By sharing under-the-skin components among many models, Ford plans to squeeze out waste and to speed development time.
But it can maintain distinctions among only so many brands as they increasingly share the same under-the-skin architecture and components.
In a process called LED photomodulation, the light stimulates the production of cell-producing proteins under the skin's surface.
Still in the development phase, it is a tiny, biodegradable mini-implant filled with a thermo-stabilized vaccine that is placed under the skin in a quick, painless process.
Labour leader Ed Miliband has said a speech in which he promised his was the true "one-nation" party got "under the skin" of the Conservatives.
His influential committee was broadcast live across the UK for at least 6 solid hours - his forensic questioning getting under the skin not just of former bank chiefs like Sir Fred "the Shred" Goodwin, but a day later of the men currently in charge of the banks.
Shallow burns hurt much more than deep ones - the nerves under the skin have not been burned away.
It could also charge wirelessly, and thus would be wearable under the skin as well as over -- imagine fully powered implants where an external battery is impractical or unsightly.
The regime the team has devised is a combination of a daily pill made of desogestrel (an artificial form of progesterone) and a slow-release testosterone pellet that is placed under the user's skin.
The autopsy conducted after his death found "extensive contusions of his chest, arms, shoulder and back, " as well as "evidence of crushing of areas of subcutaneous fat" -- which is the fatty tissue directly under a person's skin.
But some patients are too allergic to tolerate the stuff, and others too squeamish, in the wake of mad-cow disease, to want it under their skin.
Newer versions like Lovenox and Fragmin can be injected under the skin more easily and are safe enough that some patients self-administer the drugs at home.
The attention deficit hyperactivity disorder drug, which is already on the market for sleepiness under the name Provigil, had caused one possible case of Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, a rare skin reaction.
In this novel, short-listed for the Man Booker prize, the author insinuates himself under the skin of Henry James, covering not only the known episodes in the literary lion's life, but also imagining the darker corners.
His hero is a middle-aged policeman, Salvo Montalbano, an understated old hand who gets under the Mafia's skin.
The Sun Kil Moon version of "Convenient Parking, " from what might be Modest Mouse's best record, 1997's "The Lonesome Crowded West, " definitely gets the song's slow-burn intensity, teasing it out on his acoustic guitar as if over the course of making this record Isaac Brock's high-strung delivery has gotten under Kozelek's skin.
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