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I was always confused at why Apple bothered making a contacts app ; since it was nothing more than a shortcut for what was already inside the contacts tab in phone app. There was no imagination to it! Buzz Contacts is a contacts app that actually useful: it faster, better and looks reaaaally good. What does it do Buzz Contacts puts the traditional iOS contacts system on its head, making it infinitely more useful and faster. Its focus is getting you to contacting your contacts as fast and elegantly as possible, through whichever medium you decide to use: phone, SMS, email or FaceTime. The app lets you choose how to interact with your contacts, the traditional list view and the much mo ; better grid view, which gives you big honking t stanley website iles to quickly select who and how you want to contact. Tap, tap, tap and you ;re already typing or calling away. Why do we like it There a smarter use of groups too or at least, a bigger emphasis on them as it so much easier to access than the backwards Apple way. Buzz Contacts uses a Facebook-style left side slide screen that reveals all your groups stanley flask , once you click on a group, you can organize shortcuts to how you see fit. Call your mom but text your friend It all shown right there. No more dipping through screens or scrolling through stanley website contacts and then waiting to get to what you want. Once you get to know it, Buzz Contacts will become the hub of how you communica Clkv Lazyitis: Super Morrissey Brothers
If you ;re one of the hard core of hospital-goers who chooses to watch whi stanley spain le hypodermics are shove stanley cup d into your arm, here some news that might make you reconsider: the act of watching an injection actually makes it more painful. A team of researchers stanley thermos from St. Hedwig Hospital, Berlin, has been investigating how we react to the pain of shots based on what we ;re looking at, and the results are extremely interesting. In a series of experiments, researchers simulated needle pricks by giving participants a small electric shock on their hand. At the same time, the volunteers were shown videos of a needle pricking a hand, a Q-tip touching a hand, or nothing happening to the hand at all. Across the board, participants who saw a hand being pricked by a needle found the pain of the shock far more intense. Not just that, though: in extra experiments, if participants were told that the Q-tip would cause more pain than the hypodermic, the Q-tip video was associated with higher levels of reported pain. Essentially, seeing something that you ;re primed to think will be painful makes the experience hurt more. The findings are published, approrpiately enough, in the jounral Pain. All of which means that if you look at your jabs, as well as being brave, you ;re being stupid. Do yourself a favor and look away next time you have a shot. [Pain via Scientific American] Image by Andres Rueda under Creative Commons license |
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