fluidexistence-old
fluidexistence
fluidexistence-old

Is it that you have to take a larger quantity of Lenalidomide pills to equal the once-a-day doses of pomalidomide noted above, does it vary based on individual or was your situation one of brand-name robbery? The answer is, I think any cost could be justified for curing or smothering any oncological impact—but I'm

#updates : VZW released a statement on this, the ubiquitous "between-the-lines" message was clear—"It's not secure enough". Whether or not this is a groundless slight bound by the sentiments of the alliance which VZW, AT&T and Sprint had forged previously for an ecommerce mobile solution isn't known; what is proven

If it's only four, that depresses the hell out of me. I think anyone over the age of 25 gets it... I'm 32, I got it no problem. My 15 year-old stepson? He's another story. Ingrate.

In related news, cancer has been found to suppress—and in some cases cure—cancer. However, scientists have not yet found a palatable dosage or recombinant form which is not lethal to the patient.

Well, I can honestly say that was not an expectation, but thanks Tony!

Each aging moment makes you realize the process itself is inescapable.

I remember that night. That Landcruiser was sweet, and almost won me over in acquiring one as an offroad beater. I did not get starred that night. That is all.

Lisa Berlini trumps Kevin Arnold. She approves, but with smug reservation.

I tip my clown mask to you, sir.

It's possible that Dell would take that avenue, but not likely—look at all of Dell's acquistions since 2008. Everyone has doubled down in Enterprise and Services, and the PC business is low-margin, cutthroat.

Here here. This smacks of what used to make it so fantastic in its spartan layout. Fuck the "Web 2.0" noise; most of us who once resided here aren't looking to Giz for the end-all, be-all media experience. Just geekitude with panache and the occasional merited f-bomb.

Here here. This smacks of what used to make it so fantastic in its spartan layout. Fuck the "Web 2.0" noise; most of us who once resided here aren't looking to Giz for the end-all, be-all media experience. Just geekitude with panache and the occasional merited f-bomb.

...one of the few things they make that's worth a damn on the consumer level, sure, that's a defensible statement. Competition's fiercer than it was in Dell's hey-day, and Alienware ain't what it used to be. Server-wise, they're significantly better in the mid-range groups (R810's, R710's, etc), and you've also got

That's because that pinky is camoflaged with peanut butter and banana goodness. Nobody ever suspects the fat guy...

Ok, so they're not capping it, but I wonder—is throttling based on a specific criterion grounds for violation of TOS or some form of discrimination?

@skyegrl: Now that's a credible source. My mom's cat's original owner's third cousin knew a guy who could fly. Honest to goodness.

Ahem, as a bearer of his ancestor's name, let's give a LITTLE credit to that drunken Scotsman who revised the design well enough that the notoriety garnered him a place in measurable modern history under the gauge of wattage.

@Alex Brewer: Sure. It's the forearm/wrist rig up where you have the cord/chain/rope attached to the center of a bar with weights/resistance attached to the cord/chain/rope. It's more of a "twist" machine, since the goal is to wind it up and wind it back, but it's also called a wrist-rolling machine.

@SacredByte: I get that, but it would definitely have to be powder with no residual ice beneath, unless you had the Lifehacker zip tie hack for some margin of traction. Wet snow would work for traction, but it'd kinda defeat the purpose and practicality.

I'm assuming this could only be really used for either a dusting of powder or a place where no ice collects—I'm looking out at the ~3' we have outside, and recalling shoveling some of that as well as the ice that's rampant throughout the landscape, and that bike would last about a minute before it was spinning its