Aah! That's a miss from my end. I had it on my previous landing page. It is 100k requests a month. But, I am not adding any cap right now. I monitor the system all the time so if it goes above the free tier limit significantly I will notify.
Thanks for the great article, you've inspired me to take another shot at making a habit of learning through spaced repetition!
I had a question: how much time do you typically spend on this activity in a day? Do you have tips for how to adjust based on the time you have available?
It depends, after a big burst of adding flashcards I'll have a big hump to get through for like 2 or 3 weeks. That might be hundreds of flashcards a day, that can take 15-20 minutes.
Right now I haven't added many cards in a while so it's more like 30-50 cards a day. Usually not even 5 minutes.
I wouldn't recommend doing hundreds of cards a day, especially if you're just getting into it. I'm just nuts.
Q: Given V (the number of vertices), E (the number of edges) and L (a list of the edges) for a connected undirected graph, determine whether the graph is a tree.
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A: It can be done in O(1) by:
return V == E + 1
The number of vertices in a tree is always one more than the number of edges. We also know that the graph is connected, so it has to be a tree.
Just search for office auctions UK, I don't remember which of the sites I finally used to get the desk from I went through about 10 of those.
P.S.
Just be careful of the sites that charge you money for getting a collections of listings, these have their value for resellers but not for casual buyers.
At least some of the books you mention arguably can be (and are by Google) classified as biography, so they would not be removed by the rule of thumb. But perhaps a better way of phrasing the rule would be "Don't read books by journalists on technical subject matter if your intention is gaining an understanding of that subject". If you want to read journalistic works like Bad Blood because it's a heck of a story, then that's a different matter. I am still failing to find a succinct way to express this thought though :)
Although I haven't read Tracy Kidder's "The Soul of a New Machine", Google categorizes it as Biography, so if you buy that then by the rule of thumb it would not be off limits. And thanks, I have added it to my to-read list!
It is indeed machine-solvable; I wrote a solver for regexcrossword.com puzzles a while back (https://github.com/hermanschaaf/regex-crossword-solver). It was great fun, maybe even more than solving the puzzles by hand!
I'd like to know whether this is true, and if it is, how are they accessing information from a different open tab?
My hope is that the Linkedin support staff is misinformed in this case, and that the suggestions are really being generated from the other side (email correspondents uploading their contact books on Linkedin, not this particular user.) But I have also noticed suspicious suggestions on Linkedin, and am a little concerned with this support answer, to say the least.