Strange Eons 3.3 for Mac can be downloaded from our website for free. The actual developer of this free Mac application is Strange Eons. The most popular version of the tool is 3.3. The program is included in Developer Tools. Commonly, this program's installer has the following filename: strange-eons-osx-j6-b3305.zip. MAC OS Is Infected' pop-up scam: WARNING! MAC OS is infected with Viruses and other malicious applications. Viruses must be removed and system damage repaired. It is necessary to Call Apple Support 1-844-658-5859 and follow Virus removal procedure immediately, please proceed. If you leave this site your Mac OS will remain damaged. The young healer girl is accused of witchcraft after a strange disease outbreak in the town. Can the girl prove her innocence and find a real source of the epidemic? And who is this mysterious sorcerer who appeared at the same time with the disease? How can I upgrade or 'hack' an incompatible Intel Mac to run OS X 10.8 'Mountain Lion'? Is it even possible? As noted elsewhere within EveryMac.com's Mountain Lion Q&A, Mountain Lion entirely drops support for many 'older' Macs, some of which were sold as new only a little over three years ago.
WHAT IS MAC (MYCOBACTERIUM AVIUM COMPLEX) AND HOW IS IT DIAGNOSED AND TREATED?
- Formerly known as 'atypical mycobacteria', 'atypical TB', or 'atypical AFB' and currently as 'nontuberculous mycobacteria' or 'NTM'. NTM includes all types or species of mycobacteria (including MAC) other than the germ of tuberculosis (TB).
- Related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) but it is not TB (tuberculosis).
- NTM includes a number of different species, but the most common one causing chronic lung disease is MAC.
- MAC is not spread person to person like Mtb. MAC is not contagious.
- MAC lung disease seen in HIV negative (non-AIDS) patients is a chronic lung infection and early-on is often misdiagnosed as chronic bronchitis or recurrent pneumonia.
- MAC Lung Disease is acquired from the environment (soil, air, natural waters, tap water, etc.)
- Scientists and physicians who have studied MAC believe people who develop MAC lung disease become infected because of a defect in the structure or function of their lungs (especially a disease called bronchiectasis) or in their immune systems.
- Damaged lung tissue can result from previous TB, heavy smoking, and a breathing tube disease called bronchiectasis.
- Bronchiectasis is a breathing tube (bronchial) disorder characterized by excessive mucus production, cough, and susceptibility to certain infections such as MAC or infection caused by bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
- Disease in men commonly relates to smoking while disease in women (non-smoking) usually relates to bronchiectasis.
- The average age of patients with MAC lung disease in men is 55 years and 67 years in women.
- Men are more likely to have cavitary MAC (holes in their lungs). Women are more likely to have non-cavitary, nodular MAC.
- Diagnosis of MAC lung disease usually requires:
- Medical history with records of symptoms:
- Cough, sputum production, shortness of breath
- Loss of appetite (anorexia is the medical term) weight loss
- Severe fatigue or tiredness with inability to perform daily tasks
- Rarely coughing up blood (hemoptysis is the medical term)
- Fever, night sweats
- Chest x-ray (a picture of your lungs internally)
- High resolution CT scan (HRCT) (similar to an x-ray but a more detailed picture)
- Sputum culture – several sputum cultures are usually performed. Your specimen coughed from your lungs is examined under a microscope (AFB smear) and also placed on special media to grow mycobacteria (AFB culture).
- Bronchoscopy – may be necessary in some cases (especially if you can not cough up sputum) but not all, and involves putting a tube down into your lungs to obtain specimens for culture.
TREATMENT OF MAC LUNG DISEASE REQUIRES A MULTI-DRUG REGIMEN (MORE THAN ONE DRUG).
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- MAC is resistant to ordinary antibiotics.
- Combination of 3 drugs (all FDA approved)/dosages are based upon your clinical history, age, weight, and symptoms.
- Clarithromycin (Biaxin) or Azithromycin (Zithromax)
- Rifampin (Rifadin) or Rifabutin (Mycobutin)
- Ethambutol (Myambutol)
- The combination of medicines is given until no more MAC germs can be grown by culture of your sputum for 1 year. Average treatment period is about 15-18 months.
- Monthly sputum cultures are performed while you are on therapy and periodically when you finish your therapy to be sure your MAC is gone.
- The 3-drug treatment may be given 3 times weekly (preferably Monday-Wednesday-Friday) or daily.
- Data from previous treatment trials tells us that most patients (approximately two-thirds) who have no previous treatment of their MAC and who can tolerate the appropriate medicines will get better and be 'cured' of their MAC lung disease.
- Patients who have failed a prior drug regimen of > 6 months for their MAC are more likely to fail the standard drug regimen (almost 50%).
- Patients who take the 3-drug regimen for less than 1 year with negative cultures are more likely to relapse with disease with their same MAC strain.
- Patients who fail therapy after taking the 3 medicines are usually required to take additional medicines. Injectables which may be useful include:
- Streptomycin or Amikacin
- Amikacin can also be given by inhalation (aerosolized) and is less toxic when given in this manner.
- Monthly laboratory blood tests that include a complete blood count and comprehensive metabolic panel (CBC and CMP) to check for possible damage to blood cells, kidneys, and liver.
- Most common potential side effects/complications of medicines:
- Clarithromycin : Loss of appetite, diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, abnormal liver function tests (blood tests), bitter taste, mild allergic rash.
- Azithromycin : Diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, abnormal liver function tests (blood tests), decreased hearing, tinnitus (sounds in ears).
- Rifampin : Nausea, vomiting, liver damage, decreased platelets (cells which clot blood), body secretions (urine primarily) are orange/red.
- Rifabutin : Nausea, vomiting, decreased platelets, decreased white blood cells (cells that fight infection), eye pain (uveitis), diffuse muscle and joint aches, skin pigmentation (yellow).
- Ethambutol : Decrease in vision (especially color vision), blurriness.
- Streptomycin : Kidney damage, sounds in ears (tinnitus), hearing loss, poor balance, numbness, tingling, muscle damage, fever, headache.
- Amikacin : Kidney damage, tinnitus, hearing loss, poor balance.
If you experience these or other additional problems, you should discuss them with your physician. - Amikacin by inhalation (aerosolization) decreases toxicity to above adverse events.
Provide a list of your current medicines to your physician so he can determine any possible contra-indications.
A Strange Disease Mac Os X
PULMONARY FUNCTION TESTING
What is a pulmonary function test?
Pulmonary function testing is a way to measure your breathing capacity and, therefore is an objective measure of how well you are breathing. There are several types of breathing tests that can be done during pulmonary function testing including spirometry, lung volumes and diffusing capacity. A technician will explain what you need to do during each test and will coach you during the tests to help you give a good effort. All breathing tests require more than one measurement so that you will be asked to make more than one effort for each test. Spirometry is the most commonly performed breathing test. It requires you to take in as deep a breath as possible and then blow out the air in your lungs as forcefully and fully as possible. Spirometry, therefore, measures how much air you breathe in and out and how fast you breathe air in and out. Spirometry is frequently performed at baseline and then after you have inhaled a bronchial dilating drug (breathing medicine) to evaluate the effect of medication on your breathing function. As with all pulmonary function tests, it is very important that you make a maximal effort to insure accurate assessment of your breathing function. Lung volumes are performed while you are sitting in a small chamber called a plethysmograph (or body box) and provide further information about how much air you breathe in and out. You will be asked to perform different breathing techniques such as blowing into a tube while in the chamber. Lung volumes are usually not performed unless there are abnormalities found on spirometry. The diffusing capacity is one measure of how well your lungs move oxygen from the lungs into the blood. The results of pulmonary function testing can tell you and your doctor how much your lungs have been affected by a disease process and help determine if specific therapy can be of benefit to you. They can also be useful for evaluating the effects of a disease or treatment over time. You will be given specific instructions about what to do with your own breathing medications when the breathing tests are scheduled. Pulmonary function testing usually takes between ½ to 1 ½ hour to complete, depending on how many of the pulmonary function tests you are asked to complete.
Also see the http://www.uthct.edu website for further information including on how to arrange a clinic visit for expert consultation on MAC. Other centers that can also provide such consultation are found under the List of Treating Institutions.
Sosumi is an alert sound introduced by Jim Reekes in Apple Inc.'s MacintoshSystem 7operating system in 1991. The name is derived from the phrase 'so, sue me!' because of a long running court battle with Apple Corps, the similarly named music company, regarding the use of music in Apple Inc.'s computer products.
History[edit]
Sosumi is a short xylophonesample, which gained notoriety in computer folklore as a defiant pun name, in response to a long-running Apple Corps v. Apple Computer trademark conflict.[1][2][3][4][5] The sound has been included in all subsequent versions of Mac OS.
During the development of System 7, the two companies concluded a settlement agreement from an earlier dispute when Apple added a sound synthesis chip to its Apple IIGS machine.[6] As a result, Apple Computer was prohibited from using its trademark on 'creative works whose principal content is music'.
WHAT IS MAC (MYCOBACTERIUM AVIUM COMPLEX) AND HOW IS IT DIAGNOSED AND TREATED?
- Formerly known as 'atypical mycobacteria', 'atypical TB', or 'atypical AFB' and currently as 'nontuberculous mycobacteria' or 'NTM'. NTM includes all types or species of mycobacteria (including MAC) other than the germ of tuberculosis (TB).
- Related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) but it is not TB (tuberculosis).
- NTM includes a number of different species, but the most common one causing chronic lung disease is MAC.
- MAC is not spread person to person like Mtb. MAC is not contagious.
- MAC lung disease seen in HIV negative (non-AIDS) patients is a chronic lung infection and early-on is often misdiagnosed as chronic bronchitis or recurrent pneumonia.
- MAC Lung Disease is acquired from the environment (soil, air, natural waters, tap water, etc.)
- Scientists and physicians who have studied MAC believe people who develop MAC lung disease become infected because of a defect in the structure or function of their lungs (especially a disease called bronchiectasis) or in their immune systems.
- Damaged lung tissue can result from previous TB, heavy smoking, and a breathing tube disease called bronchiectasis.
- Bronchiectasis is a breathing tube (bronchial) disorder characterized by excessive mucus production, cough, and susceptibility to certain infections such as MAC or infection caused by bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
- Disease in men commonly relates to smoking while disease in women (non-smoking) usually relates to bronchiectasis.
- The average age of patients with MAC lung disease in men is 55 years and 67 years in women.
- Men are more likely to have cavitary MAC (holes in their lungs). Women are more likely to have non-cavitary, nodular MAC.
- Diagnosis of MAC lung disease usually requires:
- Medical history with records of symptoms:
- Cough, sputum production, shortness of breath
- Loss of appetite (anorexia is the medical term) weight loss
- Severe fatigue or tiredness with inability to perform daily tasks
- Rarely coughing up blood (hemoptysis is the medical term)
- Fever, night sweats
- Chest x-ray (a picture of your lungs internally)
- High resolution CT scan (HRCT) (similar to an x-ray but a more detailed picture)
- Sputum culture – several sputum cultures are usually performed. Your specimen coughed from your lungs is examined under a microscope (AFB smear) and also placed on special media to grow mycobacteria (AFB culture).
- Bronchoscopy – may be necessary in some cases (especially if you can not cough up sputum) but not all, and involves putting a tube down into your lungs to obtain specimens for culture.
TREATMENT OF MAC LUNG DISEASE REQUIRES A MULTI-DRUG REGIMEN (MORE THAN ONE DRUG).
A Strange Disease Mac Os Download
- MAC is resistant to ordinary antibiotics.
- Combination of 3 drugs (all FDA approved)/dosages are based upon your clinical history, age, weight, and symptoms.
- Clarithromycin (Biaxin) or Azithromycin (Zithromax)
- Rifampin (Rifadin) or Rifabutin (Mycobutin)
- Ethambutol (Myambutol)
- The combination of medicines is given until no more MAC germs can be grown by culture of your sputum for 1 year. Average treatment period is about 15-18 months.
- Monthly sputum cultures are performed while you are on therapy and periodically when you finish your therapy to be sure your MAC is gone.
- The 3-drug treatment may be given 3 times weekly (preferably Monday-Wednesday-Friday) or daily.
- Data from previous treatment trials tells us that most patients (approximately two-thirds) who have no previous treatment of their MAC and who can tolerate the appropriate medicines will get better and be 'cured' of their MAC lung disease.
- Patients who have failed a prior drug regimen of > 6 months for their MAC are more likely to fail the standard drug regimen (almost 50%).
- Patients who take the 3-drug regimen for less than 1 year with negative cultures are more likely to relapse with disease with their same MAC strain.
- Patients who fail therapy after taking the 3 medicines are usually required to take additional medicines. Injectables which may be useful include:
- Streptomycin or Amikacin
- Amikacin can also be given by inhalation (aerosolized) and is less toxic when given in this manner.
- Monthly laboratory blood tests that include a complete blood count and comprehensive metabolic panel (CBC and CMP) to check for possible damage to blood cells, kidneys, and liver.
- Most common potential side effects/complications of medicines:
- Clarithromycin : Loss of appetite, diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, abnormal liver function tests (blood tests), bitter taste, mild allergic rash.
- Azithromycin : Diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, abnormal liver function tests (blood tests), decreased hearing, tinnitus (sounds in ears).
- Rifampin : Nausea, vomiting, liver damage, decreased platelets (cells which clot blood), body secretions (urine primarily) are orange/red.
- Rifabutin : Nausea, vomiting, decreased platelets, decreased white blood cells (cells that fight infection), eye pain (uveitis), diffuse muscle and joint aches, skin pigmentation (yellow).
- Ethambutol : Decrease in vision (especially color vision), blurriness.
- Streptomycin : Kidney damage, sounds in ears (tinnitus), hearing loss, poor balance, numbness, tingling, muscle damage, fever, headache.
- Amikacin : Kidney damage, tinnitus, hearing loss, poor balance.
If you experience these or other additional problems, you should discuss them with your physician. - Amikacin by inhalation (aerosolization) decreases toxicity to above adverse events.
Provide a list of your current medicines to your physician so he can determine any possible contra-indications.
A Strange Disease Mac Os X
PULMONARY FUNCTION TESTING
What is a pulmonary function test?
Pulmonary function testing is a way to measure your breathing capacity and, therefore is an objective measure of how well you are breathing. There are several types of breathing tests that can be done during pulmonary function testing including spirometry, lung volumes and diffusing capacity. A technician will explain what you need to do during each test and will coach you during the tests to help you give a good effort. All breathing tests require more than one measurement so that you will be asked to make more than one effort for each test. Spirometry is the most commonly performed breathing test. It requires you to take in as deep a breath as possible and then blow out the air in your lungs as forcefully and fully as possible. Spirometry, therefore, measures how much air you breathe in and out and how fast you breathe air in and out. Spirometry is frequently performed at baseline and then after you have inhaled a bronchial dilating drug (breathing medicine) to evaluate the effect of medication on your breathing function. As with all pulmonary function tests, it is very important that you make a maximal effort to insure accurate assessment of your breathing function. Lung volumes are performed while you are sitting in a small chamber called a plethysmograph (or body box) and provide further information about how much air you breathe in and out. You will be asked to perform different breathing techniques such as blowing into a tube while in the chamber. Lung volumes are usually not performed unless there are abnormalities found on spirometry. The diffusing capacity is one measure of how well your lungs move oxygen from the lungs into the blood. The results of pulmonary function testing can tell you and your doctor how much your lungs have been affected by a disease process and help determine if specific therapy can be of benefit to you. They can also be useful for evaluating the effects of a disease or treatment over time. You will be given specific instructions about what to do with your own breathing medications when the breathing tests are scheduled. Pulmonary function testing usually takes between ½ to 1 ½ hour to complete, depending on how many of the pulmonary function tests you are asked to complete.
Also see the http://www.uthct.edu website for further information including on how to arrange a clinic visit for expert consultation on MAC. Other centers that can also provide such consultation are found under the List of Treating Institutions.
Sosumi is an alert sound introduced by Jim Reekes in Apple Inc.'s MacintoshSystem 7operating system in 1991. The name is derived from the phrase 'so, sue me!' because of a long running court battle with Apple Corps, the similarly named music company, regarding the use of music in Apple Inc.'s computer products.
History[edit]
Sosumi is a short xylophonesample, which gained notoriety in computer folklore as a defiant pun name, in response to a long-running Apple Corps v. Apple Computer trademark conflict.[1][2][3][4][5] The sound has been included in all subsequent versions of Mac OS.
During the development of System 7, the two companies concluded a settlement agreement from an earlier dispute when Apple added a sound synthesis chip to its Apple IIGS machine.[6] As a result, Apple Computer was prohibited from using its trademark on 'creative works whose principal content is music'.
When new sounds for System 7 were created, the sounds were reviewed by Apple's Legal Department who objected that the new sound alert 'chime' had a name that was 'too musical', under the recent settlement. Jim Reekes, the creator of the new sound alerts for System 7, had grown frustrated with the legal scrutiny and first quipped it should be named 'Let It Beep', a pun on 'Let It Be'. When someone remarked that that would not pass the Legal Department's approval, he remarked, 'so sue me'. After a brief reflection, he resubmitted the sound's name as sosumi (a homophone of 'so sue me'). Careful to submit it in written form rather than spoken form to avoid pronunciation, he told the Legal Department that the name was Japanese and had nothing to do with music.[7][8][9]
In macOS Big Sur, the original chime was replaced with a different sample, due to be named 'Sonumi' (presumably a homophone of 'so new me', due to the change to macOS 11). However, the original name was retained in the first public version of the OS, and was later changed to 'Sonumi'.
In popular culture[edit]
Ducks inferno mac os. The term is in the poem 'A Short Address to the Academy of Silence' by Jay Parini.[10]
Jon Lech Johansen's weblog 'So Sue Me' is commonly mistakenly believed to be a reference to the Apple sound.[8] Fleeting flurry mac os.
Apple used the CSS class name 'sosumi' for formatting legal fine print on Apple product web pages.[11][12]
In 2006, Geek Squad used this sound in their commercial 'Jet Pack', in which a woman was frustrated over her computer.[13]
See also[edit]
- Apple libel dispute with Carl Sagan for a similar revenge-by-pun anecdote
A Strange Disease Mac Os Catalina
References[edit]
- ^Jennifer Lee (August 19, 1999). 'The Sound and the Fury: Beating Back the Beep'. New York Times. Retrieved July 23, 2020.
- ^Greg Mancina (May 14, 2001), 'Ding, dong, now I've got your attention', Saginaw News, MI
- ^Amy-Mae Elliott (October 18, 2010). '8 Classic Tech Sounds that Defined Our Digital World'. Mashable.com. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^S. Derrickson Moore (April 2, 2006), 'Sometimes all those bells and whistles just give us a headache', Las Cruces Sun-News, NM,
Sosumi' is such a strange word that I Googled it, searching for a definition, and got all sorts of references to lawsuits and defense attorneys. Really. I would have probed further but I don't like the sound anyway. So sue me.
- ^Owen W. Linzmayer (2004). Apple Confidential 2.0. No Starch Press. p. 283. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^Royal Courts of Justice (2004). 'Judgment in Apple Corps Limited vs Apple Computer, Inc. - EWHC 768 (Ch) in Case No: HC-2003-C02428'. courtservice.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 2005-03-15. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^Jim Reekes describing the origins of the sosumi name (Vimeo)
- ^ abXeni Jardin (24 March 2005). 'Early Apple sound designer Jim Reekes corrects Sosumi myth'. Boing Boing. Archived from the original on 2005-06-01. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^Luke Dormehl (2012). The Apple Revolution. Random House. pp. 297–298. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^'A Short Address to the Academy of Silence' Jay Parini, The Sewanee Review, Vol. 112, No. 3 (Summer, 2004), pp. 344-345
- ^'The story behind 'Sosumi' the Mac's startup sound'. macamour.com. November 11, 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-11-25. Retrieved October 21, 2016.CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
- ^'apple_legal_text_css.png'. robertclarke.com. Archived from the original on 2014-03-24. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
- ^'GeekSquad 'Jet Pack' Commercial'. TouTube. 2006-06-19. Retrieved 2020-07-02.