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Return To Yesterday's News
But maybe an even easier way to make sure you don't miss a day is to subscribe to our daily newsletter, sent every night around midnight, Pacific Time (US). The free newsletter gives you links to every story featured on ArtsJournal. The premium version ($28 US) also includes our descriptions of stories, just as you see them on ArtsJournal. .
The INQUIRER is betting on MS-Yahoo
ASSUME FOR A MOMENT that Microsoft-Yahoo goes through without a hitch. What does the world look like afterwards? Here’s the book on what might come next. 1/3: Massive consolidation in Microsoft/Yahoo web properties. For now, Microsoft will stay quiet on what happens to all those duplicated efforts but it’s pretty obvious that some cherry-picking will occur. Excellent Yahoo sites like Flickr, Finance and Answers should be safe. Microsoft might decide to keep on both Yahoo Mail and Hotmail but there’s no point in paying all that money and then having scads of replica features. Same goes for the respective ad networks. Evens: Microsoft-Yahoo is deemed a success. Steve Ballmer has a great get-out here. He can say that he’s playing the long game and that the internet war won’t be won in a day.
Drug Treatment
Corticosteroids (commonly called steroids) are mainstay treatments for acute relapses patients with relapse-remitting MS. High-dose methylprednisolone given intravenously (IVMP) is typically administered for major relapse, often followed by oral prednisone for a few days. Steroids reduce inflammation in the central nervous system and may help suppress the immune system's attack on myelin and even improve electrical conduction. Steroids, in general, do not improve the long-term course of the disease and can lose effectiveness if overused. They are not generally used for maintenance therapy. Some research, however, is reporting benefits from the use of pulsed administration of intravenous methylprednisolone. Such an approach typically administers the steroid daily for 5 days every 4 months for 3 years, then every 6 months for 2 years.
Return To Yesterday's News
But maybe an even easier way to make sure you don't miss a day is to subscribe to our daily newsletter, sent every night around midnight, Pacific Time (US). The free newsletter gives you links to every story featured on ArtsJournal. The premium version ($28 US) also includes our descriptions of stories, just as you see them on ArtsJournal. .
The INQUIRER is betting on MS-Yahoo
ASSUME FOR A MOMENT that Microsoft-Yahoo goes through without a hitch. What does the world look like afterwards? Here’s the book on what might come next. 1/3: Massive consolidation in Microsoft/Yahoo web properties. For now, Microsoft will stay quiet on what happens to all those duplicated efforts but it’s pretty obvious that some cherry-picking will occur. Excellent Yahoo sites like Flickr, Finance and Answers should be safe. Microsoft might decide to keep on both Yahoo Mail and Hotmail but there’s no point in paying all that money and then having scads of replica features. Same goes for the respective ad networks. Evens: Microsoft-Yahoo is deemed a success. Steve Ballmer has a great get-out here. He can say that he’s playing the long game and that the internet war won’t be won in a day.
Drug Treatment
Corticosteroids (commonly called steroids) are mainstay treatments for acute relapses patients with relapse-remitting MS. High-dose methylprednisolone given intravenously (IVMP) is typically administered for major relapse, often followed by oral prednisone for a few days. Steroids reduce inflammation in the central nervous system and may help suppress the immune system's attack on myelin and even improve electrical conduction. Steroids, in general, do not improve the long-term course of the disease and can lose effectiveness if overused. They are not generally used for maintenance therapy. Some research, however, is reporting benefits from the use of pulsed administration of intravenous methylprednisolone. Such an approach typically administers the steroid daily for 5 days every 4 months for 3 years, then every 6 months for 2 years.
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