It's not even a question of IF for those who are into this stuff. It's really a question of WHY for the researchers. But for those in the field, the solution is simple and you don't need to know the why, you just work around it (by nasal breathing!)
Here's some more that are more about the sleep apnea side of things:
Point being: before you think you (or your kid) is "ADHD", see to it that they are breathing and sleeping properly. They're just so tired they become irritably unstable and unfocused. Lack of sleep = kids are a mess
There isn't. While the underlying technology is available in GKE with 1.2, the ability to seamlessly launch a multi-zone cluster doesn't yet exist. As mentioned in other comments, you could reverse engineer the GCE setup scripts and do this manually if you really wanted to.
I work in DC, so DC and / or Federal law would also be relevant. I believe the distracted driving statutes in DC would also apply to bikes, so headphones would fall under that I believe.
DC, VA, and MD also have contributory negligence. You can read more about that here:
TL;DR you can receive no damages if you break the law in any tiny way while on a bicycle or on foot. Wearing headphones might be said to have contributed in some way, so you might get nothing.
One of my coworkers who bikes through the district will sometimes follow behind a guy who plays NPR on a regular radio - loud enough for my coworker to listen for a while on his commute, too.
Is anyone running Arch on a 2013 Macbook Pro Retina 13"?
I've seen conflicting reports of things working and not working, which is making me hesitant to try (I want to dual boot Max OS X)
Worked fine. The Arch wiki has pages dedicated to Macbooks if you need help.
The only issue I had with macbooks was the wifi card was not detected by the installer after booting from USB. It works fine after installing a package using pacman once you get internet. So I always keep a cheap $10 Netgear USB wifi for installs which always works by default.
Most people who have issues with installing Arch are almost always just new to Arch or Linux. I had a lot of issues starting out with Arch but after the first 6 months learning curve I rarely had issues.
I have been using it for over two years now on a daily basis, across multiple Macbook and Thinkpads models and custom desktop build. It has been very stable and though most software versions are often 1-2 yrs ahead of Debian/Fedora.
I actually had way more problems while using Fedora for two years prior than I ever did with Arch. The Arch package library (AUR), wiki, and pacman provide a very strong foundation for using Linux as a desktop.
> now having problems because of the reduction of breast feeding
Do you have a link to any studies that indicate/confirm this?