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Here's how to charge your phone properly

We’ve been doing it wrong all along…

charging-cellphone-smartphone-blue.jpg r.nial bradshaw r.nial bradshaw

YES, WE KNOW. Our smartphone batteries are bad because they barely last a day.

But it’s partially our fault because we’ve been charging them wrong this whole time.

Many of us have an ingrained notion that charging our smartphones in small bursts will cause long-term damage to their batteries, and that it’s better to charge them when they’re close to dead.

But we couldn’t be more wrong.

In fact, a site from battery company Cadex called Battery University details how the lithium-ion batteries in our smartphones are sensitive to their own versions of “stress”. And, like for humans, extended stress could be damaging your smartphone battery’s long-term lifespan.

If you want to keep your smartphone battery in top condition and go about your day without worrying about battery life, you need to change a few things.

Don’t keep it plugged in when it’s fully charged

According to Battery University, leaving your phone plugged in when it’s fully charged, like you might overnight, is bad for the battery in the long run.

Once your smartphone has reached 100% charge, it gets “trickle charges” to keep it at 100% while plugged in. It keeps the battery in a high-stress, high-tension state, which wears down the chemistry within.

Battery University goes into a bunch of scientific detail explaining why, but it also sums it nicely: ”When fully charged, remove the battery” from its charging device. “This is like relaxing the muscles after strenuous exercise.” You too would be pretty miserable if you worked out nonstop for hours and hours.

phone2 The batteries in these phones get stressed out, too

In fact, try not to charge it to 100%

At least when you don’t have to.

According to Battery University, “Li-ion does not need to be fully charged, nor is it desirable to do so. In fact, it is better not to fully charge, because a high voltage stresses the battery” and wears it away in the long run.

That might seem counterintuitive if you’re trying to keep your smartphone charged all day, but just plug it in whenever you can during the day, and you’ll be fine.

phone3 Don't shoot your smartphone batteries, either

Plug in your phone whenever you can

It turns out that the batteries in our smartphones are much happier if you charge them occasionally throughout the day instead of plugging them in for a big charging session when they’re empty.

Charging your phone when it loses 10% of its charge would be the best-case scenario, according to Battery University. Obviously, that’s not practical for most people, so just plug in your smartphone whenever you can. It’s fine to plug and unplug it multiple times a day.

Not only does this keep your smartphone’s battery performing optimally for longer, but it also keeps it topped up throughout the day.

Plus, periodic top-ups also let you use features you might not normally use because they hog your battery life, like location-based features that use your smartphone’s GPS antenna.

battery

Keep it cool

Smartphone batteries are so sensitive to heat that Apple itself suggests you remove certain cases that insulate heat from your iPhone when you charge it. “If you notice that your device gets hot when you charge it, take it out of its case first.” If you’re out in the hot sun, keep your phone covered. It’ll protect your battery’s health.

- Antonio Villas-Boas

Read: How much do you really know about Super Mario?

Read: There’s a second setting screen on Android that you might have missed

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    Mute Sean Hyland
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    Jul 26th 2014, 7:37 AM

    If this outbreak continues we should be vigilant on all sub Saharan traffic to and from here in Ireland.

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    Mute Elaine Cassin
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    Jul 26th 2014, 7:42 AM

    I totally agree, there should be proper screening put in place like Australia and the USA..

    185
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    Mute luke daly
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:23 AM

    You people are being silly, please educate your self before you post on there issues.

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    Mute luke daly
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:32 AM

    As a poster who was a microbiologist said On a previous article about Ebola this is more likely to be spread by a international business traveler like SARS was.

    17
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    Mute Neal Ireland Hello
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:36 AM

    “A poster who claimed to be a microbiologist but could be anybody because this is the Internet and you can’t take everything as gospel”.

    There, I corrected that for you, Luke.

    36
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:44 AM

    @Neal

    I am that poster and I am in fact a microbiologist. Hi.
    Yes Luke, you are right today too. Business men. And in case you’re interested I nor my chum in computational infection biology AKA this area exactly, are very concerned.

    21
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    Mute Fluich It
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:54 AM

    Mary (1) business_men (why the space?) (2) starting a sentence with And..really? (3) I nor my chum..are very concerned (this should be …neither I nor my Chum..are very concerned OR my chum and I are concerned)…and you want us to believe you have gone and studied at 3rd level and obtained a Diploma or higher?

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:04 PM

    @Fluich it

    Yep. Believe it, don’t believe it I don’t care.
    I’m not justifying frivolous grammer when I’m making a point about a virus. Your sleuthing is a little petty.
    I’m doing a PhD in microbiology so… Interpret that as you like.

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    Mute Fluich It
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:40 PM

    I couldn’t give a fig about spelling/punctuation mistakes. I would have thought that in such a serious line of work as yours, that the language used would have to be precise and unambiguous. You want to be clear about findings and don’t want to scare the uninformed. That is why I pointed out your errors, because they are very basic grammar/use of language mistakes.

    4
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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:47 PM

    If it goes airborne then it is a major problem but only by touch then it will not be. Not much consolation to the poor people that get it but this is not a global threat.

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:55 PM

    @Fluich it

    Worry not for I proofread thesis and documents. I’m telling people not to panic, focus on that. Surely that’s the take-home part?

    @Seannie

    Ebola is not airborne as you’ve said. This is great news. It’s quite hard to spread, as viruses go. We’ll be fine. Even if there was a case in Ireland, I wouldn’t panic. Unless it was me obviously. That’d be s**t.

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    Mute Mick Jordan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 2:44 PM

    Then Luke. Suspend All air travel from the affected countries in every direction. Isolate and Quarantine. As there is no know vaccine or cure for this disease so it can only be left to run its course and unfortunately that means runs out of victims.

    4
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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 4:35 PM

    I’m a monkey,Luke :) So’s my young fella :) Spot on,Neal !

    4
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 5:52 PM

    @Thomas

    Hello? I’m right here?

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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:58 PM

    Are you all there ?

    3
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 7:00 PM

    Last time I checked

    3
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    Mute Thomas Quinn
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:35 AM

    Unbelievably contagious and devastating disease. If a person has a sweaty palm and touches a door knob before someone else the can become infected. Scary stuff. The fact that it is is such a populated city as Lagos is terrifying. Massive opportunity for it to spread across boarders due to air traffic.

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    Mute Sian O Sullivan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:00 AM

    I am not so sure it is that contagious. We have completely different practices here . Isolation , cleanliness . Very advanced medical care. The problem from what I understand and have read is that there is a deep seated mistrust of western medicine which is what is fueling this virus currently.

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    Mute Shane Cormican
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:20 AM

    But the issue is if an infected person walks around temple bar you would have an outbreak here too then we are in the fight on the backfoot!!! Birds flying from the sky, manholes blowing up with green gas, OMG loike sooooo Nostradamus

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    Mute Sian O Sullivan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:29 AM

    That’s my point , people are only concerned because it’s contagious so there is a chance it might spread to Europe and infect them . Third world starvation isn’t contagious , it’s much easier to be sympathetic about that ….

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    Mute Shane Cormican
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:34 AM

    Ah I did not pick up on that!! Fair & valid point!! ;)

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:38 AM

    It’s not vary contagious, each Ebola case infects on average 1.4 to 1.7 other people, this is about the same as SARS. It’s not airborne, only passed by close contact between family members and medical staff.

    By comparison, one Measles case infects 35 others, flu about 3 to 6. If Ebola becomes airborne it will become more infectious, that’s the fear.

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    Mute Pauliebhoy
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:41 AM

    If there was an Ebola outbreak in a much larger city rather than small towns I’m sure the contagion ratio would increase

    14
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    Mute David Jordan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:05 AM

    Ebola reached the capital of Guinea, Conakry, back in March, it didn’t spread out of control.

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:48 AM

    @People of this thread

    Ebola not very contagious at all
    Diseases like this thrive in Africa and not well outside (climate, poverty etc)
    No natural reservoir (like bats) in Ireland
    Much better sanitation hygiene here.

    Temple bar will be grand.

    Friendly neighbourhood microbiologist

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:54 AM

    Ps
    SARS is a respiratory virus and would be spread far easier than this for many reasons.

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    Mute John Sheahan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 7:39 AM

    Religious belief strikes again.

    63
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    Mute Donagh O Connell
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:42 AM

    There is absolutely no reason why we shouldn’t have a screening process not just for diseases but also for criminals and scroungers.

    52
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    Mute Thomas Quinn
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:48 AM

    A lot of Irish wouldn’t get back in after holidays then.

    48
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    Mute luke daly
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:25 AM

    Only on the journal does a piece About a virus turn into a discussion about emigration. Sad really

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    Mute Larry L'Oiseau
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    Jul 26th 2014, 10:52 AM

    Perfect

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    Mute Sat singh
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    Jul 26th 2014, 7:53 AM

    37 company delegates from Ireland went in November 2013 and signed a trade
    Agreement worth €7 million for irish workers in NIgeria.
    Perhaps they should be screened for Ebola.

    51
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    Mute Vocal Outrage
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:07 AM

    The incubation time for Ebola is significantly less than 9 months. It is rumour and mis information like that that is causing the treatment problems at the moment.

    A bit of simple googling would have confirmed that the incubation time is in fact 2 to 21 days, dependant on strain.

    48
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    Mute Sat singh
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:31 AM

    Thanks for the information Vocal, the next trade mission to
    West Africa is in October 2014 organised by Enterprise
    Ireland,perhaps by then some form of screening is in place
    not only in Ireland but due to the ease of it spreading without
    a known cure throughout the world.
    This illness will need a international response and only then
    Is there a chance of avoiding a epidemic outbreak.

    46
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:46 AM

    @Sat

    No, it needs an African response, some zoologist to deal with this reservoir or at least state why this is so high and it needs people not to panic. This is not like flu. People need to chill out.

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    Mute Citizen Keen
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:44 AM

    It’s not just Ebola we have to worry about.. TB is making a comeback..

    44
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    Mute Galwaybay
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:48 AM

    A friend of mine arrived home from rural Sierra Leon 3 weeks ago. He was not checked for the virus in either London or Dublin. He was given a minimum check leaving the village he was living in. Scary how easily it could spread here.

    30
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    Mute Joe Howard
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:21 AM

    Read Richard Prestons book called The Hot Zone. It includes a section on how Ebola became airborne in a Monkey House in Washington. The strain is now called Ebola Reston but they found it wasn’t harmful to humans. It’s one hell if a good book too

    11
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    Mute Jake Behan
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:03 AM

    I’ll just leave this here for anyone who has the time: http://youtu.be/XasTcDsDfMg; it’s a great segment done by vice news.

    Unfortunately these people are uneducated, highly impoverished, distrust their government and doctors. Sadly I think this epidemic (is it a pandemic at this stage?) is going to get worse, which is unfortunate as an Ebola outbreak could be reasonably well maintained.

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    Mute luke daly
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:25 AM

    No it is not a pandemic because it hasn’t left Africa…yet

    7
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    Mute Kev
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    Jul 26th 2014, 10:18 AM

    Ah shur a bit of Ebola never hurt anyone

    9
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    Mute COOM
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:55 AM

    Let natural selection work it’s magic.

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:57 PM

    @COOM

    You wouldn’t say that if you had a heart attack.

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    Mute alpha_chaarlie
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:47 AM

    “Religious belief, social mores, misinformation and a general mistrust of conventional medicine”

    Basically Ignorance.

    5
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    Mute Sat singh
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:42 PM

    @Mary
    The Chief Medical Doctor treating the Ebola patients has
    contracted the deadly disease in Sierra Leone and is now
    been treated for it and is hospitalised.
    Hope you will not think he came in prolonged close contact with the
    patients or he was not aware of barrier nursing care.

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:55 PM

    @Sat

    Of course he was in prolonged contact, he’s the doctor. Look, panic if you want. This is not at the level we should be on lockdown yet. Nowhere near in fact. People need to chill out.

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    Mute Hill 16
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:53 PM

    And an outbreak of the Black Death in China. I’d hate to see the both of them meeting up.

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:57 PM

    @hill

    Actually bubonic plague was found in Madagascar recently.

    But still, it’s grand.

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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 4:44 PM

    Thought that you would have been told about the one in China yesterday ?

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 5:53 PM

    If he’s talking about Ebola meeting Plague surely he Madagascar outbreak is more important given, you know… It’s in Africa.

    Hence why it was mentioned.

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    Mute Larry David the 2nd
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:16 PM

    No offence to you Mary but you strike me as the typical laid back under estimating member of the medical establishment that will be caught on their heels when this hits Europe , in fact there has already been a case reported in Spain ! I mean have you read the hot zone book??

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:51 PM

    @Larry

    Better, I did a degree. Look people are never going to believe what you say to them anyways. People don’t always trust doctors when given a diagnosis but they are USUALLY right. I’m not going to help feed the paranoia when I an others like me are relaxed. I have no doubt it’s possible but it is highly unlikely.

    2
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:59 PM

    PS
    Reading “The Hot Zone” is basically the equivalent of googling your symptoms and calling yourself a doctor.

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    Mute gerryb
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    Jul 26th 2014, 12:46 PM

    Notting good comes this place…once we vet the ones coming into our country!

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    Mute Sat singh
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    Jul 26th 2014, 7:38 PM

    @Mary
    Glad you have a degree on this topic,only trying to give you alternative
    sides to a topic,not panicking. Hopefully journal readers can gain from the
    views/knowledge of all who have contributed on this relatively new topic and
    debate is healthy in any profession.I am sure you will agree with that

    2
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:35 PM

    @Sat

    Absolutely. But I hope you’d concede also that not all opinions are created equal on certain topics and I’m sorry but reading Hot Zone or any book like it is not the same as being an expert on a subject (which, doing a PhD I rightly or wrongly assume myself to be).

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    Mute Sat singh
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    Jul 26th 2014, 5:37 PM

    @ Mary
    Nigeria has been put on red alert today following the death of a Liberian
    man who recently entered the country from this disease.
    People do not panic without reason,but this virus spreads easily
    through bodily fluids including sweating which is easily done.
    I still feel it’s more than West Africa’s exclusive problem.

    2
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:01 PM

    @Sat

    No, this is not very transmissible at all and requires VERY close, prolonged contact. There have literally been plenty cases of people getting on planes with advanced symptoms with sky-high temperatures and internal bleeding and not one other person became infected. It’s not that contagious at all. Absolutely untrue.

    2
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:02 PM

    They’re probably panicking because of mortality rates upwards of 80%, that doesn’t mean they’re gonna get it easily.

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 6:58 PM

    Seriously, red thumb me if you want but I have a degree in this… Not much of a commodity here, I see.

    Somehow reading “The Hot Zone” is an equivalent to countless research papers and experiments.

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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:23 PM

    Mary

    I’m splitting my sides with laughter . This is one of the reasons why I love the Journal comments section .. Serious Kudos to you ;)

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 8:33 PM

    @Thomas

    How come mate?

    3
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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:11 PM

    Mary

    How old are you ? Genuine question .

    3
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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:14 PM

    @Thomas

    21. And before you say a thing, I’m finished a degree in micro, went TCD doing PhD in UK.

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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:18 PM

    In 2003 you were 8 . It is now 2014 and you are 21 . The math doesn’t add up right,Mary . Good night!

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 9:33 PM

    Hahahaha
    Are you for real? By my estimations, I said I was around 8 in the NI topic a while back which was a round the spot estimate/guesstimate I didn’t give 2 thoughts to. And now that somehow ties in to the fact I know a think or two about microbes? Haha, you’re pathetic mate and you think you’re smart. I think what you’re a bit pissed about is a 21 year old girl unequivocally knows more than you in this topic. Bites, don’t it?

    I’m 22 next week by the way. And yep. Still an international scholar.

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    Mute Thomas Mac
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    Jul 26th 2014, 10:20 PM

    Hope you get your PHD at such a young tender age ..best of luck!

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    Mute Mary Doherty
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    Jul 26th 2014, 11:04 PM

    24… Yes. Yes I will. And then another after. Chemistry, this time. Fingers crossed.

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    Mute Patric Reilly
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    Jul 26th 2014, 5:47 PM

    Maybe thr new dan brown book isnt that far from the truth ….

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