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Golbez posted:I have a routine dentist appointment tomorrow and have forgotten all the rules, how long should I go without eating before the appointment? I have never heard of these rules. Neither my dentist nor his receptionist have ever said anything about not eating beforehand, although I usually brush right before I go in case my breath is awful.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 16:27 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 06:10 |
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Are you being put under any sort of general anesthetic? If not don't worry about it, just brush your teeth like AlphaDog said, as a courtesy to the poor suckers who have to deal with your mouth after you've gone long enough without dental care to forget all the rules :P
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 16:46 |
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Flossing is probably a good idea also. If you get a fluoride treatment you should not eat or drink anything for 30 minutes after, but they should tell you that afterwards anyway.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 17:19 |
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I've also found that brushing your teeth really well in the week/few days leading up to the appointment usually shortens the amount of time they spend doing the routine cleaning. Unless of course you already have nasty unkempt teeth.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 17:30 |
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A friend of mine is helping me out with getting a job. He's given me a few email addresses that I need to send my resume to but I'm wondering how a cover letter is better handled. Should my cover letter be the body of the email, or should I stick it in front of my resume in the same pdf with just a quick sentence in the email explaining what I've sent them?
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 18:34 |
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Teeter posted:A friend of mine is helping me out with getting a job. He's given me a few email addresses that I need to send my resume to but I'm wondering how a cover letter is better handled. Should my cover letter be the body of the email, or should I stick it in front of my resume in the same pdf with just a quick sentence in the email explaining what I've sent them? I usually make my cover letter the email.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 18:36 |
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Teeter posted:A friend of mine is helping me out with getting a job. He's given me a few email addresses that I need to send my resume to but I'm wondering how a cover letter is better handled. Should my cover letter be the body of the email, or should I stick it in front of my resume in the same pdf with just a quick sentence in the email explaining what I've sent them? I usually send it with the resume, and just say "Enclosed please find: cover letter, resume", like sending a business letter. I don't know if it's the "right" way, but it's worked in the past.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 19:12 |
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Teeter posted:A friend of mine is helping me out with getting a job. He's given me a few email addresses that I need to send my resume to but I'm wondering how a cover letter is better handled. Should my cover letter be the body of the email, or should I stick it in front of my resume in the same pdf with just a quick sentence in the email explaining what I've sent them? Recent job hunting tips suggest that your application is more likely to be read on a blackberry or other smartphone, so cover letters are best in the body of the email to read without downloading an attachment.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 19:26 |
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Teeter posted:A friend of mine is helping me out with getting a job. He's given me a few email addresses that I need to send my resume to but I'm wondering how a cover letter is better handled. Should my cover letter be the body of the email, or should I stick it in front of my resume in the same pdf with just a quick sentence in the email explaining what I've sent them? Oldie but goodie. Follow this advice and you're miles ahead of the competition: http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/sfo/101949754.html
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 19:33 |
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I'm obsessed with finding some sort of music video I've seen years ago. If anyone knows this video, please let me know and put my mind at ease. Here's what I remember. * It's somewhat old, looks like something that was played on TV in the 70's and recorded by someone. * It's a nordic song, or at least the title of the video reminded me of a nordic language. * There are two guys on stage, wearing suits. One of them is doing something that resembles dancing. He (or maybe the other one) also plays a Kazoo. The other just sings * And the most "memorable" part, out of nowhere a guy walks through the stage holding a glass pane. He puts his open mouth against it and blows on it, making him look like a blowfish or something. I don't know why this video suddenly came to me. I can't remember how I found it. I have some recollection that those guys were performing a folk song, maybe finnish or swedish.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 20:35 |
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ChubbyEmoBabe posted:Oldie but goodie. Follow this advice and you're miles ahead of the competition: (I would trash the resume of that hiring guy in the CL post because he thinks apostrophes are required to pluralize words. And he's in charge of hiring marketers and copywriters? )
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 20:42 |
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Niger. I was listening to the BBC today and they pronounced it nee-JSHER. I had always pronounced it NYE-jurr. Which one is more accepted?
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 20:49 |
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I've always used NYE-jurr too and I think it's more common in the West, but it's wrong. http://www.slate.com/id/2085735/ quote:Well, it's not "NYE-jur." Explainer used this pronunciation when he called Niger's embassy this morning and was vigorously chided by the receptionist. Those in the know use the French-sounding "nee-ZHER," and emphasize the second syllable so the word makes an approximate rhyme with "Pierre." edit: By the West what I really should have said is non-French speaking countries.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 20:50 |
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AlphaDog posted:
The United States Post Office Postal Inspectors take mail fraud very seriously (really!), so if there's the slightest chance that your eBay seller has intentionally defrauded you, I would definitely get the Postal Inspectors involved. If he used the U.S. mails to defraud people, he's their meat. Couldn't hurt, might help.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 20:57 |
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randyest posted:Good advice in general but also please consider checking your grammar and spelling carefully. Gross errors and adding unnecessary apostrophes when trying to pluralize is a big turn off for many people. Just keep in mind that the resume reviewer, at first, is just skimming letters and resumes looking for reasons to trash as many as possible to narrow the field. Be perfect. True. Those things are paramount. I just stress cover letters because people seem to think they are ok to C&P as some form letter or wherever when the opposite is true. It's ok to kind of have the same things to say about yourself in a cover letter but for the most part you should click compose and start typing, then attach resume when done.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 21:05 |
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ChubbyEmoBabe posted:Oldie but goodie. Follow this advice and you're miles ahead of the competition: Nice link, cheers! I've got loads of students who are totally loving hopeless at writing cover letters and CVs in English. They just don't understand that it's not a formula and that every single person doesn't get equal consideration.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 21:11 |
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In the UK, how much it cost an employer to hire 1 person on minimum wage for 1 month at 35 hours a month, including NI contributions and PAYE?
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 21:13 |
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the posted:Niger. nee-JSHER. It's French. People from Nigeria are called Nigerians, people from Niger are Nigeriens. If you pronounced the country "NYE-jurr", then Nigerian and Nigerien would sound almost identical.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 21:29 |
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My girlfriend and I are considering marriage. She's currently in the country on a student visa, but she's done with school in just a few months. I'm dealing with the local INS office, but can someone tell me if she'd be allowed to stay in the country while the paperwork for the whole thing is processed? Aside from the government's website, are there any good sources of information for the process? A google search brings up websites for law offices.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 21:52 |
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KittenofDoom posted:My girlfriend and I are considering marriage. She's currently in the country on a student visa, but she's done with school in just a few months. I'm dealing with the local INS office, but can someone tell me if she'd be allowed to stay in the country while the paperwork for the whole thing is processed? Maybe try and see if her embassy is any help? I would think they would have some answers, or at least know where to look.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 22:14 |
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KittenofDoom posted:My girlfriend and I are considering marriage. She's currently in the country on a student visa, but she's done with school in just a few months. I'm dealing with the local INS office, but can someone tell me if she'd be allowed to stay in the country while the paperwork for the whole thing is processed? Disclaimer: I am in Australia. I moved here with my fiance, and had a working holiday visa which allowed me to stay in the country for up to one year. In this time, I applied for a permanent partner visa, and as part of that process I got what's called a bridging visa, which allowed me to stay here for up to two years while they processed my paperwork, during which I could work as well. I imagine it would be very similar in the US.
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 22:36 |
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I don't know why I was thinking about this as I was riding my bike, but merely the act of doing something that LOOKS like a crime illegal? Like say, "stealing" your own bicycle? I once saw a video of someone doing that on youtube, to demonstrate how easy it was to steal a bicycle and how few people would try to stop it (no one said or did anything to him while he was going through the chain with a hacksaw).
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 22:42 |
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Pennant posted:In the UK, how much it cost an employer to hire 1 person on minimum wage for 1 month at 35 hours a month, including NI contributions and PAYE? Depends on the employee's personal allowance, if they are only working that job then nothing as 35 hours per month is below the threshold for NI. You can us the calculator here though http://listentotaxman.com/index.php
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# ? Sep 7, 2011 22:42 |
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KittenofDoom posted:My girlfriend and I are considering marriage. She's currently in the country on a student visa, but she's done with school in just a few months. I'm dealing with the local INS office, but can someone tell me if she'd be allowed to stay in the country while the paperwork for the whole thing is processed? I think (though I'm not 100% sure) that if you get married before her visa is up, then you can just file an I-130 Petition for an Alien Relative form. If you plan to wait to get married until after her visa expires, then I think she will need a K-1 visa, and I'm not sure if you can use an I-539 Application To Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status to change her visa to a K1 or if she'll have to return to her home country and start the very extremely tiresome process from scratch with an I-129F Petition for Alien Fiancé(e) form. If it turns out that she has to go back home to get the K1 visa (and keep in mind I don't know this for sure), you're better off just marrying in a hurry and then filing an I-130. I'm working on getting a K1 visa for my fiance now and it's a bitch, let me tell you. A huge hassle and up to 9 months (or more?) of waiting. Your best bet is to look at the USCIS website. It can be a bit dense and confusing, so a really great website I recommend is Visajourney.com. There are step-by-step guides there for everything you need, and forums in case you have any questions. Your situation is not at all uncommon, so I'm sure you'll be able to find the answers you need. Florida Betty fucked around with this message at 01:13 on Sep 8, 2011 |
# ? Sep 8, 2011 01:11 |
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Is there any liquid or solid that glass can't safely hold besides to the point where heat or extreme cold would damage the glass?
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 02:20 |
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Dudebro posted:Is there any liquid or solid that glass can't safely hold besides to the point where heat or extreme cold would damage the glass? Hydrofluoric acid
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 02:25 |
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Most liquid gases require special dewars.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 02:26 |
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Dudebro posted:Is there any liquid or solid that glass can't safely hold besides to the point where heat or extreme cold would damage the glass? Certain acids and bases (hydrofluoric acid, sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide come to mind). Also, glass etching cream is composed of dilute Barium Sulfate, Sulfuric Acid, Sodium Bifluoride, and Ammonium Bifluoride, I would assume that a more concentrated form would not be safely held.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 02:30 |
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So what kind of containers would one put these various acids and bases in? I don't remember if I used any special containers in high school or even university labs.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 02:36 |
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Dudebro posted:So what kind of containers would one put these various acids and bases in? I don't remember if I used any special containers in high school or even university labs. Plastics like PTFE http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polytetrafluoroethylene are used to contain some super acids like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluoroantimonic_acid - Which is a pretty strong acid. Edit: also glass sometimes has trouble holding Superfluids: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FudzqfpLLs SlightButSteady fucked around with this message at 02:52 on Sep 8, 2011 |
# ? Sep 8, 2011 02:48 |
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I'm going to the Minneapolis area on business next week. What rush hour traffic on US-169 like?
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 03:05 |
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When I moved into my apartment, someone got me a Britta pitcher as a housewarming gift. I promptly filled it up with water, set it in the fridge, and forgot about it, opting to just drink tap water instead. A little over a year later, I notice it in the back of my fridge, pull it out, and dump it out. I didn't expect the water to be good any more, and it's kinda slimy, with grey mucus-y looking stuff floating in it. I figure it's some sort of mold, scrub the thing out with bleach, and put it in my cupboard. What was living in my unused water pitcher? I'd figure that pretty much anything would have to eat something, or photosynthize, maybe. However, all that this thing has gotten is cold, water, and time.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 03:54 |
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Gravity Pike posted:When I moved into my apartment, someone got me a Britta pitcher as a housewarming gift. I promptly filled it up with water, set it in the fridge, and forgot about it, opting to just drink tap water instead. A little over a year later, I notice it in the back of my fridge, pull it out, and dump it out. I didn't expect the water to be good any more, and it's kinda slimy, with grey mucus-y looking stuff floating in it. I figure it's some sort of mold, scrub the thing out with bleach, and put it in my cupboard. My money would be on cross-contamination from other items in your fridge. Likely some other food items spread bacteria or fungus and given the time frame, had enough time to grow a colony.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 03:57 |
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edit: wrong thread
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 09:06 |
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Why do some states have "highway patrol", and some have state police? Do states with highway patrols only use them for guarding highways, or is the difference in name only, and the highway patrol outfits do all the normal police stuff (detectives, undercover operations, SWAT, etc.) as well as being on the highways? Probably a very stupid question, but something I've always wondered.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 10:06 |
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Mike Tysons CARFAX posted:I'm looking for a part time college job and came across this on craigslist. I'm not necessarily interested in the job (whatever the gently caress it is) but are these things legit, or are they just spam? TremendousMajestic posted:Yeah, door to door sales, possibly to businesses. I had a friend who answered one of these once and sold lovely American flags and statuettes and stuff like that to little convenience stores. Thank god he finished his degree.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 10:50 |
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I have a new Wacom Cintiq drawing tablet, which acts sorta like a monitor as well, but my PC can only handle one monitor at a time. The manual was very clear that I should never ever dis/connect monitor cables while the PC is on, but my tech friend says he does it all the time and it's never caused problems. Is he an idiot playing with fire, or is Wacom just covering its rear end in the remote offchance that something might happen? Having to shut down and reboot every time I want to use the tablet is pretty annoying, I'd rather skip that step if I can get away with it.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 11:09 |
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Is there a page where you can find whether a first name usually belongs to a man or a woman? I live in Europe now and I just have no clue when I receive emails how to reply. I felt like an rear end when I called Maxime Madame last week and now I'm a little stuck on Rudi (he's from the Netherlands, so he's most likely a guy right?). Now I'm just putting the names in GIS and seeing what comes up and I've also found this but does anyone know of something better?
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 15:16 |
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I've disconnected and connected monitors from powered up PCs multiple times a day for 14 years now and the worst that's ever happened is multi-monitor setups occasionally losing their settings in windows.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 15:16 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 06:10 |
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Gravity Pike posted:When I moved into my apartment, someone got me a Britta pitcher as a housewarming gift. I promptly filled it up with water, set it in the fridge, and forgot about it, opting to just drink tap water instead. A little over a year later, I notice it in the back of my fridge, pull it out, and dump it out. I didn't expect the water to be good any more, and it's kinda slimy, with grey mucus-y looking stuff floating in it. I figure it's some sort of mold, scrub the thing out with bleach, and put it in my cupboard. Bacteria. Just plain ol' bacteria. There are bacteria everywhere, and this is the reason you're not supposed to store jugs of unsterilized water in unsterilized containers in your basement for Armageddon for long periods of time; the bacteria that are present in the water and on the interior surface of the jug/Brita water pitcher will happily colonize. Bacteria don't photosynthesize, and they can live at low temperatures. Even at your fridge's below-40-degrees-F temperatures, you can still eventually get bacterial food spoilage from the kinds of bacteria that are happy at below-40-degrees-F. So the fact that it was cold and dark wouldn't signify, if neither the water nor the container was sterile when it went in. As for what they eat, your tap water, when it comes out of the faucet, isn't sterile distilled water; it still contains other microorganisms and chemicals that are what the bacteria can feed on, and then the water pipes themselves, both city-maintained in the ground and in your house, contribute their load of microorganisms and chemicals. There is a coating of bacterial slime living on the inside of all water pipes everywhere, and inevitably some of them break off and go along for the ride into your Brita water pitcher. I hope I have brightened your day now.
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# ? Sep 8, 2011 15:27 |