Alas, I have no techie knowledge with which to help you, other than to suggest you take it and its cable to another pc and re-check. I've found that I have troubles with a USB device on one computer and not another - may be a dodgy connection in the receiving port of the first computer, but I don't know for sure. Also try another cable if there is one around. Is there a techie in your husband's team who could see if it is recoverable?
Re the icky tonsils, I meant to write to you about that. I had repeated cases of tonsilitis to the point where I was missing a lot of work and a lot of life. Finally my gp said I could consider getting them taken out. I wondered why he hesitated. I found out.
The surgery is pretty quick - the doctor puts you under anaesthetic, scrapes out the tonsils and wakes you up again. The first day or so, when you are still under the healing numbness of the general anaesthetic, isn't too bad. It's days 2-5 that suck. Your throat swells because of the scraping and the forming of scabs. In my case, I had trouble breathing through my nose afterward, so every breath had to come through my swollen, aching throat. Every breath, cough, spoken word and god-forbid swallow, was incredibly painful - to the point where I wanted to stick my head under a bus and was crying with the pain. I handled a burst appendix more easily. Finally my dad, a pain specialist, spoke to the surgeon and they agreed the double-strength panadeine wasn't doing the job. They prescribed morphine. That got me through the really bad couple of days, and by about day 6 the pain was mild enough not to be an issue.
Lost about 5 kilos in just over a week, mind you. Who could eat? Once I'd recovered I was glad I had the surgery. I still get occasional throat infections, but they're just bad colds. No more swallowing razor blades. I'm glad I had it done, but it was very unpleasant for a few days there.
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Date: 8 Dec 2008 09:10 am (UTC)Re the icky tonsils, I meant to write to you about that. I had repeated cases of tonsilitis to the point where I was missing a lot of work and a lot of life. Finally my gp said I could consider getting them taken out. I wondered why he hesitated. I found out.
The surgery is pretty quick - the doctor puts you under anaesthetic, scrapes out the tonsils and wakes you up again. The first day or so, when you are still under the healing numbness of the general anaesthetic, isn't too bad. It's days 2-5 that suck. Your throat swells because of the scraping and the forming of scabs. In my case, I had trouble breathing through my nose afterward, so every breath had to come through my swollen, aching throat. Every breath, cough, spoken word and god-forbid swallow, was incredibly painful - to the point where I wanted to stick my head under a bus and was crying with the pain. I handled a burst appendix more easily. Finally my dad, a pain specialist, spoke to the surgeon and they agreed the double-strength panadeine wasn't doing the job. They prescribed morphine. That got me through the really bad couple of days, and by about day 6 the pain was mild enough not to be an issue.
Lost about 5 kilos in just over a week, mind you. Who could eat?
Once I'd recovered I was glad I had the surgery. I still get occasional throat infections, but they're just bad colds. No more swallowing razor blades. I'm glad I had it done, but it was very unpleasant for a few days there.