| bio | website | stackoverflow.com/users/5812/… |
|---|---|---|
| location | Rhode Island | |
| age | 45 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 4 months |
| seen | Apr 12 at 20:06 | |
| stats | profile views | 1 |
Computer scientist working at [A Facility] developing [Systems] that [Do Stuff] at [Places].
Tae Kwon Do: Sam Dan
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Needs Improvement What is the best way to work with a partner who misunderstands the drill? |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Satisfactory How do I choose a boxing glove? |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Needs Improvement Is it possible to become expert in different martial arts |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Needs Improvement Does Morote Chudan and Awase Tsuki refer to the same thing? |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Satisfactory What are the advantages of using a vertical fist for punching? |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Needs Improvement What to look for in a training/mock gun? |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Satisfactory Korean Equivalent of Shu-Ha-Ri? |
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Feb 3 |
awarded | Custodian |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Satisfactory Is it good to practise punching a wall? No place for punching bag |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Needs Improvement How to get rid of fear of fighting |
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Feb 3 |
reviewed | Needs Improvement Where can I find Seido Resources? |
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Feb 3 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Jun 7 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Apr 11 |
comment |
Which kind of breath provides the most striking power? @stslavik, that's not true. Every aspect of human-related physics is quite easily measurable. Impact energy, pressure and impulse are all directly measurable. Velocity can be observed with a high speed camera (see any episode of Mythbusters for an example). The mass of the system components shows up in all of the related formulae; just solve for 'm'. |
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Apr 10 |
comment |
Which kind of breath provides the most striking power? @BerinLoritsch, then it's an unanswerable question without that context. General aimless discussion is specifically disallowed in the FAQ. |
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Apr 10 |
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Which kind of breath provides the most striking power? "Power is how much force is transferred to the target": again, you're thinking of energy. |
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Apr 10 |
comment |
Which kind of breath provides the most striking power? This is incorrect: "Power is force over time." You're thinking of work: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_(physics)#Mechanical_power The correct definition is "Power = Force times velocity = Work over time." Power is also a poor choice as a physical principle due to it's lack of conservation. Try kinetic energy instead = 1/2 * mass * velocity^2. |
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Apr 10 |
comment |
Which kind of breath provides the most striking power? @BerinLoritsch, so it's an unanswerable general question according to the FAQ: martialarts.stackexchange.com/faq#dontask There are too many variables, undefined terms and a missing metric (what is "best"?). |
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Apr 8 |
comment |
Which kind of breath provides the most striking power? "No, I can't define the methods of breathing that I refer to" - if the terms aren't defined, then this is not an answerable question. |
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Feb 22 |
comment |
How do I coach her mindset to better suit karate competitions? Totally agree: if you're engaged, you can't give objective feedback. That said, you can talk about "what worked for me" and see if that's useful. Realize: it might not help. Her issues are not your issues. |