LTE 2.0

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devildeac
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by devildeac » October 22nd, 2009, 7:51 am

wilson wrote:
Lavabe wrote:
YmoBeThere wrote:So, we're in the A- range and moving up. One day we'll have an A+.
I don't believe in A+. I believe in EarlJam.
\m/
I don't quite know what any of the above means, but Lavabe's post now stands alongside devildeac's recent post of every smiley as highly unlikely to ever be dislodged from CTN's top 10 posts ever.
I'd like to think that the time I posted the entire Magna Carta is also in that top 10, but I dunno.
I think they are referring to this LTE being 90+% of the DBR LTE and 90%=A- on a grading scale. An A+ will be when LTE 2.0 > LTE 1.0. And yes, the Magna Carta is a classic post ;) :D .
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by TillyGalore » October 22nd, 2009, 7:54 am

Lavabe wrote:I don't believe in giving an A+. There's something wrong about it.
I don't believe in half the crap that Crash Davis believed in BULL DURHAM, but I liked the scene.
I don't believe in the lottery.
I don't believe in...

Hey... sounds like a new thread idea! *-:)
If I could have given a student an A+ I would have as he scored a perfect 100 in our class. But, for the clerkships in medical school you receive either an Honors, High Pass, Pass, or Fail. Though, I guess all my students would be Honors students. Bwahhahahahahaha
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by Lavabe » October 22nd, 2009, 8:50 am

TillyGalore wrote:If I could have given a student an A+ I would have as he scored a perfect 100 in our class. But, for the clerkships in medical school you receive either an Honors, High Pass, Pass, or Fail. Though, I guess all my students would be Honors students. Bwahhahahahahaha
#-o :ymapplause: /:) ~x(
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by Miles » October 22nd, 2009, 9:04 am

CameronBornAndBred wrote:I finally watched "The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou". (Wife got it at store for $6). I wish I had watched it long ago, it was a fun movie.
One of mine and Kelly's favorite movies. I love Bill Murray.
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by bjornolf » October 22nd, 2009, 9:05 am

My father has one of those bridges, but it's not because he had a tooth extracted. One of his permanent teeth just NEVER came in. You can see it in his x-rays, but it just never got the message to come up when the baby tooth fell out. They put in the bridge to keep his teeth from going all crooked.

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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by Miles » October 22nd, 2009, 9:07 am

OZZIE4DUKE wrote:
OZZIE4DUKE wrote:Root canal morning. Ugh. :-q
Rootus interruptus. ~x( As he drilled, he said there were fractures in the tooth below the crown. As he got deeper into the canal, the fracture went all/most the way down the canal and he stopped. He said that even if he completes the procedure, infection would still get into the root and cause major problems, likely within a year. No point in completing (and charging me) for the procedure. If anyone is looking for an honest root canal dentist, I can recommend one.

New plan. The tooth will have to be extracted (next Tuesday) and then I'll have to get a fixed bridge "replacement" for the tooth. Not looking forward to thi$$$ at all. [-x [-x [-x :ympray: :ympray: :blee: :blee: :(( :(( :((
Awww crap Ozzie, I'm sorry to hear all this. I'll be wishing you vibes now and well through your recovery. So for the tooth extraction, do you tough it out and get it done caveman style? I myself believe in unconscious surgical procedures.
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by Lavabe » October 22nd, 2009, 9:18 am

Miles wrote:... do you tough it out and get it done caveman style?
Be careful what you say in front of a physical anthropologist. ;)
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by OZZIE4DUKE » October 22nd, 2009, 9:48 am

Lavabe wrote:
Miles wrote:... do you tough it out and get it done caveman style?
Be careful what you say in front of a physical anthropologist. ;)
I'm certainly not going the Tom Hanks/Castaway style! As for Novocaine or sedation, I don't know - whatever the dentist recommends, and if I have someone to drive me home afterwards. His office is 7 miles from my house, literally at the entrance to the Country Club. Maybe I'll just play 18 when it's over. OK, maybe just 9 =))
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by wilson » October 22nd, 2009, 9:51 am

OZZIE4DUKE wrote:I'm certainly not going the Tom Hanks/Castaway style! As for Novocaine or sedation, I don't know - whatever the dentist recommends, and if I have someone to drive me home afterwards. His office is 7 miles from my house, literally at the entrance to the Country Club. Maybe I'll just play 18 when it's over. OK, maybe just 9 =))
Today's historical/linguistic nugget (Uh oh, is that throaty coming?):
The phrase "bite the bullet," implying a steely, somewhat displeased resolve to get something over with, dates from the Civil War, when, lacking anesthesia, soldiers undergoing amputations were typically given a bullet to bite down on.
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by DukieInKansas » October 22nd, 2009, 9:54 am

BD - This T-shirt is for you!

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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by TillyGalore » October 22nd, 2009, 10:09 am

wilson wrote:
OZZIE4DUKE wrote:I'm certainly not going the Tom Hanks/Castaway style! As for Novocaine or sedation, I don't know - whatever the dentist recommends, and if I have someone to drive me home afterwards. His office is 7 miles from my house, literally at the entrance to the Country Club. Maybe I'll just play 18 when it's over. OK, maybe just 9 =))
Today's historical/linguistic nugget (Uh oh, is that throaty coming?):
The phrase "bite the bullet," implying a steely, somewhat displeased resolve to get something over with, dates from the Civil War, when, lacking anesthesia, soldiers undergoing amputations were typically given a bullet to bite down on.
Cool! I didn't know that. I love learning about the origins of phrases.
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by DukieInKansas » October 22nd, 2009, 10:27 am

DukieInKansas wrote:BD - This T-shirt is for you!

Image
And the white at the end of the phrase is just an ink blot, nothing else. ;)
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by bjornolf » October 22nd, 2009, 10:54 am

Lavabe wrote:
bjornolf wrote:I was watching the History International the other night, and they had a show called something like "The Link". They were talking about some special fossil they found, trying to figure out if it was a lemur or not. Anyway, they had a specialist go to the Duke Lemur Center and examine the lemurs for comparison purposes. I'd never actually SEEN the DLC before, so it was kinda cool to see it. They said that the Duke Lemur Center was one of the largest and most extensive anywhere.

%%-
This fossil, Ida, was discussed earlier this year, as it received a TON of publicity. I just did see a critical discussion of it in either Smithsonian or Scientific American. Will try to find a "link," so to speak. ;)
Now they're saying that Ida WAS a lemur and not related to humans at all.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091021/ap_ ... ial_fossil

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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by bjornolf » October 22nd, 2009, 11:30 am

devildeac wrote: I think they are referring to this LTE being 90+% of the DBR LTE and 90%=A- on a grading scale. An A+ will be when LTE 2.0 > LTE 1.0. And yes, the Magna Carta is a classic post ;) :D .
I had no idea we were within about 1250 posts of the DBR LTE. That's pretty cool. CellR and YBT oughta be able to knock that out this weekend! ;)

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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by Bostondevil » October 22nd, 2009, 12:29 pm

wilson wrote:
OZZIE4DUKE wrote:I'm certainly not going the Tom Hanks/Castaway style! As for Novocaine or sedation, I don't know - whatever the dentist recommends, and if I have someone to drive me home afterwards. His office is 7 miles from my house, literally at the entrance to the Country Club. Maybe I'll just play 18 when it's over. OK, maybe just 9 =))
Today's historical/linguistic nugget (Uh oh, is that throaty coming?):
The phrase "bite the bullet," implying a steely, somewhat displeased resolve to get something over with, dates from the Civil War, when, lacking anesthesia, soldiers undergoing amputations were typically given a bullet to bite down on.
Dude, I know you're the historian and all, but weren't they doing that in the Revolutionary War as well? I'm pretty sure I've seen a bitten bullet from Revolutionary War days in a museum somewhere. Maybe the practice preceeded the common use of the phrase.

The phrase 'Break a leg' comes from understudies wishing ill on the principal actors so that they might get a chance to perform. It became so commonplace for understudies to wish ill upon the performers that they became used to it and therefore superstitious about getting messages of good luck. Now it's everybody, not just the understudies, who tell performers to 'Break a leg'. In France, performers say 'Merde' to one another instead of good luck, for much the same reason. But you all knew that, right?

Other theater superstitions, did you know whistling backstage is considered back luck? In the days before headsets, technical crew workers would communicate cues to one another by whistling. If the actors were whistling backstage it could interfere with the cues. The practice of using whistles to communicate has long been out of fashion. But it's still considered bad luck (and a major faux pas) to whistle backstage.
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by wilson » October 22nd, 2009, 12:39 pm

Bostondevil wrote:Dude, I know you're the historian and all, but weren't they doing that in the Revolutionary War as well? I'm pretty sure I've seen a bitten bullet from Revolutionary War days in a museum somewhere. Maybe the practice preceeded the common use of the phrase.
Technically, there were very few bullets in the Revolutionary War. The prevalence of rifles in that conflict has been wildly overstated over the years, to the point that the legend of the American "rifleman" is almost pure fabrication. Musket balls were far more commonplace, but due to their shape, would not have functioned in this capacity as well as a bullet. Furthermore, military personnel at the time, from the highest general to the lowliest militiaman, would have understood and appreciated the considerable difference between a bullet and a musket ball. It's certainly possible (perhaps probable) that some soldiers "bit the bullet" during the American Revolution, but the equipment simply was not in wide enough use for that phrase to have likely been in wide circulation at the time. Not until the end of the Civil War did most enlisted men possess rifles rather than muskets.
Bostondevil wrote:Other theater superstitions, did you know whistling backstage is considered back luck? In the days before headsets, technical crew workers would communicate cues to one another by whistling. If the actors were whistling backstage it could interfere with the cues. The practice of using whistles to communicate has long been out of fashion. But it's still considered bad luck (and a major faux pas) to whistle backstage.
I did know that about whistling...I was taken to task for that very faux pas once upon a time.
Back in high school, we used to blithely wish each other "Good luck, Macbeth!" before a show (it's also bad luck to utter the name "Macbeth" in a theater).
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by devildeac » October 22nd, 2009, 12:57 pm

Nothing of value here. Just a post to further narrow the gap... ;) :D
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by cl15876 » October 22nd, 2009, 1:02 pm

devildeac wrote:Nothing of value here. Just a post to further narrow the gap... ;) :D
=)) =)) =)) =)) =)) :ymdevil: :ymdevil: :ymdevil: :ymdevil: :-o :-o :-o Nothing of value :-o :-o :-o I sit on the edge of my seat to see what you will come up with next!!!! :D ;) :-bd
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by DukeUsul » October 22nd, 2009, 1:19 pm

Working from home today. Sitting on the couch. I need something on the TV in the background. So I put on my recording of the Duke-NCSU game. Getting psyched for Saturday!
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Re: LTE 2.0

Post by Lavabe » October 22nd, 2009, 2:01 pm

bjornolf wrote:
Lavabe wrote:
bjornolf wrote:I was watching the History International the other night, and they had a show called something like "The Link". They were talking about some special fossil they found, trying to figure out if it was a lemur or not. Anyway, they had a specialist go to the Duke Lemur Center and examine the lemurs for comparison purposes. I'd never actually SEEN the DLC before, so it was kinda cool to see it. They said that the Duke Lemur Center was one of the largest and most extensive anywhere.

%%-
This fossil, Ida, was discussed earlier this year, as it received a TON of publicity. I just did see a critical discussion of it in either Smithsonian or Scientific American. Will try to find a "link," so to speak. ;)
Now they're saying that Ida WAS a lemur and not related to humans at all.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091021/ap_ ... ial_fossil

%%-
The funny thing is, my lecture today was on anthropoid origins and fossil record. I saw that a few minutes before lecturing. Technically, it's an adapoid, a primitive primate in the same major branch of primates as lemurs. It's not an anthropoid, the group that includes monkeys, apes, and humans.
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