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Containers provide a standard way to package your application's code, configurations, and dependencies into a single object. Containers share an operating system installed on the server and run as resource-isolated processes, ensuring quick, reliable, and consistent deployments, regardless of environment.


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What is a container on aws?

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World War I was one of the most destructive wars in modern history. The opposing sides in World War I were the Entente Powers and the Central Powers.

Nearly ten million soldiers died. The enormous losses on all sides resulted in part from the introduction of new weapons like the machine gun and gas warfare. Military leaders failed to adjust their tactics to the increasingly mechanized nature of warfare. A policy of attrition, particularly on the Western Front, cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of soldiers.

No official agencies kept careful track of civilian losses during the war years. Scholars suggest that as many as thirteen million non-combatants died as a direct or indirect result of the war. The conflict uprooted or displaced millions of persons from their homes in Europe and Asia Minor.

Property and industry losses were catastrophic, especially in France, Belgium, Poland, and Serbia, where fighting had been heaviest.

In January 1918, some ten months before the end of World War I, US President Woodrow Wilson had written a list of proposed war aims which he called the “Fourteen Points.”

Eight of these points dealt specifically with territorial and political settlements to accompany a victory of the Entente Powers (Great Britain, France, and Russia). One important point was the idea of national self-determination for ethnic populations in Europe. Other points focused on preventing war in the future. The last principle proposed a League of Nations to arbitrate international disputes. Wilson hoped his proposal would bring about a just and lasting peace: a “peace without victory.”

German leaders signed the armistice (an agreement to stop fighting) in the Compiègne Forest on November 11, 1918. Many of them believed then that the Fourteen Points would form the basis of the future peace treaty. But when the heads of the governments of the United States, Great Britain, France, and Italy met in Paris to discuss treaty terms, the European countries of the “Big Four” rejected this approach.

After the devastation of World War I, the victorious Western powers (Great Britain, the United States, France, and Italy, known as the “Big Four”) imposed a series of treaties upon the defeated Central Powers (Germany, Austria–Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey).

Viewing Germany as the chief instigator of the conflict, the European Allied powers decided instead to impose harsh treaty terms upon defeated Germany. The treaty was presented to the German delegation for signature on May 7, 1919, at the Palace of Versailles near Paris. The Treaty of Versailles held Germany responsible for starting the war and liable for massive material damages.

Germany lost 13 percent of its territory, including 10 percent of its population.  The Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to:

The treaty called for:

Further, all German overseas colonies were taken away from Germany and became League of Nation Mandates. The city of Danzig (today Gdansk), with its large ethnically German population, became a Free City.

Perhaps the most humiliating portion of the treaty for defeated Germany was Article 231, commonly known as the "War Guilt Clause." This clause forced the German nation to accept complete responsibility for starting World War I. As such, Germany was to be held liable for all material damages.

France's premier, Georges Clemenceau, in particular, insisted on imposing enormous reparation payments. While aware that Germany would probably not be able to pay such a towering debt, Clemenceau and the French still greatly feared rapid German recovery and a new war against France.

The French sought to limit Germany's potential to regain its economic superiority and also to rearm. The German army was to be limited to 100,000 men. Conscription was forbidden. The treaty restricted the Navy to vessels under 10,000 tons, with a ban on the acquisition or maintenance of a submarine fleet. Germany was forbidden to maintain an air force.

Finally, Germany was required to conduct war crimes proceedings against the Kaiser and other leaders for waging aggressive war. The subsequent Leipzig Trials, without the Kaiser or other significant national leaders in the dock, resulted largely in acquittals. They were widely perceived as a sham, even in Germany.

The harsh terms of the peace treaty did not ultimately help to settle the international disputes which had initiated World War I. On the contrary, the treaty got in the way of inter-European cooperation and intensified the underlying issues which had caused the war in the first place.

For the populations of the defeated powers—Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Bulgaria—the peace treaties came across as unfair punishment. Their governments quickly resorted to violating the military and financial terms of the treaties. This was the case whether the governments were democratic as in Germany or Austria, or authoritarian in the case of Hungary and Bulgaria. Efforts to revise and defy provisions of the peace became a key element in their foreign policies and became a destabilizing factor in international politics.

The newly formed German democratic government saw the Versailles Treaty as a “dictated peace” (Diktat). The war guilt clause, huge reparation payments, and limitations on the German military seemed particularly oppressive to most Germans. To many Germans, the treaty seemed to contradict the the very first of  Wilson’s Fourteen Points, which called for transparency in peace negotiations and diplomacy. Revision of the Versailles Treaty was one of the platforms that gave radical right-wing parties in Germany such credibility to mainstream voters in the 1920s and early 1930s. Among these parties was Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party.

Promises to rearm, reclaim German territory, remilitarize the Rhineland, and regain European and world prominence after the humiliating defeat and peace appealed to ultranationalist sentiment. These promises helped some average voters to overlook the more radical tenets of Nazi ideology.

The reparations and a general inflationary period in Europe in the 1920s caused spiraling hyperinflation of the German Reichsmark by 1923. This hyperinflationary period combined with the effects of the Great Depression (beginning in 1929) to undermine the stability of the German economy. These conditions wiped out the personal savings of the middle class and led to massive unemployment. Such economic chaos contributed to social unrest and the instability of the fragile Weimar Republic.

Finally, the efforts of the Western European powers to marginalize Germany through the Versailles Treaty undermined and isolated German democratic leaders.

Some in the general population believed that Germany had been “stabbed in the back” by the “November criminals”—those who had helped to form the new Weimar government and negotiate the peace. Many Germans “forgot” that they had applauded the fall of Germany’s emperor, initially welcomed parliamentary democratic reform, and celebrated the armistice. They recalled only that the German Left—commonly seen as Socialists, Communists, and Jews—had surrendered German honor to a shameful peace.

This Dolchstosslegende (stab-in-the-back legend) helped to discredit the German socialist and liberal circles who were most committed to Germany's fragile democratic experiment. The difficulties caused by social and economic unrest in the aftermath of World War I and its peace undermined democratic solutions in Weimar Germany.

German voters ultimately found this kind of leadership in Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party.


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Why was the tov created?

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As a general guide, the ideal blood pressure for a young, healthy adult is between 90/60 and 120/80. If you have a reading of 140/90, or more, you have high blood pressure (hypertension).


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Could you suggest Is 93 over 64 blood pressure normal??

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Freezing is a method of preserving food and products that is used to prolong their usefulness. We stop the growth of organisms that can affect food. There are three different types.

The normal freezing temperature is -18oC, enough to stop the growth of organisms. The microorganisms are not destroyed with freezing, they remain inactive or their activity slows down. If a product is affected by a pathogen, they will still be there once thawed.

Since anisakis poisoning is not a microorganism, it is possible to prevent it by freezing.

Microorganisms continue to grow under normal conditions when a raw food or a cooked dish is re-thawed.

It's like removing the pause button in the process of food degradation, which will resume its path at normal speed towards the end of its useful life.

Physical alterations that modify the appearance and texture occur during freezing. There are foods that do not admit to freezing well, such as fats and potatoes. It is best to freeze at high speed and thaw slowly in the fridge, so as not to alter the organoleptic properties and minimize the growth of organisms.

It's clear that refreezing food carries certain risks that it would be better to avoid. The food will have already advanced a little further towards its decline and dangerous pathogens could have developed if we hadn't defrosted.

The idea of danger associated with freezing again has something of a myth or popular belief, but it is not without reason, especially when it is discouraged by experts. It seems logical to bet on the " better prevention than cure" when it comes to food safety.

Some food safety authorities don't reject refreezing.

Tina Hanes of the US Department of Agriculture's Food Inspection Service said that if the food has been frozen and thaws properly, it can be refrozen.

That includes both cooked and raw food. If food safety conditions continue to be met, having gone through freezing will not affect being able to freeze again.

It should be consumed quickly once it thaws again.

The problem is that the refreezing should take place in a short period of time.

If we leave a piece of meat or fish in the fridge for more than a day, it will start to oxidize and become rancid.

The United States Department of Health and Human Services recommends that food be kept out of the fridge for more than 4 degrees.

Most foods are safe to refreeze if we have changed our mind in the middle of the process.

Products such as fruits, vegetables, bakery or pastry products, and certain cooked dishes will not be less safe to consume because of quality losses. It is best not to risk it if we see something strange in the product.


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can lox be refrozen?

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berta

Address: 119 Liverpool St, Hobart TAS 7000, Australia


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Which are the best brunch bars in Hobart, Australia?

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Woolworths Campbell Street

Address: 189 Campbell St, Hobart TAS 7000, Australia


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Which is the best panettone in Hobart, Australia?

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Russian oligarchs are business oligarchs of the former Soviet republics who rapidly accumulated wealth during the era of Russian privatization in the aftermath of the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the 1990s.


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What is russia oligarchs?

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Ukraine and Russia will not meet each other at this stage as a result of the ongoing conflict between the two states while other potential


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Why can't russia and ukraine play each other?


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