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Press the button in the middle to play music — when I did so while writing this, the drum beats on “Hurricane” and The Weeknd’s soaring vocals filled my office. Though I definitely made the song sound much worse.) Turn the Stem Player on, and you’re greeted with a gentle vibration and four colored lights appearing on each of the stems.
Erica: Sounds good. And just a couple of quick housekeeping items, just want to let you all know that we are recording this session, and we’ll be sending out the recording as well as the slides later on today. You should already have the slides. I mean, we’re used to hurricanes, tornadoes, you know, fires, wildfires.
Another direct content example is that of the number of websites that emerged post-Hurricane Katrina. Regardless of how well-designed or technologically sound the tool, if people aren’t already using that tool then they won’t turn to it in a time of disaster. Here are my slides from the presentation.
Just want to let you all know that we are recording this session, and we’ll be sending out the slides as well as the recording later on this afternoon, probably get it before dinnertime. So I’m going to stop sharing my screen, and I’ll let you two bring up those slides. And just a couple of quick housekeeping items.
Fast forward to the summer of 2020: I’m now working from home, I get up from my desk, slide the phone into my back pocket, and WHAM — it drops straight onto my hardwood floor, my partner right beside me — so we both get to witness the ensuing heartbreak. I pick it up to find a nice hairline crack across the full width of the screen.
who warn the public about avalanches are sounding a different type of alarm. The forecasting work is crucial for skiers and climbers who flirt with danger when they travel through mountain gullies that are prone to slide. Officials in the Western U.S. The forecasts also are used to protect the general public.
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