

Over the next couple days, take note of whether or not you give the people at work and at home the amount of time you should. Also take note of when people give you the time you need to communicate properly to them. Try and make strides in investing in people, and let us know how these efforts have gone in the comments section below.

In this episode, I discuss digital transformation projects with speaker, author, and former football player Tanvir Bhangoo, and why these projects are much less reliant on technology than you might expect.

The truth is, some of us prioritize fast travel while others prefer slow travel. But what exactly is the difference between fast and slow travel? Which one is better? And why are we all so obsessed with talking about the pace of travel?

As the names imply, fast travel is fast and slow travel is slow. Fast travel usually involves fitting in a large number of places or itinerary items in a small number of days. You race around to see and do as much as you can in a short amount of time. Slow travel takes the opposite approach. You travel longer, stretching out how long you spend in one place, and keep the itinerary more relaxed.

An example of fast travel would be the three and a half days we spent in New York City in May 2022. We jam packed our days with lots of sightseeing, going to bed late and waking up early to see it all in the short amount of time we had.

An example of slow travel would be the six days we spent in Halifax, Nova Scotia in October 2021. With six full days in one city, we were able to take our time checking out sights and going on a couple of day trips. Another example would be the month I spent in Tokyo, living with a Japanese family and taking Japanese language lessons.

I find that fast travel works well in busy cities with lots to see and do. In a place like New York, where your bucket list of activities and restaurants to try is never ending, going fast from one thing to the next is the only way to experience as much of this cool city as possible before you have to leave.

Slow travel allows you to go deeper. Instead of moving from place to place, you get to stay put, learning more about the local culture, people, history and food. When we lived in Prague for a year, we were able to visit museums we never would have on a short trip, make friends who also lived in Prague, and create routines with regular visits to the same parks, restaurants and cafes.

In the travel blogging world, it seems like most people are Team Slow Travel. But I think we forget that not everyone has the luxury to travel as slow as they would want. To spend a month in Tuscany means you need a month off of work and a budget to support yourself. Not everyone has that!

The truth is that if I had an unlimited budget and unlimited time off, I would choose slow travel nine times out of ten. I love the idea of having a chill itinerary and lots of time to work through it. I dream of finding a local coffee shop I can become a regular at and spending enough time in a city to actually understand the public transportation system.

Riana Ang-Canning is a travel writer who has been sharing her global adventures as the founder of Teaspoon of Adventure since 2012. In that time, Riana has travelled to almost 50 countries on 6 continents, including interning in Eswatini, working in Tokyo, road tripping New Zealand and living abroad in Prague. Riana helps everyday travellers discover the world on a mid-budget, proving that you don't have to be athletic, wealthy or nomadic to have an adventure!

Thanks so much, Carolin! Totally agree that the reason why travel is so appealing is because people can experience it however they want. And similar to you, I like having the flexibility when I travel too.

Certain things in life are just better done slowly. Things like cooking a steak, enjoying a fine wine or sitting on the front porch in the rocky chair with a glass of iced tea on a spring sunset out by the lake. The same goes for fishing I suppose. A Texas-rigged worm generally needs to contact the bottom, and that often requires a slow deliberate retrieve. A jig is much the same.

The jig is an incredibly versatile lure. It can be hopped, drug, swam, stroked, shook and more, all of which will trigger bass to bite at different times. But day in and day out, just dragging it around cover and on hard bottoms can produce lots of good quality bites on various fisheries all over the country.

Likewise a Texas-rigged plastic can also do a lot. But many folks tend not to throw them when they are trying to find fish fast because they feel they have to slow down too much. There are certain instances where other baits will be a lot easier to fish fast, but a jig and a worm can really let you know if fish are in an area whether the bite is tough or wide open.

As you hone in on your areas, you can really work through them quickly to know that a population is present without beating the area up too bad either. Usually when I take a quality bite, I will leave an area and try to duplicate it or replicate it in other areas on the lake. We were able to do that in practice by fishing contact baits quickly out to the depth range we found the fish active in other areas and quickly establish a few areas where fish were present and active.

Many bass fishing tournaments are won in areas after just one bite in practice. The angler fished through an area fast, took a quality bite, decided the area offered a lot of room for a population of fish and they left. Then in the tournament, they came back and really slowed down and fished methodically in the area because they knew bass were present.

Help keep Petaluma's pace of life slow by taking the pledge to Slow the Fast Down. Then, nominate a street that needs safety improvement with our Safe Streets Nomination Program. Together, we can reach our Sonoma County Vision Zero goal and reach ZERO severe injuries or fatalities from traffic incidents by 2030.

Petaluma's Safe Streets Nomination Program allows residents to tell us which streets to improve next. With your help, we can pinpoint, rank, and upgrade areas that need work to slow traffic down and make our streets safer. We know that fast cars and safe streets don't mix. In fact, high speeds are the cause behind most traffic collisions in Petaluma.

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No, there is no limit. It just slows things down initially as there are overheads on checking each file.

I can quite easily upload movies of a few GB here in a couple of minutes, but, thats because everything else is already sync'd and so the overheads are low.

Have a look at -uploads/faster-sync

I was using my Synology NAS with the great Dropbox client in there. It was getting 45MB/sec upstream (I have 840Mb/ upload speed with FIOS).... so that's 360Mb/sec. It uploaded my 740GB collection in about 12 hours or so? I didn't check how long it took but I set it up after getting annoyed that Amazon Drive lost 20 of my videos and paid to go back to Dropbox where I had 30 days file retention -- Amazon Drive completely lost the files and I couldn't get them back otherwise. I set it up at 4am and when I checked around 4pm, it said it was already done.

If there's a cap, it could be on your machine or at your ISP. Maybe if you try uploading via Wifi it goes slower? I wired my PC here with a Cat6 cable into a 7-port switch and then with one cable into the cable modem across the room. Speeds are much faster than with any other provider I've used.

I don't use Google Drive so I can't say if I get the same results. For me, I turn on my Synology NAS, put the files on my drive there, and the system takes care of syncing it to Dropbox. I can have it do 10 files at the same time and each one goes for about 5MB each.... but it does 10 at the same time. Not sure if you're referring to individual upload speed but in terms of syncing a ton of files over, I seem to do OK and pretty much always have. I think sometimes it even matches it up to files in the Deleted files folder and pulls them out to avoid having to use network traffic if it has a match..... When I started to put my files back on Dropbox, it often said "Merged" instead of "Uploaded" as most of those files hadn't changed since I pulled them off 30 days ago.

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