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is this weird or what? |
nox Joined: Jan 14, 2006 Posts: 14 From: Romania PM, WWW
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man..this seems to be a huge problem...but my suggestion is to buy a handsfree for it and change it's wire with a 5 meters one..this way you'll be able to use the phone without getting near it
if you can't find something to live for then you better find something to die for! |
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max_wedge Joined: Aug 29, 2004 Posts: > 500 From: Australia PM, WWW
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I feel sick when I can't see my beloved K750
(I think I definitely need to see a psych....)
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goldenface Joined: Dec 17, 2003 Posts: > 500 From: Liverpool City Centre PM |
Where eye patches and then slip the phone in to your pocket
You have whats called Peenineaphobia.
Its a rare condition and affects about 2% of P900 owners. More serious sufferers of this condition have been known to actually trade their P900 in for a disused T300 with a missing joystick and a picture of David Hasselhoff. |
r@9892525343 Joined: Jan 24, 2006 Posts: 4 PM |
When New York City consolidated the boroughs of Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island in 1898, there were grand visions of an efficient and rationally-planned metropolis. Then, as now, a key selling point of consolidating regional government was that poorer areas would be able to share in the region's overall wealth. With access to Manhattan's tax base, the other boroughs were promised the same level of services the central city enjoyed, from street-cleaning to parks to transit. But what happened?
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In 1898, Manhattan had begun achieving success with the most forward-looking waste management program of its time. During the previous four years, Streets Cleaning Commissioner Col. George Waring had stopped dumping the city's garbage in the ocean, instead implementing a radical program that included recycling and composting. Diversion of reusable materials had significantly reduced the waste stream and solved a major regional environmental problem.
Consolidation, however, led to an unfortunate change in the political winds. By forging new coalitions in the outer boroughs, Tammany Hall recaptured the mayor's office. The reformers were out after only a single term. The recycling program was soon scrapped and the city resumed ocean dumping.
As the city's population and waste stream grew in coming decades, the city supplemented ocean dumping with landfills and incinerators. A successful federal lawsuit brought by a coalition of New Jersey coastal cities forced the city to end ocean dumping in 1935. Ambitious plans for new incinerators had to be scaled down during the Great Depression and World War II, so the city's sanitation infrastructure continually lagged behind its needs. Most garbage ended up as landfill for public works projects like Robert Moses' parks and highways.
In an effort to stem the rising tide of garbage it handled, in 1957 the city stopped collecting commercial waste, instead requiring businesses to hire private companies to take their garbage away. This strategy succeeded in diverting some of the waste stream to incinerators and landfills outside the city. But this shift created a business that soon became a mafia cartel that inflated the cost of private garbage collection by up to ten times the reasonable market price. The mob controlled the business until just two years ago, when federal prosecutors finally succeeded in cracking the industry and sending the leading bosses to jail.
By the 1960s, the city was burning almost a third of its trash in its 22 municipal incinerators and over 17,000 apartment building incinerators. Since then, public awareness of the environmental costs of landfilling and incineration have gradually forced the city to shut down its old landfills and incinerators, including those in apartment houses. The last municipal incinerator closed in 1992, leaving only a single waste disposal option for the 14,000 tons of residential and public waste DOS collects each day. Sanitation trucks take the trash to the nearest of the city's marine transfer stations and dump it in waiting barges that carry it across the harbor to the Fresh Kills Landfill.
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haynesycop Joined: Mar 10, 2004 Posts: > 500 PM |
WTF!
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Bambino Joined: Sep 17, 2005 Posts: > 500 From: Clow Kingdom PM |
Quote:
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On 2006-02-15 17:03:47, adramshaw wrote:
ok then, i received my P900 yesterday, and at the time of receiving it and openning it, i felt terrible and sick, and generally awful. I wake up this morning, feeling much better, i have a shower, eat breakfast, all feeling fine, then as soon as i set my eyes upon my P900, i suddenly feel terrible and sick again, i had to lie down for a while, i then left the house, leaving this phone behind, and i came back a few hours ago, and as soon as i saw that phone again, i felt awful, after lying down for 10 minutes, i feel fine, and it seems that whenever i set my eyes upon that phone, i feel awful!!!! This is really going to be a problem!!
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I was also sick reading ur post!
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jack77777 Joined: Apr 11, 2006 Posts: > 500 From: uk/england. PM |
did u get your p900 as a gift ?
15% online - Sony Ericsson - "4 lyf" |
zyexx Joined: Aug 25, 2004 Posts: 127 From: Jamaica PM |
this is like..mad funny, btw, I would just try get it changed or give it to good friend for a while and see if they feel sick or anything, or just put it down for a while like a week or so and see if you still feel the same after.
If you go to church...seek prayer  |
brownlad007 Joined: Jul 22, 2005 Posts: 264 From: The Punjab, Wolverhampton UK. PM |
when i was little i had some game thing and it was this baby disgusting blue colour and everytime i looked at it i felt sick and sometimes even being sick.
so i believe you lad  |
EastCoastStar Joined: Dec 07, 2003 Posts: > 500 From: orlando fl US PM |
sometimes i feel sick playing my PSP, or a ps2 or sumthn besides NES or SNES  |
REO Joined: Nov 21, 2004 Posts: > 500 From: U.S.A. PM |
I've felt the same way any time I'm around a Blokia...hhmmm I meant Nokia.......
iphone rocks... |
zyexx Joined: Aug 25, 2004 Posts: 127 From: Jamaica PM |
hay..u still feeling sick or are you all better....damn haven seen him in a while..wonder if the phone killed him
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adramshaw Joined: Apr 14, 2004 Posts: 51 PM |
aah, don't worry it hasn't killed me, in the end i did actually have to sell the phone, i now have a D500, the sickness started to wear off, but eventually i did just sell the phone, too bulky!! Maybe i'll get the P990i when it arrives :S
I've had too many phones in my life to list! I can't remember some, but i certainly know that in the past 4 years, i've got through about 40.
The shortest time i've had a phone for is... 21 hours. |
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