Depends on the coax type - thinnet coax is 185 meters per segment, thicknet is 500 meters
To determine who ran faster, we need to compare their speeds. Speed is calculated as distance divided by time. Since we don't have the distance they ran, we can't definitively say who ran faster based solely on the times provided. If we had the distance, we could calculate their speeds and determine who ran faster.
On his first day of training, Will ran 4 miles. The next day, he ran one third of that distance. To find the distance he ran on the second day, calculate one third of 4 miles: ( \frac{4}{3} ) miles, which is approximately 1.33 miles. Therefore, Will ran about 1.33 miles on his second day.
time it took to travel that distance
You increased your distance by 22.5%
202 Miles
it is none other than our indian super star's chandramukhi which ran for more than 800days
Terry ran an average of 10 kilometers every day.
1 mile.
Maximum Security - 1984 I Never Ran for My Father Part 2 1-6 was released on: USA: 1984 USA: 2 April 1985
Burglars! acutly the reall answer is; The catcher and the umpire
No way. The difference in distance certainly depends on velocity. Example: Two animals ran this morning. One animal ran twice as many minutes as the other animal ran. No velocity information. Which one covered more distance ? 1). What if the animals were a racehorse and a kitten ? 2). What if the animals were a snail and a kitten ?
10baseT is the designation for ethernet LAN running on twisted pair cable at 10 megabits per second using cables and hardware compatible with 10baseT. 100baseT, also called Fast Ethernet, uses twisted pair cable where data transfer occurs at 100 megabits per second with cables and hardware compatible with 100baseT. 1000baseT (gigabit ethernet) runs at 1000 megabit per second or 1 gigabit with cables and hardware capable of maintaining that speed. The higher speed cables and hardware are supposed to be compatible with the earlier slower speed. The T in 10..baseT indicates that it uses twisted pair cabling (called category 5, 5e, 6, 6a depending on the speed it can handle) with various rules about the cables regarding insulation, shielding, connection rules and a maximum cable distance of about 100 meters. Earlier versions of ethernet used different cableing. 10base5 used a special thick coaxial cable, ran at 10 megabits per second with a maximum cable length of about 5 hundred meters. 10base2 used thinner cheaper coaxial cabling and connectors, also ran at 10 megabits per second but with a maximum cable length of about 200 meters. Both of these are considered obsolete having been replaced by the twisted pair cable.