Showing posts with label take. Show all posts
Showing posts with label take. Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Take Online Typing Test to Boost your Speed


Typing Test Speed Score


Typing speed is an asset for a person. In many cases people may rate you by your typing speed. You can measure your typing speed by taking online typing tests. There are many sites available for taking typing tests. Today Im gonna talk about some popular and useful sites for taking typing tests. 

This is my second post about typing. If youre regular on this site then you should notice this post- Typing Speed Secret!. In that post I discussed about how to increase typing speed. 


Today Im gonna share 4 sites from where you can take typing tests. Its totally free of cost and online. You dont need to install any software or anything. All of them have some advantages and disadvantages. You can choose any of them. Whatever you do, make sure youre trying regularly. Otherwise nothing and none can increase your speed. 

  • TypingTest.com: This is the most strong and popular site for taking typing test. In fact, this site is a part of famous Typing Master Software. After visiting this site youve to set the language, duration and article. Then hit on Start Test. Immediately you will be redirected to the test page. Start typing to begin the test. After finishing the test, youve to carefully analyze the result. 

  • Free Online Touch Typing Speed Test Another popular site for typing test. The most important feature of this site is- simple. Ya this site is really very simple and easy to use. When you visit the site a new article will appear. To start the test, hit on Start the Clock button. When you finish hit on Stop the Clock. After stopping the clock you will get the result. 

  • Rapid Typing Zone: Well this site is more interesting. At least this site has attracted me. Know why? Because it stores your result! When you visit this site you can see the list of recent test results. Your name and speed will also be displayed there after taking the test. And you can also see the list of speed winner! To start the test, type your name and set your text. Then hit on Start test, and when you finish click on Done

  • Speed Typing Online: This site is fantastic! Ive never seen such a marvelous system. This site doesnt show the text separately. The given text is gray colored. When you type the color will be green. If youre wrong the text color will be red. Speed and accuracy will be counted immediately. 

These are the online methods of taking typing tests. But these methods are only for those people who dont wanna install typing master. But if you have any typing software then you may get something more from it. 

First, I personally suggest you to use Typing Master software. When your speed is more than 30 wpm then you should go for the online test. 

Remember: Before memorizing the keys do not try to increase the speed. If you do so, then your accuracy will not be satisfactory. 

Tips: While trying to increase the speed, also focus on accuracy. 

Stay with Marks PC Solution to get more interesting IT topics!




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Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Using Shutter to take screenshots in Linux

The procedures in this document can help use the Shutterscreenshot tool for Linux. You can capture your entire desktop, an active window, or any rectangular area you select. Shutter lets you save your screenshots directly as JPEG image files. In contrast, pressing PrtScn (Print Screen) to capture a desktop, or Alt+PrtScn to capture an active window, lets you save your screenshot only as a PNG file. If you want a JPEG, you must separately convert it from a PNG.

You can install Shutter through the software-application catalog in your Linux operating operating system. For example, for Ubuntu, you can use the Ubuntu Software Center.

Configuring Shutter
To configure Shutter, do the following:
  1. Open Shutter to display its window as shown in Figure 1.
  2. Click the down arrow at the right of Selection, and then select Advanced selection tool. This lets you resize your selection rectangle before you take a screenshot.
  3. In the Shutter toolbar at the top of the desktop, click Edit, and then click Preferences to display its window as shown in Figure 2.
  4. Set Image-format to jpeg, Directory to Desktop, select (check mark) Include cursor when taking a screenshot and then set the capture delay to 15 seconds.
Figure 1 - Shutter lets you take a screenshot as a Selection, Desktop, or Window.
In Ubuntu 11.04, the Shutter toolbar is above your desktop, at the left.
Figure 2 - My recommended Preferences are setting Image-format to "jpeg,"
Directory to "Desktop," selecting (check marking) "Include cursor when
taking a screenshot" and setting the capture delay to "15" seconds.
Capturing your desktop
To take a screenshot of your desktop through Shutter, do the following:
  1. Start Shutter, click the down arrow at the right of Desktop, and then click Capture all Workspaces to take the screenshot and place an icon for its new JPEG on your desktop.
  2. In the Shutter window, close the image tab by clicking on its X, and then minimize the Shutter window.
  3. Double-click the new icon to display an image similar to Figure 3.
Figure 3 - A desktop screenshot.
Capturing an active window
To take a screenshot of an active window through Shutter, do the following:
  1. Select a window to activate it. For example, I activated the Calculator window as shown in Figure 3.
  2. Start Shutter, click the down arrow at the right of Window, and then click "Active Window" to take the screenshot and place an icon for its new JPEG on your desktop.
  3. In the Shutter window, close the image tab by clicking on its "X," and then minimize the Shutter window.
  4. Double-click the new icon to display an image similar to the fourth image above.
Figure 4 - An active-window screenshot.
Capturing a rectangular area
To take a screenshot of a rectangular area through Shutter, do the following:
  1. On your desktop, group whatever items you plan to include in your captured rectangular area.
  2. Start Shutter, click Selection, use your mouse to draw a rectangular area, and then press Enter to take the screenshot and place an icon for its new JPEG on your desktop.
  3. In the Shutter window, close the image tab by clicking on its X, and then minimize the Shutter window.
  4. Double-click the new icon to display an image similar to Figure 5.
Figure 5 - A selected-rectangular-area screenshot.


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Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Maximal Protein Synthesis in the Elderly How Much Protein Does it Take Another Study to Suggest More is Better!

Maximal protein synthesis requires protein, but how much exactly you need will depend on your age - the older you are the more PWO protein youll need.
Scientists from the University of Auckland were fed up with the lack of information about the differential response in protein synthesis in response to the ingestion of various amounts of protein. Accordingly, Randall F. D’Souza et al. conducted a study to characterize the changes in intramuscular levels of EAAs and BCAAs and the expression of the "protein pump" p70S6K at Thr389, a marker of protein synthesis, in response to resistance exercise and graded ingestion of whey protein in older men.

As a regular SuppVersity reader you will probably already think: "Where is the actual measurement of the fractional protein synthesis?" The unfortunate answer: Its not there.
You can learn more about protein intake at the SuppVersity

Are You Protein Wheysting?

5x More Than the FDA Allows!

Protein requ. of athletes

High EAA protein for fat loss

Fast vs. slow protein

Less Fat, More Muscle!
Previous research had show that the ingestion of graded amounts of high-quality protein such as whey after resistance will maximize with "only" 20g of egg protein (Moore. 2009) or whey (Witard. 2014) in young men. Multiple studies in older adults (>60 years), on the other hand, suggest that they exhibit a lower anabolic signaling and MPS response to protein feeding, resistance exercise, and the combination of feeding and exercise when compared to young men (Cuthbertson. 2005; Fry. 2011; Burd. 2013). Scientists call this phenomenon age-related "anabolic resistance" (Yang. 2012b).
Figure 1: In contrast to the fractional protein synthesis in the elderly, which increases with increasing amounts of protein, the FSR of young men shows a ceiling effect at 20g+ whey protein (Yang. 2012a; Moore. 2009)
As you can see in Figure 1 from a 2012 study by Yang, the same 20g of extra-whey (total dose 40g) that was useless in young men, lead to a significant increase in protein anabolism in elderly men. Compared to young men, the MPS response to feeding 40 g of protein was yet still slightly lower in older vs. count men (Yang. 2012a; Churchward Venne. 2013b).

What is particularly relevant for the study at hand, and the previously criticized absence of actual MPS measurements is the fact that deficits in feeding induced p70S6K phosphorylation may at least partially underpin anabolic resistance in aged skeletal muscle (Cuthbertson. 2005), which is why measuring the p70S6K phosphorylation in older human subjects (mean age 71 years) in response to the graded ingestion of whey protein after a leg workout consisting of three sets of 8–10 repetitions of bilateral barbell smith rack squat, 45°leg press, and seated knee extensions at 80% of the subjects predetermined 1R is not as irrelevant at it may initially have seemed.

Workout + supplements, thats the "whey to go" ;-)

The exercises were performed in a circuit manner with 1 min rest between each exercise and 3 min rest between subsequent sets, the exercise protocol took approximately 20 min to complete. Following completion of the exercise protocol, subjects were immediately provided with a fixed-volume (350 mL) beverage, containing a flavored noncaloric placebo, or oneof the four doses of whey protein concentrate (10 g, 20 g, 30 g, or 40 g).
Figure 2: Intramuscular amino acids. This figure is a heat map which shows groups means fold changes from the resting fasted condition. Green represents a decrease in amino acid content, white represents no change, and red represents an increase in amino acid content (D’Souza. 2014)
Subjects were instructed to ingest the beverage within 2 min and were required to ingest the total volume provided. Following consumption of the supplements, subjects rested in a supine position throughout the 4 h of post-exercise recovery with additional muscle biopsy samples collected at 2 and 4 h post exercise.
Figure 3: Higher protein intake = higher increase in p70S6K phosphorylation (left graph). This increase is linearly associated with intramuscular leucine levels (right graph | both from D’Souza. 2014)
As you can see in Figure 3, there was a similar dose-dependent increase in p70S6K as it was observed previously for MPS in skeletal muscle of elderly subjects by Yang et al. (2012b). In fact, the fold change in the phosphorylation of p70S6K (Thr389) at 2 h post exercise was correlated with the dose of whey protein consumed (r =0.51,P<001) and was found to be significantly correlated with intramuscular leucine content (r =0.32,P=0.026).

Moreover, the intramuscular BCAAs, and leucine in particular, appear to be important regulators of anabolic signaling in aged human muscle during post-exercise recovery via reversal of exercise-induced declines in intramuscular BCAAs.
Suggested Read: "Protein Timing Does Matter! Yet Only in Trained Men. More Than 2x Higher Relative Protein Retention W/ Immediate vs. 6h Post Whey Consumption in Bodybuilders vs. Rookies" | read more.
Bottom line: In the absence of a young control group and actual muscle protein synthesis (MPS) measurement, the study at hand cannot finally answer the question, whether older men require higher amounts of protein than young ones to achieve maximal increases in post-workout protein synthesis, but it is at least another piece of evidence that "more helps more" - at least in the elderly.

As mentioned in other recent posts, there are yet still many confounding variables that would have to be controlled and modified as well to answer the important (?) question: "How much protein does it take to achieve maximal post-workout protein synthesis?" Which confounding factors that would be? Well, what about the training experience? The baseline muscle mass? The protein content of the diet? And so on and so forth || Comment on Facebook!
References:
  • Burd, N. A., S. H. Gorissen, and L. J. van Loon. 2013.  Anabolic resistance of muscle protein synthesis with aging. Exerc. Sport Sci. Rev. 41:169–173.
  • Churchward-Venne, T. A., N. A. Burd, C. J. Mitchell, D. W. West, A. Philp, G. R. Marcotte, et al. 2012. Supplementation of a suboptimal protein dose with leucine or essential amino acids: effects on myofibrillar protein synthesis at rest and following resistance exercise in men. J. Physiol. 590:2751–2765.
  • DSouza, Randall F., et al. 2014. Dose?dependent increases in p70S6K phosphorylation and intramuscular branched?chain amino acids in older men following resistance exercise and protein intake. Physiological Reports 2.8: e12112.
  • Churchward-Venne, T. A., L. Breen, and S. M. Phillips. 2013a. Alterations in human muscle protein metabolism with aging: protein and exercise as countermeasures to offset sarcopenia. BioFactors 40:199–205.
  • Churchward-Venne, T. A., C. H. Murphy, T. M. Longland, and S. M. Phillips. 2013b. Role of protein and amino acids in promoting lean mass accretion with resistance exercise
    and attenuating lean mass loss during energy deficit in humans. Amino Acids 45:231–240.
  • Churchward-Venne, T. A., L. Breen, D. M. Di Donato, A. J. Hector, C. J. Mitchell, D. R. Moore, et al. 2014. Leucine supplementation of a low-protein mixed macronutrient beverage enhances myofibrillar protein synthesis in young men: a double-blind, randomized trial.
    Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 99:276–286.
  • Cuthbertson, D., K. Smith, J. Babraj, G. Leese, T. Waddell, P. Atherton, et al. 2005. Anabolic signaling deficits underlie amino acid resistance of wasting, aging muscle. FASEB J. 19:422–424.
  • Moore, D. R., M. J. Robinson, J. L. Fry, J. E. Tang, E. I. Glover, S. B. Wilkinson, et al. 2009. Ingested protein dose response of muscle and albumin protein synthesis after resistance exercise in young men. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 89:161–168.
  • West, D. W., and K. Baar. 2013. May the Force move you: TSC-ing the mechanical activation of mTOR. J. Physiol. 591:4369–4370.
  • West, D. W., N. A. Burd, J. E. Tang, D. R. Moore, A. W. Staples, A. M. Holwerda, et al. 2009a. Elevations in ostensibly anabolic hormones with resistance exercise enhance neither training-induced muscle hypertrophy nor strength of the elbow flexors. J. Appl. Physiol. 108:60–67 .
  • West, D. W., G. W. Kujbida, D. R. Moore, P. Atherton, N. A. Burd, J. P. Padzik, et al. 2009b. Resistance exercise-induced increases in putative anabolic hormones do not enhance muscle protein synthesis or intracellular signalling in young men. J. Physiol. 587:5239–5247.
  • Witard, O. C., S. R. Jackman, L. Breen, K. Smith, A. Selby, and K. D. Tipton. 2014. Myofibrillar muscle protein synthesis rates subsequent to a meal in response to increasing doses of whey protein at rest and after resistance exercise. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 99:86–95
  • Yang, Y., L. Breen, N. A. Burd, A. J. Hector, T. A. Churchward-Venne, A. R. Josse, et al. 2012a. Resistance exercise enhances myofibrillar protein synthesis with graded intakes of whey protein in older men. Br. J. Nutr. 108:1780–1788.
  • Yang, Y., T. A. Churchward-Venne, N. A. Burd, L. Breen, M. A. Tarnopolsky, and S. M. Phillips. 2012b. Myofibrillar protein synthesis following ingestion of soy protein isolate at rest and after resistance exercise in elderly men. Nutr. Metab. 9:57.


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