Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 10, 2018

Waching daily Oct 25 2018

this is part two of the video series how to talk to the doctor in English in this

video I will show you two more health problems and the most common questions

doctors will ask you at the hospital

hey friends teacher Prix here to help you talk to anyone anywhere anytime in

English thank you so much for joining I always appreciate you coming back but if

it's your first time here hey welcome I hope you enjoy this video and I hope I

can keep helping you improve your English so make sure to subscribe

alright and if you would like more tips in English I have an exclusive email

list where I send weekly emails with English lessons vocabulary lists

podcasts videos I will leave the link in the descriptions make sure to become

part of this very exclusive email list but let's get started problem number one

headache well when you go to a hospital when you want to talk to the doctor

about a headache you can basically say hey doctor I have a bad headache or I

have a terrible headache or my head hurts

alright these are common ways to say your head is hurting and remember you

could have a headache for many reasons alright it could be just because of your

head or it could be because of your stomach well so the doctor may ask you

some questions to help him diagnose why you're having a headache now one thing

that is also very important to mention is if the headaches happen to you very

frequently if this is the first time or if this is something that is rare that

doesn't often happen to you but if it's something that is frequently happening

to you you should tell the doctor or if you have a history of headache or

migraines you should also tell the doctor so that

he can prescribe the best medicine or the best treatment for you but let's

assume this is not your case you don't have a history of headache you go to the

hospital because you're feeling a headache

let's see what the doctor can ask you where does it hurt basically they want

to know the position so after the doctor asks you this question you have to show

where in your head it hurts it could be on your front part on the sides on the

back so it's important to show the doctor where exactly it hurts

does it hurt on the front he just wants maybe he just wants to confirm

does it hurt on the front or on the side or on both sides in case you show him

one side of your head he may want to confirm if it's just on that side or if

it's on both sides so he may ask that question as well and then here he may

also ask you what's the pain like is it like a chronic non stopping pain or is it

more like pulsing so it's important to identify what kind of pain you are

feeling there are different words to describe the kind of pain you're feeling

so if you for example if you have frequent headaches this is something

that you should research so that you can discover and learn more different words

to describe your pain okay he can also ask you does it hurt when in contact

with bright light so does your head hurt more or does it start to hurt when you

are in contact with light with bright light very important so if that is

happening to you you should say yes or sometimes or no the answers will be very

basic the point of this video is to show you the possible questions

the doctors will ask you because these questions you will answer with very

simple answers yes/no left right sometimes rarely it depends on the

question though unless the doctor asks you to explain something else which I

doubt your answers will be very basic and simple he may also ask you does it

hurt in noisy environment when many people are talking when you hear the

cars when you hear many things at the same time

and usually at a high-volume noisy environment you have to say yes no I

don't know maybe you don't know you've never paid attention so it's also a

possible question do you feel nauseated okay maybe your headache is so so bad

that you start to feel nauseated some people even throw up when they're

having a really bad headache so you should tell the doctor if you have been

feeling nauseated and if you have thrown up because of the headache you should

tell your doctor now the doctor may ask you for some exams especially if you hit

your head such as a head x-ray or CT but usually headaches as I said they have

like many possible reasons so they may prescribe you some kind of medication to

help you feel better but other than that that's pretty much what's going to

happen next pain knees so if you're feeling pain in your knee again that it

could be happening for many reasons all right working out too much exercising

walking too much or maybe you fell down and you hit your knee so there are many

possible reasons to explain why your knee is hurting so here are some

questions the doctor may ask you if you go to the hospital with knee pain

firstly he'll ask you when did it start did it start two days ago did it start

today did it start three days ago so you need to remember when your pain started

all right and what you were doing that could also be something that will help

the doctor diagnose your pain now something that it's important to

remember let's say you're traveling as a tourist tourists usually walk a lot if

this is something that you don't usually do on a regular day this is probably one

reason one possible reason why your knee is hurting so you should tell your

doctor if you are on a vacation and walking a lot so that he can have a

better understanding of what's going on with you where does it hurt

well your knee is hurting but where exactly on the front part on the back

part on the side so where did it start suddenly?

or slowly gradually it's also something important to pay attention did you just

wake up this morning feeling pain in your knee or did it

slowly grow your pain gradually grew as the days went by another question he may

ask you is the pain always there or sometimes it comes and goes

do you feel pain all the time or occasionally if you say occasionally he

may ask you well what do you usually do when you feel pain well when I walk or

when I ride a bicycle when I'm going up stairs and finally how would you

describe your pain so here again the type of pain you're feeling I will show

you two kinds but there are more okay you can say your pain is dull or you can say

your pain is sharp what's the difference between these guys a dull pain is less

intense but it's always there this kind of pain doesn't really stop you from

your everyday activities you can still do them but the pain is always there

okay not as intense but it doesn't go away for example that kind of pain you

feel after sitting all day long in front of a computer you can still go and do

your things but you know the pain is there and it's uncomfortable okay so

that's the dull pain now the sharp pain on the other hand you can really

identify when you're feeling a sharp pain why because it's more intense and

it usually stops you from doing your everyday activities maybe that's not

like it stops you but it makes it very difficult for you to do your everyday

activities in a way that eventually you will have to stop this pain doesn't really

last a long time but it can come and go okay now that you understand this kind

of pain even if the doctor doesn't ask you, oh is it dull or is it sharp you can

explain to the doctor, well it's more like a dull kind of pain or it is a sharp in my knee

and that will give the doctor a better picture of

what's happening to you after this questions they, the doctor may do a

physical exam on your knee and ask does it hurt here does it hurt there and well

pay attention so that you can answer the doctor but other than that he may ask

you for a x-ray on your knee or a CT depending on how bad it is but other

than that these are pretty much the things the doctor may ask you he may not

prescribe anything until he knows what exactly is going on in your knee okay

there you have it two more health problems and we finished this two video

series of how to talk to your doctor in English I will be making more videos

about hospital and medical English so make sure to stay tuned I hope you

enjoyed this video make sure to subscribe and share it with your friends

thank you so much and I'll see you next time bye

For more infomation >> How to talk to the doctor in English| Part 2 - Medical English - Duration: 9:38.

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Using Azure Pipelines for your Open Source Project - Duration: 13:44.

>> Hi everyone and welcome back to the Devops Lab.

I'm Damian Brady and I'm joined by Edward Thomson

from the, not the VSTS team anymore.

>> It is not the VSTS team.

>> Azure DevOps team.

>> Azure DevOps.

>> As of last week at time of recording.

>> Last week.

>> Yeah, so there were a lot of announcements,

I want to go through everything

but the big thing that it kind of

drawcard for me was the Azure Pipelines.

>> Yes.

>> In particular the open-source offerings

for Azure Pipelines.

>> Right. We're incredibly excited about it.

It's our way of giving back to

the open-source community and we are

providing free access to Azure Pipelines,

which is our continuous integration and

continuous delivery service, for open-source projects.

We're giving them unlimited build minutes

across 10 parallel pipelines.

>> So, this is hosted builds

and your own personal builds and things like that.

So, you don't need any of your own infrastructure, right?

>> That's exactly right. Yeah, so we'll host all of

the building infrastructure for you in the Cloud.

So, we have Windows,

of course, build agents to the Cloud.

Yeah, surprise.

But, we also have Linux and macOS and I think we're

the only provider that has all three

available hosted for you.

But, if you have something custom,

you can also bring your own infrastructure if you want.

But, most open-source projects,

I maintain an open-source project,

I don't want to bring anything.

I just want it handled for me, right?

>> Yeah, exactly and there's a few flavors of

the Linux build pipeline

[inaudible] Linux build agent, is that right?

>> Yeah. So, what I recommend you do,

is just use the out-of-the-box build agent.

We've got one for you that's Ubuntu 1604,

and then if you want to

say build on a different environment,

let's say you want to run and send to us,

no problem we do that in a Docker image.

So, that's how I got my stuff set up.

So, I can really just customize exactly the

dependencies that I want

and just spin up my builds in a Docker image.

>> Nice. So, we're

NDC Sydney at the moment, which is cool.

I just arrived like an hour ago. So, I'm jet-lagged.

I came all the way from the Gulf Coast

like an hour or something.

You can clearly tell that I'm jet-lagged.

Here in NDC Sydney, I haven't seen anything,

but I've seen a few people

tweeting about Azure DevOps and few sessions,

you did a talk on Git at scale, right?

>> I did.

>> So, Git is one of these things that you've been

involved with for a long time.

>> It's been a while.

>> You've got this shirt.

Probably not a new shirt, I'm guessing.

>> It's not, this is from when I worked at GitHub.

>> Right. So, one of the things that came out with

this announcement as well was integration with GitHub, [inaudible].

>> Yeah, that's exactly right so as part

of our giveaway for two open-source projects,

we built Marketplace app for GitHub.

So, it's super easy to acquire.

So, here I've got a a simple open-source project,

this is just a .NET

Framework application and it's a command line app.

I actually built this to help me

work on Git repositories.

So, this is a Hex Dots app

like the BSD command-line application,

and if I want to get started with Azure Pipelines,

all I have to do is go into

the "Marketplace" that's up here,

let's see, there we go.

So, I just click on the "Marketplace" there in

GitHub and that brings me to the Marketplace.

If I scroll down and find

continuous integration here over in the side,

then I can add Azure Pipelines right there.

So, it's super simple to get started.

I've already got Azure Pipelines

configured for a couple of my accounts,

of course, but I can add it to another one.

So, all I have to do is click on "Edit your plan",

actually no, let me set up a new plan instead,

and then click for "Free",

then boom, and it just explains, again,

that 10 free parallel

jobs and unlimited build

minutes and I just click "Install for free".

>> So, one thing I noticed as well,

was the you can see it on the left and the

1,800 minutes per month for private pipelines.

>> That's right.

>> That used to be what,

240 minutes a month or something like that?

>> I forget what it used to be,

but yeah now it's 1,800.

So, if you're not using

open-source or if you're

not developing open-source rather,

you can still take advantage of Azure Pipelines,

but the offer isn't quite as generous.

Because, again, the open-source community does so much

for all of us.

So, all I have to do is select which

account I want to install it into.

Obviously i'm already got it on mine,

I've already got it on LibGit too,

which is a project I hope to

maintain, gotten on a couple others.

So, I select this demo one

and then just click "Complete

order" and it will have me login.

>> You can restrict to specific referrals so it's not?

>> That's right. I find it easier just to do one

at a time as I'm going and it'll just make me confirm.

>> That's a long password.

>> Yeah. I'm only

a little paranoid about my source.

That's something in GitHub.

Yeah.

Now, I just log in with a Microsoft account.

>> You've got a few of them as well?

>> I have got a few of them as well. Well that's fine,

I'll just I'll just go ahead and use this one.

Yeah, that's the funny thing about testing software,

you end up with a lot of accounts on

your projects and so I can either use

an existing Azure DevOps organization

if I'm already using Azure DevOps or if I'm not,

I can just create a new organization.

If I didn't have anything at all,

it would just go ahead and create me a new one,

just very simple,

very straightforward, but since I'm already

an Azure DevOps user

it's guiding me through this process,

in case I want to create a new account or use my own.

I can choose where my projects get hosted,

that's important for a lot of

people knowing where their code is, geographically.

We're here in NDC Sydney,

so thinking I want to be in Australia.

You know what, that's fine, only

in my project because, of course,

we have Azure DevOps

takes advantage of Azure's data center,

so we've got data centers all over the world.

>> There's a lot they can use.

Do you know how many? They are

kind of scattered all over, right?

>> They are, there's

a couple in the US, couple in Europe.

That's all I remember off hand.

I think I knew that there was one in Australia,

but I always forget because it's not that old.

>> No. Well, yeah,

there's Australia Southeast and

Australia East and then there's also a couple more now.

There's a government one, and them something [inaudible].

>> Crazy. Yeah, so now we're in

Azure Pipelines and so all I have to do is

select my repository and

it will pull that down from GitHub and examine

it and it's going to look and see

what I'm building and

it's going to suggest something for me.

Like I said I've just got a command

line .NET Framework app,

so that's the template it chooses for me.

But, if it had found like a package.JSON, it would say,

it would suggest a NodeJS template,

and so I'll just select that, and then I get to see it.

So, I can review this here,

but it's super straightforward.

It's going to run NuGet.

It's going to run

misspelled and then it's going to run the tests.

So, that's a great way to get started,

and I can customize this, but

like I said this is basically what I want,

and so I'll just click "Save" and run,

and then it will actually just check a YAML file in,

this YAML file into my repository,

so that's configuration as code,

it's exactly what you want.

You want your build description version

right alongside your code.

So, that if you go change branches,

go to an old release that you still got

the build description for how that release was built.

>> Right, because otherwise used to be the problem.

You have your build definition and

you have various branches.

You're going to change

your code until you need to build a differently,

which won't be breakfast [inaudible] .

>> Right, terrible. That was terrible so

this is configurations code is is amazing.

So, I could use

a pull request or I could just create a commit

directly and I'll just commit directly

since I'm just playing around.

Usually I do a pull request,

so that people could

comment on it and get visibility into what I'm doing,

and so it's going to go ahead and set that up.

It's going to commit that onto GitHub and

it's going to start my first build.

>> Okay.

>> So, now and in

fact while that's doing

the build it'll only take a second,

but while it's doing the build.

I can also go back and look

at the build definition that was created,

so I'll hit "Edit" right here and once that loads,

I'll go to triggers,

and so you can see what it's set up.

It's set up a continuous integration trigger.

Anytime code is merged into the master branch,

it'll kick off a build here and

anytime somebody opens up pull request,

it will do this build validation,

and so that's incredibly

important as an open-source maintainer.

When somebody sends me a pull request,

I want to know that it builds on all

the platforms I support

and that all my tests pass

before I even really start looking seriously

a pull request.

If it just fails all across the board,

I don't have to spend much time I

can just suggest to them that maybe they

need to do a little [inaudible] first.

>> I've noticed as well, in

GitHub and a lot of open-source projects when you submit

a pull request is a series of checks that

run and the build is one of those,

doesn't actually compile and that it passed.

Is this integrating directly with that? Is that the same?

>> It's exactly the same, Yeah,

so you'll see the cute little Pipeline spaceship

in a pull request now as a check.

>> That's very cool. Awesome. Nice. If you

want to change that mood definition,

the YAML's just sitting on your source.

So, you can change that however you maintain.

>> That's exactly right. The next time I fetch this repo,

it will pull that down and I can just edit

it and I like the eye,

but if you're an Emacs fan or VS Code.

>> I'm VS Code all the away.

So, this was the Pipeline stuff for open-source

and you can just do this for

as many open-source projects as you have.

No charges, nothing like that,

it's just continuously free for the moment.

>> Yeah. It's free, not for the moment, is just free.

>> Is just free.

Nice. Awesome. Thanks for showing this.

It's easy to get started you mentioned it.

You walked through that whole

process basically from scratch.

>> That's right, and it just took a minute.

>> When that build completes, the other thing that I see

in GitHub open-source free poses I can build badge.

>> Yeah, absolutely.

So, all I have to do is click this ellipses

here in my builds

and click "Status badge" and

it'll actually give me the markdown.

It doesn't have the build output yet,

but as soon as it does, that'll turn green,

so I can just copy that and then I can flip back over to

GitHub and I can edit my read me,

just click on the readme and then

click the pencil to edit it.

For something like this, I'll just use

the GitHub editor, paste that right it.

If I click preview, there we go.

Now, the build does seem to succeed,

so it will actually show me the green,

and so now I can add

the build badge and create a new pull request.

>> Okay, so we can test.

>> That's exactly right.

So, click "Create pull request" and once that happens,

this is where you're

talking about, this is the checks area,

it's yellow while it's analyzing what checks need to

run and as soon as it

realizes that Azure Pipelines is one of those checks,

it kicks off that build.

>> Oh, very cool.

>> So, it's yellow

right now meaning that it's in progress.

I can click details and that'll take me to

the GitHub checks page and then from there,

I can go straight to Azure Pipelines,

and I can even watch the build as it happens.

So, it'll provision an agent.

It'll start downloading my new Git tasks

and I just love to watch the build output,

but what can I say.

So, as soon as this build

actually completes, it turns green,

then it'll report back to GitHub,

and I'll be able to see that it'll turn green there too.

Then, that gives me a lot of visibility

into the build process

and so I have comfort that this change

is probably not doing too many bad things anyway.

So, I'm going to go code review it,

but it gives me a nice sanity check.

>> That's that's some pretty deep integration.

>> Yeah, I love it and like I said it's super

easy to set up and it just takes a couple minutes.

>> Yeah, definitely and free you said,

no reason not to try it.

>> Free. That's right.

>> Awesome. Thanks for walking me through that,

an easy couple of minutes. That's good.

>> Absolutely, my pleasure.

>> Awesome.

Well, thank you everyone for joining us

and we'll see you on another DevOps Lab pretty soon.

>> Right.

For more infomation >> Using Azure Pipelines for your Open Source Project - Duration: 13:44.

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Half Life - Duration: 2:29.

You

have always

and only ever been

in the middle of things

awake

in the midst of a body

straddling life

in medias res,

ab ovo.

You

negotiate flow

between north and southbound:

the medium and the median.

You

are the trace of an argument

between the circle

and the line:

cartesian coordinates desirous

of the planar,

the corporeal,

the rhizomatic.

Some arguments

end in a peace accord.

All arguments

end.

You

are an index of traversal

marking that which keeps you coming back to

that which you keep coming back to.

Years and yards

mindful of momentum,

either embrace

or encroach

on this

your home.

You

are a star,

a situated self

half out of hydrogen.

Spent energy, however,

persists,

and insists on being remade

into movement or heat

or just old light,

awaiting a retinal soft landing

on alien eyes

another four and half billion years or so

from now.

You

are an exponentially decaying quantity,

which sounds like an insult,

until you read the fine print

in which it is said that you possess

an immeasurable

half life.

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