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FREE FASTER ROAD RACING PDF Peter Pfitzinger,Philip Latter | 280 pages | 01 Jan 2015 | Human Kinetics Publishers | 9781450470452 | English | Champaign, United States Feel Better Faster | Prevention An award-winning team of journalists, designers, and videographers who tell brand stories through Fast Company's distinctive lens. Leaders who are shaping the future of business in creative ways. New workplaces, new food sources, new medicine--even an entirely new economic system. Fast Company is about to get a little faster. The June:July issue marks our last as a bimonthly magazine. Starting with the August issue, subscribers will receive Fast Company monthly. Nothing in the new world of work stands still or stays the same for very long. In an economy that runs on change, Fast Company is both a chronicler of change and a participant in it: Witness our introduction in this issue of a new feature — Faster Road Racing Big Questions — that will reappear from time to time in future issues. And stay tuned for more editorial innovations in coming months. That focus on change is part of our charter and of our Faster Road Racing. How do we define that value? As we move toward publishing Faster Road Racing, all of us at Fast Company have been looking carefully at what we stand for and how we deliver on it. So what does bringing Fast Company to you mean to us? First, we mean to open windows. We want to ventilate the all-too-stuffy business world by introducing you to the newest ideas, Faster Road Racing most useful tools — and the most compelling applications for those ideas and tools. Second, we Faster Road Racing to knock down doors. Forget conventional wisdom and the old institutional practices. Today there are new work styles and lifestyles, new yardsticks for success, new measurements for personal achievement. Faster Road Racing want to go beyond the same old companies, Faster Road Racing the familiar names and faces that seem to populate most business publications. Faster Road Racing want to introduce you to the remarkable — and previously undiscovered — people and teams Faster Road Racing are inventing new best practices. And third, we mean to be a hands-on work magazine — a personal resource to help you get things done. Issue by issue, we measure our success by the number of articles you tear out, the number of yellow stickies you attach to them, and the number of conversations they spark. How we deliver on our mission is as important as Faster Road Racing mission itself. Much like the people and companies we write about, Fast Company seeks to integrate the way we work with the work we do. More than just accuracy, we aspire to authenticity — the ring of truth. We also aspire to speak with a voice that is all our own: a voice that is passionate and positive, spirited and direct, honest and entertaining. Like the best kinds of workplaces, our voice suggests an approach to business that is at once serious and fun. Finally, a note on our look and feel: Fast Company has a bold, fresh design that reflects the exhilaration and the challenge, the nerve and the verve, of the people and companies that are making a mark on Faster Road Racing new economy. They recently garnered 19 awards — including 3 silver medals — from the Society Faster Road Racing Publication Designers for their work on Fast Company, and a spot for the magazine as a finalist for the National Magazine Award for excellence in Faster Road Racing. Are we staying true to our mission? We still want to open windows, knock down doors, and offer hands-on tools. We just want to do these things faster, cheaper, better — and more often. Events Innovation Festival The Grill. Follow us:. By The Founding Editors 3 minute Read. Impact Impact How COVID has changed voting, from drive-in rallies to mail-in ballot tracking Impact This innovative tax plan is designed to help cities pay for climate action Impact Plant-based meat sales exploded during the pandemic. Design Co. Design Can good design help win an election? Should I listen? Work Life 5 traits of CEOs who successfully take their companies public. 23 Ways to Run Faster and Improve Race Times On July 4,a group of running enthusiasts had just wrapped up a less-than-inspiring race at Ft. Benning in Columbus, Ga. Why drive far away to some small town for a modest road race when they could just run their own road race in Atlanta during the Independence holiday? The group was part of the Atlanta Track Club, still in its relative infancy, and the race these runners came up with on that car ride home would become one of the most popular 10Ks ever. Little did they know what they'd spawned. Staged for the first time in by the Atlanta Track Club, the race now holds the title of largest 10K in the world. Inthe Vancouver Sun Run had more Faster Road Racing 59, entrants turn out for its 2. However, at 55, entrants, the Peachtree Road Race still has the title of the largest 10K. But it didn't start out that Faster Road Racing. That first race inrunners showed up at the old Sears parking lot at the corner of Peachtree and Roswell roads. The Faster Road Racing of the race grew almost exponentially over its first 10 years. It nearly doubled in size every year during that first decade until organizers capped registration at 25, entrants in Faster Road Racing It stayed that way until when it grew to 40, before capping at 55, in [source: Atlanta Track Club ]. So what makes the Peachtree Road Race so popular? That's what you came Faster Road Racing to find out. Let's take a look at why the Peachtree Road Race is considered one of the top road races of any distance. We'll start by learning what you need to do to enter. The Peachtree Road Race is an all-out festival when you take into account the number of people and organizational effort required to put it on each year. Securing a number can be tough. Roughly 70, people apply for those 55, numbers. Sincethe first 45, have been awarded through registration either online beginning March 21 or by filling out a paper application found in the March 28 edition of the "Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Typically the online registration is filled within hours Faster Road Racing going live. It also garners you a coveted T-shirt, which we'll get into later. With such a large race, there's a great logistical challenge with shutting Faster Road Racing such a busy area of the city on a major holiday. So you'd better get there early if you're running or even watching the race. Because wheelchair racers start at a. Before we take a look at the race route, check out some impressive Faster Road Racing and figures from a typical Peachtree Road Race. As you can see, a lot goes into the Peachtree Road Race and planning Faster Road Racing dictates who gets in and who misses out. And for those fortunate enough to get a chance to run, be careful what you wish for. In the next section we'll break down the race course. And as you're about to find out, it's somewhat of a rollercoaster ride. Especially Cardiac Hill. Part of what makes the Peachtree Road Race so alluring is its course and the challenge of tackling Cardiac Hill in the Georgia summer humidity. Because Faster Road Racing the race's immense size, runners begin the race in one of several groups known as starting waves. The first two waves are reserved for the fastest runners, whose registered times must be verified beforehand for placement. Waves are usually sent out in minute increments, and the last runners may not start until well past an hour after the race begins. The first mile is a gradual incline from feet From there it's a steep decline over the next mile and a half. The course bottoms out just before the end of mile three. By now, you've covered 21 feet about 6 meters of elevation change. This is where you must dig down deep because the next half of a mile rises sharply to feet. Welcome to Cardiac Hill. Cardiac Hill peaks in front of Piedmont Hospital coincidence? Mile five is a gradual rise in elevation to feet From there it's a straight shot downhill to 10th Street where the course finally leaves Peachtree now Peachtree Street with a left turn on 10th Street. The final half-mile sprint to the finish is also downhill as the course enters Piedmont Park to the finish line. Along the route, the participants are motivated by music from several live bands. It takes approximately 3, volunteers to put on the race, and more thanspectators show up Faster Road Racing offer encouragement to runners, so it's truly a packed house. But inthe finish had to be moved due to severe drought conditions in Georgia. Back in the s, the chic souvenir to bring back for someone you really didn't want to spend a ton of money on was a T-shirt that said, "My grandparents went to Hawaii and all I got was this lousy T-shirt. The Peachtree Road Race T-shirts are a big deal. How big? But the money doesn't mean as much as seeing your design all over town. Perhaps the reason T-shirts from the Peachtree Road Race are so popular is that only those who finish the race get one.