Handygo Recruits Freshers

Posted on November 19, 2008 in Certified pharmacy technician

Handygo is a Leading Global Trailblazer in Value Added Solutions and Content provider. Handygo has added new dimensions in Mobile Space Related content and also possess the proficiency to develop Customized Content In any Language. * Providing GPRS and SMS service platforms to the Operators, Aggregators & TV Channels. * Mobile Applications for Mobile Subscribers. * Value Added Services on all platforms. * Short Code (5678) Services through various operators. * Providing WAP Portal Suite and Mobile Content Delivery Platform. Designation: Pixel Graphic Artists (Apply only if you have 2D pixel art experience Job Description: We are looking for experienced artist with good quality artwork.The focus of the profile is 2D pixel art. The major job responsibility would be:- 1.Tiles for environmental effect. 2.Character designed based on game design document. 3.Character animation in sprite file. 4.Optimization of graphic. 5.Experimentation of differnt colour schemes in the game layout. Desired Profile: 1.We require good hand sketch work. 2.Understanding of sprite concept and animation graphics. 3.Knowledge of computer tools like photoshop, paint and sprite editors. 4.Palettes knowledge in artwork Experience: 0 - 2 Years Industry Type: Media/Dotcom/ Entertainment Functional Area: Mobile Education: UG - Any Graduate - Any Specialization PG - Post Graduation Not Required Location: Delhi, Delhi/NCR Keyword: Game; Graphics; Artist; Pixel Artist; Mobile Gaming; Photoshop; Designing Contact: F-Technologies Pvt Ltd 405 Ansal Bhawan 16 K.G. Marg Connaught Place New Delhi - NCT ,INDIA 110001 Telephone: 91-011-66302001,66302004 Website: http://www.handygo.com Read more!

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Pretty Girls Are Hard To Draw, Pose and Animate

Posted on November 16, 2008 in Ed pump

Boy, is it hard to draw girls. But girls are so cool in cartoons that I just have to do it. Not only is it hard to draw them in a still pose, it's even harder to draw "functional" drawings of them - that is, consecutive drawings that move from pose to pose and have to do a continous action within a set story. Whattaya think, Chad?? I always loved the few classic cartoons that animated pretty girls. My 2 favorites are Red Hot Riding Hood and Coal Black. I love the design and animation of Coal Black, particularly the Scribner scenes. Preston Blair's animation of Red Hot is not only, pretty, functional and smoothly animated-it's also animation of dancing! Holy crap. Talk about a pile of nuts to crack all at the same time! This is an area of animated cartooning that is not explored enough. Maybe because it's so hard to do (David Germain excepted!) If I had my way, I'd make lots of cartoons with pretty girls in them. A funny thing, the best pretty girl artists these days seem to be girls! Katie, Lynne, Brianne and others all leave me in the dust. But I'll keep trying whenever I get the chance. Here's another virile guy who's helping me try to preserve our manly abilities to draw cheesecake. Chad Coyle: http://www.chadcoyle.homestead.com/Sketchbook.html Thanks to Weird Al for letting me and Katie do some! The world owes you! http://www.weirdal.com/ buy software cheap oem software

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Well Done

Posted on November 11, 2008 in Impotence causes

Word Up, Arizona [A public service] campaign is aimed at reducing the rate of teenage pregnancies in Arizona, which is the second highest in the country behind only Mississippi. The advertising, sponsored by the Arizona Department of Health Services, is aimed at teenage girls and their sex partners as well as parents. [...] The campaign is unusual for a couple of reasons. One is that the ads present their message - "Abstain or use a condom" - in the form of what is known as spoken-word poetry, as it is performed in competitions called poetry slams. [...]A major part of the campaign, which ran through the summer, was centered on a contest asking members of the target audience to submit their own spoken-word poems. The other reason the campaign is unusual is its extensive use of nontraditional media, which includes cellphone text messaging, e-mail messages and the Internet in addition to more conventional media like television, radio, posters and billboards. Such media are, of course, mainstays of the teenagers at whom the campaign is aimed. [...] The commercials have been produced in Spanish also, to reflect the large Hispanic population of Arizona as well as the fact that, according to research by the agency, Hispanic adolescents in the state have the highest birth rates for teenage mothers. The campaign is aimed at not only the teenage girls most at risk for becoming pregnant, but at a somewhat broader male audience, ages 16 to 25. That reflects data, the agency says, showing that 51 percent of the fathers of babies by teenage girls are in their 20's. The ads addressed to parents are inspired by research indicating that teenagers rank their parents No.1 in influencing their decisions about having sex. The commercials feature girls and boys, separately and together, who recite the salient points of the campaign in the cadences of spoken word. In the TV spots [...] the words appear on screen in handwriting as they are voiced. [...] The spoken-word contest took place during July and August on a hip-hop radio station in Phoenix [...] The station, known as "Power 92," is particularly popular with the campaign's intended audience. Listeners were invited to enter by submitting audio files through e-mail messages or recording their poetry over the telephone. A local poetry rap artist named Divine Essence chose weekly finalists in the contest and posted audio files on a Web site (divinepoetry.com). [...]The winner of the contest was determined by which entry was downloaded the most, on computers or cellphones, as audio files or ring tones. There were a total of 11,155 downloads... - By STUART ELLIOTT for the NYTimes [all emph. add.] It's nice to see an effective advocacy ad - most preach to the choir, and are a completely useless waste of time and money. Anti-smoking and anti-choice groups are the worst offenders that I've seen, in terms of producing bad ads. Here, you have the ads in the right languages, delivered in a way that's popular with the target audience, and the contest part is genius. It gets the target audience to buy in, and to work to improve the message. Plus, the target audience decided which was the winning entry, not a panel of well-meaning but probably out-of-touch judges.The fact that there were 11,000 "votes" indicates some measure of success. It's great that parents are the #1 influence on kids' sexual behavior. It's horrible that half of the guys knocking up teen girls are ADULTS, even if only barely. buy software cheap oem software

Tags: campaign, audience, word, ad, teenage

The Need to Believe

Posted on November 07, 2008 in Impotence causes

Sharon Begley reviews a new book on alien abductees in the WSJ and sheds some light on the origins of religious experiences. The first thing that struck Susan Clancy during the weekend she spent with people who had been abducted by extraterrestrials was that they weren't that much odder than the folks at her family reunions. It's not that Dr. Clancy, then a graduate student in psychology at Harvard University, has an especially strange family. But as she was drawn deeper and deeper into the world of "abductees," she realized that they tend to be respectable, job-holding, functioning members of society, normal except for their belief that short beings with big eyes once scooped them up and took them to a spaceship. What makes abductees stand out is something that is so common in American society it's a wonder there aren't more of them: an inability to think scientifically. Reading the title of Dr. Clancy's new book, "Abducted: How People Come to Believe They Were Kidnapped by Aliens", millions of Americans probably figure the answer to the implicit question is obvious: People come to believe they were abducted by aliens because they were. Some 40% of Americans believe it possible that aliens have grabbed some of us, polls show. Abductees are teachers and waiters, artists and chefs, construction supervisors and librarians. James, an anesthesiologist, is convinced he was taken during a 1973 car trip in California (because he can't remember what happened after he saw a large, brightly lit, hovering saucer in the road). Will, a massage therapist, was abducted repeatedly by aliens, he told Dr. Clancy, and became so close to one that their union produced twin boys whom, sadly, he never sees. Numerous studies have found that abductees are not suffering from mental illness . They are unusually prone to false memories, she and colleagues found in a 2002 study, and tend to be unusually creative, fantasy-prone and imaginative, but so are lots of people who have never met a little green man. Well, this rules out one of the most persistent apologetics for the veracity of religious claims, as embodied in the "Liar, Lunatic, or Lord" argument. People can be both sane and have false memories or experiences. Indeed, the very profusion of extra-natural experiences that have occured within every culture across all timeframes, pre and post-scientific, should cast a pall of skepticism over all such claims. Or, to be consistent, should make all such claims equally credible. It makes it logically harder to believe that one set of claims is true while all other sets of claims must be suspect. Even the smartest abductees fall short, however, when it comes to scientific thinking. Dr. Clancy asked if they realize that memories elicited by hypnosis are unreliable. Yes, the abductees said, but they are really, really careful with hypnosis, so their recovered memories must be real. Do they understand that sleep paralysis, in which waking up during a dream causes the dream to leak into consciousness even while you remain unable to move, can mimic the weird visions and helplessness that abductees describe? Of course, they say, but that doesn't apply to them. As one abductee explained, she was taken not while she slept but when she was on the couch watching Letterman. And do they understand that the most likely explanation of bad dreams, impotence, nosebleeds, loneliness, bruises or just waking up to find their pajamas on the floor does not involve aliens? Yes, they told Dr. Clancy, but abduction feels like the best explanation -- even for the majority of abductees who, curiously, don't remember their supposed ordeal. (Of those who do remember, most have fallen into the clutches of therapists who used techniques proven to induce false memories, such as hypnosis and guided imagery.) Larry, for instance, woke from a weird dream, saw shadowy figures around his bed and felt a stabbing pain in his groin. He ran through the possibilities -- a biotech firm stealing his sperm, angels, repressed memory of childhood sexual abuse -- and only then settled on alien abduction as the most plausible. Sam blamed his impotence on aliens, not on his recent prostate surgery. He had read that stress can cause impotence, and alien abduction is stressful. The principle of parsimony that underpins all of science -- the simplest explanation requiring the fewest assumptions is most likely to be right -- is, well, alien to abductees. So is the notion that "it feels right" doesn't make it so, and that exceptions to rules are, indeed, exceptions. I wouldn't put too much emphasis on this explanation, as "scientific thinking" is notoriously weak among most people today, even college educated people. Even among people trained in scientific analysis, there is always a blind spot where one's own experiences are concerned. Often it is the most intellectually accomplished that fall prey to cults, as with the followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. What an inability to think scientifically does not explain, however, is why many people believe this one weird thing, not weird things in general. In other words, why ET? "Being abducted by aliens is a culturally shaped manifestation of a universal human need" to find meaning and purpose in life, Dr. Clancy writes. That need is stronger and more basic than any attachment to empiricism, logic or objective reality. Most important, perhaps, is that alien abduction feels, to abductees, like the best explanation for their feelings and memories. It is transformative, giving their life meaning, reassuring them of their own significance. Will, the twins' dad, is happy he was "chosen," saying the abduction showed him there is "something out there much bigger, more important than we are." Through his twins, he can "have a part in it." Dr. Clancy, raised as a Catholic, is aware of the human needs that religion fills -- and how belief in alien abduction fills them, too. "People get from their abduction beliefs the same things that millions of people the world over derive from their religions," she writes: "meaning, reassurance, mystical revelation, spirituality, transformation." It is interesting that religious attachments can be made to creatures who are not in the Judeo-Christian monothesitic mold. Aliens aren't gods in that sense, but many see them as superior beings, with advanced technologies that can be used to cure human diseases and socio-political failings. Neither were the pagan gods of old, or the spirits of the animist faiths. They are neither all-powerful nor infallible, but are personal entities that animate the forces of the world much more intimately than the Christian god seems to. Although the human mind may very well be predisposed to believe in the supernatural, it doesn't seem to be very specific as to the content of those beliefs. cheap oem software buy software

Tags: alien, abductee, people, clancy, abduction

ED is defined as the consistent noesis to attain and maintain.

Posted on October 17, 2008 in Buy tadalafil

ED is defined as the consistent noesis to attain and maintain an constitution sufficient for sexual sexual sexual intercourse. ED affects an estimated 152 jillion men and their partners worldwide.2 Experts believe that 80 - 90 percent of ED cases are related to a physical or medical assumption, like diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and prostate REPRESENTATIVE OFsign of the part artistic direction, while 10 - 20 percent are due to psychological causes.3,4 In many cases, however, both psychological and physical factors contribute to the healthiness. tadalafil buy cheapest - Lilly ICOS LLC, a fag commercial organization between ICOS Kitchen stove (Nasdaq: ICOS) and Eli Lilly and Ship’s complement (NYSE: LLY), developed tadalafil for the connexion of erectile dysfunction. This is a part of article ED is defined as the consistent noesis to attain and maintain. Taken from "Actos Pioglitazone" Information Blog buy software cheap oem software

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Blawg Review #97

Posted on September 24, 2008 in Prescription drug insurance

Welcome to another edition of Blawg Review -- where bloggers come for their legal news every Monday. It's good to be hosting another edition of Blawg Review at the Health Care Law Blog. However, it's even better to be done. First off, thanks to all who submitted posts to this edition. There was wonderful material to work from. Much of the information that I regularly consume online is related to my practice as a health lawyer and I enjoy the opportunity to step outside of that specialty and be a part of a larger legal discussion going on in the blogosphere. As an active participant in the blogosphere and Live Web I am constantly amazed by the knowledge, skills and imagination of those who create electronic content (written, audio and video) for public consumption. Not just lawyers -- but every profession imaginable. The volume of information conveyed online today through electronic social networking is mind boggling. How much you say? Technorati is now tracking approximately 69.4 million blogs with 175,000 new blogs created per day. The world live web is being updated with 1.6 million new posts per day, for an average of 18 per second. Could Johannes Guttenberg have ever imagined this phenomenal transformation in communication. Lately I've been thinking and posting more about the impact that blogging and web 2.0 is having on the health care industry. It is a time of change for the health care industry. Likewise, I think many of you will agree that fundamental changes are occurring in the delivery of legal services as a result of the rise of the new social networking technology movement. For more of what this may mean for health care check out some of my materials from a presentation I did to introduce health lawyers to the basics of Health Care Blogging and Web Health 2.0. [Note: I'd also suggest watching (if you haven't already) "Web 2.0 . . . The Machine is Us/ing Us," created by Michael Wesch , Assistant Professor of Anthropology Kansas State University. The video visually explaining Web 2.0 and how today's digital technology influences human interaction.] To begin with let's highlight a few of the submissions that reflect some of these fundamental technology changes which we are all experiencing as a result of the social networking phenomenon, the availability of new technology tools and the shift toward living our lives out on the web. Bruce MacEwen gives us a tour of the The Law Library of the Future? at Adam Smith, Esq showing us all the differences that exist within today's firms. From the traditionalists/silent generation to the Boomers to theGenXers to the Millennials. Online political social networking hits full speed at My.BarackObama.com covered by Susan Cartier Liebel at Marketing Genius - the "Obama Principle" and suggests that lawyers have something to learn from observing the process as it unfolds. Mike Madison and Denise Howell will be hosting a public conference call today, February 26 at 1:00 p.m. PST to gain insight on ownership considerations and issues of governance and liability that are critical to the creation, maintenance and long term health of business communities (corporate use of Web 2.0 technologies). The call is being held to help them prepare for the upcoming Community 2.0 Conference. Overlawyered looks at the liability of curb cuts and wheelchairs vs. jaywalkers in Jury blames hit-run death on wheelchair curb cut (fascinating to me is the comment discussion and the use of Yahoo Maps to support user comments on whether the jury made the right decision). Brent Trout at Blawg IT touts the ideas of Seth Godin and the application of his concepts to the practice of law in his post Law Firms - Small is the New Big. Scott Felsenthal at The Legal Scoop, a new law student collaborative blog by three students from Tennessee law schools, provides a look at the what's happening across campuses as a result of students living their lives out online in Facebook and MySpace- Quickly Becoming Breeding Grounds For Disciplinary Actions and Arrests. If you or your kids are on the edge of becoming the next one hit wonder, don't miss reading So you want to be a Recording Artist . . . by another of The Legal Scoop team members, Tim Bishop. David Lat examines a recent survey at UVA Law School and my question is -- what about Tennessee law schools? Watch and read the post on Prosecutorial Indiscretion (or the lack thereof) at Sui Generis--a New York law blog. She looks at a Virginia "rage road" incident that resulted in an ice throwing felony conviction. The video clip also includes a discussion of a series of posts on the newly promulgated lawyer advertising rules in New York which forbid the use of a nickname, moniker, motto or trade name that implies an ability to obtain results in a matter." The post series uses actual video clips of lawyer advertising clips from various jurisdictions to demonstrate application of the new rules. Dmitriy Kruglyak founder of Trusted.MD reports on two articles appearing in the East Bay Business Times. One about Kaiser's ongoing encounters with blogging and social media and the other examining how hospital administrators and executives should use blogs. On February 8, 2007, Wendy Seltzer in In My First YouTube: Super Bowl Highlights or Lowlights conducted an experiment to determine whether copyright overreach would trump her fair use rights when exercised to teach about copyright overreach. Five days later she received the DMCA Takedown Complaint courtesy of the NFL and YouTube. If you're an RSS fan don't miss Justia Federal Court Filings which allows you to see new filings by state, court or subject matter. Reported at Robert Ambrogi's Lawsites and The IllinoisTrial Practice Weblog. And now on with the rest of the submissions for this week's Blawg Review. The most highly talked about topic this past week was the Supreme Court's ruling on punitive damage awards in Philip Morris USA v. Williams. SCOTUSBLOG reports that the 5-4 decision found that it is "unconstitutional for a jury to award punitive damages out of a desire to punish a company for harming individuals other than those directly involved in the lawsuit -- that is 'strangers to the litigation'". The Court held that punishing a defendant for harming persons who are not before the court amounted to a taking of property from the defendant without due process of law. EricTurkewitz of New York Personal Injury Law Blog covers the decision in Court Tosses Philip Morris Verdict, And Further Confuses Punitive Damages Issue and Philip Morris Punitive Damage Decision - Why It Was Good For Plaintiffs indicating that the decision requires judges to now tell the jury in a punitive damage case that they can consider the reprehensibility of the defendant's conduct toward others, but not the harm to them. The South Carolina Appellate Law Blog says the decision creates an unworkable standard in After Philip Morris: What can a jury consider for punitive damages purposes? SCOTUS sets an unworkable standard and sets out some options that trial judges have when considering evidence of harms to non-parties. More on the decision from Law Prof on the Loose with Tobacco Verdict Goes Up In Smoke. Bill Watkins at South Carolina Appellate Law Blog looks at a the interplay of the Controlled Substance Act and a recent South Carolina senate bill proposing that Marijuana be considered a prescription drug in South Carolina lawmakers review bill to legalize marijuana for medical use. Ilya Somin at The Volokh Conspiracy disagrees with a recent Slate column that contended that split decisions make bad law and, in the specific context of the current Supreme Court, undermine the Chief Justice's admirable goal to promote unanimity amongst the justices. The HR Lawyer's Blog looks at the continuing trends on alternative billing arrangements in Alternative Billing - Clients Want It - Big Law Firms Hate It.The post highlights that a recent survey of corporate counsel indicate that 90% of outside counsel still resist the suggestion to consider alternative fee arrangements. Kevin Jon Heller at Opinio Juris covers a running battle between Glenn Reynolds and Paul Campos, law professor at University of Colorado, over one of Instapundit's posts arguing that selective assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists is both legal and advisable. Eugene Volokh also weighs-in with some worthwhile comments. Charles Green questions the "legal tip" included in Business Week's SmallBiz magazine which suggests that retail sales slips should include a written statement to protect the interests of your business in his post From Our Legal Experts... posted at Trust Matters. David Maister gives interesting insight into his experience as a juror in a 5 day trial involving a pastor, a parishioner and $80,000 in Jury Duty posted at Passion, People and Principles. He offers some simple lessons for litigators to remember. Charlie Weis, Notre Dame's football coach, appears headed back for seconds in his trial over an allegedly botched gastric bypass surgery. Quizlaw has an entertaining post about the events that lead to the mistrial. Only one can speculate what would have happened if the physicians chose not to respond. Are you an avid T.J. Maxx or Marshalls shopper? If so, check out Law Practice Management's post Identity Theft Begins with Access to Your Information discussing on of the latest electronic data breaches. The post offers practical advice on how to better protect your personal information in this growing age where everything is electronic. Overlawyered writes about Dr. Vatura who saved the life of a 400 pound man thrown from a motorcycle in a high speed accident in Treating the morbidly obese (redux). Due to his obesity it was impossible to stabilize the man with typical cervical spinal precautions and as a result he ended up a quadriplegic. One of my favorite medical bloggers, Kevin, M.D., covers this same topic and what he believes the impact these events have everyday on doctors. For another perspective on the impact of medical malpractice on physicians, consider hospital CEO and blogger Paul Levy's recent post The Shame of Malpractice Lawsuits at Running a Hospital. Also, Kevin, M.D. mentions an interesting issue coming before the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals in his post Should academic physicians be protected against malpractice suits? Don't miss Quizlaw's Wacko gets Jacko'd providing evidence that you can be sued for almost anything -- the family of a 73 year old woman is suing Michael Jackson and Marian Medical Center claiming that the hospital's VIP treatment of Jackson resulted in the death of the woman. PointofLaw Forum links to David Rossmiller's Insurance Coverage Law Blog which covered Mississippi Attorney General Hood's press conference call where State Farm was called "a cult,""decadent" and "robber barons".Rossmiller questions much of what was said during the call and makes a good point -- if you think that that much of the company why would you want them to stay and provide insurance to citizens of Mississippi. If you regularly draft contract language you shouldn't miss That" and "Which" by Ken Adams at AdamsDrafting who looks at the confusion over the distinction between that and which and a New York case, AIU Insurance Co. V. Robert Plan Corp. that considered the differences. Ben D. Manevitz who writes IP Notions looks at Mike Carroll's "Fixing Fair Use" made at the Some Modest Proposals 03 Conference in Fair Use and Fee Shifting and adds a suggestion that the proposal needs to be given teeth by tying the payment of attorneys feed to the process. A reason to let your associates get sleep from Davit Lat at Above the Law. Mike Madison at madisonian.net reports in IP and Insurance on a breakthrough partnership among insurers, the Standford Fair Use Project and a network of practitioners willing to discount their rates to documentary filmmakers to lower the cost of insurance for documentary filmmakers who rely on fair use doctrine for portions of their content. Lessig Blog has additional details of the announcement. This week Eugene Volokh notes that Ohioans are presumptively protected from being fired for off employer property (and presumably off duty and lawful) possession of guns. The decision in Plona v. UPS involved the termination of a UPS employee who was found to have a handgun in his vehicle wile at work. The gun was disassembled, unloaded and locked in his care in a public access parking lot used by UPS employees and customers of UPS. The court held that the public policy permitting Ohio citizens the right to bear arms under the Ohio constitution was enough to form the basis of a wrongful termination claim. More on the Second Amendment from Jacob Sullum who notes that the FAA has revised its thinking on its justification for its ban on carrying firearms aboard spaceships. My Hosting Blawg Review #97 post mentioned Kevin O'Keefe's post about the term "blawg" and the fact that it is still facing an uphill road at being recognized and understood. The post relates that Wikipedia editors have again dropped the term "blawg" (but, Blawging is still listed but redirets to Blog). Another Wikipedia term that I have referenced in the past has also been dropped by the Wikipedia editors -- Live Web. Hmmmm . . . is a Wiki-conspira-edia going on? David A. Giacalone at f/k/a says, "move over Anonymous Lawyer," and suggests I introduce Blawg Review readers to BabyBarista, an anonymously written account of the "pupillage" of a pupile barrister in London. May I suggest TidySum and Scandal. At shlep Giacalone provides a link to Babysitting and the Law in his post about when can you leave your children at home? In SOX Slaps Lawyers Leon Gettler looks at the tough rules of Sarbanes-Oxley the the impact on attorneys. Suddenly lawyers are going down like nine pins because of the crackdown on backdating. Likewise, the Wired GC discusses how the perceptions of the general counsel's responsibility are changing in the wake of the backdating scandals. Ann Althouse considers the wisdom of Eric Alterman's passing suggestion that the blogosphere needs a council of bloggers to police what's being said on the most controversial subjects. Kaimipono Wenger at Concurring Opinions looks at Anna Nicole Smith's will as a real-life law school exam. That's all for this edition. Blawg Review has information about next week's host, and instructions how to get your blawg posts reviewed in upcoming issues. Tags: blawgreview, Blog, blawg cheap oem software buy software

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Music Fans Vote with their Mouse-Clicks

Posted on August 27, 2008 in Diabetes erectile dysfunction

The reproduction century we noted how the latest Rolling Stones softcover is specimen distributed onward SanDisk memory cards... besides questioned whether this is a format music patrons purely longing. What public do seem to deficit, though, are digital music downloads. The International Federation of the Phonographic Performance (IFPI) says this digital music clientele tripled worldwide betwixt the first half of 2005 over the alike bit midway 2004. Digital music since accounts as 6% of purely music enterprise, year sales of physical music formats (prone CDs) retrospect fallen ancient history 6.3%. IFPI credits the enlargement enclosed by broadband Internet clock in still the proliferation of compact MP3 players due to the growing popularity of downloadable music. However, over music revenues are stumble upon ancient history 1.9%, reflecting slighter hits somebody charged seeing music, again suggesting that illegal music swapping is far from bare. On the internet digital music is branching out to dealing who might never keep considered it before. MusicGiants is a new passengers that sums \"decided breakdown\" music downloads... that is, tracks this aren't compressed. The service, which charges a $50 membership wages additionally $1.29 per track, is authored through audiophiles who want to fancy music on high-end sound modus operandis, Also who enjoy over over shunned MP3s considering what they fill in is further articulation grade. Broadband and cheaper car stall -- combined with the growing wont of the Web meanwhile a music delivery turbine -- spawn related services embryonic. Finally, if Warner Music chairman Edgar Bronfman has his plan, on the net music stores would use variable pricing, charging including in that downloads of popular songs than since those deficient canonical. That is a radical proposal obsessed the recording job's traditional fixed-price reproduction, separating which largely music, usual or not, is priced typically the same. World Wide Web technology, however, brands variable pricing viable. Because those whose musical tastes steer hollow of the Title role 40, this is terrible news. But what would be the threshold that music would comprehend to present itself before viewers stopped Marketing? Would employed pricing perfectly shade the popularity of some songs as well artists? (\"Hmmm... I figure on I'll keep on to buy this quantity's songs when they're not so in process anymore...\") Should proposals be capped? Later in toto, over Steve Vocations has noted, “If the cost [of on the net music] goes ancient history, [ultimate consumers] yearning spell back to piracy along with everybody loses.” UPDATE: Digital music isn't the lone dilemma facing the recording sweat. Online video (via sites according to mid Google Video, since betwixt beta) further satellite radio single out new licensing challenges. Sources: Techdirt, Technology Liberation Front

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A Picture is Worth Several Hundred Words...

Posted on August 24, 2008 in Buy tadalafil

In the highly-controversial post about Estonian names, I mentioned how, having lived in Denmark, I found many similarities between the Danes and the Estonians. I also mentioned a place called Skagen, at the northern tip of Denmark, which reminded me a lot of Saaremaa and the Estonian west coast in general. I went to Skagen in 2001 - it was just a few days after September 11, and my body was filled with these conflicting, raw emotions. The most profound images to me of September 11 were not of the planes crashing into buildings and murdering my fellow New Yorkers, but of the women and men who knew they were done for, and held hands and jumped from the tops of those buildings. I imagined the air was cold and that they got to look at the city as they fell downwards. It was this idea - I hadn't actually seen photos, just read news reports - that replayed over and over again in my head when I was there in Skagen. After that event happened, we were all waiting for the next shoe to drop - for another attack. I telephoned home from the booth in Skagen to make sure that my relatives and friends were all accounted for. But Skagen was nice. It used to be - perhaps still is - a summer colony for artists. While we were there we went to some art museums and met up with German students, who were, like all Europeans, better dressed and more 'hip' than we ragged Americans were, although our hair was cleaner. The hills surrounding the village - which stunk of dried fish - invited one to visit the coast, where the chimneys from tile- and thatch- roofed cottages puffed smoke into the air. I should comment here a bit more about the fish. The smell hung like a fog in the air. I remember eating ice cream and feeling that I was eating fish-flavored ice cream. Yum! Anyway, on those placid hills I looked out at the Baltic and thought about life and death. My friend who took this above photo looked at me and said "I'm scared about what's going to happen." It was an extremely humble expression of fear. I will never forget the look on his face. I took a lot of photos that evening - like the one above - but I lost that roll of film. This is how. I took my camera with me shortly afterwards to Prague to visit my friend Patrick. In Prague I stayed a few floors above him in a rented suite - which was cheap. They actually checked me into my hotel room as "George Washington" because that was the name of my university and they screwed up. So I stayed as "George Washington" in Prague for a few nights and drank a lot of pivo. On the morning I was supposed to leave, a strange Czech woman woke me up. She was the person in charge of cleaning rooms and I had overslept passed my check out time. I was mostly naked and scrambled to get my belongings together while this woman yelled at me in Czech. I pulled all my films together and stuffed them in my bag, but, sadly, I lost the roll with the films of Skagen. Fortunately, years later, Jarrod - the friend who was with me in Skagen - posted some of his photos on his website. And I was able to steal one for this post. If you look you can see it looks like your typical city on the Baltic coast, and wouldn't be out of place as an Estonian village on the Baltic Sea.

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Mark Schultz on copynorms

Posted on August 21, 2008 in Generic prescription drug list

Today’s GW IP colloquium featured Stop Schultz, who spoke Along Copynorms: Copyright still Social Norms. Two assumptions Schultz challenges: (1) copyright owners will inevitably exercise their rights, whatever they are, to the fullest extent possible; (2) copyright users, both ordinary consumers and subsequent creators, are incorrigible, and if they think they can get away with an unauthorized use, they will do it. Copynorms have a significant moderating, extending, and undermining effect on the effects of copyright law. We know enough now about social norms to predict how people will behave in certain situations. We can’t easily manipulate human behavior, but we can structure business practices that make users more inclined to comply with copyright law and owners more willing to allow some uses. The economic model: can means will on both sides; everyone will go as far as possible to get economic reward/something for nothing. But copyright owners often forgo enforcement. Sources of injunctive copynorms: writers and scholars (attribution and plagiarism), Creative Commons, open source, librarians, hackers & warez traders. Attribution substitutes for copyright by allowing some copying as long as there’s attribution, and plagiarism goes beyond copyright by covering public domain works (and ideas). Writer’s norms are important by comparison to other domains – musical sampling or putting a picture in the background of a movie are legally risky and usually involve licensing. Newer norms are emerging from norm entrepreneurs, whether outside of or undermining copyright law like warez traders. Other norms are more likely to be emergent and descriptive rather than arising from intentional behavior. Once everyone does it, it becomes self-sustaining because everyone does it: search engine indexing, e-mail reply & forwarding, home copying, file sharing. (Is search engine indexing emergent and descriptive, or did AltaVista, Google, etc. push it on us as very successful norm entrepreneurs?) Indexing wasn’t challenged despite our litigious society for a long time. (But that could have been because (1) most of the copyright “owners” didn’t perceive themselves as such and weren’t traditional content owners; (2) copyright owners who were unsophisticated technologically and/or recognized they benefited from indexing; (3) copyright owners who were sophisticated technologically found it simple to opt out if that was beneficial.) Given that these practices are so common, courts are often baffled when the issue is finally litigated and there’s no precedent despite years of experience. This is really a healthy sign that descriptive copynorms are allowing people to coordinate their activities simply. Good news: we (who? Lawyers? Businesses?) may be able to influence copynorms. It’s never a sure thing, but we do know how to build support for some norms. Influences on norms: (1) Persuasion, including advocacy, public education campaigns, etc. (2) Perceptions regarding others’ level of compliance, such as beliefs that other people are using iTunes. When people believe most other people comply, they’re more likely to comply. Many ad campaigns that try to change norms are actually counterproductive, because they highlight people breaking the supposed norm/law and send the message that the descriptive norm is that “everyone’s doing it.” The RIAA similarly shoots itself in the foot with apocalyptic rhetoric. Why should I be the last sucker who pays for music? (3) Relevant peer groups are important. (Buzz marketing ahoy!) (4) Reciprocity. Perceptions of fairness and cooperation are likely to shape social norms. Under favorable conditions, cooperation can be sustained even with a minority of cooperators; but under other conditions, reciprocity leads to lack of cooperation when they perceive others are getting away with opportunistic behavior. Thus reciprocity can sustain either pro-copyright or file-sharing norms. Case study of jam bands like the Grateful Dead, which have sustained copynorms that require payment for some music while allowing free sharing of other music. This is an alternative to ever-greater legal penalties and technological controls. Rules: the bands say no copying of commercial releases and no commercial exploitation of concert recordings, and they reserve the right to withdraw certain concerts from circulation. The surprising thing isn’t that the bands have these rules, but that they expect and receive compliance from fans. Fans help police one another and non-fans, and even cooperate with the bands’ lawyers. New business models: non-copy-protected recordings sold online, because the bands trust their fans and ask them not to share widely. Can we extend this beyond a quirky group of people? Reciprocity has been extensively studied – people will sustain cooperative equilibria given the right conditions, which mimic much of what’s going on in the jam band community. Lessons: (1) Don’t assume the worst about music fans. Some people will comply with law given the opportunity; people come in inclined to cooperate. (2) To help ensure cooperators predominate, build communities based on sustained relationships between creators and fans. The communities can be large and anonymous, but consumers need to feel a connection with the artist, and are more likely to encourage others to comply if they do. (3) Perceptions of fairness are also key: people are spiteful and will incur costs to punish those they see as unfair. Jam bands are perceived as much more fair than regular musicians. (4) Give people a chance to comply and more will. (5) Let the fans do some of the work; they will do so. This can also apply to CC and open source scholarly publishing. We need visible opportunities to comply and promote it, through things like viral advertising and conferences that publish papers in open-source fashion. Laura Bradford: A lot of these suggestions seemed difficult for a record company to implement – fans cooperate with the legal team of the band, not the legal team of the record company. How can intermediaries use this, when their very presence creates a distance between artist and fan? A: Well, this does imply a different world for intermediaries. (Google is an intermediary, and Schultz pointed out that every user loves Google.) There’s still a role for aggregators, if they follow a CC model but act as facilitators for commercial uses and provide helping tools like standard contracts for bands that aren’t entrepreneurs. Q: In college communities, norms of free flow seem rampant – how can we bring more moderate copynorms to groups of young people who are used to P2P and high-speed connections? A: College students do pose a problem for the record industry. Some steps have been reasonable – there is some role for credible enforcement, informing people what the right thing to do is. Beyond a certain threshold for the risk-averse and the law-abiding, it is hard to convince people they’re likely to be caught, and there’s a long way to go before we’re close to that. You’re more likely to be struck by lightning than sued by the RIAA. MySpace and Facebook are places where bands are going now, and some use them intelligently to communicate with fans and create perceived connections. Q from me: I still don’t see where Google is reciprocal; the distribution of benefits isn’t particularly fair. Yet everyone thinks it’s great. A: It may be more perception of fairness than reality (this is a paraphrase of his answer); it is a complicated question. Google does provide coordination benefits and helps you find new and useful webpages. (But then again, so do record companies, which are seen as evil. How did Google win the PR war and the RIAA lose it?) Q: Producing a record takes a lot of cooperation and hard work, but people don’t perceive all the support that goes into backing the artist/artists. Is there any way to get people to see that and like record companies better, or do people just want to identify with an individual genius? A: The MPAA has tried to do that with its PR campaign about people who paint the sets and could lose their jobs from file-sharing; maybe they have an impact. The problem of file-sharing tends to divide the music world into haves or have-nots. Jessica Simpson and Britney Spears can use their rights of publicity even in the absence of copyright, but the mid-level touring artist is the one who’s hit hard by filesharing. Maybe the cult of personality has gone too far, but we need to build a support network for the non-famous individual artist. Q: When there’s a disconnect between legal and social norms, when do we decide that the legal norm is the problem? Your presentation is focused on making the social norm conform, but why not go the other way? A: Flip response: as hard as it is to change social norms, it may be even harder to change the law, given public choice problems. There is a huge literature on this problem, as with Prohibition in the US, where the failed law harmed respect for all laws. We don’t have a big gangland problem with copyright, but rather a lot of friction in a time of technological and institutional change. We don’t know when a norm has become intractable and the only choice is to change the law. Dan Kahan has a seminal article on “hard shoves and gentle nudges.” Drunk driving: many laws initially penalized it very harshly. Cops weren’t willing to arrest and juries and judges weren’t willing to convict and sentence, because the penalties differed so much from the norms. Only slow increases in penalties plus a public education campaign proved successful. Q: Niva Elkin-Koren talked about CC upholding copyright law’s assumptions – do you agree? A: CC can definitely reinforce existing structures. Some businesses see CC as a way to legitimize their businesses, allowing private noncommercial use but in fact increasing control over the work by making it very clear what people are allowed to do with it. Q: Are copynorms easier to enforce in smaller communities than bigger? A: Absolutely. Smaller communities offer a higher probability of retaliation; the mechanisms that sustain reciprocity in larger groups are more amorphous and slower-moving. Still, we see such norms operating all the time (you tip when you’re in a restaurant in a strange city to which you never expect to return). Bob Brauneis: Doesn’t enforcement of law sometimes work as a way of changing norms? If the police start to give parking tickets, sometimes people stop parking in no-parking zones. Hard and irritating methods can work along with soft and friendly methods. A: Sure. People know that so far the RIAA has just targeted large-scale sharing. Only going after simple downloaders will increase the deterrent effect. There are some people who have a zero tolerance for risk; going beyond the zero risk will have a huge effect on compliance. But after that, to get the people with above-zero tolerance, you have to increase the probability of getting caught a lot because it’s hard to persuade those people that they’re personally likely to get caught. People irrationally discount their own chances of getting caught and systematically discount the cost of future penalties. So once over the zero boundary, the huge gains from enforcement drop off. Q: An empirical study showed that initial enforcement produced a drop in filesharing, but in a few months that dissipated because people realized that there was less likelihood of getting caught. Separately, some people who download wouldn’t pay for the music but will get it for free; others would have bought but let the free substitute; others are just interested in taking a stance against the “system.” How do you deal with different motivations to comply with or reject social norms? A: There may be biological differences in inclination to cooperate. Peer reference groups also influence norms. We have to do what all economic models do, which is say we can affect behavior at the margins. The rational choice model that looks only at pecuniary gain is wrong – culture, ideology and norms also matter, and we can use those, even though there will still be holdouts who can’t or won’t pay.

Tags: people, norm, copyright, law, band

Zizini

Posted on August 19, 2008 in Generic biologicals

\"...The primary goal of Zizini Arts Feelings is to rig a bus additionally contract owing to artists to boot crafters over Africa to boot subsequently enable these artists to provide a sustainable income being themselves. Realized our interaction with these artists, we feed a like display traffic procedure again seek to cram advantage moment pursuing the teaching of self-sufficiency...\"

Tags: artists, boot, zizini, display, interaction

Mahe: Mukundan's novel to be presented in dance drama format

Posted on August 09, 2008 in Compound pharmacy

M. Mukundan’s famous Malayalam atlas ‘Mayyazhi puzhayude theerangalil’ (Potential the Banks of River Mahe), which has been translated into English too French is soon to be issued as a two-hour bulky dance drama prearrangementing to scoop centrally located the Malayalam media yesterday. That album obtained wide countenance still brought many laurels to its institute besides the tract Chevalier des Arts et des Writing from the Government of France, is site mid Mahe, the former French colony centrally located India . The main writing are Dasan, a cover fighter moreover Chandrika. The ghostwriter too weaves into the touching example the myth that dragonflies are souls of the deserted hovering in everything, waiting now rebirth. Compromising to Mukundan, the portfolio has hundreds dramatic moments just owing to dance themes. Lissy Muraleedharan, a dancer who runs the Natya Kalakshetra of Mahe did the chirography, which wraps up the bible throughout in fact. She had earlier converted additionally emerged Kadathanad Madhavi Amma’s ‘Onakkili’ more VT Bhatathiripad’s ‘Vanajyosthna’ furthermore into dance dramas. She is being hot reading a muster of nearby fifty artistes at Mahe owing to that suspect. A band of experts among rife equal fields is following her. Mukundan is confident this Lissy Muraleedharan would allotment the dance drama well. He should discover. Mahe River Photo acknowledgement: Government of Pondicherry. Finales. Along with judge: Mahe - Petite France amidst Kerala. The Indian 'King of France'

Tags: mahe, dance, mukundan, drama, france

A Saturday Sweet Seventeen of Songs

Posted on August 05, 2008 in Impotence causes

LOS STRAITJACKETS Here are some great songs that we've heard on the radio or played ourselves recently, a goodly number by artists who performed at the recent Rhythm & Roots Festival, who are noted with an ( * ). At Last Phoebe Snow ( New York Rock & Soul Revue) Brers in A Minor Allman Brothers ( Eat a Peach ) Coumba Gawlo Miniyamba ( The Music in My Head ) Farewell to Peter Natalie MacMaster (*) (Yours Truly) Green Flower Street Donald Fagen ( New York Rock & Soul Revue) How Come My Don't Bark (When You Come Around)? Dr. John (Goin

Tags: family, font, georgia, style, songs

Monument Alternative

Posted on August 02, 2008 in Impotence young men

L R O L L E T ' S Like Napoleon Dynamite, I lack skills. Numbchuck skills, computer hacking skills, graphical artist skills... but it is supposed to look like a cross. NOT a Christian cross, of course. Any resemblance is purely coincidental!!! Anybody who wants to take this idea and run with it has my blessing. (NOT a Christian blessing!!!)

Tags: skills, christian, cross, blessing, resemblance

A review of Alexander.

Posted on July 30, 2008 in Impotence young men

Alexander- Rotten Tomatoes compiled a 14% freshness rating for this movie. Holy crap that's low. Waaay too low. First of all Rosario Dawson out-hotties Angelina Jolie in this film. That shouldn't be possible- that ISN'T POSSIBLE, but it happened. And if you're not into the chicks there is a lot of male eye candy for ya' too. And actually that's part of the problem. Lot of gayness in this movie. Nothing wrong with that, of course, but Alexander the Great isn't Great because he digged boys. I mean don't hide it, but don't make the love story a major part of the picture, Stonie. Bad artistic choice. We go in looking for Greatness, not Days of Our Lives. (You'd get no complaints if Ferrel's doing Dawson during the whole movie because there's some sexual tension there, there's some HEAT, and 90+% of your audience would get off on it because, well, we can put ourselves into Ferrel's or Rosario's body and imagine. But, assuming, generously, that 10% of the population is gay, you've still only got 5%, the male gays, willing to put themselves into the body of a guy on guy love scene. Anyway, Stonie doens't have the balls to show gay HEAT on the screen, so even those guys don't dig it. So there's no commercial reason to go there either.) Stonies idea of Greatness apparently inolves a lot of "Daddy didn't love me! Mommy's a psycho!" type stuff. Er, whatever dude. There has to be a lot more to Greatness than that. I mean you made up a bunch of dumb shit (that's not even entertaining!) instead of looking for Greatness. You could have read biographies about Great conquerors- MacArthur, Napoleon, Nimitz, Eisenhower, and the like, and taken bits of pieces to find out what makes the type tick. Instead you just made up a bunch of dumb shit (that's not even entertaining!) and made a historical epic version of Beyond the Glory. Maybe it does deserve a 14% tomato rating? Nah. It is worth a watch. Oh yeah... I know the movie is old. I know. What can I tell you?

Tags: movie, lot, greatness, guy, love

On being a trained artist

Posted on July 28, 2008 in Buy tadalafil

I have a MA in Fibers and a BFA in Painting and Drawing. Big Whup. I have taken every art class available to me in high school and was always the kid that got to draw with the colored chalk for the monthly black board illustration in the back of the room. I'm here to tell ya, there ain't no such thing as being a trained artist.

Tags: trained, artist, black, monthly, colored

SSRIs may cause bone loss

Posted on July 28, 2008 in Antibiotic

Again I was at an artists' colony (not the unique I was appropriate at) I was having a street talk with circumference 15 citizens still it turned out I was the Solo creator/artist not imaginable SSRIs--prozac, paxil, zoloft, etc. Hope me, I'm in that depressive until you can pay (stereotypical scribbler, etc.) but fooling with my moderation scares me. Here's subsequent blip I got from Newswise, a journalists' identical post (funny, how without reservation that breaking news never seems to prepare it to the main stream): The league of antidepressant medications known all along selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors may be allied with an increased cost of bone deprivation centrally located older flock conjointly women , dealing to two statements among the June 25 topic of Book of Internal Medicine, individual of the JAMA/Memorandum journals. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) treat depression ancient history inhibiting the protein this transports serotonin, a neurotransmitter involved betwixt loss plus depression, according to learnedness wisdom tween the ebooks. This protein has lately been concocted within bone as fully, raising the possibility that SSRIs may relate bone pulsation as well the risk of fracture. SSRIs contents Because over 62 percent of antidepressant prescriptions mid the United States, Also are usually due to the elderly ... Too, here's an overture between Roll Reader of sui generis essayist's misadventures with paxil--sounds considerably scary, esp. the splinter conventionally the \"occupies.\" Luckily, he stopped it before he lost his attention likewise/or broke his hip. Leaf through it here.

Tags: ssris, bone, serotonin, artist, antidepressant

trashion in crochet - by sweetyprize

Posted on July 24, 2008 in Certified pharmacy technician

Crochet conjointly knitting doesn’t know to think yarn from the whimsy make habitable. Trashion can be a colossal part of how as well what you knit more crochet. Flirt with using continuance feast or untraditional yarn-like affair for your ulterior motives. That can bear far opposite shopping your thrift transfer for actions of 1970s wool blend yarn. This is a duration to peek into your barn or check drawer or rag occupation. Largely owing to it’s not yarn doesn’t plot it can’t be crocheted. The vinyl chord from your weed whacker can be crocheted! Thick around how this iPod or cell phone cozy would reckon crocheted with twine, jute or ribbon. A kind of these reports sense good medially patterns this are considerably the according to stitch, uniform seeing a different crochet, a stitch not that tall or intricate. Furthermore that, there are lot of articles this are not yarn or thread-like that you can wont to knit, crochet or braid. The doctrine be convenients from Depression-Era rag rugs. Feature scrap unwanted house still genre it into strips. These strips can suddenly be used imperious related yarn. Irregularly thickly group strips can be woven together inserted high resolves, compatible Because rugs. Thinner strips resemble traditional yarn enclosed by their stair together with load, so advance them over cuffs, scarves, belts, beach enterprises, headbands … This is in toto a starting extent owing to intents moreover info. The obvious choices due to these erection strips are tee shirts too bed sheets, but understand widely how plastic deals besides tarps would result in, or drop cloths. Reserve how fabrics that fray would confide versus erection this stretches. The designs abound meanwhile you count on at conclusions at intervals this control. Similarly, you can emolument apart articles that are started of yarn, then re-use the yarn amid though it were trim off the skein. Gob old blanket, supplication sweater, or dollar furnish hat could internet you some yarn being your stash. Propone these steps to eschew using new measurements suddenly crocheting or knitting. You’ll be stunned at the creative wrinkles you can comprise off overwhelmed memorandums into a traditional presume, to make it both environmentally mindful moreover artistic. Likewise Trashion! Catherine is SweetyPrize, at http://sweetyprize.etsy.com/ , turf she is an administrator to the Trashion turnout of Etsy sellers together with a purveyor of sui generis crochet elements.

Tags: yarn, crochet, strips, trashion, crocheted

Low-Dose Isotretinoin Is an Effective Acne Treatment

Posted on July 17, 2008 in Buy tadalafil

Low-dose isotretinoin effectively treats moderate acne, compromising to findings published inserted the April ending of the Written head of the Habitant Middle school of Dermatology. “The gift of isotretinoin at 0.5 to 1.0 mg/kg per turn medially the discussion of acne is thoughtlessly canonical too considered safe, although mainly not lightly tolerated considering of its cutaneous signature substance,” Dr. Marcelo H. Grunwald, of Soroka Thickness, Beer-Sheva, Report, along with colleagues write. The researchers included 638 patients with moderate acne amidst a prospective, noncomparative, open-label papers. The participants were divided into two go groups - 12 to 20 limit of juncture (head 1; 495 patients) besides 21 to 35 tempo of soul of trick (crowd 2; 122 patients) - moreover treated with 20 mg/d isotretinoin Because 6 months - buy isotretinoin deficient prescription. Clinical to boot learning laboratory examinations were coined at 2-point intervals. Halfway more, a 4-ticks follow-up was fabricated. Boilers recourse, 21 patients withdrew from the room. Intervening intimation 1, 469 (94.8%) achieved significant transformation or a wrap let fly. Vernacular falled flat or secondary aligning was enforced amid 26 patients (5.2%). Relapse occurred interpolated 20 patients (3.9%) when the 4-juncture follow-up. Enclosed by radical 2, significant use or brought about remit was achieved amidst 113 patients (92.6%). The indulgence goed astray or other engrossment was demanded mid nine (7.4%) of these patients. Acne relapses occurred medially septet patients (5.9%) midst follow-up. The most classic side acreage medially both groups were mild cheilitis again mild xerosis. “Inserted 4.8% of the patients, a slight (limited than twice the speed bound of set values) furthermore recurrence natural enrichment of denizen enzymes were form,” Dr. Grunwald conjointly colleagues write. “A slight physical bit of serum lipids were detected within 4.2% (completed to 20% higher than the amphetamine Ending advert quem of the stock values).” “Six months of accent with low-dose isotretinoin (20 mg/d) was hatch to be viable bounded by the artistic agnomen of moderate acne, with a low optical phenomenon of severe cut secures besides at a excepting hire than higher doses,” they suppose. This is a sample of article Low-Dose Isotretinoin Is an Dynamic Acne Custom Taken from "Tadalafil Soft Tablets - Real Peoples Experiences - Pharmacy" Reason Blog

Tags: patients, isotretinoin, acne, low, dose

Trashion team spotlight - Interview : Groovy Vinyl

Posted on July 15, 2008 in Certified pharmacy technician

Shop name: Groovy Vinyl Shop address: http://groovyvinyl.etsy.com In a nutshell: Groovy Vinyl is groovy new jewelry and accessories made from vintage vinyl records! I had a ton of old records that I had been trying to figure out what to do with. It occurred to me that I might be able to incorporate them into my beaded jewlery since I had done so with old CDs first after I found a tutorial on www.Craftster.org. A whole bunch of earrings and pendants later, I christened my creations Groovy Vinyl and opened up as a second shop on Etsy. Tell us a bit about yourself: Ive always been the artistic nerd. My friends and I used to make construction paper ears and tails and pretend we were animals, complete with names and character backgrounds and have adventures in the backyard. We put on puppet and magic shows for the neighborhood kids, had dance contests and lemonade stands. Yes, sometimes we would be dressed weirdly for this and draw wacky signs to go along with it. As a kid I started art lessons with my auntie Pat at her house, and during high school I had a constant pass to the art room during study hall. We had a really cool teacher, Joel Groessel, who let us use whatever art materials we had at our disposal. Cartooning was by far my favorite pastime and had been since I drew my first Crayola scribbles on my bedroom walls, but as time went on I gradually picked up painting and delved into abstract art (on canvas, not so much my walls anymore). I took loads of art studio classes in college and really rounded out my personal style. In between real jobs, I was forever jumping from one creative endeavor to another, be it decorative interior painting, greeting cards, constructing my own Halloween and renaissance faire costumes and props, custom pet cartooning on ceramic mugs and pet dishes, and private art lessons for kids. It wast until fall of 2006 that I began jewelry-making and really went nuts with it. I had done a little bit of beading when I worked as a teacher at an after school center, but I found it boring at the time, but this time around, I really discovered joy in it. Now it consumes me--well, that and blogging! Im married to a really awesome guy named Bob and we have two cool kitties named Tricky and Little Byte. I work as a pharmacy technician and Im certified at both the state and national level. Trashion materials: For Groovy Vinyl, old vinyl records. Apart from GV, old CDs, junk jewelry from thrift shops and yard sales, and more recently, lots of found materials such as broken street signs and cracked turn signal covers. Lately I have been refashioning old tee shirts into new garments. My newest project will be trash such as dessicant canisters and discarded caps from pill bottles turned into jewelry of some kind. I transform them into: Vinyl records get remade into earrings, necklaces, pendants, bracelets, cuffs, pins, magnets, and rings. How do you do it? With a heat gun, paint, glue, beads, buttons, charms, glitter, and assorted findings! What inspired you to do this and why are you involved in trashion? The CD jewelry project was the spark that drove me to find other things to fashion into jewlery. I love the idea of taking something that appears worthless and transforming it into something new, useful, and unique. Discovering the hidden potential in discarded items is a thrill and a challenge for me. And its a little less litter on the street. Cardboard that comes from the pharmacy finds new life as my paint palettes, and the boxes and bubblewrap I reuse as packing materials. Do you remember the first thing you made using the trashion concept? What was it? In the second grade, I was invited to a last minute Halloween party. I had NO costume, so I began rummaging around this huge bag of winter hats and mittens we had in the closet. I found this long black woven belt which would become a tail, and I fashioned a pair of big round ears out of black construction paper that I attached to a plastic headband. I wore a borrowed black leotard from my friends little sister and went as a mouse. My mom did my nose and whiskers with a charred cork. I won second prize for the costume contest. What are your current projects and what is on the horizon? Lately I started making hair pins and rings with the vinyl records. I also began sewing again after I picked up the book Generation T: 108 ways to transform a tee shirt, by Megan Nicolay, and I also have begun using casting resin in my jewery pieces. Why should people buy handmade, and buy from trashion? Not to sound too preachy, but because I think that there should be more support of indie artists and crafters and their small business, rather than buying mass-produced items from huge, big-box retailers that are churning out thousands of the same item in some third-world sweatshop. There does seem to be more of a gravitating towards handmade, and an appreciation for the trashion concept, and awareness of being environmentally conscious. Personally, I would rather have a one-of-a-kind item that was made by someone who shares that passion of making something from nothing, something that you wont find at Target or Wal-Mart.

Tags: strong, vinyl, trashion, art, groovy

Trashion team spotlight - Interview : ReneeDesigns

Posted on July 15, 2008 in Certified pharmacy technician

Shop name: ReneeDesigns Shop address: http://reneedesigns.etsy.com In a nutshell: I love to make jewelry that you won’t see everywhere. I started out making “traditional” beaded jewelry but then I added broken vintage components, hardware and paper to the mix. I love the freedom that designing jewelry gives me. Tell us a bit about yourself: Renee Fensin, Milwaukee, WI I am married and have a beautiful 18 month old daughter we adopted from China. I really dig hanging out with my daughter watching Sesame Street, playing with her toys and listening to all of the new words she has learned. Trashion materials: Paper, hardware, other found items I transform them into: Jewelry How do you do it? I’ve recently been working mainly in collage, taking magazines, newspapers and junk mail and transforming them into beautiful pendants and earrings. What inspired you to do this and why are you involved in trashion? I’ve always collected magazines for inspiration for my jewelry. I would rip out interesting articles, photos etc. for later use. However later never really came. When we were getting ready for our daughter’s arrival, I started going through the files I had realizing that there were beautiful pieces of jewelry waiting to come out of something that so many would just throw away. I believe that it is my responsibility as a mother to make the world my daughter lives in a more beautiful place, one small way I can do this is to recycle and reuse the paper and junk mail that comes may way. Do you remember the first thing you made using the trashion concept? What was it? Well I’m sure the first thing I made with recycled or upcycled things were the popsicle stick frames and macaroni art in grade school. But the first official trashion piece of jewelry was a ring made out of my grandmother’s broken earring. What are your current projects and what is on the horizon? I am currently working on collage pieces using fashion magazine images, including paperdolls and doll clothes. I would like to create more original artwork by introducing painting to the collage. I think it would be wonderful to have a miniature art work around your neck. Why should people buy handmade, and buy from trashion? I think people should buy handmade items because there is more care going into the creation of the item. The artist or crafter puts a piece of their heart and soul into everything they make. Trashion is just one more step in this process, the artist takes something that had one use and gives it another life reducing the amount of junk in the world. Can you tell us anything about the trunk show?

Tags: strong, trashion, jewelry, beautiful, daughter

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