always thinking on the bright side of life,is an optimistic.
actually it is a is a mental attitude that interprets situations and events as being best.
I am a fashion photographer,according to me, I could summarize this by the word optimism. When I am shooting, my approach is to first put people at ease. Fashion models and celebrities feel this attitude, because the contact is immediate, relaxed, calm, and I feel that this is beneficial to the final result. This is how I see things. I like to put people in their best light. I do not try to exploit the slightest flaw. You could call this the simplicity of happy people.
Kelly or Missy
You look at them.
You think about them.
You try to impress them.
You want to be with them.
When you’re on the phone with them
late at night and they hang up, you
still miss them even when it was just
two minutes ago...yeh its jst my feelings..
You read their Texts and Ims Over and
over again.
You walk really slow when you’re with
them.
You would do anything for them, just
to see them.
wow...anyway its a wonderful feeling...
hey...you must trust your husband..And you desire him as your perfect partner and dedicate yourself to him...it will be a good turn..finally you will never ask this type of questions again...because he will show you what he is..
we must first learn about electrolytes.
Pb2+ + 2 e- → Pb (s) ξo = -0.13 V
Ag+ + 1 e- → Ag (s) ξo = 0.80 V
What is the voltage, at 298 K, of this voltaic cell starting with the
following non-standard concentrations:
[Pb2+] (aq) = 0.08 M
[Ag+] (aq) = 0.5 M
Use the Nernst equation:
ξ = ξo - (RT/nF) ln Q
ξo=0.80-(-0.13)=0.93V
first I balanced the equation:
2(Ag+ + 1 e- → Ag (s))
Pb(s)→ Pb2+ + 2 e-
--------------------
2Ag+ + Pb(s) --> Pb2+ + 2Ag(s)
Q = [products]^p/[reactants]^r
so Q = 0.08/0.5^2 = 0.32
i used ξ = ξo - (RT/nF) ln Q
ξ = 0.93V - ((8.314)(298K)/(2)(96500)) ln0.32 = 0.9446V
I also used E=Eo-(0.05916/n)logQ
E = 0.93V - (0.05916/2)log0.32= 0.9446.... hoping if you can double check this for me. thanks!
Open Outlook 2010. If the Microsoft Outlook 2010 Startup wizard displays automatically, on the first page of the wizard, click Next. Then, on the E-mail Accounts page of the wizard, click Next again to set up an e-mail account.
If the Microsoft Outlook 2010 Startup wizard doesn't appear, on the Outlook 2010 toolbar, click the File tab. Then, just above the Account Settings button, click Add Account.On the Auto Account Setup page, Outlook may try to automatically fill in the Your Name and E-mail Address settings based on how you're logged on to your computer. If the settings are filled in and they're correct, click Next to have Outlook finish setting up your account.
If the settings on the Auto Account Setup page aren't filled in or aren't correct, consider the following as you correct the settings:
If the settings on the Auto Account Setup page aren't filled in for you, type the correct settings based on the information that was provided to you by the person who manages your e-mail account.If the name in the Your Name box isn't correct, you may need to reset the options on the Auto Account Setup page before you can edit your name. To reset the options, click the option button next to Manually configure server settings or additional server types, and then click the option button next to E-Mail Account.
After you click Next on the Auto Account Setup page of the wizard, Outlook will perform an online search to find your e-mail server settings. You'll be prompted to enter your user name and password during this search. Make sure that you enter your full e-mail address (for example, tony@contoso.com) as your user name.
If Outlook is able to set up your account, you'll see the following text: Your e-mail account is successfully configured. Click Finish.
http://www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi... it helps you
she was 36 when she died.
The first post office in Boston—and probably in the first in America—was established in the home of Richard Fairbanks, on or very near the site of the [old] Boston Globe building in 1639.
Richard Fairbanks was an influential person in Boston, England, and had emigrated to Boston, New England with Reverend John Cotton in 1634
Site of First Post Office