A 27-year-old man had been suffering frequent headaches and had been falling over frequently for around three years. But when he had a seizure, he headed to the.![]() Look at This Crazy Brain Cyst. A 2. 7- year- old man had been suffering frequent headaches and had been falling over frequently for around three years. But when he had a seizure, he headed to the emergency department. They took an MRI and found THIS. ![]() If you need to get your bearings, the squished brain looking stuff is a squished brain. The black horror is an arachnoid cyst. Internist Jennifer De Longpre at Metro Health Hospital in Michigan spotted it and wrote the case report up for The New England Journal of Medicine. Arachnoid cysts are actually benign: They’re just the sac between the brain and the skull, filled with fluid, often present from birth. But this one was so big it had been causing neurological effects from pressing on the patient’s brain. I emailed 1. 5 and called 7. This story focuses on two technologies: Windows Server Backup and the Diskshadow utility, both of which come standard in Windows Server 2008. They work with a non. As if they hadn’t already grafted themselves onto a significant portion of your own childhood memories (damn your catchy classics, Elton John and Phil Collins), the. The XML C parser and toolkit of Gnome Note: this is the flat content of the web site libxml, a.k.a. gnome-xml "Programming with libxml2 is like the thrilling embrace. ![]() Maria Gisele Matheus, professor of radiology at the Medical University of South Carolina, to answer my very simple question: how severe is this seemingly massive cyst?“This case doesn’t look especially bad,” she said. Oof.“We’ve seen this before, not so extreme like this one,” she said. The patient comes with a headache. Usually, these cysts don’t grow—they stay and do some minor deformities on the bone.”Generally, said Matheus, the brain adjusts to the new pressure shift until symptoms begin to occur, but it doesn’t kill the patient. Her department sees maybe one or two minor arachnoid cysts a week, she said, and cases like this come less than once per year. In the case here, Longpre and her team cut into the skull and opened up the cyst to let the fluid drain. They also installed a drain for the fluid, called a shunt. The treatment didn’t change the cyst’s size, the patient still gets headaches, and doctors now just treat his seizures. Logitech Finally Made a Keyboard Worthy of Its Best Mouse. For years, Logitech’s productivity mice have been among the best, with devices like the MX Master 2. S helping to bring PC and Mac users together thanks to a cool software solution called, Flow which allows users to use the same mice with multiple computers at once. But for a long time, the company never had a keyboard that could deliver the same sort of style and quality its pointers delivered. So despite a pretentious sounding name like Craft (the only thing worse would be to call this thing an artisanal keyboard) and not having mechanical keys that are all the rage among the youths of today, Logitech’s new wireless keyboard is a delightful piece of tech. I’ve only used it for a few days, but its cushioned scissor switches are damn near whisper silent, which is a big plus for people who works next to inconsiderate assholes using keyboards with clackety Cherry Blue switches.(I’m kidding, kind of.) The keys also have a comforting indent and chiclet style layout which makes switching between laptop and desktop keyboards a cinch, even if you’re a Mac. Book user. And the backlighting has a special party trick thanks to its proximity sensor, which makes the keyboard light up whenever you get close. But the absolute best thing about Craft is that when teamed up with another Flow- enabled device like Logitech’s MX Master 2. S mouse, it completely eliminates the need for archaic tech like KVM switches. Controlling multiple computers with the same input devices has never been easier. Logitech Flow even lets you copy and paste things across up to three different machines, and because Flow works over Bluetooth or Logitech’s own wireless dongle, there’s no cords to worry about either. Another nice feature on the Craft is the big dial on the top left. It can do normal stuff like adjust the volume of your computer, but it also works with Microsoft and Adobe software. Now you can use the dial to adjust settings in apps like Photoshop and Powerpoint. It’s the same idea behind the Surface Dial, and it gives you precise, granular control when you want to adjust things like contrast or opacity. The main drawback is that only seven apps are fully supported right now (four from Adobe and three in MS Office), though Logitech says more are on their way. And while important apps like Chrome don’t have any pre- installed controls either, you can create your own dial shortcuts on a somewhat limited basis. But before the fawning goes too far, I must mention that the Craft isn’t perfect. It doesn’t have adjustable legs in back, so people who like a little angle to their keyboard dangle are out of luck. And if you choose to keep the backlighting on, in wireless mode, Logitech says the Craft will only last about a week, which is far less than some of its past wireless keyboard like the Di. Novo Edge. (Turning the backlighting off extends longevity to about a month, but who is going to do that?) However, I do have to give Logitech props for fitting the Craft with a USB- C port for recharging instead of micro USB. It’s helpful nod to the future that a lot of other accessory makers seem to be ignoring. Lastly, there’s the Craft’s price: $2. That ain’t cheap by anyone’s standards, but it’s not that different than a high- quality mechanical keyboard, and the Craft has way more features. The Craft is due out sometime in October.
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