Answer:
About 5 years ago my girlfriend and I were taking a summer camping trip in southern Alberta. I was in the passenger seat trying to find the campground on a map when she drove over the crest of a hill, was blinded by the sun drove into the ditch. It was a seriously steep ditch but we weren't going very fast so all was fine. I looked over at her and laughed before returning my attention to the map, assuming she could safely bring the vehicle back onto the road.
The next thing I knew, the SUV launched onto the pavement and she lost control and we began swerving. I remember feeling the wheels on the driver's side lift off the ground, then the impact as I was slammed into the door and glass exploded into my face. We barrel rolled and we rolled over-front for a seriously long way.
At some point during the chaos I looked over at her to make sure she was "ok", and just as I did so I watched as she was thrown into the ground through her door window and the corner of the roof just above her seat was crushed inward. The way it looked to me was that she had just been crushed between the ground and the roof of the vehicle. I passed out at that point.
When I came to I had somehow already unbuckled myself from my seat and the vehicle was on its roof. I crawled over to her seat and was in absolute shock to see that she was still in one piece. I removed her from her seat and got us out through the windshield before carrying her for about a half a kilometer down the road, still in shock and fueled entirely by adrenaline.
We were found by a driver who had gone past the wreckage and we were eventually taken to a hospital. I broke 3 ribs on my right side and dislocated my right shoulder, she was severely concussed and scraped up but otherwise mostly okay. However she was 7 weeks pregnant at the time and we found out while in hospital that her body had rejected it under the immense and sudden stress.
We are still together and have 3 amazing and beautiful children, but she still holds onto a lot of guilt surrounding the accident and the loss.
Explanation:
Explanation:
Module getNumber (Integer Ref Value)
Display "Display a number"
Input number
End module
Module main ()
Declare Integer number x = 1
Declare Real number y = 2.5
Display( x, " " ,y)
Call changeUS (x,y)
Display( x, " " ,y)
End module
Answer:
There are certainly many hidden costs, and you need to find them out. I am listing some. The GPU can cost a lot if you are using them for complex computing like in the case of Bitcoin. You need to pay heavy electricity bills as well. And if you want to install the webserver then as well, you need to keep your computer open all the time, and pay a good sum as an electricity bill. Many more hidden costs can be found. And one out of above is used in Schools, the webserver. Some more hidden costs can be Network cost, as the school is big, and you need to connect all through LAN, and at times we also need WAN set up. And these are another hidden cost. Various education licenses come for free, and smart classes cost as well. The video conferencing, VOIP, etc costs as well. Smart classes training by various computer training institute for teachers like one from adhesive.
Explanation:
Please check the answer section.
Air conditioning, or cooling, is more complicated than heating. Instead of using energy to create heat, air conditioners use energy to take heat away. The most common air conditioning system uses a compressor cycle (similar to the one used by your refrigerator) to transfer heat from your house to the outdoors.
Picture your house as a refrigerator. There is a compressor on the outside filled with a special fluid called a refrigerant. This fluid can change back and forth between liquid and gas. As it changes, it absorbs or releases heat, so it is used to “carry” heat from one place to another, such as from the inside of the refrigerator to the outside. Simple, right?
Well, no. And the process gets quite a bit more complicated with all the controls and valves involved. But its effect is remarkable. An air conditioner takes heat from a cooler place and dumps it in a warmer place, seemingly working against the laws of physics. What drives the process, of course, is electricity — quite a lot of it, in fact. Hope this helps?