If you need snapping, open the preferences with Edit > Preferences > Behavior > Snapping and check the option to only snap to the node closest to the mouse pointer. Also disable all snap targets in the snap settings bar that you do not need.

Tanks for your suggestions. Turning snapping of works, but it is still awfully slow, up to the point where I have to wait minutes until it comes back to life. The problem is that I have a plot and I cannot just remove datapoints. Is there another way to simplify such a file? (Sorry

Is this slowing down due to internals or is there a possibility to just increase Memory somewhere so that it will be able to handle such files?


Snapping 1 2 Where Are You - Slowed Download


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Is there a method to import the svg at exactly the same place where the pngs are with the same formatting? That at least would give me the opportunity to import the svg as a last step without having to move them (which is problematic even without snapping)

The cursor jumps to random places and it is almost impossible to paste an object where you want it to be and the entire process is slowed down as the cursor progressively snaps from one random place to the next in slow motion.

To deter predators or competitors, snapping shrimp create shock waves with their powerful claws. The shrimp store energy in the flexing exoskeleton of their claw as it opens, latching it in place much like a bow-and-arrow mechanism, says Jacob Harrison, a biologist at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.

J.S. Harrison and S.N. Patek. Developing elastic mechanisms: ultrafast motion and cavitation emerge at the millimeter scale in juvenile snapping shrimp. Journal of Experimental Biology. Vol. 226, February 28, 2023. doi: 10.1242/jeb.244645.


The quick striking motion of the spider can be seen in the above video, which was shot at 3,000 frames per second and slowed down to make the snap of the jaws visible. In real life, the action takes place 150 times faster than it appears in the video.

The researchers theorised that the snapping works in a spring-like way, similar way to the previously-studied motion of mandibles in some insects. You build up energy in your fingertips by pressing your finger and thumb together, ready to snap. When they slide past one another, the energy is released suddenly, causing your finger to hit your palm. This impact sends out shock waves that make the clicking sound.

It was in 1882 in lower Manhattan that Thomas Alva Edison built the first central station electric system. Soon more electric systems were being built in cities across America, and electric power began having a profound effect on the way people lived and worked. But for the families of rural America, it would be many more years before they would be able to enjoy the benefits of this exciting new form of energy. By the mid 1930s, 9 out of 10 rural homes in America were still without electricity. The difference between city living and country living was becoming more and more like night and day.


The problem was a simple matter of economics. Building power lines across the sparsely populated rural areas would not be cheap, and there would be little revenue in return. The existing power companies were not interested in serving areas where they could not foresee a profit.


On May 11, 1935, President Franklin Roosevelt signed an executive order which created the Rural Electrification Administration. The purpose of REA was to bring affordable electricity to rural America by providing low-interest loans for the construction of generating facilities and transmission and distribution lines. Still, the large power companies showed no interest in serving America's vast rural areas. It soon became clear that it would be the farmers themselves who would make the rural electrification program work. By forming a non-profit cooperative and applying for REA loans, the people of rural America would get the job done.


Snapping Shoals EMC is formed

The roots of Snapping Shoals EMC began developing with the creation of Snapping Shoals Power and Light Company on June 29, 1936. The organizers were 5 area men who received a loan of $90,000 to construct 90 miles of lines for serving 270 consumers in Rockdale, Newton and Henry counties. The original headquarters was located at Snapping Shoals, an area on the South River between Newton and Henry counties, where a small electric generating facility was located. The first power lines were energized in November 1937.


In 1938, Snapping Shoals Power and Light became Snapping Shoals Electric Membership Corporation, a consumer-owned, non-profit cooperative, and the headquarters moved to Covington. Snapping Shoals grew rapidly as a cooperative. Growth slowed during World War II but increased again after the war. Today, most of the co-op's service territory is within the ever-expanding metro Atlanta region and includes some of the fastest-growing areas in the nation.


Snapping Shoals EMC's headquarters is now located at 14750 Brown Bridge Road in Newton County, near the center of the co-op's service area. A branch office is located on Fairview Road in Henry County's Ellenwood area.

Shock waves are supersonic high-amplitude pressure waves that cause barotrauma when they transfer kinetic energy to the tissues of animals.1-4 Snapping shrimp (Alpheidae) produce shock waves and are exposed to them frequently, so we asked if these animals have evolved mechanisms of physical protection against them. Snapping shrimp generate shock waves by closing their snapping claws rapidly enough to form cavitation bubbles that release energy as an audible "snap" and a shock wave when they collapse.5-8 We tested if snapping shrimp are protected from shock waves by a helmet-like extension of their exoskeleton termed the orbital hood. Using behavioral trials, we found shock wave exposure slowed shelter-seeking and caused a loss of motor control in Alpheus heterochaelis from which we had removed orbital hoods but did not significantly affect behavior in shrimp with unaltered orbital hoods. Shock waves thus have the potential to harm snapping shrimp but may not do so under natural conditions because of protection provided to shrimp by their orbital hoods. Using pressure recordings, we discovered the orbital hoods of A. heterochaelis dampen shock waves. Sealing the anterior openings of orbital hoods diminished how much they altered the magnitudes of shock waves, which suggests these helmet-like structures dampen shock waves by trapping and expelling water so that kinetic energy is redirected and released away from the heads of shrimp. Our results indicate orbital hoods mitigate blast-induced neurotrauma in snapping shrimp by dampening shock waves, making them the first biological armor system known to have such a function. VIDEO ABSTRACT.

However a quick google of the issue did turn up a few pages saying that snapping turtles never stop growing (in fact one person claimed that reptiles in general never stop growing) and no pages refuting it. It could be a very well known "urban legend" that no one has verified or refuted (I don't know if there have ever been any in depth long term studies on snappers). I do know that every so often a "monster" reptile will show up that has grown far beyond the usual growth limits of their species. That could just be because there is a large variation in their genes, or it could be a lucky individual that managed to get enough food and avoid predators long enough to grow to that size. It can be difficult to study wild reptiles and captives usually tend to be on the smaller side for whatever reason so it could be that we just don't know for certain.

It is said that reptiles keep growing throughout their lives. As mentioned above that growth can be in any direction including it's weight. It is said that the amount of protein the reptile consumes has a great influence on the rate of growth. I have an almost 12 year old female common snapper, who in the past year has finally stopped growing, at least for the time being. She is just over 19" shell length(SCL) and weighs 72 lbs. According to the record books, the record female common snapping turtle is 14"(SCL). The record male common snapper is larger around 19.5 - 20"(SCL).

I'm working on the theory that reptiles, like snappers, continue to grow throughout their life and seeing if I can get snapper to start growing again. She could exceed the male common snappers record. What happened the last couple of years was that the UVB bulb industry came out with a bunch of bad UVB bulbs including the mercury vapor bulbs that I was using on my snapper. So I haven't been using the bulb that much. When I first started using the Mega Ray mercury vapor UVB bulbs several years ago, I noticed an noticeable increase in my snappers growth rate. As an example from her 5th to 8th year, a 3 yr. period, she grew nearly 5" in shell length and 34 lbs. Her last 3-yrs. she has slowed down to 1.70" shell length but with a modest weigh gain of 20.5 lbs.

The alligator snapping turtle is the largest freshwater turtle in North America. Male alligator snapping turtles can reach lengths of 29 inches (73.7 centimeters) and 249 pounds (112.9 kilograms), while females can reach lengths of 22 inches (55.9 centimeters) and 62 pounds (28.1 kilograms) (Ewert et al. 2006, Pritchard 2006). The inner mouth lining is gray/brown with black splotches, which is different from most turtles; others have a pink lining (Ewert et al. 2006). This species also has a tremendously long tail; large, triangle-shaped head; curved beak; and a rough brown shell with three spines that run vertically up the shell (Florida Natural Areas Inventory 2001).

Courting occurs from February to April, with nesting occurring from late April into the middle part of May in western Florida. This species prefers to construct their nests in sandy soils within 65.6 feet (20 meters) of water, although they sometimes construct the nests as far as 656 feet (200 meters) from water. Females prefer to nest when the weather is warm and humid, which is when they will lay an average of 17-52 eggs in a clutch, with one clutch being laid per year (Allen and Neill 1950, Dobie 1971, Ewert et al. 2006, Ewert and Jackson 1994). Eggs are incubated for 100-110 days with most eggs hatching in mid-August (Ewert and Jackson 1994). The sex of the offspring is determined by the surrounding environmental temperature of the egg. An incubation temperature of 77-80.6F (25-27C) will result in a male hatchling, and a temperature of 84.2-86F (29-30C) will result in a female hatchling (Ewert et al. 2006). Alligator snapping turtles reach sexual maturity at 11-13 years of age (Smithsonian National Zoological Park, n.d.). 2351a5e196

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