I used to have an Ender. It was great, very few problems. Ended up needing to sell it while I traveled for residency, then ended up getting a soval. I like it even more. Set up was super easy, prints are great. Only issue I've had was needing to replace the hot end because I boogered it up and completely encased it in plastic. On the plus side, changing the hot end was fast and easy.
I love green cars. My wife drives a green Toyota Sienna and it's a gorgeous green color. That being said, I don't think I'll ever but another green car. I live somewhere that gets really hot for large portions of the year and dark colored cars get really hot really fast.
One of my favorite things about working in an OR is that I can just roll into work looking like a hobo and then they supply me with a pair of pajamas to change into for the day. It's great.
It's fresh enough that bacterial contamination isn't a concern and they don't have the trichinella worm in country. All meat is carefully inspected as well.
Sugar itself isn't bad, it's the fact that we are consuming far too much of it. The sugar in fruit is far less concentrated and attached to a lot more nutrients than a lot of sources of processed simple sugars. I'm fact, fructose (the sugar found in fruits) does not suppress hunger like sucrose (table sugar).
Exactly this. It sounds like OP wants it to be an instructional aid. It does not need to be sterile, the people practicing need to practice how to don sterile gloves, then drape and prep the site sterilly and insert the catheter correctly.
Not for that, but I printed a model of the brachial plexus to teach about nerve blocks. I also made a small section of a spine to explain epidurals and subarachnoid blocks to patients.
I don't think that was just a fart