How are they applied?
In the past, available dental technology created crowns fused to metal for a strong, break-resistant, single tooth restoration. With today’s amazing advancements, however, crowns are often created from pure porcelain, especially when the crown will be used for those all-important front teeth where a natural result is highly desirable. There are many reasons why your dentist may suggest a porcelain crown: • Badly broken teeth • Existing large fillings • Large area of tooth decay • Weak fillings How Are Crowns Applied? Porcelain crowns are thin moldings designed to cover the tooth’s entire surface. Crowns can generally be applied in two visits. The goal is to avoid removing the tooth, which contributes to weakening of the jawbone. During your first visit: • Your tooth is prepared by removing any decay • The damaged tooth is reshaped in preparation for the crown • A mold is made and sent to the dental laboratory • The crown is hand-made at the lab • The crown is custom-fitted to your mout
There are different ways to add a window to a virtual desktop (non virtual desktops are less flexible): statically defining it as sticky: you must edit the registry (_StickyPrograms value), but I dont recommend to do this. I use this kind of settings (in the setup program) to define system-wide windows (like custom cursors) that should stay on all virtual desktops dynamically defining it as sticky: you must click the pin in the windows caption or use the windows system menu, if available (the windows icon has then a red cross when displayed in the Desktops Explorer) dynamically adding it using rules: you must define a rule, either at the virtual desktop level or at the computer level (use in both cases the property dialog); rules are flexible as you can use rules extensions to change the default behavior: window activation, transparency, (the windows icon has then a red cross when displayed in the Desktops Explorer) manually adding it to the virtual desktop: you can either use a VDT ap