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I just stumbled on the "Photography" section under:

Arts & Humanities > Visual Arts > Photography.

If you are not spending QUITE enough time answering questions in this section, you'll love the questions over there. More students asking for answers to their assignments, for instance.

"What are some advantages of interchangeable lenses?"

"Why do black cameras cost more?"

There are more general interest photography questions over there - if you have the time and the inclination.

I've found this section (THIS one) to be very interesting and education to ME, as it forces me to keep on my toes. I choose questions that I find INTERESTING. I stopped giving brand name recommendations about entry level cameras, for instance, because I have not bought one for about a year. A year in this field may as well be a decade. I have a few "stock" answers that I cut and paste when it can be of some help.

But - I have come to enjoy the cameraderie (pun intended) with the regulars.

2006-09-30 09:51:14 · 2 answers · asked by Picture Taker 7 in Consumer Electronics Cameras

I made top ten??? Thanks for telling me! I didn't know there WAS such a thing.

Why would anyone do SRP on healthy teeth? I don't think that's a valid question.

2006-09-30 13:28:07 · update #1

2 answers

That question wasn't a question at all, and that first answer was off topic - YOU'RE BOTH REPORTED!
Just kidding :-)
Actually, the regulars in the photography section seem to know quite a bit more about gear than most people here. Too bad so few questions are asked there.
Then again, 70% of the questions in this section are variations on "What's the best camera for not a lot?", and "How many pictures to a gigabyte?"
Another section I sometimes browse, is Travel/ my neck of the woods (Holland)
Oh, and Sam, congrats on making the top 10 board in Health!
Kind regards,
Jeff

2006-09-30 10:52:16 · answer #1 · answered by OMG, I ♥ PONIES!!1 7 · 0 0

Thanks for the suggestion, Dr. Sam, but perhaps you can tell me this: Is there any clinical evidence that root planing/deep scaling forestalls the natural progression of periodontal disease in otherwise healthy teeth?

You can reply to my email if you want.

*

2006-09-30 10:06:30 · answer #2 · answered by Heckel 3 · 0 0

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