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ROPE LAYING MACHINE OPERATOR | Sacramento | United States
I am working as ROPE LAYING MACHINE OPERATOR.
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An LMS (Learning Management System) username and password are almost always provided by the institution that owns the LMS. There's no universal way to "get" one as it's tied to your enrollment or employment. Common LMS platforms include Moodle Canvas Blackboard and Google Classroom. Here's the general process:
If you're a student or employee your school university or company's IT/administration department creates your account. You typically receive your login credentials via email (to your official student/employee email) or in a welcome packet. The username is often your student ID number employee ID or your official email address. The initial password is usually a temporary one you must change on first login. If you haven't received credentials contact your institution's help desk IT support or student services. If you've forgotten your password look for a "Forgot Password?" link on the LMS login page which will send a reset link to your registered email. Never try to find or request LMS credentials from unofficial sources—they are private and secure. The login portal is usually something like "lms.yourschool.edu" or "canvas.youruniversity.edu".
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As someone who's bricked a phone trying this I strongly advise against it. The performance gains are minimal (maybe 5-10% in synthetic benchmarks) for a huge cost in battery life heat and risk. Modern phones use dynamic clocking—they boost to high GHz for short bursts when needed (like opening an app) and then throttle down. Forcing them to stay high just makes them thermal throttle faster actually reducing sustained performance.
If your phone feels slow try these safe steps first: 1) Enable "Developer Options" and reduce animation scales to 0.5x. 2) Clear app caches. 3) Uninstall unused apps. 4) Perform a factory reset (backup first!). 5) Check if your manufacturer has a "performance mode" in settings. Overclocking a sealed device with passive cooling is a recipe for a dead phone. It's not like a desktop PC with a giant heatsink.
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This is a common point of confusion especially in exam contexts. While heavily overlapping there's a subtle distinction in focus. General Knowledge (GK) is often considered a broader more static repository of facts and information. It encompasses history geography science awards books famous personalities and static data. It's what you "know." For example knowing who wrote "War and Peace" or what the capital of Bhutan is.
General Awareness (GA) leans more towards current affairs and applied knowledge of the world around you. It's dynamic and focuses on recent events government schemes economic developments sports news scientific breakthroughs and important appointments. It's being "aware" of what's happening. For example knowing the recent change in RBI's repo rate or who won the latest Nobel Peace Prize. In many competitive exams the section is called "General Awareness" but includes both static GK and current affairs. Think of GK as the foundation and GA as the constantly updated building on top of it. A site like GKToday categorizes news well into current affairs (GA) and static GK.
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"Resetting" an HDMI port on a TV usually means troubleshooting when there's no signal or a poor connection. It's not a literal reset button but a series of steps to re-establish communication. Here's the universal fix order: 1) Power Cycle Everything: Turn off the TV and the device (cable box game console etc.). Unplug both from the wall power for 2 full minutes. This clears any electrical charge and resets the HDMI handshake. 2) Check Cables and Ports: Try a different HDMI cable if possible. Try plugging the device into a different HDMI port on the TV. 3) TV Settings: On your TV remote there's often an "Input" or "Source" button. Manually select the correct HDMI port. Some TVs have an option to "Refresh" or "Re-detect" inputs in the settings menu (look under External Inputs or General).
4) Device Settings: On the source device (like a PlayStation) check its display output settings and ensure it matches your TV's capability (e.g. 1080p vs 4K). Sometimes lowering the resolution can force a re-handshake. 5) Factory Reset (Last Resort): If one specific port is dead but others work it might be a hardware failure. As a last resort you can perform a factory reset on the TV (Settings > System > Reset) but this will erase all your apps and settings. A helpful guide for specific brands can be found on Sony's support site but the steps are similar for most brands.
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Oh back pain is the worst sorry you're dealing with that! First things first if your pain is severe sudden or accompanied by other symptoms like leg weakness numbness fever or loss of bladder/bowel control you need to see a doctor immediately. That could signal something serious. For common non-emergency back pain here's a general plan:
Short-term (First 48 hours): Avoid activities that worsen the pain but try to stay gently mobile. Complete bed rest is usually not recommended anymore. Apply ice packs (wrapped in a towel) for 15-20 minutes several times a day to reduce inflammation. After 48 hours you can switch to gentle heat. Over-the-counter pain relievers like ibuprofen or naproxen can help with inflammation but check with a pharmacist first if you have other health conditions. After the acute phase: Start gentle stretching and walking. Look up "McKenzie method" exercises or "cat-cow" stretches on YouTube. Improve your posture especially if you sit a lot. If pain persists beyond a couple of weeks see a healthcare professional—a physiotherapist is often the best bet. They can identify the root cause and give you targeted exercises. The NHS (UK) back pain guide has excellent safe advice.
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