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TED Blog | The 4 ways sound affects us: Julian Treasure on TED.com - 0 views

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    Playing sound effects both pleasant and awful, Julian Treasure shows how sound affects us in four significant ways. Listen carefully for a shocking fact about noisy open-plan offices. (Recorded at TEDGlobal University, July 2009, Oxford, UK. Duration: 5:47)
Agtha Shan

Relieve Pain With Delta Brainwave Recordings! - 0 views

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    Relieve Pain With Delta Brainwave Recordings! You don't have to live with pain! Physical pain is undoubtedly one of the hardest to ignore bad things about life anyone has to deal with. Not only is it limiting and harmful to your wellbeing, it's also a drain on your emotions as well.
Janos Haits

The European Library - Connecting knowledge - 0 views

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    "Users can cross-search and reuse over 23,618,232 digital items and 163,720,257 bibliographic records."
Janos Haits

Welcome to bnb.data.bl.uk | The British National Bibliography - 0 views

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    "The British National Bibliography (BNB) records the publishing activity of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland and has been doing so since the 1950s. This has traditionally included printed works and has recently been extended to electronic publications. The dataset includes metadata about published books, already published and forthcoming, and serials i.e. journals, periodicals, magazines, newspapers, etc."
Georgiya Cathrin

Loans For Bad Credit An Ideal Choice of Loans for Low Credit Borrowers! - 0 views

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    Loans for bad credit are quick and short term financial alternative which is arranges sufficient funds to those people who have low credit record and face financial crisis in middle of the month. It is an ideal monetary aid in which you can take an amount varying from AUD $100 to AUD $1000 for short time of period such as 14 to 31 days.
veera90

ACL Digital Staffing FSP - 0 views

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    ACL Digital Life Sciences has a track record of partnering successfully with some of the leading Pharmaceuticals, Biotechs, CROs, Medical Devices and MSP companies. We offer multiple sourcing models to suit your business needs. We work with an MSP of your choice, insourcing staff augmentation, insourcing and outsourcing FSP models and Project-based deliverables. We do this to provide you with the flexibility you need - whether it's for onsite or remote resources, long term or project-specific resources, SME consultation, resources available across multiple geographic areas, resources mapping US time zones or working off-hours in local time zones, among other requirements.
Skeptical Debunker

Radar Map of Buried Martian Ice Adds to Climate Record - NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory - 0 views

  • The ability of NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to continue charting the locations of these hidden glaciers and ice-filled valleys -- first confirmed by radar two years ago -- adds clues about how these deposits may have been left as remnants when regional ice sheets retreated. The subsurface ice deposits extend for hundreds of kilometers, or miles, in the rugged region called Deuteronilus Mensae, about halfway from the equator to the Martian north pole. Jeffrey Plaut of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., and colleagues prepared a map of the region's confirmed ice for presentation at this week's 41st Lunar and Planetary Science Conference near Houston. The Shallow Radar instrument on the orbiter has obtained more than 250 observations of the study area, which is about the size of California. "We have mapped the whole area with a high density of coverage," Plaut said. "These are not isolated features. In this area, the radar is detecting thick subsurface ice in many locations." The common locations are around the bases of mesas and scarps, and confined within valleys or craters. Plaut said, "The hypothesis is the whole area was covered with an ice sheet during a different climate period, and when the climate dried out, these deposits remained only where they had been covered by a layer of debris protecting the ice from the atmosphere."
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    Extensive radar mapping of the middle-latitude region of northern Mars shows that thick masses of buried ice are quite common beneath protective coverings of rubble.
Skeptical Debunker

GPS Jamming Devices Pose Many Threats (w/ Video) - 0 views

  • GPS jammers send out a radio signal that’s the same frequency as the satellite signal. Since GPS satellite signals are weak, a GPS jamming device that puts out approximately 2 watts is sufficient to disrupt a GPS signal in a vehicle that’s approximately within 10 feet of the device. This leaves the in-vehicle system unable to establish its position and report back to a GPS tracking center, where the vehicle is registered. There are also fears that terrorists can use these devices to disrupt air traffic and cause severe safety and economic damage to the US. More powerful jammers could disrupt GPS signals in close proximity of airports, causing safety concerns. Our military overseas use GPS extensively to record their position as well as the position of the enemy. With GPS jamming devices in the hands of our enemy, U.S. and allied forces can be severely impacted when launching ground and air-strikes.
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    The latest GPS jamming devices are now being used by car thieves in the UK to render stolen cars and trucks undetectable by law enforcement. These devices also pose a threat to airlines and US military overseas.
anonymous

The Natural Way To Enhance Milk Yield - 1 views

Milk has always been one of the most significant sources of nutrition. It is good for the health of children and easily digested by the elders. The vitamin D, which is an important component of mil...

increase milk supply production dairy farming science research Mahendra The Effect trivedi Foundation

started by anonymous on 28 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
allengyh

the World's Fastest AI Cluster - Atlas 900 - 2 views

On February 25, 2020, the GSMA - an industry organization representing mobile operators - awarded the Global Mobile Awards 2020 (GLOMO Awards) Tech of the Future Award to Huawei Atlas 900 Artificia...

started by allengyh on 11 Sep 20 no follow-up yet
anonymous

Illustrate The Process Applied On Organic Agriculture - 2 views

Organic agriculture is an essential emerging trend with farming and gardening. Nowadays it is getting very unpleasant, due to using chemical compounds for gardening and for that reason the fertilit...

mango production how to increase fruit organic sustainable agriculture farming trivedi science research

started by anonymous on 19 Dec 14 no follow-up yet
Skeptical Debunker

New study shows sepsis and pneumonia caused by hospital-acquired infections kill 48,000... - 1 views

  • This is the largest nationally representative study to date of the toll taken by sepsis and pneumonia, two conditions often caused by deadly microbes, including the antibiotic-resistant bacteria MRSA. Such infections can lead to longer hospital stays, serious complications and even death. "In many cases, these conditions could have been avoided with better infection control in hospitals," said Ramanan Laxminarayan, Ph.D., principal investigator for Extending the Cure, a project examining antibiotic resistance based at the Washington, D.C. think-tank Resources for the Future. "Infections that are acquired during the course of a hospital stay cost the United States a staggering amount in terms of lives lost and health care costs," he said. "Hospitals and other health care providers must act now to protect patients from this growing menace." Laxminarayan and his colleagues analyzed 69 million discharge records from hospitals in 40 states and identified two conditions caused by health care-associated infections: sepsis, a potentially lethal systemic response to infection and pneumonia, an infection of the lungs and respiratory tract. The researchers looked at infections that developed after hospitalization. They zeroed in on infections that are often preventable, like a serious bloodstream infection that occurs because of a lapse in sterile technique during surgery, and discovered that the cost of such infections can be quite high: For example, people who developed sepsis after surgery stayed in the hospital 11 days longer and the infections cost an extra $33,000 to treat per person. Even worse, the team found that nearly 20 percent of people who developed sepsis after surgery died as a result of the infection. "That's the tragedy of such cases," said Anup Malani, a study co-author, investigator at Extending the Cure, and professor at the University of Chicago. "In some cases, relatively healthy people check into the hospital for routine surgery. They develop sepsis because of a lapse in infection control—and they can die." The team also looked at pneumonia, an infection that can set in if a disease-causing microbe gets into the lungs—in some cases when a dirty ventilator tube is used. They found that people who developed pneumonia after surgery, which is also thought to be preventable, stayed in the hospital an extra 14 days. Such cases cost an extra $46,000 per person to treat. In 11 percent of the cases, the patient died as a result of the pneumonia infection.
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    Two common conditions caused by hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) killed 48,000 people and ramped up health care costs by $8.1 billion in 2006 alone, according to a study released today in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
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