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The ACSM is the most recognized accrediting organization when it comes to exercise physiology, biomechanics, and kinesthetics and is widely recognized by the medical community. It has the most rigorous entrance exam of any personal trainer certification and by far the most demanding continuing education requirements.

No, it isn't.

No, actually, it's both. Proper running technique involves striking with the ball of your foot, transitioning towards your heel, then back towards your toe. In the absence of excessive shoe support this requires you to recruit a lot of small stabilization muscles on both sides of your calf.

Messaged you the details. His were the nearly all-black trek sports (very minor grey highlighting) so I doubt it was because of the color scheme.

Considering I've watched these shoes fix the problems you seem to think they'll create, I find your comment mildly hilarious.

Thanks, I never would have guessed that you couldn't simultaneously have two opposite yet related conditions. /sarcasm

I recommend it for reasons:

I currently work a white collar office job for a major entertainment company. I wear my Vibram KSOs about half the time. My boss, the department VP, and the department SVP all saw me wearing them for months, but failed to notice them until I pointed them out. Once I did it blew their minds.

No, no they weren't. Arch supports are a crutch that most people don't actually need. They allow people to continue ignoring proper biomechanics. What's worse, in doing so they contribute to the problems that they're intended to alleviate.

Injinji makes a good set as well.

They sort through this stuff so they can figure out where it came from. The company I work for gets pirated material bought off the street from all over the world. It's analyzed to determine region of origin, sometimes even theater of origin. Theaters that allow high quality cams to be made repeatedly get fined (well,

The difference there is that in a micro-grav flight you're going back and forth between near-0 G and several Gs since the comet aircraft is diving into near free fall then pulling up hard. That's what makes it challenging. You only get a few seconds of floating (and rarely perfect free fall) before you're slammed into

And page loads on 56k are measured in minutes, not seconds. Still orders of magnitude off for the latency to be the limiting factor.

Bad physics is laughably bad.

There's a difference between the bandwidth and the latency. The thought of latency contributing to slow page loads for a website is laughable.

Really? I'd be thinking about Asteroids. Also - Space Invaders.

Because it's like Facebook but isn't Facebook. Obviously.

LA has some particular challenges. There are actually some pretty decent corridors set up with bike lanes crisscrossing the city, but a lot of motorists are oblivious to them. I'd routinely see people drive half in their lane and half in the bike lane, or turn across them without signalling or looking.

That would be valid if the Dublin plant was willfully breaching the contract. If they're selling it to people with the understanding that it's for local distribution and those third parties are turning around and trucking it across state lines, it isn't their fault.