はてなキーワード: GEtとは
forums.garmin.com/developer/connect-iq/f/showcase/393204/daily-collect-free-fortnite-v-bucks-generator---get-codes-real-tools-2024
forums.garmin.com/developer/connect-iq/f/showcase/393198/new-updated-new-free-fortnite-v-bucks-generator---get-codes-real-tools-2024
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/get-13500-v-bucks-free-fortnite-codes-list-epic-battle-royale-games-2024
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17819/
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/unlimited-coinsfree-robux-generator-get-epic-battle-royale-games-roblox-gift
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17816/
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/unlimited-skinsfree-fortnite-v-bucks-generator-get-epic-battle-royale-games
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17814/
最近は月収15万くらい。
仕事やれば出来るし手は早い方なんだけど仕事増やすまでのプロセスがめんどい。
手っ取り早いのは適当に業務委託募集してるとこに応募、ポートフォリオ審査後に面接通れば仕事GET。
はーめんどくさい
この面接が本当に嫌い。
人と話したくないよー緊張するよー
面接なんかいるんだろうか、ポートフォリオ見りゃ実力分かるだろ、っていつも思う
まぁ納期守らんやつとかヤバいタイプの人間いっぱいいるんだろうな
それを弾くための面接なんだろうけども
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/unlimited-rollsmonopoly-go-dice-links-get-free-codes-promo-gift-cards-list-2024
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/100-free-tiktok-followers-generator-get-unlimited-likes-fans-free-fans-click
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17804/
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/daily-collectfree-tiktok-followers-generator-get-50-followers-latest-updated
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/todays-free-cash-app-money-generator-get-real-750-money-free-daily-collect
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17805/
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17796/
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/daily-collectcoin-master-spins-coins-get-unlimited-spin-generator-links
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17806/
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/daily-collectfree-amazon-gift-cards-generator-get-unlimited-promo-codes-list
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17807/
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/daily-collectfree-psn-gift-cards-generator-get-unlimited-playstation-promo
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17808/
I'd hold you
I'd get down on my knees for you
And make everything alright
I'd please you
I'd tell you that I'd never leave you
community.lincs.ed.gov/group/30/discussion/real-tools-list-fortnite-v-bucks-generator-get-free-promo-codes-latest-updated
community.lincs.ed.gov/node/17788/
少額の金(初期装備)からスタートする「『テレビ』のリサイクル券」獲得RTAのルート案です。本番向け。
Any%とTrue Endingカテゴリそれぞれ解説します。
Any%:とにかく近所のショップへ一直線。脳筋です。ロット毎のランダムマップなので、ルート取りのイメトレ・自主練は必要です。
True:お祈り要素あり。。遠くてもできるだけデカい店舗に行きます(安テレビに出会う確率を上げる)。
大手ショップが近隣にあるマップであればまず「下調べ」を選択し、次のターンでショップに向かってもOKです。安定派はこちらで。
マップの引きが悪すぎる、または「下調べ」の進捗があまりにも悪かった場合については
「通販」選択ルートでカバーしましょう。本来リセットですが、持ち時間が決まってる場合の奥の手として。
Any%:テレビを購入後、その場で即売ります。ヤバい人パラメータが限界ギリまで上がりますが耐えます。
ここでは店員さんとの会話で確実に良客になり、ヤバい人パラの上昇を抑えることが肝です。店内のコース取りも重要。
本ルートでは"町の変人"称号を取らずに進むため、会話フェーズを飛ばすとパラが上がりきって警備員が来ます。必ず良客でいましょう。
True:帰り道に別のリサイクルショップに持ち込みます。会話コマンドは安定さえ取れればOKです。
帰りの道中に立ち寄ることを優先に、できれば大きいショップに寄りましょう(リサイクル券を発行してもらえないバグ防止)。
大きいショップだと買い取りがスムーズなのでタイム短縮が狙えます。
③帰宅
コース取りに気をつけつつウイニングランです。他カテゴリと同様、自宅玄関を開けた瞬間にタイマーストップです。
以下補足です。
・購入するテレビですが「PC」「モニター」等はNGです。また引っかけで「車載テレビ」やその他特殊なテレビも引き取ってもらえません。
現実のものですが、こちらの区分が大変参考になります。https://www.rkc.aeha.or.jp/recycleticket/target_items.html
・本ゲーム初心者で見極めが不安な方は、テレビ売り場近くの店員さんに話しかけ「これ繋いだらニュース映りますか?」を選びます(ヒントが出る)。
まずは情報の正確な把握に努めましょう。その後の雑談では無難に回答し、むやみにヤバい人パラを上げずに完走を試みてください。
、、余談ですがこの選択肢、現実でこんなこと言いますかね?笑 要は確実にヒントが出るようなアホ質問ということなんでしょうがw
現実ならギリでも「テレ朝映ります?」「TBS見れます?」とかになりそう。少し前なら「手越復帰のイッテQをリアタイしたくて…」とか?笑
・財布スコアを捨てて早く済まそう!というコンセプトです。「引き取りを依頼」「リサイクル施設に持参」ルートは考案しておりません。
上記ルートで「引き取りを依頼」すると財布がマイナス→アルバイトに突入するのでRTAとして破綻します。俗に言うタイミーさん化。
「リサイクル施設に持参」は行動自体に財布の増減はありませんが、ほとんどのマップで施設がバカ遠く、交通費もかかるので微妙です。。
というか、そもそも施設持参はマップ依存すぎて現在100%カテ以外では各大会ローカルでレギュ違反となっています。元は暗黙の了解でしたね。
今後を考慮して一応書きましたが、今んとこ個人配信で盛り上がる分にはよいですね(真Any%とか神マップRTAと称されることが多いです)。
以上、お役に立ちましたら幸いです。
➤「救いようが最もうない、極東の自称他称の〝ジャーナリスト〟や〝学者〟、〝知米派〟は読まなくても構い。読んでもその肥大化した自己承認欲求、度し難い自己愛性人格では読むことはできないし、理解もできない。ただ見下した目線で見やるだけで、そこに自分が利用できる素材がなければ鼻で嗤うだけだ。この文章は、我がU.S.を領りたい、領ろうと下向きの反省的眼光で欲する諸君に読んで貰いたい。
I Traveled to 46 States in America This Summer. Here’s Why Trump Won.
By Frank S. Zhou
By Ezekiel A. Wells
Ezekiel A. Wells ’27 is a Double Concentrator in Environment Science & Engineering and Economics in Eliot House. He spent last summer traveling to 46 American states conducting interviews for his YouTube series, “Crossroads America.”
A week after Democrats’ election loss, accusations have flown in every direction within their Party. Some fault President Joe Biden for an egoistic refusal to drop out of the race earlier. Some blame the Harris campaign for failing to serve key demographics and communicate a clear vision for the country. And some blame Americans, claiming that racism and sexism drove voters toward Trump.
These factors certainly exist, but we’re missing a larger piece of the picture.
Over the summer, I traveled to 46 states in the U.S., creating a YouTube series highlighting slices of life across the country. In conversations from my nearly three-month road trip, I spoke with Republicans who were certain that inflation is entirely Biden’s fault and Democrats who, despite their frustrations with corporate profits and desires for universal healthcare, hoped for a more moderate candidate. From supporters of all candidates, I heard a shocking amount of misinformation.
After combing through hundreds of hours of interview footage from swing state Trump voters, I am certain that, as much as other factors influenced the outcome of the election, our crumbling media landscape — which has caused a rift in our democracy — is most to blame.
In the postwar period, news was dominated by three main channels, and because of the Fairness Doctrine, each station reported the same stories and covered multiple sides of each issue. Viewers picked which channels they watched mainly based on their preferences for news anchors’ personalities. Of course, this model had its problems, but, at the end of the day, it meant that Americans worked with a shared set of facts.
A shared set of facts is not the world we live in today.
Throughout my interviews, conspiracy theories were rampant, and on at least five separate occasions across separate states, I was told that Bill Gates tampers with our food, adding plastic to our fruits and vegetables to make his medical investments more profitable.
In conversations with voters, neither side seemed able to name many specific policy issues they cared about; everyone just seemed to repeat the words of their favorite pundits, podcast hosts, and internet personalities.
Although this behavior is harmful, I don’t blame everyday Americans. Blame falls on the media that has ostracized, disillusioned, and misinformed them.
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I first saw this trend with low-wage workers in West Virginia, who — despite falling inflation rates — have seen stagnated salaries and clear increases in food costs. Channels like Fox News bred anger and resentment for many of them.
Take July of this summer, for example, when for the first time in his presidency, prices actually fell under the Biden administration. Traditional media establishments rushed to celebrate this victory, with one article from CNN declaring, “The White House can finally cross out ‘inflation’ on its list of presidential liabilities.” However, outside these bubbles, I observed many Americans held a different view.
In late July, I was welcomed at a massive family reunion in Tylertown, Mississippi, where one Trump voter — a middle-aged, Black, family man, pastor, and soul food enthusiast — made this clear.
“When I go in the grocery stores, and I gotta spend my last to get groceries, you mean to tell me I’m not gonna look and see who’s gonna vote to help me? I voted for Trump and I’d vote for him again, because he put money in our pocket,” he told me.
In their coverage, mainstream news organizations obsess over the Federal Reserve’s next rate cuts while failing to connect with people concerned with their next meals. With titles like “Vance: Young Americans ‘Are Becoming Paupers’ Due To Inflation, High Housing Costs,” sites like The Daily Wire had their fingers on the pulse of American sentiment, welcoming new readership from those who felt neglected by traditional media.
This problem was not just confined to the economy. While Biden’s mental state was deteriorating, liberal media outlets seemed to under-cover these stories, sheltering him from scrutiny of his declining capabilities, until the infamous presidential debate.
Formerly trusted networks slowly made themselves indigestible to the polarized American public, and in 2024, for the third year in a row, a Gallup poll found that more Americans indicated having “no trust” in the media than those who trust it a “great deal/fair amount”.
So where does the average American turn when the nation’s media cannot be trusted? For many people, it was YouTube talk shows, Newsmax, and podcasters such as Joe Rogan.
While Democrats seek to blame various internal factors for this election’s loss, I cannot help but think of Joe Rogan’s Trump endorsement, the many blind lies I heard from ordinary citizens across the country, and declining trust in American journalism.
As Harvard students and members of higher education institutions, we have a part to play in the problem. At Harvard’s Institute of Politics, those who denied the 2020 election results have been precluded from speaking at the JFK Jr. Forum. While the goal is understandable, it shields students from understanding the American viewpoints they represent.
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There is a difference between platforming intentional and manipulative misinformation and listening to and learning about where people are and what they believe.
As a pipeline to mainstream media, Harvard, and its future journalists, have to consider the audience they lose when they stay inside of their bubble and ignore the issues of everyday Americans.
The disappearance of factual importance in our world is alarming and dangerous, but if we, as aspiring journalists, politicians, and engaged citizens, want to be taken seriously in communicating Trump’s threat to democracy, inflationary tariff policies, and so on, we owe American voters that seriousness, too.
Ezekiel A. Wells ’27 is a Double Concentrator in Environment Science & Engineering and Economics in Eliot House. He spent last summer traveling to 46 American states conducting interviews for his YouTube series, “Crossroads America."
南北戦争、get place to live、ただ素直に生きるために…😟