IT Support
Our IT support guy has been in the job since 1979, and never misses an opportunity to pick up a mouse and say "Hello computer" into it, Star Trek-style. Tell us your tales from the IT support cupboard, either from within or without.
( , Thu 24 Sep 2009, 12:45)
Our IT support guy has been in the job since 1979, and never misses an opportunity to pick up a mouse and say "Hello computer" into it, Star Trek-style. Tell us your tales from the IT support cupboard, either from within or without.
( , Thu 24 Sep 2009, 12:45)
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It's spelt "barbarous".
And there's nothing barbaric about it. For any surgery, a medic will prefer to use a local anaesthetic if at all possible: it means you don't have to worry about providing the same pre- and post-op treatments, and it is in any case MUCH safer. Were it possible to do lung transplants with a local, that's what'd be used.
( , Sun 27 Sep 2009, 13:10, 2 replies)
And there's nothing barbaric about it. For any surgery, a medic will prefer to use a local anaesthetic if at all possible: it means you don't have to worry about providing the same pre- and post-op treatments, and it is in any case MUCH safer. Were it possible to do lung transplants with a local, that's what'd be used.
( , Sun 27 Sep 2009, 13:10, 2 replies)
I'd...
personally much prefer to use a rusty spoon for lung transplants - however my intoxicant of choice might be a chair leg.
( , Sun 27 Sep 2009, 14:56, closed)
personally much prefer to use a rusty spoon for lung transplants - however my intoxicant of choice might be a chair leg.
( , Sun 27 Sep 2009, 14:56, closed)
Speaking from bitter personal experience...
Local anaesthetic is SO not adequate for wisdom teeth removal.
( , Sun 27 Sep 2009, 20:38, closed)
Local anaesthetic is SO not adequate for wisdom teeth removal.
( , Sun 27 Sep 2009, 20:38, closed)
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