[QUOTE="iusm78"]Obviously you don't want to share but whatever. My job is smarter than yours.CIoud_S
:lol:....so how does that prove anything...you're job is smart?....what's a smart job as opposed to a dumb one?.....did the job not make it through college?.....Speaking of which......I work at a University as a programmer.....opps....guess I'm not the sanitation engineer you thought I was....(and psst....that means garbage man)
Going by pure statistics, yes. I graduated number one in my class in high school and got accpeted to (didn't go to) one of the top universities in the world. bman784
Eating ice will not dehydrate you. Dehydration occurs when your body excretes too much water, either through urination, perspiration, or defecation (diarrhea). Ice is nothing more than very cold water and ingestion does not accelerate excretion.
The human body is a type of heat engine – it burns fuel for energy and in order to maintain a certain temperature it must eliminate excess waste heat generated during the process. One of the main methods is perspiration (sweating). People sweat almost constantly and the moisture evaporates immediately, carrying away excess heat. As the body produces more energy, and therefore more heat, during physical exertion, perspiration increases and may not evaporate if the relative humidity is too high. Moisture then accumulates as sweat.
If you sweat in cold weather it means your body is too hot and if the sweat can not evaporate, maybe due to clothing, then sweating will increase in an attempt to cool things down. If it becomes too excessive, you may lose a lot of water and become dehydrated, but that would require extraordinary circumstances.
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