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| Articles about Geeky |
| | Sexy Geeky Mouse for Nipple Hungry Nerds | | 2008-05-21 13:49:06 | | Nothing against breasts and such but I would plan refuse to press on either of these nipples! Also, I wonder if you could get a driver for Windows Vista?
Your computer just got a whole lot sexier! This working mouse is shaped like a woman, and the "boobs" are waterball click buttons! The Sexy Mouse is [...] | | By: Random Good Stuff | | |
| | Geeky Gifts | | 2008-05-20 20:05:00 | | Now we all like receiving birthday cards. Sure, those paper cards with sweet sappy lines, colorful images and sometimes made with fragrant papers are nice and would melt the heart out of anyone. Birthday cards such as the one pictured here from cardsdirect.com can come for as cheap as $4 a piece. However, if you think that these kind of birthday cards are just to traditional and blah for the | | By: Gadget Reviews and How-Tos | | |
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| Gadgets that a Geeky Girl would want, or already owned? | | 2008-04-14 07:12:56 | | Needless to say, I'm considerably geeky but never nerdy!
Anyhow.
Recently another gadget website posted a gallery of geeky gadgets that they thought women would want, and well... The list only included gadgets that were pink or bedazzled.
With that, GamingAngels.com decided to come up with a list of some cool gadgets that they think any women would love to own. (Which of course, I don't totally agree with.)
Continue reading... | | By: Princess Sabrina - Just memories... | | |
| | Ultra-geeky Josh and the Literatis at Dad's | | 2007-07-20 07:24:00 | | Tsong Joshin an eat-all-you-can dinner with someof the Literatis at Dad's-Kamayan-SaisakiMakati City, PhilippinesNow, someone didn't get his coke!Who was it? We don't know who did it!A sample of Philippine delicacy- grilled gizzard -The Future Governor of Abradiscusses the politics of dancingTsong Josh checks out his fan mail(and he gets a lot of 'em)Tsong's favorite dessert - halo-haloSisig - An All Time Favorite(sizzling pork insides)The Anitokidwith Kamayan's music bandThe leader of the bandserenades Tsong Josh witha heart-breaking rendition of Eric Clapton'sWonderful World TonightTsong: Yeah, I think she's pretty.Sam: Who is pretty, Josh?NOT ME!I'm El Terribly! Meow!Josh: She is!Miss Saisaki - Kamayan's own Lea Salonga!Being polite and all y'all!The face that launched a thousand postsThe future Governor going for his halo-halostir-stir, mix-mix*note the Governor's bodyguards behind him*Did you enjoy the post? Did you find it interesting?You know what to do :) | | By: The AnitoKid Chronikos | | |
| | Thermodynamics in Track and Field and Other Geeky Stuff | | 2007-07-14 16:40:00 | | I like to explore the depths of track and field websites. Geeky, huh? The IAAF website, for instance, has some 62,200 pages (62,400 pages, just 4 hours later) over which I can obsess. While exploring the web pages of our sport's international governing body, I ran across a section titled New Studies in Athletics that I had previously overlooked for some reason.While exploring it I found some easily-digestible summaries of some fascinating track and field research studies. These summaries are so short that even the complex scientific information they contain can be absorbed within a minute or two. Here's one that is so short, I'll just quote it in its entirety:The effects of warm-up and pre-cooling on endurance performance in high ambient temperaturesWednesday 18 April 2007By Sandra Ückert and Winfried JochIt is well established that warm conditions have a detrimental effect on endurance performance. If skin temperature is exceeded by the ambient temperature, heat dissipation is impaired and heat storage is likely to occur. A warm-up, which by definition entails increasing body temperature, is generally considered a vital part of the preparation for competition - including endurance performances in hot weather. On this understanding, the question arises if cooling prior to competition (pre-cooling) might be a better alternative. Twenty subjects performed two laboratory endurance tests in conditions of high ambient temperature and relative humidity. One test followed a 20-minute warm-up and the other a 20-minute pre-cooling procedure. The comparison of results shows that pre-cooling significantly extends the time to exhaustion and slows the increase in both body core temperature and heart rate. The authors conclude that pre-cooling, as opposed to a warm-up, optimises thermoregulatory processes before physical effort in warm conditions.I'd never imagined that a warm-up, as opposed to a hot-weather "pre-cooling" procedure, could be so detrimental to a distance run | | By: Finish Line Pundit: A Track & Field Blog | | |
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