Just looked at CDC website it says fewer than 20%.
Suburbs have been the only place where I’ve seen lots of yellow busses because everything is so spread out. Idk where that dude got his numbers, go to any city in the USA and you'll see kids taking public transit to school aka walking.
Not every school system provides transportation, and when they do, some states (maybe all?) require that transportation be provided by a yellow school bus and not a city bus. (My father ran into this in Indiana).
I'm gonna guess that in at least some of these areas, they walk/take busses because the school system doesn't provide transportation.
From a 2014 study in Norfolk, UK[0] (note: UK should have relatively similar child obesity rates as the US at this time, given they only surpassed the US in 2018[1]):
> This study shows that young people living closer to school are more likely to walk to school than those living further away (Panter et al., 2008, Pont et al., 2009). The novel contribution of this work is the identification of the threshold distances that children walk to school, and that this increases as young people age; the criterion distances were 1421 m (0.8 miles) at 10 years, 1627 m (~1 mile) at 11 years and 3046 m (~1.9 miles) at 14 years.
However, note that US suburbs are often vastly more spread out while servicing the same size population: for example, Worcester, England at 100k population is only 12 square miles[2] and Chico California with 100k population is 34 square miles[3].
Anyone seeing significant performance impact with CSP? We simply enabled an extremely lax policy on a Jira service desk instance and are seeing a 15-30% performance cost loading the summary page. Also, has anyone else come up with a consistent way (short of watching browser timeline) to determine the performance cost?
I find it useful to differentiate bug from feature because they have a very different information set associated with them. Bugs need to provide description, steps to reproduce, expectation, observation, workaround and are require a write up as part of their completion (root cause). Features, on the other hand, need only a requirements list.
Talking over the phone doesn't show me the code/command/text we are talking about. It takes far more words to "talk" through a problem than it does to show the source...
If you mean IntelliSense in VS Code, I just got this figured out today! The official docs will walk you through it[1]. Be careful about reading blogs about how to do it, the process has changed from when you used to use "tsd". You need to click the little green light bulb at the bottom right of the editor to create a jsconfig.json file. Then install the typings module with:
npm install -g typings
then install the language files you want. This will install node completion:
typings install dt~node --global
No, I don't use vim or any similar arcane editor. When I hear someone is happy e.g. with vim, and then I see how they use it (e.g. you can see screencasts from Golang team on youtube) - they just use it as a vanilla plain text editor, slightly better (or worse?) than Notepad.exe. Maybe basic syntax coloring, and that's it, nothing more...
I love how it was more acceptable for your general to be drinking vodka by the glass full than it would have been to drink the "American Imperialist" drink.
Im not sure how a signature could prove who signed it. Handwriting analysis can tell some things, but how many people still sign enough of a name to actually analyze. Look at the [Jack Lew signature](http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://images.politico.c...), assume that doesn't tell anyone much about _who_ signed it.