I have ended up keeping both a Cinnamon Bear (snap) and Cowboy Mint (zip). I really love both, though I do find the zippered version to have a bit more structure and less tendency to gape open, even when not zipped, due to the added strips of leather for the zipper. Cowboy Mint is such a pretty green with the unique marbling and lovely true green tones. Cinnamon Bear is the pebbled brown I was hoping for with lovely, unique pebbling, and reddish undertones. The raindrop size is very comparable to my Mini CB. I did switch my wallet from a bifold to a Lovebug, just to save a little room. Here are my usual contents: large envelope pouch (lipsticks + emergency femme hygiene items), large (3 slot) lovebug wallet, 2 mini taco keychains (one w/ key fob, other w/ chapstick & bobby pins), pill box, pen, and occasionally a small envelope wallet. All fits very comfortably and could add 1-2 other small things if needed.

This atmospheric wallpaper, designed by the Rockwell Group for Jim Thompson, features softly billowing clouds scattered with sparkling raindrops. The sky-inspired hues are enhanced with a silver metallic and sisal grasscloth ground, adding subtle luster and glamour.


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High in the atmosphere, water collects on dust and smoke particles in clouds. Raindrops start to form in a roughly spherical structure due to the surface tension of water. This surface tension is the "skin" of a body of water that makes the molecules stick together. The cause is the weak hydrogen bonds that occur between water molecules. On smaller raindrops, the surface tension is stronger than in larger drops. The reason is the flow of air around the drop.

As the raindrop falls, it lose that rounded shape. The raindrop becomes more like the top half of a hamburger bun. Flattened on the bottom and with a curved dome top, raindrops are anything but the classic tear shape. The reason is due to their speed falling through the atmosphere.

Air flow on the bottom of the water drop is greater than the airflow at the top. At the top, small air circulation disturbances create less air pressure. The surface tension at the top allows the raindrop to remain more spherical while the bottom gets more flattened out.

Even as a raindrop is falling, it will often collide with other raindrops and increase in size. Once the size of a raindrop gets too large, it will eventually break apart in the atmosphere back into smaller drops. This time, the surface tension loses and the large raindrop ceases to exist. Instead it pulls apart when it grows to around 4 millimeters or more.

Thus Zdr is a direct measure of mass weighted median diameter. The functional relationship between Zdr and Do is developed from the underlying microphysical relation between the mean axis ratio of raindrops and their size. This shape size relation can potentially be perturbed in the presence of raindrop oscillations. Grogucci et al. (2002) developed a technique that watches the self-consistency between Zh, Zdr and specific differential phase Kdp, to account for the perturbation in oscillation, in retrieving Do from dual-polarization radar measurements.

I am wondering if any users of Obsidian could share how they have integrated Obsidian with other productivity tools. In particular, I am wondering how it might be possible to do universal advanced searches - that is, search for a tag and find all items with that tag, whether those items are files on my HD, bookmarks on raindrop.io, notes on Obsidian, and annotations on hypothes.is. Does that sound possible?

I have seen raindrop.io integration with hypothes.is, raindrop.io integration with Obsidian, and Alfred integration with both raindrop.io and Obsidian. As a researcher, the ability to search across all of these apps and services sounds really powerful, especially with a tagging system.

I rushed back into the house and got my Hasselblad camera and tripod. To focus this close I added a 55mm extension tube to my 80mm lens. I had to position the camera carefully so that all of the raindrops would be in focus. I took one exposure on Fujichrome 50 film.

I discovered raindrop recently and would LOVE a proper integration. For the meantime, I use Zapier to save shared stories from the blurblog to raindrop. But a proper integration with tags and saved / non-shared stories would be greatly appreciated.

That's my poem on the nature of humans, portrayed by a raindrop. People, whether you like 'em or leave 'em, I don't believe (most) people are inherently lazy. I do believe that people are more likely to follow the gravitational path of least resistance, much like a raindrop. I've heard my colleagues and superiors rip people for being lazy, but calling others 'lazy' is the easy way to let yourself off the hook too. Take, for example, my friends, Everybody, Somebody, Anybody, and Nobody, in the parable of responsibility:

So what can you, a raindrop, do about it? Like any good coach, you have to see how each player works. Actively observe each raindrop as they flow. Work on a plan to leverage their strengths and encourage their successes. If you neglect a raindrop, that's where they can fall through the cracks and water damage begins. When water gets inside your home, it invites termites, produces rot and eventually causes structural failures. The same is true of our teams. It's amazing what a few drops of water can do! It can cause a lot of damage but if channeled properly, it can do a lot of good. If I am not happy with the results, I go back to rule number one, the definition of insanity:

Raindrops fall into our lives and with us, form a river, shaped by the boundaries and obstacles in our environment. We too have the ability to impact those obstacles, no matter how immovable they appear to be. If your teams were anything like mine, they have a wide range of skills, personalities and motivations to consider. It's not easy to keep track of them all. Nor does a one-size-fit-all management approach work either. To guide them down this river, we need to better understand how each member of our team works. What are their strengths and weaknesses. What are opportunities for them to grow and what are threats to their livelihood. For each member on my team, I create a continuity sheet, essentially a coaching profile, that includes their resume, my notes from the interviews, information from their references, notes from each time we meet one-on-one, important informal discussions and notes from formal reviews. I build a profile, consult it from time to time and it helps me adapt and better coach each member of my team. It helps me learn how we get the best out of each other, to get us to where we need to go. By developing my coaching profile, I think like a raindrop, I step outside of my singular perspective and immerse myself in the context of another person: where in this journey do I need guidance? What obstacles are in my way? Where do I need to go?

Now think about a waterfall as the culture of your organization. When you create the space and provide direction within a supportive environment, you get all of those raindrops moving together and you produce an unstoppable force. It's why Peter Drucker said, "Culture eats strategy for breakfast", because your culture is the one thing that competitors cannot copy.

The national coverage of the NHDPlus Flow Direction Grid provides a foundation for evaluating the probable course of surface water flow. Given a point anywhere on the flow direction grid, a "downhill" path may be determined to associate an arbitrary hydrologic event with NHDPlus features. WATERS utilizes an application known as the "Raindrop Tool" to traverse the flow direction grid and determine an appropriate spatial intersection with NHDPlus hydrologic features. While a powerful tool for indexing and creating spatial relationships, the raindrop tool requires some explanation of usage, limitations and best practices.

The logic to travel the grid from cell to cell is quite simple. Depending on the value of a given raster cell, the application may move from cell to cell in any of eight directions continuing onward until either the maximum raindrop distance is travelled or until a grid sink is encountered. Grid sinks are special no-data grid values indicating that no further traversal is possible. NHDPlus processing has placed grid sinks on ocean coastlines, outflows to foreign countries, certain isolated networks and at the previously mentioned outflows between production units.

* All raindrop actions are initiated with two parameters: "maximum raindrop distance" and "maximum snap distance" (both in kilometers). Together these parameters may be used to tune the Raindrop Tool results.

The NHDPlus Dataset represents flowline hydrologic features without width, meaning that a feature such as the Mississippi river is abstracted to a single line. However, the Flow Direction Grid does represent the descending nature of the entire feature channel. The raindrop application can return peculiar results when the flow direction grid's channel does not immediately intersect with the NHD feature geometry.

After heating the water and agar, the liquid is molded and cooled.[10] A molasses-like syrup, called kuromitsu, and soybean flour, called kinako, are used as toppings.[9] The dish appears like a transparent raindrop, although it has also been compared to breast implants and jellyfish.[9] The largely tasteless dessert melts when it enters the mouth and must be eaten immediately, or it will melt and begin to evaporate after twenty minutes.[9] 006ab0faaa

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