Brioche Buns
- 450g strong white flour
- 2 tsp fine sea salt
- 50g caster sugar
- 7g dried active yeast
- 100ml whole milk
- 4 eggs
at room temperature, beaten, plus 1 for egg wash
- 190g salted butter
cubed and softened
Best practices for adding labels
Labels can help boost the search relevance of an article. However, you should use labels carefully and sparingly. It's more important to make sure the article title and body contain the relevant keywords.
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Use single word labels where possible, instead of multi-word phrases
It is possible to add labels as single words or as multiple words or phrases. In general, it's more efficient to use single word labels. If you add a multi-word label, the search engine breaks it into individual words to perform the search. For example, if you have a label of "late delivery," it gets broken down into "late" and "delivery" for search.
Avoid using long phrases as labels to boost an article's ranking with respect to a query. For example, "Can I return something I ordered online to my local store." Instead, you should modify the article's title or content to make it literally relevant to the query.
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Do not include variations of the same word, including different tenses or plural forms
You do not need to include multiple labels for variations of a word. For example you do not need a label for "return" and "returns" or "update" and "updated." Fuzzy search allows different forms of the same word to match. In particular, the singular and plural forms of a word will generally match.
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Use a limited number of labels, instead of overloading an article with labels
Use labels sparingly. Adding lots of labels might actually diminish any matches on labels. This is because it is assumed that matches with a fewer number of labels beats matches with more labels. And too many labels might outweigh the relevance of the title and body.
For example, if article 1 has the labels “car,” “automobile,” and “transport” and article 2 has only the label “car,” all other things equal, if the end-user searches for “car,” the article that has only the label “car” will rank higher. That is because, as a general principle, an article that is about one specific thing is more relevant than an article about many things, when a user is looking for that one specific thing.
Your best bet is to look at the top ranked search queries and make sure that they exist in either (but not both) the title or the labels. You don't give content an extra boost if you match a term across the title, body, labels, and comments.
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Avoid using variations of the same word with different capitalization
In general, labels are case insensitive. This means that you can create the labels "automobile" and "AUTOmobile" and although they will exist as two separate labels, users will be able to do a text search on "automobile" and receive results for articles with either label attached. This is because Guide search normalizes the label capitalization prior to searching and delivering results. However, since filters require an exact match, using a label filter in the Manage articles view to locate articles with the "automobile" label will not display articles with the "AUTOmobile" label. Therefore, it is good practice to keep the capitalization of your labels consistent so that users can easily find and filter on the label they need.
Method
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Step 1
Put the flour in a bowl of a stand mixer with a dough hook. Add the salt to one side and sugar to the other. Pour in the yeast to the side with the sugar. Mix each side into the flour with your hands, then mix it all together with the dough hook.
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Step 2
Heat the milk until warm to the touch, but not hot. Mix into the flour mix until combined. With the dough hook on medium, gradually add the eggs and mix for 10 mins.
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Step 3
Gradually add the softened butter, one or two cubes at a time, until combined. This will take 5-8 mins. Scrape down the sides, the dough will be very soft.
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Step 4
Scrape the dough into a large bowl, cover with a tea towel and leave for 1 hr 30 mins-2 hrs until doubled in size and well-risen. Once risen, put in the fridge for 1 hr.
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Step 5
Line the bottom and sides of a 900g loaf tin with baking parchment. Portion the dough into seven equal pieces (the easiest way to do this accurately is to weigh it). Lightly dust a work surface with flour, take a piece of dough and pull each corner into the middle to form a circular shape. With a bit of pressure, push down and roll into ball. Repeat with the six remaining pieces.
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Step 6
Put the balls into the tin, four on one side and three in the gaps on the other side. Cover with a tea towel and leave to prove for 30-35 mins until almost doubled in size. Heat the oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Lightly brush the dough with the egg wash and bake for 30-35 mins until golden and risen. Leave to cool in the tin for 20 mins, then remove and cool completely.
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How to make a pizza
You can make pizza by mixing Flour, Water, Salt and Yeast. These would be enough to make a great pizza. Just get your ratio Right, to get a good dough hydration.
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How to Coffee
Roast the beans to your taste, grind the beans to your coffee method, use the hot water as intended, and drink.
Random
Water is consisted of two atoms of Hydrogen and one of Oxygen, it creates H2O, that is the water formula.
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Or salt, it is made by NACL
Troubleshoot Unprotected Devices
If you have devices in the environment that were previously activated for protection but have not performed a successful backup within the protection range, they will be listed as Unprotected devices.
The Protection Range is 5 business days by default.
The Cibecs Administrator can see the Protection Rating and the Protection Status from the Endpoint Cloud Protection screen.
In the list below you will see some of the backup failure reasons, and the quick solutions.
No Backup
- The device has not performed a backup during the protection range (5 business days).
Quick Solution:
- See if the device is online (look at the Last Seen date).
- Make sure the Discovery Agent and Cibecs Agent services are running.
- Make sure Cibecs Agent is open (blue shield icon in the task tray).
Never Backed Up
- The device has never performed a backup since activation.
Quick Solution:
- Make sure the Discovery Agent and Cibecs Agent services are running.
- Make sure the Cibecs Agent is open (blue shield icon in the task tray).
- See if the device is stuck on indexing by hovering your pointer over the task tray icon.
Locked Files
- Files are in use and Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) can't access them.
Quick Solution:
- Restart the device to release the locks.
No Connection
- The device can not communicate with the Vault on the specified port.
Quick Solution:
- Make sure the Vault is online (Vault tab on the Cloud Portal) and healthy.
- In Powershell run test-netconnection servername -port portnumber to test connectivity to the Vault.
Connection Lost
- A device was busy with a backup but lost connectivity to the Vault.
Quick Solution:
- Make sure the device has Internet connectivity.
- Make sure the Vault is online (Vault tab on the Cloud Portal) and healthy.
- In Powershell run test-netconnection servername -port portnumber to test connectivity to the Vault.
Agent Error
- The Cibecs Agent experienced an unknown or unidentifiable error during backup.
Quick Solution:
- Restart the Cibecs Agent Service.
- Close the Cibecs Agent (right-click -> exit), and start it again (Start -> search -> Cibecs Agent).
- Upgrade to the latest Agent version.
Server Connection Limit
- The Vault allows a certain number of connections at once (60 by default). Once this limit is reached, additional connections can not be made.
Quick Solution:
- Once other backups are complete, connections will automatically free up.
- Check-in on the device in an hour.
Other
- Uncategorized errors.
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