In terms of other information you can find there, there is information about when to bet and when not to, how much to bet, and even advice on which casino sites are the best ones to visit. It can easily help you choose a good site instead of one that doesn't pay or is known to cheat their players.
For more information please visit www.onlinecasinobluebook.com/forum and join the community! While you are there visit with the other players and share your knowledge. Working together everyone learns more!
I know it's been a while since there were any updates. I've been thinking about what direction to take the site, how to go about it, along with I've had a lot going on with school and otherwise.
During the time I decided to focus on one subject (Mathematics/Physics) and let the others be more of "fall-behind" subjects. This is because Physics is a class I'm working on better understanding and by teaching others I farther concrete my own knowledge of the subject.
My only issue at this point is I need to find my scanner so I will be able to scan in documents. Although I can explain what is going on with text, many parts will need to be *shown* with hand-drawn diagrams.
Also, once the site starts to grow a bit I will open up a forum base for people to collaborate questions/answers to various problems (and the forums will be open for all sections - not just math based).
Please understand that the site is a "when I have free time" site, not an "I need to update it all the time!" one. Although this is true, I will do what I can.
As we all probably know by now, water is a requirement for the human body to continue living. We are made up primarily of water, and therefore without it, there is no "us." But at the same time, many people do not know that you are able to "drown" yourself (causing death) by drinking *too much* water!
First of all we need to understand what is going on when we drink water. For this purpose we are going to explore the red blood cells and what effect water has on them (or lack of water).

On the diagram we see the three titles, "Hypertonic," "Isotonic," and "Hypotonic," but what do they mean?
Hypertonic is the act of pushing water away. Think of it as being a "fear of water." If you look at the shriveled look of the cells, this is what is happening to your red blood cells when you do not have enough water.
Isotonic is when you are perfectly watered down. This is the ideal shape of the red blood cells. It looks like a small rafting tube.
Hypotonic is what happens when the water is being pulled in. This is the "love of water." Which is what is happening when you drink *too much* water and your body is unable to keep filtering it out.
As you can see, hypertonic is bad because it is sucking the life out of the cells. But on the other hand, the hypotonic solution is also bad because if you look at the cell with the blue coming out of it, it is because it "exploded." There was too much water and the cell could not handle it, causing it to burst. When drinking too much water, this is a possibility of what happens to your cells!
So how much water should you drink a day? How can you be sure you are not drinking too much?
You will find many, many resource online that will assist with helping determine how much water you should have a day, however nothing is more precise than what your body tells you (via your urine color!). Anything else is just an estimate and nothing more. Because of this, here is a chart to assist with determining.
The colors here represent your body and the amount of hydration you have. The reason is that urine is your body's way of filtering out "toxins" and other negative things. If there is not enough water, the toxins are much more compact (causing darker colors). As there is more water, it is spread out, causing lighter colors. You want to do your best to keep on the left side of this chart!
Hmm.. Twitter seems to still be having issues on my side.
On a kind of funny note, my grandmother even knows about Twitter going down, :P.
It was confirmed to be a DDOS attack, as seen here.
A quote from their website shows the last three status updates (All given yesterday):
- Update: the site is back up, but we are continuing to defend against and recover from this attack.
- Update (9:46a): As we recover, users will experience some longer load times and slowness. This includes timeouts to API clients. We’re working to get back to 100% as quickly as we can.
- Update (4:14p): Site latency has continued to improve, however some web requests continue to fail. This means that some people may be unable to post or follow from the website.
