Another great place to shop for Large Counting Parts products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
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SIGMA PC15 Heart Rate Monitor Watch
List Price: $79.99
Sale Price: $59.88
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Sigma Sport's PC 15 Heart Rate Monitor Watch is like its users: sporty, ambitious and committed to excellence. Anyone with a passion for sport and fitness will soon find a place for it in their heart. It is an individual trainer that allows you to control, plan, and evaluate your exercise sessions with total precision--complete with Training Manager, Lap Counter and is 100% electro cardiogram (EKG) exact...
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PILL COUNTING TRAY 23087 1 EACH
Sale Price: $8.00
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It is the easiest way to sort, count, and organize pills and other small items for all your laboratory or pharmacy needs! Start by simply pouring items onto the tray, and then sort however you would like: by color, size, shape, style...
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My Piano
List Price: $29.95
Sale Price: $22.88
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Research has proven that children who play an instrument do better in school, make friends more easily, are more creative, learn self-discipline and gain self-confidence. In eMedia My Piano, an animated character named Pam the Piano leads kids through over 100 lessons by Irma Irene Justicia, M...
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Star Trek: The Next Generation, Birth of the Federation
List Price: $49.95
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Star Trek: The Next Generation, Birth of the Federation is the first PC CD-ROM strategy game based on the rich Star Trek, universe! Forged from the cultures, time lines, events, and technologies of the hit TV show Star Trek: The Next Generation, this turn-based epic emphasizes resource management, combat, and diplomacy...
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![Battle Cruiser 3000 AD]() |
Battle Cruiser 3000 AD
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This software is BRAND NEW. Packaging may differ slightly from the stock photo above. Please click on our logo above to see over 15,000 titles in stock.
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Timex Ironman Midsize Road Trainer Heart Rate Monitor Watch
List Price: $109.95
Sale Price: $67.88
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It's no longer enough to train hard; you also have to train smart if you want an edge. Enter the Timex Ironman Road Trainer digital heart rate monitor watch, which gives elite athletes the performance tools they need to succeed...
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Timex IronMan Road Trainer
List Price: $109.95
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Timex IronMan Road Trainer features target zones, average heart rate, recovery timer, max zone calculation, digital transmission and an owner replaceable battery INDIGLO night-li
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MacGregor Count Up/Down Clock
List Price: $285.99
Sale Price: $168.55
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The MacGregor Count Up/Down Clock is the perfect timing device designed for any and all timed activities in your physical education curriculum. It comes equipped with an easily readable 4-inch LED screen and numbers with 99:59 up/down timing and a 12/24-hour clock...
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Here are some more information for Large Counting Parts:

How to Count Calories With Your Eyes
Embarking on a serious fitness quest or even a journey to just be healthy can sometimes be a daunting task. And at some point, you've been told or heard that eating 5-6 frequent small meals a day is the way to go for weight gain or weight loss.
After running a fitness site and bodybuilding forum, I see a lot of confused individuals who ask this very question below about the 5-6 meal deal. They have heard about it and want to do it but when it comes to counting calories, they are not willing to measure each grain of rice.
And can you blame them?
Many times people will ask, "I know all that stuff like I need to eat 5-6 meal a day, eat less than your daily maintenance caloric and stuff like that... But what I do not know is how big the meal has to be?"
Despite what you may have heard... eating 5-6 times a day it's not that hard. It takes some discipline but it's not all that difficult and you certainly do not eat 5-6 large, American style meals. These are small, frequent meals that comprise what is termed a complete meal (protein, carb, sometimes healthy fat).
But let me go back to the beginning to continue the story...
Here's what you do:
1- Figure out how many calories per day you need to
gain/maintain/lose weight
2- Start tracking with any online nutritional tracking program.
3- Eye ball your portions. You know you had some brown rice
right? Get out a cup. Look at it. If you practice this,
you'll soon be able to eat, look at your place and just know.. that is about a cup of brown rice.
You don't have to physically measure your foods. I suppose you could but that wouldn't work so well when you eat out, go to a friends out and such. Who wants to carry around a complete set of measuring cups and spoons?
So you will need to look at measurement devices like a cup, a quarter cup and such and be able to eye ball things. Once you do this a few times at home, you will be able to visually look at a plate of food and roughly guess the portions. Once you know the portions...
Then you know how much you should enter into a calorie calculator tracking program.
And at the end of the day any good program will show what you ate in calories, protein, carbs and fats. And you'll be able to see this displayed in a graph so you know if your ratios are correct (assuming you are into or have any interested in ratios).
I personally don't carry around a cup or any type of measuring devices. But I know if I go out to eat that the chicken on my place is about the size of the palm of my hand.. times two...
.. the palm of my hand is roughly 3 ounces.
I can eye ball that chicken breast and guess it's about 6 maybe 7 ounces of chicken.
Are you getting my point?
Follow those steps above. Once you know how much you need to eat in terms of calories, you will be able to do whatever you want.
Then eat, and eye ball your portions. Quickly you will learn that in order to hit your daily calories, maybe you don't want to eat 2 cups of brown rice as it's too much. Or maybe not enough. But you can judge this and track it and that is how you will know.
Then track it. If you don't track what you eat, then you are only guessing. And those who guess get frustrated because those who guess do not know. That is why it's called guessing. So if you simply cannot or won't track, you'll always be frustrated and confused. Unless of course, you track it for the first day and forever on, eat the same portions and foods. Yuck!
The biggest mistake I see people making is:
1- They have not ever figured out the math to calculate their calories
2- They do not track what they eat
3- So they just do whatever and get whatever
If you follow the above three steps, you are almost guaranteed not to make the same mistakes that most other people make when it comes to reaching their fitness goals.
About the Author
Marc David is a bodybuilder and author of the, Beginner's Guide to Fitness and Bodybuilding. You can get info on Marc's e-book at:
Beginning Bodybuilding
. To get Marc's free e-zine, visit
JustAskMarc.com
Need to do if else statements on a large data set. It needs to be easy. A nice interface is a +?
So I have a huge dataset (excel is out of the question). I need to take out some of the observations that meet a certain criteria and provide simple stats on them (like the sum or mean of a varible). Then on the remaining observations look at who meets a different criteria and then provide simple stats on them. etc etc. Now here is the difficult part: it has to have an easy interface. I mean I set this thing up and other people can choose the criteria and get the list of stats. For instance I have a data set with people. The user picks left handed people then women. So he gets the total income of left handed people then the total income of right handed women and then he gets the total income of whomever is left over. In other words no double counting. Thanks in advance
Access would be your best bet. You can setup forms in access to make the queries easy. Also, Access has some nice query building functions to make searching your data easy. Also, most versions of access can support database sizes of 2 Gigs
The Best of times: MPAA's Dan Glickman prepares to move on
“Look, this is one of the great industries in the world—an industry that not only impacts the economy of the United States…but that also impacts people’s lives,” Dan Glickman, the outgoing chairman and chief executive officer of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), enthuses as if it were his first day on the job.
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