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Author: cnsneakers79cnsneakers79
Date: May 15, 2008 19:40
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Author: D.F. MannoD.F. Manno
Date: May 15, 2008 18:32
An often-asked question here at Bedlam by the Schuylkill is "Are you
hearing voices?" [1] I haven't heard anybody come up with anything but
variations on the now-trite "Yes, you're talking to me, aren't you?" I'd
like to come up with something new. Any suggestions?
Thanks.
--
D.F. Manno | dfmanno@ mail.com
[1] They don't ask me anymore after the voice in my head told me to say no.
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Author:
Date: May 15, 2008 18:10
Where, exactly is Smithereens, anyway?
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10 Comments |
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Author: Anny MiddonAnny Middon
Date: May 15, 2008 16:27
What's the best way to store prescription drugs to prolong their life? I'm
specifically interested in storing Darvocet and Percocet. (OK, really the
generic versions of both.)
I got prescriptions for them when I had kidney stones a couple months ago
and took only a couple tablets. I'm a bit paranoid now about waking up in
the middle of the night with another attack of kidney stones and would like
to have the meds around just in case.
Stored under best conditions, how long will they be effective?
Anny
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Author: Dover BeachDover Beach
Date: May 15, 2008 13:25
This topic may not be of general interest, but as a former teacher, I
find it raises my hackles. The gist is that college instructors resist
having their lectures videotaped because then the students won't come to
class. I stood many, many times in front of a classroom wondering what
the hell we were all doing there and shouldn't there be some more
contemporary way to teach? So I have little sympathy for the faculty.
The Lectures Are Recorded, So Why Go to Class?
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG
When video recordings of Ravi Janardan's computer-science course at the
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities first went online, the students
loved it. Instead of dragging themselves out of bed for the 8 a.m.
lectures, many started skipping classes and watching the recordings
instead.
"Personally I was not too happy about it," says Mr. Janardan, who
complained to administrators. And he wasn't the only professor
concerned. "There were a lot of howls of protest about it. People were
not happy."
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14 Comments |
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Author:
Date: May 15, 2008 07:19
I just saw one of those fun facts that says there are 430,000 deaths
each year due to nicotine, none "attributable" to marijuana. But
wouldn't smoking pot have the same conraindications as tobacco? Or is
it smoked in sufficiently smaller quantities that emphysema and other
complications are unlikely to result? If so, would this change if
marijuana were legalized.
--
Opus the Penguin
That is the thing that made it memorable, well to the extent it was
memorable, as I can't remember much more than that. - Xho
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9 Comments |
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Author: Scour Old Cereal BowlsScour Old Cereal Bowls
Date: May 15, 2008 06:59
Does anyone know how the shuffle function on car stereos work? My car
stereo takes Mp3 CDs. I have a CD with about 200 MP3s on it. It's not
organized in any particular way with files classified in albums or put into
folders or anything. However, the player when it's in Shuffle mode doesn't
seem all that random.
For example, it recently has started about half of the time on Track 77.
It then generally plays a random song, but within the first 3 or 4 songs
after that, it will play one of three or four particular songs, which
aren't related in any way that I can tell, and don't have track numbers
which are related to each other, as far as I can tell, such as being
adjacent on the disc, or all ending in 0, or anything like that.
I typically listen to this CD only on short trips, so I'll only play around
5-10 songs at a time, so this level of repetition seems unlikely to be the
result of just a quirk of rolling the dice.
Any ideas how it's choosing what songs to play?
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Author: General SpecificGeneral Specific
Date: May 15, 2008 05:05
At the turn of the century there was much speculation as to how we
would reference the years. My 9-Year-Old son just said two thousand
and seven referring to last year.
Is that it? Did we miss the opportunity to say "aught-five"?
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29 Comments |
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Author: General SpecificGeneral Specific
Date: May 15, 2008 05:01
Viral Video - clip content which gains widespread popularity through
the process of Internet sharing
It started with the Star Wars Kid and Chocolate Rain has been viewed
more than 20 Million times. These things are "cute", except for "the
one".
It was just name-dropped in another post, but I will reference the
evil clip as "Plural Females Single Chalice".
I heard references to this clip on Morning Shock Radio and I ignored
it. Then I started to see references everywhere. I was in a suite in
the Borgatta and saw it mentioned in Esquire Magazine.
So I gave in and looked it up. Gag!
I think it says bad things about society that such a thing would be so
widespread.
As for me, I want to believe that it's fake. People really don't do
such things. Jurassic Park looked real too...
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