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Here is a cover for the zine which I am putting together called Brain paste, which should be completed soon.
Photo taken Jan. 2017.
Can anyone ID the Artist? The is a tag on the lower right hand corner which I cannot read.
Designed Date paste production units principle of hydration and insulation, so that the transfer of dates across the conveyor belt to the multi-layered hydration chamber to moisten dates using water vapor, to raise the dates, water content, temperature, to facilitate the process of insulation (remove cores and repression).
Complete the process by the transfer of wet dates across the conveyor belt to the insulation machine, which holds the process of separating the cores and repression Dates, Which produces free with a permanent softer impurities paste and golden color attractive, the production process continues to move the paste of dates to unit harmonies and cooling paste and pumped to the packing machine, to fill a paste of dates in a three bags welding and a variety of weights on demand, starting from 500 grams to 2000 grams. (Usually we offer two types of weights 500 grams and 1000 grams with the machine, while the other requests for different weights, are requested by the added value.).
You can paste an image into a silhoutte easily in photoshop. The tutorial is here : photoshopper27.blogspot.com/2010/11/silhouette-paste-into...
Hell yes, a SWIV Wheat Paste! www.flickr.com/photos/jackchappel/ has a nice collection of SWIV images
The food at the hospital where I stayed a week for treatment for my body's revenge on me for reaching middle age was actually uniformly good. The goods I didn't like were not the fault of the hospital, but me. Here is one such food: seaweed paste. From what I understand, it's used as a topping for rice. (I tend to prefer my rice plain.) Since this was only a condiment, there were many other things to eat in this particular meal. I tasted it and even though the food in the hospital is very mild and doesn't have much salt, it was still too salty for me...
A few weeks before I checked-in, the hospital gathered my dietary needs and likes and dislikes and only once was I served something that was on my "thank you but no thank you" list; it was umeboshi, or pickled plum. It was, however, in a separate container, so all I had to do was to not eat it.
Naomi visited every day and we soon developed a routine where she would show up a couple of hours before lunch, When lunch was served, we went to the lounge and ate there - I had the yummy (really!) hospital food and Naomi ate the food she brought with her.
Recovered from the wreck (1840) of the City of Edinburgh, this jar contained ‘Bloater Fish Paste’, a spread made from herrings or other fish that have been first salted and then smoked. Potted meats and fish pastes were popular for afternoon tea, and exploited an inexpensive method of meat preservation.
Registration: 902.00022
My American flatmate insists on calling this glue paste. Then I found it like this. Talk about labouring the point :)
The forum poster who described burnishing the CPU with thermal paste also wrote that he was trained to lay down thermal paste on the heat exchanger in a spiral pattern, so that any air bubbles could escape. The more I thought about this, the less I liked it. If you pushed a deformable, convex surface into the center of the spiral, perhaps it would chase any air bubbles around and out of the maze as you compressed it. However, the poster described a procedure of placing one edge of the heat exchanger in contact with one edges of the CPU, and gradually lowering it until the two flat surfaces were parallel and separated only by a thin layer of thermal paste. In this context, wouldn't parallel lines of thermal paste, perpendicular to the initially touching edges, release air bubbles better? For the spiral approach to work, I guessed that large air bubbles might burst through spiral lines, and that smaller bubbles must not matter that much.
The spiral approach also had the advantage of more even thermal paste distribution if I squeezed the stuff out of the tube too quickly and ran out before completing the pattern. All the paste would be more or less evenly distributed about the center point of the heat exchanger, so if I just placed this on the CPU, parallel, and pressed straight down, I'd probably get a fairly even distribution of paste. If I drew parallel lines of thermal paste and ran out, the distribution would be lopsided and harder to squeeze out consistently.
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