Airman 1st Class Jenae Bellar, 22nd Logistics Readiness Squadron individual protective equipment journeyman, and Staff Sgt. Johnny Ware, 22nd LRS weapons vault NCO in charge, open an M16 rifle weapons container, Feb. 12, 2014, at McConnell Air Force Base, Kan. The Weapons Vault Shop is responsible for maintaining approximately 2,200 firearms and distributing them to Airman deploying. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class John Linzmeier)

file name changed in Vault (basic) browser, but local files did not change. Then right click on the file name, choose" get, working folders - force overwrite", then in the local $workingFolder , two files exist same time!!! is this the thing supposed to be?


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for example, in Inventor , I started a new assembly file, then "save as" , it still goes to " local work folder, how about make the local working folder totally invisible ( as buffer), so any new part file directly save to vault?

I'm open to be proven wrong, but as far as I know you can't do this using standard product features, Autodesk aren't big on giving admins the option to enforce rules like this even though in many cases it's something we really really want to be able to do. Initially my first thought (on Workgroups or Pro) was maybe we could create a Vault based file rule to redirect a file with no comment onto a lifecycle which the users have read and modify rights denied, which would in turn block the file from being created in Vault. But then I remember logging a ticket years ago to have that behaviour reversed, and it was wups. But even then, it would be a complicated and messy workaround.

I'm not positive on this as I haven't personally tried it, but I'm almost sure that Data Standard can't apply enforcements like that, even in Pro. I asked the question a little while ago and Doug Redmond responded saying it can't go that far, but we might have been discussing a different property enforcement. Either way, I'm totally wanting to be proven wrong if someone can confirm it can do this and show an example as I have a current requirement for this kind of feature.

My feeling in that with all the security I assume the vault files should be safe to even the most determined hackers but there are so many remarks about using a different emails & lots of 2FA and all sorts of concerns, If it is a secure as implied, why so many concerns?

Can such a file be open to a brute force attack, if so I guess no matter how well encrypted its worthless if the master PW can be broken, might take a week unless really long pw but my worry is the fact that these files are clearly valuable it is worth the effort. If you cannot automate the process even a 6 or 7 word PW would do as long as not something stupid like "Password" or a familiar word, I am not saying use a 6 or 7 letter PW as just stupid & easy to have longer but why emphasize so much.

Looking for a way to refresh my mobile Android 1Password client. I've noticed that sometimes new item(s) sometimes do not appear on the mobile app for quite some time. Usually, I have to exit and restart the app to force a sync. Is there a way to refresh the info on the mobile client? I know that other clients provided a pull-down option (drag down with finger from main page) to refresh the info displayed on the client. Where would I do this in 1Password?

By the way: Force locking is not related to vault.cryptomator or masterkey.cryptomator. Once your vault is unlocked and accessible, the aforementiond files are not touched anymore until you unlock the vault again.

Staff Sgt. Jonathon Hunley, 2nd Logistics Readiness Squadron weapons armory supervisor, checks the serial number on an M-4 carbine rifle being returned to the weapons vault at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., May 6, 2019. The vault on base houses more than 1,000 M-16 rifles, M-9 pistols and M-4 carbine rifles. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Tessa B. Corrick)

Staff Sgt. Jonathon Hunley, 2nd Logistics Readiness Squadron weapons armory supervisor, clears an M-4 carbine rifle after it is returned to the weapons vault at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., May 6, 2019. In total, the transformation of the weapons vault took two months. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Tessa B. Corrick)

M-9 pistols are arranged in the 2nd Logistics Readiness Squadron weapons vault at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., May 6, 2019. Weapons like these are set aside for Airmen during specific taskings such as deployments. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Tessa B. Corrick)

Staff Sgt. Jonathon Hunley, 2nd Logistics Readiness Squadron weapons armory supervisor, removes a scope off an M-4 carbine rifle after it is returned to the weapons vault at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., May 6, 2019. Roughly nine months ago, Hunley and other team members developed improvements to the weapons vault that has saved time and money. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Tessa B. Corrick)

Thanks @stuart-c ! just to make sure, while both of us agree that this is not the recommended way or even the best way to force password complexity in Vault I do want to try and verify a definitive answer if this is possible (while not recommended) or impossible to do?

Also, do you know if the enterprise version allows for such settings without external user management and regardless of MFA?

That training began with basic use of a rifle for skeet shooting, but progressed to moving targets carried on a small train system. The old railroad beds used for that part of the program are still visible today as a series of triangular berms in the far north valley.

The new vault table features listed above created numerous advantages for gymnasts. In particular, women gymnasts were able to benefit from a wider, longer and more visible surface thus reducing hand placement inaccuracy errors in the pre-flight phase (from a springboard to a vault table), improved confidence in the hand placement on the apparatus, and a softer and slightly elastic hand contact surface. The impact and push-off actions during the hand contact phase were thought to be enhanced by the changes provided by the vault table. Figure 1 shows typical forward handspring-style hand placement for an old vault horse and a current vault table. The table surface may enhance a wrist position by allowing a less severe hyper-extended position (Sands and McNeal, 2002).

Sample, hand-support phase force-time data for the High (left) and Low (right) Load Intensity groups. The continuous and dashed lines represent the vertical (Fz) and anterior-posterior (Fx) forces, respectively.

Major findings indicated that the two intensity groups identified were characterized by statistically significant differences in impact peak force magnitude and time to impact peak force; however, no statistically significant differences in the overall loading rate were observed. The rate at which upper and lower extremities are loaded has been implicated in stress fractures and soft tissue dysfunctions (Nigg, 1985; Markolf et al., 1990; Seeley and Bressel, 2005). From an injury risk perspective, the results from the present study indicate that during the handspring vaults, the shock absorption demands placed on the upper extremities are high, particularly when extrapolated to dozens of daily repetitions.

In upper extremity stretching-shortening-type motions such as the forward handspring, there are large and relatively unnatural ranges of impact loads similar in magnitude to the lower extremities; the risk of injury is obviously high (Markolf et al., 1990). The vertical forces observed during the present study in HI handspring vaults may be intense enough alone or in aggregate to cause injuries (such as distal radial syndrome, carpal stress fracture, capsulitis, positive ulnar variance and carpal instability) associated with weight-bearing gymnastics exercises in general (Gabel, 1998). Werner and Plancher (1998) reported that 90% of wrist injuries are related to compressive stress, and closely related to this type of stress is a loading rate (Markolf et al., 1990).

A comparison between the impact peak forces and loading rates measured in the present study with those measured by Roy et al. (1985) during two gymnastics tumbling skills, round-off on the floor (impact peak = 2.2  0.3 BW; loading rate = 19.2  4.6 BWs-1) and round off on the vaulting springboard (impact peak = 2.4  0.3 BW; the loading rate = 28.6  6.7 BWs-1). In the tumbling skills analysed by Roy et al. (1985), the higher impact loads in the round-off are associated with lower loading rates. In contrast, the present study shows that both intensity groups displayed high loading rate values during hand contact with similar CM velocities. These results contrast with the assumption that impact peak force and a loading rate are speed-dependent, as shown in running activities (Munro et al., 1987), it is not applicable to handspring vault hand support skills. In addition, the premise that high impact forces accompany high loading rates in jumping movements (McNitt-Gray, 1991) is not similarly associated with vault handspring skills. In fact, this study showed that low impact peak forces may produce high loading rates. This was supported by the absence of a significant correlation between hand-table impact peak forces and loading rates.

Finally, the wrist and shoulder angles did not show significant differences between HI and LI groups. However, for HI impacts the relationships of the wrist with the shoulder angles, the times to impact peak forces and the loading rates demonstrated that gymnasts who approached the apparatus with the wrist more hyper-extended also had the shoulder more flexed, reached the impact peak slower and developed a lower loading rate. These results confirm that while the wrist angle at hand contact did not show any obvious direct relationship with hyperextension injury in relation to compressive load, the shoulder angle may be seen as a critical injury factor (Sands et al., 1993; Wadley and Albright, 1993; Whitinh and Zernicke, 1998). It could be suggested that the shoulder angle at impact may play a role in determination of time to impact peak and thus of the magnitude of the loading rate. be457b7860

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