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I use a few drops of canola oil when I fry eggs (weekends only).
I'm blessed with high HDL and very low LDL and strive to eat a balanced meal (in moderate quantity) every day. Recently (8 months ago) I started taking a Vitamin D supplement on the advice of my doc, on account of reduced sunlight where I live. My annual physicals have (thankfully) consistently revealed a good body chemistry, but I need to exercise more (even though I'm not overweight).
/ravi
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Ravi Bhavnani wrote: I'm blessed with high HDL and very low LDL
Note that HDL is an essential component that helps with the assimilation of various vitamins (including D vitamin). Probably that adds to your vitamin D deficiency. Fat is also essential to protect and cushion the vital organs.
There's no reason to intake too much fatty foods and become plump, but fats are not as bad as you think they're. .
I've Vitamin D deficiency too, primarily because I'm a vegetarian and also because I don't get enoug sun exposure. I'm supplementing on cholecalciferol based on doctor's advice.
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote: but fats are not as bad as you think they're. Yes, absolutely correct. Many vitamins and minerals are fat soluble and need a fatty medium in order to be absorbed by the body.
/ravi
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I think you could be assuming vanaspati when I said ghee, because some people use the word ghee to mention either. Vanaspati[^] is some horrendous stuff, and I don't ever use it.
Desi ghee is what we use, and it's usually prepared at home from (again) homemade butter.
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
modified 3-Oct-13 13:26pm.
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote: I think you could be assuming vanaspati when I said ghee Yes, I was. My mistake.
/ravi
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote: which is probably ghee rotis and some dal and/or curry with raita.
Mouth watering.
.AK.
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My daily workout is running for the bus - which I usually miss, then standing still for a long time waiting for the next bus - which is always "Out of Service" (I have quite a collection of photos taken with my phone as they go by), then running to the office when I get off the bus because I am late for a meeting - which has usually been cancelled (75%-80% of meetings seem to get cancelled at the last minute due to some crisis), then running to Burger King to get a breakfast sandwich before they stop serving them - I miss breakfast at home most days because I try and leave early enough to not miss my first "Out of Service" bus of the day.
A similar pattern but with walking replacing the running and a stop at the all-you-can-eat buffet, occurs on the way home in the evening.
I'm not fat, just big-boned.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Have you tried Green Coffee Extract tablets, sure kills the appetite.
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No, I'm not going to pop any pills to kill my appetite. I'd much rather eat as much as I want and then exercise more to stay fit.
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
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Interesting article.[^]
The following line, however, confused me.
"Text-based Web browsers such as Elinks or Lynx remain useful even today in some circumstances, such as operating a Linux server without a graphical user interface."
To read a command-line, you still need a GUI, whether you do it locally or remotely. How you choose to view it is up to you. Unless of course you're outputting the server information directly to a printer to read. Then you just need paper; lots and lots of paper.
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Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote: To read a command-line, you still need a GUI, whether you do it locally or remotely.
No you don't, looked after a few Linux servers over the years that ran directly on the hardware and had no GUI installed. Keyboard and moniter only needed to access it.
You could remote and use PuTTY or the like, but it wasn't required.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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I'm assuming you're talking about sending or receiving commands to or from a Linux server? But to read anything from a server, a GUI has to exist somewhere in order for a browser (command-line or GUI-based) to work. How else would you read something without a GUI?
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SSH from another server?
Keep Clam And Proofread
--
√(-1) 23 ∑ π...
And it was delicious.
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Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote: How else would you read something without a GUI?
You read it from the command line?
I think I might be missing something here.
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stdout.
You're obviously far too young -- you want to stop that.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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There are lots of embedded machines out there that use Telnet over Ethernet, or even RS-232 for command-line use.
Software Zen: delete this;
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BTW, I took read to mean literally, as in using one's eyes for reading. Otherwise, server to client communication isn't actually reading if there's no humans involved and I'm assuming the text-based browser is for humans who would need a monitor to read the text (even remotely).
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What you're missing is that olde skool command line based systems such as Unix & DOS are not designated as having a GUI[^]. Non-graphical is CLI[^].
speramus in juniperus
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Yeah, I realized that in my response to someone else. I was too busy seraching for an Asterix page while reading CP.
Should really focus on one thing at a time.
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[taps temple with forefinger]
These system engineers are all crazy.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Dude. Read = text, not graphics. I'm guessing you've never used or seen lynx. It's a text-based browser, the TEXT gets output to the console. No mouse, no clicking, no images, no GUI.
Behold: http://bit.ly/1dZiqXE[^]
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Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote: To read a command-line, you still need a GUI, whether you do it locally or remotely. How you choose to view it is up to you. Unless of course you're outputting the server information directly to a printer to read. Then you just need paper; lots and lots of paper.
Well what say about shelling amidst crisis in a dracut emergency mode shell? These will only save the day (and have, well that day I was fortunate enough to remember the appropriate serial driver module name for my USB stick, the usb_modeswitch command (I googled this in my phone though) and the faithful pppd!)
Assuming you know what a kernel panic feels
Beauty cannot be defined by abscissas and ordinates; neither are circles and ellipses created by their geometrical formulas.
Carl von Clausewitz
Source
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Ubuntu server doesn't even come with a GUI, just the terminal interface (at least out the box), I'm sure Lynx would work on that.
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I was unaware of it really. Whenever I got a ubuntu to do stuff (that was once in a blue moon perhaps), I had a SSH with X.
Beauty cannot be defined by abscissas and ordinates; neither are circles and ellipses created by their geometrical formulas.
Carl von Clausewitz
Source
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The vanilla server version is like this, for most server applications you probably don't want/need the overhead of an GUI. Also this is only true if you need to know what you are doing in linux, which I don't. So the first thing I did was to Google the instructions to install the desktop environment...
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