Subscribe Now

* You will receive the latest news and updates on your favorite celebrities!

Trending News

T1D Exchange T1D Exchange T1D Exchange
  • Activity
    • 39 minutes ago
      Mary Coleman likes your comment at
      Aside from the first year after your diagnosis, have you seen a registered dietitian for help managing nutrition and T1D?
      When I was put on insulin, the first dietitian I payed to see said I could eat whatever I wanted as long as I followed the set number of macros (carbs, protein, fats). The stupid diet had my blood sugars all over the map. She didn't care/listen when I told her milk, bread/pasta made me feel really sick. She said because I was on insulin I need to eat a high carb, low protein and low fat diet. What bad advice! Thankfully, I came to my senses and starting reading the experiences of other T1D's who were following the The Bernstein diet.
    • 2 hours, 11 minutes ago
      Robin Melen likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Labor Day weekend 2022 I was admitted to the hospital for passing out in a hotel bathroom. My blood sugar was over 400, so they had me on an insulin drip. I hit my head when I fell so they gave me a ct scan and found 3 cysts and a huge shadow the size of a baseball in my head. After they got my sugar under control they transferred me to a larger hospital with an MRI machine. Found stage 4 brain tumor. So had to have emergency surgery that Wednesday. Let’s just say the next 4 months was extremely stressful for me & my husband. I am on the mend now & hopefully my next mri will be stable or all clear! 🤞🤞
    • 2 hours, 11 minutes ago
      Robin Melen likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      My last hospitalization was in December 2020 after a delayed refill for my insulin put me in DKA. The worst part was that because it was at the height of Covid, my husband basically could only drop me off at the ER door. The hospital was less than ten minutes from our home, and it was only one night, but I may as well have been on the other side of the world.
    • 2 hours, 11 minutes ago
      Robin Melen likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      After my preliminary stay at Joslin in 1954, I've never spent time in a hospital because of having diabetes. A few other times for things like tonsils and babies, but I've been very lucky, and very healthy. Very grateful!
    • 2 hours, 11 minutes ago
      Robin Melen likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      The only time I have been hospitalized due to T1D was in 1970 when I suffered a diabetic hyperosmolar coma, due to ketoacidosis resulting from undiagnosed T1D. I was young and just back from an assignment to Korea in the USAF. I new something was wrong with me, but did not know what and I wanted to visit my family before exploring my issues through the USAF medical services.
    • 2 hours, 12 minutes ago
      Robin Melen likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      At 65yo, a T1D for 53 years and a pump user for 25 years I experienced what I own as a user error when my pump charger cord went bad and I miscalculated a manual shot. I awoke at 3am knowing I was going low and went to the kitchen to get some juice and remember noting after that until I awoke on the kitchen floor. I could not stand up and drug myself down the hall to get my phone. I called 911 and asked what time it was. It was 9am. I had broken my right ankle, fractured my left knee and torn the meniscus. Lots of lessons learned and after a month of rehab my family and I decided I could no longer live alone. Between T1D and being a fall risk I am in a senior assisted living. It’s not a bad ending but so many things go into our care. Prepare for your future and don’t be stupid!
    • 13 hours, 41 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Amazing!
    • 13 hours, 41 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      In 72 years with T1D I have been hospitalized once -- 1984 when BG got so low that my internal body temperature went from 98.6 to 93. That is the coldest I have ever been in my life, colder than 30 below 0 Fahrenheit in Midwest winters, cold Alps at 9,000 feet, and cold western US Ski areas at 9,000 feet. Brain does a wonderful instinctive thing at low BG to try to keep it's functions working so that you don't die. Thanks, brain.
    • 13 hours, 43 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Dang, now I jinxed myself 🙃
    • 16 hours, 46 minutes ago
      Bekki Weston likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Labor Day weekend 2022 I was admitted to the hospital for passing out in a hotel bathroom. My blood sugar was over 400, so they had me on an insulin drip. I hit my head when I fell so they gave me a ct scan and found 3 cysts and a huge shadow the size of a baseball in my head. After they got my sugar under control they transferred me to a larger hospital with an MRI machine. Found stage 4 brain tumor. So had to have emergency surgery that Wednesday. Let’s just say the next 4 months was extremely stressful for me & my husband. I am on the mend now & hopefully my next mri will be stable or all clear! 🤞🤞
    • 20 hours, 43 minutes ago
      Ahh Life likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      At 65yo, a T1D for 53 years and a pump user for 25 years I experienced what I own as a user error when my pump charger cord went bad and I miscalculated a manual shot. I awoke at 3am knowing I was going low and went to the kitchen to get some juice and remember noting after that until I awoke on the kitchen floor. I could not stand up and drug myself down the hall to get my phone. I called 911 and asked what time it was. It was 9am. I had broken my right ankle, fractured my left knee and torn the meniscus. Lots of lessons learned and after a month of rehab my family and I decided I could no longer live alone. Between T1D and being a fall risk I am in a senior assisted living. It’s not a bad ending but so many things go into our care. Prepare for your future and don’t be stupid!
    • 21 hours, 51 minutes ago
      Bill Williams likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Labor Day weekend 2022 I was admitted to the hospital for passing out in a hotel bathroom. My blood sugar was over 400, so they had me on an insulin drip. I hit my head when I fell so they gave me a ct scan and found 3 cysts and a huge shadow the size of a baseball in my head. After they got my sugar under control they transferred me to a larger hospital with an MRI machine. Found stage 4 brain tumor. So had to have emergency surgery that Wednesday. Let’s just say the next 4 months was extremely stressful for me & my husband. I am on the mend now & hopefully my next mri will be stable or all clear! 🤞🤞
    • 22 hours, 15 minutes ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      So gratifying to see so many "no" responses, way to go everyone!!
    • 23 hours, 14 minutes ago
      T1DGJ likes your comment at
      Have you developed lipohypertrophy due to repeated injections/infusions of insulin? Lipohypertrophy is a term to describe hardened lumps of body fat just under the skin that resulted from repeated insulin injections/infusion sites. If so, share how you’ve handled lipohypertrophy in the comments!
      After 56 years of T1D (34yrs of injections up to 5 / day), my buttocks have some scar tissue. The description of lipohyertrophy doesn't match with my scar tissue. I don't have hard lumps, just areas that feel firmer under the skin. I also have more problem with sunken spots (atrophy) in my 'favorite' injection spots. Dealing with it is basically trying to avoid those spots. If a site is not absorbing, I take a hot shower or do moderate exercise to increase blood flow to the area. BGs will plummet though so I have to be cautious. I also started using alternative infusion sites and also have considered a variable angle infusion set, but have not yet tried it.
    • 23 hours, 14 minutes ago
      T1DGJ likes your comment at
      Have you developed lipohypertrophy due to repeated injections/infusions of insulin? Lipohypertrophy is a term to describe hardened lumps of body fat just under the skin that resulted from repeated insulin injections/infusion sites. If so, share how you’ve handled lipohypertrophy in the comments!
      I started to but then switched to my upper thighs and am able to rotate over a much greater surface area.
    • 23 hours, 14 minutes ago
      T1DGJ likes your comment at
      Have you developed lipohypertrophy due to repeated injections/infusions of insulin? Lipohypertrophy is a term to describe hardened lumps of body fat just under the skin that resulted from repeated insulin injections/infusion sites. If so, share how you’ve handled lipohypertrophy in the comments!
      I stopped using those sites and paid more attention to rotation of available ones.
    • 23 hours, 38 minutes ago
      Greg Felton likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      The only time I have been hospitalized due to T1D was in 1970 when I suffered a diabetic hyperosmolar coma, due to ketoacidosis resulting from undiagnosed T1D. I was young and just back from an assignment to Korea in the USAF. I new something was wrong with me, but did not know what and I wanted to visit my family before exploring my issues through the USAF medical services.
    • 23 hours, 38 minutes ago
      Greg Felton likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Last time I was in the hospital due to diabetes was within 6 months of first starting on an insulin pump. Approximately 32 years ago
    • 23 hours, 38 minutes ago
      Greg Felton likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      No, I have not been hospitalized in the last three years, it has been 67 years since I’ve been hospitalized for diabetes related issues.uu
    • 23 hours, 38 minutes ago
      Greg Felton likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      I’ve never been hospitalized because of T1D other than when the endo started me on insulin on 1973 to learn about injections and diet.
    • 23 hours, 48 minutes ago
      jo likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      In 72 years with T1D I have been hospitalized once -- 1984 when BG got so low that my internal body temperature went from 98.6 to 93. That is the coldest I have ever been in my life, colder than 30 below 0 Fahrenheit in Midwest winters, cold Alps at 9,000 feet, and cold western US Ski areas at 9,000 feet. Brain does a wonderful instinctive thing at low BG to try to keep it's functions working so that you don't die. Thanks, brain.
    • 23 hours, 49 minutes ago
      jo likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      So gratifying to see so many "no" responses, way to go everyone!!
    • 23 hours, 49 minutes ago
      jo likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      First time two years ago when I was diagnosed with T1D! Was in DKA and had no idea why I was so sick. Six days! Second time just overnight when I couldn't get my sugars down (I was still in that early learning phase). And at least one stop of a couple of hours at the ER - same reason - high sugars I couldn't figure out. Luckily I seem to have all figured out now! Whew!
    • 23 hours, 50 minutes ago
      jo likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Labor Day weekend 2022 I was admitted to the hospital for passing out in a hotel bathroom. My blood sugar was over 400, so they had me on an insulin drip. I hit my head when I fell so they gave me a ct scan and found 3 cysts and a huge shadow the size of a baseball in my head. After they got my sugar under control they transferred me to a larger hospital with an MRI machine. Found stage 4 brain tumor. So had to have emergency surgery that Wednesday. Let’s just say the next 4 months was extremely stressful for me & my husband. I am on the mend now & hopefully my next mri will be stable or all clear! 🤞🤞
    • 23 hours, 50 minutes ago
      Janis Senungetuk likes your comment at
      In the past three years, have you been hospitalized due to T1D?
      Labor Day weekend 2022 I was admitted to the hospital for passing out in a hotel bathroom. My blood sugar was over 400, so they had me on an insulin drip. I hit my head when I fell so they gave me a ct scan and found 3 cysts and a huge shadow the size of a baseball in my head. After they got my sugar under control they transferred me to a larger hospital with an MRI machine. Found stage 4 brain tumor. So had to have emergency surgery that Wednesday. Let’s just say the next 4 months was extremely stressful for me & my husband. I am on the mend now & hopefully my next mri will be stable or all clear! 🤞🤞
    Clear All
Pages
    • T1D Exchange T1D Exchange T1D Exchange
    • Articles
    • Community
      • About
      • Insights
      • Submit a Question
      • Donate
      • Join the Community
    • Quality Improvement
      • About
      • Collaborative
        • Leadership
        • Committees
      • Clinics
      • Resources
        • Change Packages
        • Sick Day Guide
        • Meet the Experts
      • Portal
      • Health Equity
        • Heal Advisors
      • Join Us
    • Registry
      • About
      • Recruit for the Registry
    • Research
      • About
      • Publications
      • COVID-19 Research
      • Work with us
    • Partners
      • About
      • Previous Work
      • Academic Partnerships
      • Industry Partnerships
    • About
      • Team
      • Board of Directors
      • Culture & Careers
      • Annual Report
    • Join / Login
    • Donate

    If you take insulin using multiple daily injections, do you use any visual cues to easily tell the difference between your long-acting and short-acting insulin vials/pens? (For example, wrapping a hair tie or rubber band around one type of insulin, or adding colorful tape)

    Home > LC Polls > If you take insulin using multiple daily injections, do you use any visual cues to easily tell the difference between your long-acting and short-acting insulin vials/pens? (For example, wrapping a hair tie or rubber band around one type of insulin, or adding colorful tape)
    Previous

    In the past 3 months, how many hours of work or school do you estimate you missed because of T1D (e.g., going to T1D-related appointments, feeling sick because of blood glucose levels, managing complications of T1D, etc.)?

    Next

    How do you review your lab results after getting bloodwork? Please select all that apply.

    Sarah Howard

    Sarah Howard (nee Tackett) has dedicated her career to supporting the T1D community ever since she was diagnosed with T1D while in college in May 2013. Since then, she has worked for various diabetes organizations, focusing on research, advocacy, and community-building efforts for people with T1D and their loved ones. Sarah is currently the Senior Marketing Manager at T1D Exchange. Sarah and her husband live in NYC with their cat Gracie. In her spare time, she enjoys doing comedy, taking dance classes, visiting art museums, and exploring different neighborhoods in NYC.

    Related Stories

    Meet the Expert

    Meet the Expert: Improving Patient Care Systems to Increase CGM Use 

    Jewels Doskicz, 3 hours ago 7 min read  
    Question of the Day

    How many low blood sugars do you have per week? 

    Samantha Robinson, 2 days ago 5 min read  
    Insulin & Meds

    Using GLP-1 Medications in Type 1 Diabetes 

    Cristina Jorge Schwarz, 3 days ago 9 min read  
    Meet the Expert

    Meet the Expert: Looking Beyond A1c at a Patient’s Quality of Life 

    Jewels Doskicz, 1 week ago 8 min read  
    Research

    Fear of Hypoglycemia: New Tool Helps Docs Identify “FoH” in People with Diabetes 

    Ginger Vieira, 1 week ago 5 min read  
    Meet the Expert

    Meet the Expert: Evaluating Telemedicine in T1D Patient Care 

    Jewels Doskicz, 2 weeks ago 9 min read  

    29 Comments

    1. Becky Hertz

      When I did do MDI I didn’t do anything special. The long acting bottle was different than short acting as well as the rubber stopper was a different color.

      2
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    2. Milly Bassett

      I keep my long lasting separate from my fast acting. I keep them separate so I can go to my long lasting a lot easier than my fast acting. Fast acting is stored in a zippered up place in my purse with a bunch of stuff on top of it. My long lasting is in a pouch right up front in my purse. Easier to grab.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    3. Carol Lovan

      Keep in a different place. Bathroom for long acting and kitchen for short.

      2
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    4. mbulzomi@optonline.net

      I have been on an Insulin Pump for Forty years. Enough said.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    5. Gary Rind

      long acting pen is in the kitchen closet. take it once a day in the morning so once I take it, I ignore it until the next day. never put fast acting in the closet

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    6. Rob Smith

      Long acting stays in the fridge. Short acting goes with me. Except when traveling, then I’m VERY careful. Would be be nice if they weren’t all blue.

      1
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    7. Jane Cerullo

      My humalog is in an InPen which is blue metal. Kind of hard to mix up with beige Toujeo long acting pen.

      1
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    8. Kris Sykes-David

      My InPen is pink, that has the Novolog and my Tresiba is dark blue. On purpose!!

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    9. cynthia jaworski

      Long-acting is kept in a case (leftover from Levomir, perhaps?) in a drawer. Since it is only used once a day, it is c convenient to put it away out of sight. Short acting is in my cosmetic bag that carries my libre scanner, glucose tabs, extra needles, etc.

      1
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    10. Karen DeVeaux

      Where I keep them in the butter tray of the fridge, long-acting on the right and short-acting on the left. Also, purple lid vs red lid which I keep on with a baggie and rubberband or twist tie. These are vials.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    11. Karen Newe

      Yes. One is a pen and the other is a vial.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    12. Sue Martin

      I use an InPen for short-acting insulin and vials for long-acting insulin so they are easily kept straight.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    13. Steven Gill

      The “glargine” (lantus) insulin pen is light blue, aspart (novalog) navy. Take the glargine first thing in the morning in bed generally (joy of retirement) although both are in a mug on my nightstand overnight.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    14. Jeremy Hanson

      Long acting Treisiba is in the drawer in the kitchen and I only take it once a day. Fiasp is always on me or in my bag so no need for visual cues.

      1
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    15. William Bennett

      √ N/A – I do not use multiple daily injections

      But when I DID, I didn’t do this and like everybody else I got it backward once. Oops.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    16. JeremyW

      The pens are different. But extra layer of safety is I only take long acting in the bathroom and I never take short acting in the bathroom. Mixing these up has always been a huge fear.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    17. Wanacure

      I wrap part of the barrel and the needle guard of my syringe for Lantus w/ masking tape. The syringe for Humalog (lispro) has a scale marked in half units. The Lantus syringe scale is whole units. I keep the vials in their boxes which have different dimensions and come clearly labeled.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    18. John Vicars

      I keep my Humalog in the kitchen because of better lighting. I keep my Lantus on nightstand. Take 2 injections a day. Place syringe beside Lantus bottle. At night after injection remove syringe. Simple solution to remember if I have taken Lantus. I also make and take diluted Humalog. I use different colors of fingernail polish to adorn the bottle. This works well.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    19. Ginger Vieira

      Definitely. I keep my Novolog pen in the little kit I carry everywhere. I store my Lantus in the fridge. Keeping these two things in different places is critical. I would (and have) accidentally grab the wrong pen if they were both in my kit all day long. Oy vey!

      1
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    20. Lynn Smith

      I have been on an insulin pump for 22 years now. I now only use it for my basal insulin though. I am using the Afrezza inhaled insulin now for boluses now and I absolutely love it!!!!!

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    21. Juha Kankaanpaa

      Yes, different colour pens, Novopen Echo. Red for basal, dark blue for regular and light blue for rapid action.

      1
      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    22. Janice Bohn

      Although I now use a pump – back when I did MDI a colorful rubber band around long acting insulin was a great visual tool

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    23. Britni

      I wrap a rubber band around my lantus vial, so I have both a visual and tactile cue.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    24. Jordanhw

      Both my pens are very different in color which is hard for me to mix them up but just incase I kept them in a specific spot so I know which is which.

      1 month ago Log in to Reply
    25. Steve Rumble

      I store my current vials of short and long term insulin in different places. When I used Lantus it was simple to distinguish between short and long term due to the shape of the Lantus vial. Now, however, the Insulin Glargine I receive from the Veterans Administration comes in the “standard” vial so more care is required.

      4 weeks ago Log in to Reply
    26. Thomas Cline

      Different pen colors usually do the trick, although recently Novonordisc has also made the Levemir pen thinner than its Fiasp partner and more sluggish to inject with, perhaps to avoid such mixups. The different injection feel is sufficiently striking to make a mixup mistake almost impossible to imagine When the pens were identical except for color, I mixed them up once due to being inattentive when I injected (I normally inject Fiasp first, but the danger comes when I only need Levemir), I took my standard dose of Levemir as Fiasp instead (27 units), fortunately when I was already rather high, realizing my mistake just as soon as I finished injecting. Although the mistake ended ok, it was an experience I’ll never forget. I immediately wolfed down two large chocolate bars, four cans of fruit nectar, 72 Jelly Bellies, and was rushed off to the emergency room by my wife where a pre-emptive IV port was installed, but never had to be used — my sugar binge worked, along with the relatively short lifetime of Fiasp. That traumatic single experience ingrained in me the importance of paying attention whenever I inject. Injecting the two insulins generally twice a day does get to be such a routine that it’s easy to zone out, but just as breaking my ribs in a shower-stall bathmat fiasco (no grab bars) made it impossible for me to ever step into a shower mindlessly, the trauma of my Levemir/Fiasp mixup seems to have done something similarly protective to my brain. In any event, given the notable difference in injection feel now between Fiasp and Levemir, I can’t imagine mixing them up ever again.

      3 weeks ago Log in to Reply
    27. Thomas Cline

      It did just occur to me that it would have been better for Novonordisk to have made Fiasp the slower and harder insulin to inject, rather than Levemir, because that’s the direction of mixup that matters. I suspect I would accidentally inject Fiasp in place of Levemir before the difference in ease of injection even occurred to me, since Fiasp injects so quickly. In any event, it may not matter because I don’t think I’ll ever be inattentive again when I inject.

      3 weeks ago Log in to Reply
    28. Bruce Johnson

      No, the two pen colours work fine for me.

      3 weeks ago Log in to Reply
    29. Bruce Johnson

      No. the two pen colours work for me.

      3 weeks ago Log in to Reply

    If you take insulin using multiple daily injections, do you use any visual cues to easily tell the difference between your long-acting and short-acting insulin vials/pens? (For example, wrapping a hair tie or rubber band around one type of insulin, or adding colorful tape) Cancel reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.




    101 Federal Street, Suite 440
    Boston, MA 02110
    Phone: 617-892-6100
    Email: admin@t1dexchange.org

    Privacy Policy

    Terms of Use

    Follow Us

    • facebook
    • twitter
    • linkedin
    • instagram

    © 2023 T1D Exchange.
    All Rights Reserved.

    © 2023 T1D Exchange. All Rights Reserved.
    • Login
    • Register

    Forgot Password

    Registration confirmation will be emailed to you.

    Skip Next Finish

    Account successfully created.

    Please check your inbox and verify your email in the next 24 hours.

    Your Account Type

    Please select all that apply.

    I have type 1 diabetes

    I'm a parent/guardian of a person with type 1 diabetes

    I'm interested in the diabetes community or industry

    Select Topics

    We will customize your stories feed based on what you select here.

    2019 Publications

    0 Stories Related

    2020 ADA

    9 Stories Related

    2020 ADCES

    0 Stories Related

    2020 ATTD

    0 Stories Related

    2020 EASD

    0 Stories Related

    2020 ISPAD

    7 Stories Related

    2020 Publications

    0 Stories Related

    2021 ADA

    11 Stories Related

    2021 ADCES

    0 Stories Related

    2021 ATTD

    4 Stories Related

    2021 ISPAD

    8 Stories Related

    2021 Publications

    22 Stories Related

    2022 ADA

    11 Stories Related

    2022 ADCES

    4 Stories Related

    2022 ATTD

    10 Stories Related

    2022 ISPAD

    0 Stories Related

    2023 ATTD

    6 Stories Related

    ADA

    5 Stories Related

    ADCES

    0 Stories Related

    Advocacy

    21 Stories Related

    ATTD

    16 Stories Related

    Blood Sugar

    0 Stories Related

    Conditions

    7 Stories Related

    COVID-19

    14 Stories Related

    EASD

    0 Stories Related

    General Publications

    73 Stories Related

    Get Involved

    11 Stories Related

    Insulin & Meds

    16 Stories Related

    ISPAD

    1 Stories Related

    Journal of Diabetes

    21 Stories Related

    Lifestyle

    12 Stories Related

    Lifestyles

    0 Stories Related

    Meet the Expert

    18 Stories Related

    Mental Health

    11 Stories Related

    News

    35 Stories Related

    Our team

    25 Stories Related

    Partner Content

    7 Stories Related

    Press Release

    6 Stories Related

    Question of the Day

    25 Stories Related

    Research

    66 Stories Related

    Stories

    18 Stories Related

    T2D

    1 Stories Related

    Technology

    23 Stories Related

    Uncategorized

    2 Stories Related

    We're preparing your personalized page.

    This will only take a second...

    Search and filter

    • Clear All
    • Sort By

    • Select Category