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We had to make an important item in our life into a cartoon. So i chose my cell phone because honestly i cant live without my cell phone. I always text on it so i made the background a pic of a text. I was texting my Boyfriend Donny Malone when this picture was taken.
breast cancer cell, fixed and dehydrated.
Courtesy of wadah mahmoud
Image Details
Instrument used: Inspect Family
Magnification: 5,000
Voltage: 2 kV
Spot: 2.5
Working Distance: 12.4
Detector: SE
It has been a week already, it is still on its 2 of 77 - still updating, I keep it charging with full battery. What should I do!!!
This is the old mercury cell building that Georgia-Pacific used. It's contaminated with mercury and will be demolished as part of an interim cleanup project.
(Photo courtesy of the Port of Bellingham.)
Cell 3, I normally head straight down below to the interesting stuff, on this occasion I thought I'd give centre stage to the impressive lifting gear. I guess this would have been used to lower engines down into the test cell below.
Cell phones are cell phones and nothing else. This saying is old now. Cell phones are much more than just a talking and listening machine. for more detal visit recyclingoldphones.blogspot.in/2012/04/buy-new-cell-phone...
An animal cell is a eukaryotic cell that contain various membrane-bound organelles. These cells tend to be larger than the cells of bacteria, and have developed specialized packaging and transport mechanisms that may be necessary to support their larger size.
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The "teens don't need a cell phone until they're driving or moved out" is an interesting idea, and I understand where it's coming from. Kidssurvived for years without cell phones, and they become sort of a social crutch... it's easy to become addicted to texting, which isn't best for the phone bill OR social interaction with peers. I am, however, a firm beliver in the expression "everything in moderation and nothing in excess.I'm not so uptight as to deny my child a cell phone until age sixteen, provided he/she can handle the responsibility (which includes keeping track of it, taking good care of it, and making sure they do not go over their minutes or texts each month). As long as I have that trust in each of my children, there is no need to deny them what has almost become a staple in today's teenage society. If they mess up, then they deal with the consequences: they pay for each text or minute they go over their limit, and Mom and Dad will buy them a new phone once every two years when the contract expires... if they ruin their phone before then, they pay for a new one themselves or they go without.My husband and I do set a 500 text a month limit on our kids' phones as long as we're the ones footing the bill... and believe me, that's not a popular decision among my kids, but they deal. The reason? First of all, money, but second of all, we don't want our kids to have their noses buried in their phones all the time. My daughter's friend sends over 10,000 texts a month. 10,000! That's ridiculous. We just don't want our kids to learn to place too much importence on their phone. Above all, it is just a THING, after all