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I hate shopping <a href=" http://escenadigital.net/buy-valium-online-pharmacy/ ">valium online india</a> Russell T Davies revived the Sonic Screwdriver when he relaunched the series in 2005, since which time it has gone through several mechanical iterations, piling on the functionality like a Gallifreyan iPhone. Among other miracles, it can now fly the Tardis, heal the sick and wounded, unlock mobile phones for galactic roaming, serve as a GPS and MRI and start fires, leading the old-school hardliners of the series to complain that it’s little more than another deux ex machina in a show already full of them. In response, Davies and his successors invented a few arcane baffles to counter the screwdriver’s dominance: it won’t work on wood and it won’t unlock devices sealed with ‘deadlocks’, which, to judge by their sudden omnipresence, must be flying out of the doors at the temporal-galactic equivalent of Homebase. (The Doctor, we learnt in Silence in the Library, will one day manage an upgrade.)