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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | It has been used in the context of alternative medicine since Halbert L. Dunn, M.D. , began using the phrase high level wellness in the 1950s. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | The modern concept of wellness did not, however, become popular until the 1970s. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | The term has been defined by the Wisconsin-based National Wellness Institute as an active process of becoming aware of and making choices toward a more successful existence. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | URL_http This is consistent with a shift in focus away from illness in viewing human health, typical of contexts where the term wellness is used. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | In other words, wellness is a view of health that emphasizes the state of the entire being and its ongoing development. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | The phrase can also be seen as an analogue to the medical term " homeostasis ". | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Wellness can also be described as "the constant, conscious pursuit of living life to its fullest potential." | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Halbert L. Dunn, M.D. , began using the phrase high level wellness in the 1950s, based on a series of lectures at a Unitarian Universalist Church in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Dunn (196, p. 4) defined wellness as "an integrated method of functioning which is oriented toward maximizing the potential of which the individual is capable. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | It requires that the individual maintain a continuum of balance and purposeful direction within the environment where he is functioning." | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | He also stated that "wellness is a direction in progress toward an ever-higher potential of functioning" (p. 6). | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Alternative approaches to wellness are often denoted by the use of two different phrases: health and wellness, and wellness programs. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | These kinds of wellness programs offer alternative medicine techniques to improve wellness. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Whether these techniques actually improve physical health is controversial and a subject of much debate. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | James Randi and the James Randi Educational Foundation are outspoken critics of this alternative new age concept of wellness. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | The behaviors in the pursuit of wellness often include many health related practices, such as natural therapies . | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Wellness, as a luxury pursuit, is found obviously in the more affluent societies because it involves managing the body state after the basic needs of food, shelter and basic medical care have already been met. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Many of the practices applied in the pursuit of wellness, in fact, are aimed at controlling the side effects of affluence, such as obesity and inactivity. | 00
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Q2884 | what is the concept of "wellness" ? | Wellness (alternative medicine) | Wellness grew as a popular concept starting in the 19th century, just as the middle class began emerging in the industrialized world, and a time when a newly prosperous public had the time and the resources to pursue wellness and other forms of self-improvement. | 00
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Q2892 | what was the first mario 3D game | List of video games featuring Mario | Mario , who serves as Nintendo 's mascot, is a fictional character created by game designer Shigeru Miyamoto and voiced by Charles Martinet . | 00
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Q2892 | what was the first mario 3D game | List of video games featuring Mario | This is a list of video games where the character Mario plays a part, either as the protagonist , antagonist , supporting character , as part of an ensemble cast , as a cameo , or in a game within a game. | 00
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Q2892 | what was the first mario 3D game | List of video games featuring Mario | It does not include simple references to the character, such as the portraits of Mario found in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past . | 00
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Q2892 | what was the first mario 3D game | List of video games featuring Mario | The year indicated is the year the game was first released, most commonly in Japan ; games were sometimes released years later in other regions of the world. | 00
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Q2892 | what was the first mario 3D game | List of video games featuring Mario | The list includes ports , remakes and compilations . | 00
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Q2892 | what was the first mario 3D game | List of video games featuring Mario | It doesn't include any Virtual Console re-releases. | 00
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Q2896 | who is not considered an eastern doctors of the church | Doctor of the Church | St. Isidore of Seville , a 7th century Doctor of the Church, depicted by Murillo (c. 1628) with a book, common iconographical object for a doctor. | 00
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Q2896 | who is not considered an eastern doctors of the church | Doctor of the Church | Doctor of the Church ( Latin doctor, teacher, from Latin docere, to teach) is a title given by a variety of Christian churches to individuals whom they recognize as having been of particular importance, particularly regarding their contribution to theology or doctrine. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | A thermite reaction using iron(III) oxide. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | The sparks flying outwards are globules of molten iron trailing smoke in their wake. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Video demonstrating a chemical reaction. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | A chemical reaction is a process that leads to the transformation of one set of chemical substances to another. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Classically, chemical reactions encompass changes that only involve the positions of electrons in the forming and breaking of chemical bonds between atoms , with no change to the nuclei (no change to the elements present), and can often be described by a chemical equation . | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Nuclear chemistry is a sub-discipline of chemistry that involves the chemical reactions of unstable and radioactive elements where both electronic and nuclear changes may both occur. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | The substance (or substances) initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants or reagents . | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Chemical reactions are usually characterized by a chemical change , and they yield one or more products , which usually have properties different from the reactants. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Reactions often consist of a sequence of individual sub-steps, the so-called elementary reactions , and the information on the precise course of action is part of the reaction mechanism . | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Chemical reactions are described with chemical equations , which graphically present the starting materials, end products, and sometimes intermediate products and reaction conditions. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Chemical reactions happen at a characteristic reaction rate at a given temperature and chemical concentration, and rapid reactions are often described as spontaneous , requiring no input of extra energy other than thermal energy. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Non-spontaneous reactions run so slowly that they are considered to require the input of some type of additional energy (such as extra heat, light or electricity) in order to proceed to completion ( chemical equilibrium ) at human time scales. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | Different chemical reactions are used in combinations during chemical synthesis in order to obtain a desired product. | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | In biochemistry , a similar series of chemical reactions form metabolic pathways . | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | These reactions are often catalyzed by protein enzymes . | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | These enzymes increase the rates of biochemical reactions, so that metabolic syntheses and decompositions impossible under ordinary conditions may be performed at the temperatures and concentrations present within a cell . | 00
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Q2897 | what is an example of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat? | Chemical reaction | The general concept of a chemical reaction has been extended to non-chemical reactions between entities smaller than atoms, including nuclear reactions , radioactive decays , and reactions between elementary particles as described by quantum field theory . | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | Mammoth Cave National Park is a U.S. National Park in central Kentucky , encompassing portions of Mammoth Cave, the longest cave system known in the world . | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | The official name of the system is the Mammoth-Flint Ridge Cave System for the ridge under which the cave has formed. | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | The park was established as a national park on July 1, 1941. | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | It became a World Heritage Site on October 27, 1981, and an international Biosphere Reserve on September 26, 1990. | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | The park's are located primarily in Edmonson County, Kentucky , with small areas extending eastward into Hart County and Barren County . | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | It is centered around the Green River , with a tributary , the Nolin River , feeding into the Green just inside the park. | 00
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Q2902 | what is the temperature of mammoth cave | Mammoth Cave National Park | With of passageways it is by far the world's longest known cave system, being well over twice as long as the second-longest cave system, South Dakota 's Jewel Cave , which has just over of known passageways. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The moons of Saturn (also known as the natural satellites of Saturn) are numerous and diverse ranging from tiny moonlets less than 1 kilometer across to the enormous Titan which is larger than the planet Mercury . | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | Saturn has 62 moons with confirmed orbits, 53 of which have names and only 13 of which have diameters larger than 50 kilometers. | 11
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | Saturn has seven moons that are large enough to be ellipsoidal due to having planetary mass , as well as dense rings with complex orbital motions of their own. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | Particularly notable among Saturn's moons are Titan, the second- largest moon in the Solar System, with a nitrogen-rich Earth-like atmosphere and a landscape including hydrocarbon lakes and dry river networks; and Enceladus , which emits jets of gas and dust and may harbor liquid water under its south pole region. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | Twenty-four of Saturn's moons are regular satellites; they have prograde orbits not greatly inclined to Saturn's equatorial plane. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | They include the seven major satellites, four small moons which exist in a trojan orbit with larger moons, two mutually co-orbital moons and two moons which act as shepherds of Saturn's F Ring . | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | Two other known regular satellites orbit within gaps in Saturn's rings. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The relatively large Hyperion is locked in a resonance with Titan. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The remaining regular moons orbit near the outer edge of the A Ring , within G Ring and between the major moons Mimas and Enceladus. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The regular satellites are traditionally named after Titans and Titanesses or other figures associated with the mythological Saturn . | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The remaining 38, all small except one, are irregular satellites, whose orbits are much farther from Saturn, have high inclinations, and are mixed between prograde and retrograde . | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | These moons are probably captured minor planets , or debris from the breakup of such bodies after they were captured, creating collisional families . | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The irregular satellites have been classified by their orbital characteristics into the Inuit , Norse , and Gallic groups, and their names are chosen from the corresponding mythologies. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The largest of the irregular moons is Phoebe , the ninth moon of Saturn, and was discovered at the end of the 19th century. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | The rings of Saturn are made up of objects ranging in size from microscopic to hundreds of meters, each of which is on its own orbit about the planet. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | Thus a precise number of Saturnian moons cannot be given, as there is no objective boundary between the countless small anonymous objects that form Saturn's ring system and the larger objects that have been named as moons. | 00
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Q2903 | what is the measurements of saturn's moons | Moons of Saturn | At least 150 moonlets embedded in the rings have been detected by the disturbance they create in the surrounding ring material, though this is thought to be only a small sample of the total population of such objects. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | A cannon is any piece of artillery that uses gunpowder or other usually explosive-based propellants to launch a projectile. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | Cannon vary in caliber , range, mobility, rate of fire, angle of fire, and firepower; different forms of cannon combine and balance these attributes in varying degrees, depending on their intended use on the battlefield. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | The word cannon is derived from several languages, in which the original definition can usually be translated as tube, cane, or reed. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | The plural of cannon is also cannon, though more commonly in America, cannons. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | In the modern era, the term cannon has fallen out of common usage, replaced by "guns" or "artillery" if not a more specific term such as "mortar" or "howitzer". | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | In aviation, cannon generally describes weapons firing bullets larger than 0.5 inches (12.7 mm) in diameter. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | First used in China , cannon were among the earliest forms of gunpowder artillery, and over time replaced siege engines —among other forms of aging weaponry—on the battlefield. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | In the Middle East, the first use of the hand cannon is argued to be during the 1260 Battle of Ain Jalut between the Mamluks and Mongols . | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | The first cannon in Europe were probably used in Iberia in the 11 and 12th centuries, and English cannon were first deployed in the Hundred Years' War , at the Battle of Crécy , in 1346. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | On the African continent , the cannon was first used by the Somali Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi of the Adal Sultanate in his conquest of Ethiopia in 1529. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | It was during this period, the Middle Ages , that cannon became standardized, and more effective in both the anti-infantry and siege roles. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | After the Middle Ages most large cannon were abandoned in favor of greater numbers of lighter, more maneuverable pieces. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | In addition, new technologies and tactics were developed, making most defences obsolete; this led to the construction of star forts , specifically designed to withstand artillery bombardment though these too (along with the Martello Tower ) would find themselves rendered obsolete when explosive and armour piercing rounds made even these types of fortifications vulnerable. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | Cannon also transformed naval warfare in the early modern period , as European navies took advantage of their firepower. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | As rifling became commonplace, the accuracy and destructive power of cannon was significantly increased, and they became deadlier than ever, both to infantry who belatedly had to adopt different tactics, and to ships, which had to be armoured. | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | In World War I , the majority of combat fatalities were caused by artillery; they were also used widely in World War II . | 00
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Q2921 | what is the size of the largest cannon ball | Cannon | Most modern cannon are similar to those used in the Second World War, although the importance of the larger caliber weapons has declined with the development of missiles . | 00
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Q2924 | who is the founder of twitter | Twitter | Twitter is an online social networking service and microblogging service that enables its users to send and read text-based messages of up to 140 characters , known as "tweets". | 00
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Q2924 | who is the founder of twitter | Twitter | Twitter was created in March 2006 by Jack Dorsey and by July, the social networking site was launched. | 11
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Q2924 | who is the founder of twitter | Twitter | The service rapidly gained worldwide popularity, with over 500 million registered users as of 2012, generating over 340 million tweets daily and handling over 1.6 billion search queries per day. | 00
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Q2924 | who is the founder of twitter | Twitter | Since its launch, Twitter has become one of the ten most visited websites on the Internet, and has been described as "the SMS of the Internet ." | 00
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Q2924 | who is the founder of twitter | Twitter | Unregistered users can read tweets, while registered users can post tweets through the website interface, SMS, or a range of apps for mobile devices. | 00
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Q2924 | who is the founder of twitter | Twitter | Twitter Inc. is based in San Francisco , with additional servers and offices in New York City , Boston , and San Antonio . | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | The OpenID logo | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | OpenID is an open standard that allows users to be authenticated by certain co-operating sites (known as Relying Parties or RP) using a third party service, eliminating the need for webmasters to provide their own ad hoc systems and allowing users to consolidate their digital identities . | 11
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | Users may create accounts with their preferred OpenID identity providers , and then use those accounts as the basis for signing on to any website which accepts OpenID authentication. | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | The OpenID standard provides a framework for the communication that must take place between the identity provider and the OpenID acceptor (the "relying party"). | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | An extension to the standard (the OpenID Attribute Exchange) facilitates the transfer of user attributes, such as name and gender, from the OpenID identity provider to the relying party (each relying party may request a different set of attributes, depending on its requirements). | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | The OpenID protocol does not rely on a central authority to authenticate a user's identity. | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | Moreover, neither services nor the OpenID standard may mandate a specific means by which to authenticate users, allowing for approaches ranging from the common (such as passwords) to the novel (such as smart cards or biometrics ). | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | The term OpenID may also refer to an identifier as specified in the OpenID standard; these identifiers take the form of a unique URI , and are managed by some 'OpenID provider' that handles authentication. | 00
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Q2931 | what is google openid | OpenID | OpenID authentication is now used and provided by several large websites. | 00
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