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24/6: The Power of Unplugging One Day a Week

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The big misstep from my point of view? Why not discuss adults ditching smartphones and tablets entirely? Or never getting them in the first place? Couldn’t finish. Got a little over halfway through it. The general idea of a Tech Shabbat is wonderful and I support it, but I think this approach to discussing tech is outdated and unhelpful. How do we talk about phone usage without fear mongering? It’s certainly not by saying this, the line that made me quit: “Let’s just call everything what it is. A flip phone is a phone and a smart phone is an addiction machine.” A dry evening for most with some rain in the Peak District. A band of rain moves into the region in the early hours, persisting on and off into the morning. Feeling chilly in upland areas, becoming milder by dawn. Minimum temperature 8 °C. Wednesday: The author wove together a cohesive balance of the 24/6 idea, stories to drive home the message, and antidotes to help a reader progress through more the droll content (speaking specifically as a fiction fanatic - usually no love story no interest hahah)

Good but not great. If it had been ranked a bit higher by others, I would have 3-starred to counteract. (Actually, if you'll look, I DID eventually three-star it for the spiritual equivalent of plagiarism, among other things.)Tiffany Shlain and her family practice what she calls a Tech Shabbat. From Friday evening to Saturday evening her family go technology free; choosing instead to use this time for some quality family bonding, time spent in nature, hosting friends etc. She gives context on why she started this practice, the difference it’s made in their lives and how exactly they achieve this. William Dotson, Cathie Speakman, Pembrooke Andrews, Jeffrey Whitcher, Shawn Kennelly, Jeff Charbonneau, Laura Macias, Vince Nicastro, Rich Polanco, Vic Radulich I appreciate a few things in this book. I like the emotion in the reading, as Shlain does the performance herself. The reading is personal, conversational, and charming. You can hear her choke up on a couple occasions, particularly when reading about her father's funeral, and that is a kind of connection I appreciate. She has some good ideas as far as her one tech free day per week premise is concerned, but nothing I haven't really heard before.

Converting from decimals to fractions is straightforward. It does, however, require the understanding that each decimal place to the right of the decimal point represents a power of 10; the first decimal place being 10 1, the second 10 2, the third 10 3, and so on. Simply determine what power of 10 the decimal extends to, use that power of 10 as the denominator, enter each number to the right of the decimal point as the numerator, and simplify. For example, looking at the number 0.1234, the number 4 is in the fourth decimal place, which constitutes 10 4, or 10,000. This would make the fraction 1234 And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.

and say to him: Calm down and be quiet. Do not be afraid or disheartened over these two smoldering stubs of firewood--over the fierce anger of Rezin and Aram and of the son of Remaliah. The first multiple they all share is 12, so this is the least common multiple. To complete an addition (or subtraction) problem, multiply the numerators and denominators of each fraction in the problem by whatever value will make the denominators 12, then add the numerators. EX:

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