вторник, 1 ноября 2011 г.

AVG Mobilation for Android tablets is a full-featured security suite

avg mobilation android tablet
AVG has been offering a pair of Android security applications for a while, and both the free and paid versions of its app have proved to be extremely popular with Android users. Now the company has launched a tablet-specific version as well.

Called AVG Mobilation for Android, the new app offers protection from malware, and a handful of other useful functions. Mobilation also provides a backup system which can secure your contacts, call logs, bookmarks, apps, and SMS messages. There's an App Locker, which allows you to password protect any app you've got installed on your Android device, and as if that wasn't enough, AVG has also built spam blocking and and task killing functionality into Mobilation.

Free and Pro versions of AVG Mobilation for Android viagra cialis online pharmacy pharmacy are due soon, but pricing and dates have yet to be confirmed.

AVG Mobilation for Android tablets is a full-featured security suite originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 25 Mar 2011 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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суббота, 29 октября 2011 г.

Facebook Wins!

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A long time ago in an internet far, far away I utilized a thing called MySpace. In the beginning it was good. As time passed it was attacked by spam and too many people taking pictures of themselves in the mirror. It wasn't the worst thing in the world, but there was one feature that caused me to stop frequenting it: My blog. In the early days of me filling the internets with my thoughts, it used to be through MySpace. As my frustration grew with the limited access for outsiders and whole posts being lost in internet space, I eventually came to know Blogger. Then Facebook came along and stole my heart. Why is this important to you? Because, you may not be aware that there have been previous blog posts not on this blog. And, you may not be aware that I have set next Tuesday as the day I delete my MySpace account, denying you the opportunity to ever see those blog posts again (no need to cry about it). For this reason I am including this link for you to check out the previous blog posts before they are gone. I promise that if you read them, your eyes will probably still work afterward.

As an added service to you, I will be posting highlights from the former blog up until next Tuesday. I figured that today I would begin with the blog post that started it all:

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Current mood: curious
What branch of the service did General Mills serve in? I bet that he was involved in preparing meals in some sort of capacity. I also think that he somehow became a 4 star general and utilized that in his future profession as a restaurant critic. We can probably thank him for the whole star grading system. Along with his many magically delicious breakfast cereals. Why isn't this guy featured on the History Channel?

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Current mood: cynical
Is it just me, or do these ads for medicine keep getting more and more ridiculous? "Hi, I have genital herpes" Really, thanks for sharing that with the whole world. I know that you are an actor, but now you will be known as the actor from the herpes commercial. That isn't even the worst. Do you ever listen to all the possible side effects of these drugs? "Some of the side effects of this bowel medication may be worse diarreah, bloody stool, serious itching, and possible death" How many people are thinking that their diarreah is so bad that they are willing to risk death to get their bowels back to normal? And finally what about those erectile dysfunction drugs? The ad says "erections lasting longer than 4 hours should seek immediate medical attention" Their are so many wrong things about that statement. First of all, who sets a timer when the troops start to stand at attention. Secondly, I would think that the possibility of having to go to the emergency room with that problem would be embarassing enough to deter people from using the drug. Can you imagine that conversation:
Receptionist: What are you here for today sir?
Mr. Over 4 hours: I really don't want to say it out loud.
Receptionist: Well then just lean over the counter and whisper your problem to me.
Mr. Over 4 hours: I am trying, but I can't get close enough.
Receptionist: Why, is something in your way? Oh, now I see the problem. Go sit down and put a coat in your lap. The doctor will see you in a minute.

And then I am thinking what the doctor is going to do.
Doctor: O.K. Mr. Over 4 hours, don't worry I have seen this problem before. Go sit in room 4. Nurse, go get the video of the 300 pound guy eating Fritos in the nude for Mr. Over 4 hours to watch in room 4.

вторник, 3 мая 2011 г.

Keep on Keeping on

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Wow...8 days have passed since I last updated the blog. Where does time go? By in large it has been a pretty good couple of days for the boys. Max is doing quite well, and his oxygen needs have been in the mid 30% range. If he can continue to hold this level, we can once again talk about ordering his home vent and start looking forward to the day we can take him home. We have started to do all of the trach care training. It has been going well, and Kate and I have been doing as much of the trach care as we can ever since Max had his surgery. The part of trach training that is not so much fun is all of the talk about worst case scenarios. It is easy to forget how important that man made hole in his neck is to his very survival, and taking care of it and knowing what to do in worst case scenario situations is very important. I guess it was just a reminder of how much longer this journey is going to be. Obviously no parent ever wants their child to need a trach, but if we had to pick between the boys, it would be Max. He does such a good job of letting us do all the care stuff (this includes: cleaning the "stoma" site (the hole in his neck) with a sterile q-tip and soap, then a sterile q-tip and soap, then a sterile q-tip and sterile water, then a sterile q-tip and sterile water, then drying the site with sterile gauze, then placing a sterile sponge under the trach so it doesn't irritate Max's neck so much, then changing the ties that go around his neck to hold the trach in place. This has to be done twice a day), he will even smile at us from time to time. Most kids need to be restrained during this procedure. Max is just such a level headed baby...who is bordering on being a toddler. The docs put him on a diet earlier this week to try and slow down his weight gain...he continues to pack on the ounces regardless. He tipped the scales last night at 16 pounds 10 ounces. We have recently lost 2 of our day nurses that have been taking care of Max for almost 8-months to maternity leave because they decided to have babies of their own...and they didn't even ask us if that was okay. We had been hunting around for a couple of nurses to take care of Max during the day (Ashley and Sara have the night shift covered!!) because it is very important at this stage to have so familiarity in Max's life. Our most recent addition is nurse Megan, and she has been a real answer to prayer because it is very obviously that Max likes her a lot. Maybe a little too much if you ask Max's mom. For those of you keeping score at home, Max's most recent blood gas was 7.40 and 43...which is literally an ideal blood gas, but because of his volatile oxygen requirements, none of the docs are willing to rock the boat with vent changes at this point. The current vent settings are 25 over 12.

We were able to have a little family time at the hospital recently with the trach training classes. Here is a picture of Max being SO serious. I tried to match his seriousness but had a difficult time:


Max is on a high dose of cheap cialis as well...for blood pressure reasons. One of the side effects is sweating, so it is not uncommon for us to get to the hospital to find him hanging out in his crib in just his diaper. A far cry from the 90+ degree, 80% humidity incubators they were in for so many months!! Max also really likes holding on to his G-tube, and I think it looks hilarious. Note the 17 fat roles on just his arm!!


I will use the above picture to identify all of the pieces and parts that make up the "total package" that is Maxwell James Wiersma. The button he is holding in his left hand is the port that goes directly into his stomach for feeding. The rest of the stuff is part of the ventilator setup: the two tubes along side his head are the air and humidity delivered by the ventilator and the other tube is to help in exhaling, the sensor that is covered by Max's right hand is called a "flow sensor" and that detects when Max is taking a breath and that triggers the vent to do its thing, then the multi-colored tube thing that is wrapped in plastic is called a "ballard" and that is how we suction Max out. The trach tube occupies his entire airway, so the natural mucousy stuff that you and I cough up or swallow stays in Max's lungs until we suck it out. The other stuff is just leads for heart rate and respiration monitoring.

No real changes to report with Wes: still crazy, still retching. We are going to try a chiropractor for a couple of weeks and see if that makes any difference for his comfort level before trying the more invasive options to cure the reflux issue. Please join us in praying that this will be the path way towards resolution of this obnoxious, heart breaking issue. Wes has not been gaining weight at nearly as fast a pace as his BIG brother. He weighed 13 pounds 8 ounces earlier this week, which is the same as his weight from two weeks ago. Needless to say, I think it is time to crank the feedings up again, we just don't want to cause him any undue stress.

Wes has also developed a new hair due that looks a lot like a mohawk, or a fauxhawk for the purists. Straight out of the bath his hairs sticks up. Now if it would just curl...


Wes has also developed this desire to lick the side of my face when I am giving him "zerberts" in the bath tub. It is a little odd and Kate finds it really hilarious, so I have added a video of it below:


video

On a somber note, Kate's Grandma Blauwkamp passed away on Monday. She was 94-years old and lived a very full, very happy life. I will never forget way back when I first started dating Kate, I was often doing service calls to the Royal Park condominium complex where Grandma and Grandpa lived. Without fail, I would get a root beer float with Butter Pecan ice-cream every time I stopped by to say "hi." Kate and I later lived in their condo for nearly 4 years after we got married, and it was a fantastic place to begin our lives together. There was a 30+ year age gap between us and all of the neighbors (it is a retirement community where you have to be 55 or older to own on of the condos), but after 3 and a half years, we ended up making some good friends. Kate was sitting with Wes on her lap when she got the call that Grandma B. was in Heaven. After a couple minutes of processing, she looked at Wes and said, "Grandma Great is in Heaven with Grandpa Great" (Grandpa B. passed away 5 1/2 years ago)...Wes grinned from ear to ear. Then Kate said "Grandma Great gets to sing with your Grandma now too." Wes smiled again.

Is Medicine Permitted?

Is order cialis Permitted?

In the 14 Adar issue of Simcha Lerner's Machshovos Zoros ("Outside-the-Box Thinking") there is a very interesting essay which I have excerpted below.



Toward a Halakhic Theory of Medicine



The study of cheap cialis is an important and often enjoyable way to learn about humanity and illnesses but it is also morally dubious. Most people enjoy discovering important details about the workings of the human body, complex diseases from different times and places that inform their health and life expectancies. But because learning about the body involves discovering and repeating uncomfortable facts about bodily functions and human desires, we must ask whether Judaism permits it. Are we allowed to publicly discuss unclean biological and physiological acts merely because someone is sick? For example, Rabbi Shtraussfogel, in his work "Fees for Divine Service," points out that if we discuss sexually transmitted infections, we might come to permit mixed dancing. Also, medicine might teach us that homosexuality is not an illness to be cured and genital herpes is a communicable disease. According to Rabbi Shtraussfogel, medicine serves to inspire. "We do not need tales of death, we need stories of miraculous cures." Rabbi Shtraussfogel's son-in-law, Rabbi Zamdkopf, used to say, "If God wanted there to be Jewish doctors,  He wouldn't have made people sick on Shabbos." Indeed, Rabbi Shtraussfogel used to make sure that he would fall ill only in a town that was at least 51% non-Jewish or non-observant.