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mdkpest

Keeping Your Home Safe from Pests: A Guide to Pest Control Services in TX - Termite, Bed Bug, Mosquito, Rodent, Pest Control, Traps | MDK - 0 views

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    Pests can cause significant problems in homes, ranging from property damage to health hazards. Unfortunately, Texas is home to a variety of pests, such as cockroaches, ants, rodents, and termites, that can cause severe damage if not controlled. In this article, we will provide a guide to pest control services in TX to help homeowners keep their homes safe from pests.
Erich Feldmeier

Ernährung: Wer abnehmen will, muss seinen Willen trainieren | ZEIT ONLINE - 0 views

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    "Erschlankte Menschen müssen sich gegen grundlegende Mechanismen in ihrem Gehirn zur Wehr setzen, die für unser Überleben unabdingbar sind. Das Gefühl von Hunger und Sättigung entsteht im Hypothalamus, der Dutzende von Körpersignalen verarbeitet. Der Körper meldet ihm etwa, wie gut die Vorratsspeicher gefüllt sind. Die Fettzellen produzieren das sättigende Hormon Leptin - je mehr Fett, desto mehr Leptin im Blut. Dicke Menschen sind jedoch unempfindlicher gegenüber Leptin, weshalb sie noch Hunger verspüren, wenn andere längst den Teller beiseiteschieben. Hat man länger nichts gegessen, produziert zudem die Magenschleimhaut das Hormon Ghrelin. Normalerweise sinkt der Pegel nach einer Mahlzeit, nach einer Diät aber haben Menschen ständig mehr von dem Hunger-Hormon im Blut. Wer abgenommen hat, dem knurrt der Magen, auch wenn er normal isst. Vehement fordert der Körper die verlorenen Pfunde zurück."
Tom Thomos

Know the Importance of Tree Fence Protection in New South Wales - 1 views

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    Trees can be damaged or killed by a wide variety of construction activities. It isn't always easy to save trees, but careful planning will help. Coastline Sediment Control provides you the best tree fence protection techniques in New South Wales.
Barry mahfood

Ray Kurzweil Speaks! The Singularity Explained - 0 views

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    I wish everyone would watch this presentation by Ray at the Killer App Expo in Fort Wayne, Indiana. There's a natural skepticism people feel when they first hear or read about the predictions made by Ray's Law of Accelerating Returns, but when you listen to him explain how it has worked and will work, you can't help but take him seriously.
Barry mahfood

Boiling the Frog: Our Transition to Singularity - 0 views

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    You've all heard the metaphor, right? Boiling a frog? Gradually increasing the temperature of the water so the frog gets used to it until it's hot enough to boil? Yes, that one. Apart from the sad conclusion of the analogy, the idea of gradual change not being very noticeable fits the way that accelerating technological change will be accepted by humans.
Barry mahfood

What Do Nanomachines Look Like? - 0 views

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    When you hear about nanotechnology (and you will hear about it more and more since it's moving into the mainstream of manufacturing), you might wonder what a nanomachine might look like. Since you can't see them with your unaided eye, you have to look at highly magnified images. But for the folks whose job it is to design the tiny parts for the nanomachines, some powerful design software comes into play.
Barry mahfood

Raised Imperishable? - 0 views

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    A bit of backstory is required here. I spent half of my life as a Christian minister. I am no longer a Christian, and obviously not a minister. Today I am an atheistic blogger, although the focus of my blogs is unrelated to atheism. I tell you this not to offend those of you who believe in God, not to curry favor with those of you who do not. I only mention it because I will quote some scripture in this post, but the post is about religion. It is about the singularity, transhumanism, and radical life-extension. So please bear with me.
Barry mahfood

Understanding the Technological Singularity: Vernor Vinge Interview - 0 views

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    For those of you who are new to the concept of the coming technological singularity, this NPR podcast, featuring Vernor Vinge (pronounced vin-gee), a retired San Diego State University Professor of Mathematics, computer scientist, and science fiction author, will be well worth your time. In it, he talks about AI as refering to "amplified intelligence" rather than artificial intelligence, among other highly visionary predictions.
ratbeard

Price placed on limiting global warming - earth - 0 views

  • Stabilising greenhouse gases at a level that would limit global warming to between 2°C and 4°C will cost between 0.2% and 3.0% of annual GDP, says the latest UN report on climate change. That is up to $1830 billion
  • Such a treaty would succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which ends in 2012.
  • China is projected to become the world's top emitter before 2010 according to the International Energy Agency. However, it and other developing countries argue that policies to battle climate change should not come in the way of their efforts to develop their economies
Barry mahfood

THE PRICE OF RICE - Transcendence in Bite-Sized Bits: Peering into the Human Brain: Nanoscale Resolution MRI - 0 views

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    It is believed that supercomputers will achieve the computational power of human brains by about 2020, personal computers just a few years later, so figuring out the details of the brain's structure and functioning needs to keep pace. A major challenge in this has been the limits of MRI resolution, which is why the news of a major breakthrough has such significance.
Mike Chelen

RNA world easier to make : Nature News - 0 views

  • John Sutherland and his colleagues from the University of Manchester, UK
  • ribonucleotide
  • building block of RNA
  • ...29 more annotations...
  • Donna Blackmond, a chemist at Imperial College London.
  • strong evidence for the RNA world
  • 'RNA world' hypothesis, which suggests that life began when RNA, a polymer related to DNA that can duplicate itself and catalyse reactions
  • chemists had thought the subunits would probably assemble themselves first, then join to form a ribonucleotide
  • three distinct parts: a ribose sugar, a phosphate group and a base
  • RNA polymer is a string of ribonucleotides
  • efforts to connect ribose and base together have met with frustrating failure
  • researchers have now managed to synthesise
  • ribonucleotides
  • remedy is to avoid producing separate ribose-sugar and base subunits
  • makes a molecule whose scaffolding contains a bond that will
  • be the key ribose-base connection
  • atoms are then added around this skeleton
  • final connection is to add a phosphate group
  • influences the entire synthesis
  • acting as a catalyst, it guides small organic molecules into making the right connections
  • What we have ended up with is molecular choreography
  • objectors to the RNA-world theory say the RNA molecule as a whole is too complex to be created using early-Earth geochemistry
  • flaw is in the logic — that this experimental control by researchers in a modern laboratory could have been available on the early Earth
  • Robert Shapiro, a chemist at New York University
  • early-Earth scenarios
  • heating molecules in water, evaporating them and irradiating them with ultraviolet light
  • results showing that they can string nucleotides together
  • ultimate goal is to get a living system (RNA) emerging from a one-pot experiment
  • need to know what the constraints on the conditions are first
  • Shapiro sides with
  • another theory of life's origins
  • because RNA is too complex to emerge from small molecules, simpler metabolic processes
  • eventually catalysed the formation of RNA and DNA
Skeptical Debunker

Phones, paper 'chips' may fight disease - CNN.com - 0 views

  • George Whitesides has developed a prototype for paper "chip" technology that could be used in the developing world to cheaply diagnose deadly diseases such as HIV, malaria, tuberculosis, hepatitis and gastroenteritis. The first products will be available in about a year, he said. His efforts, which find their inspiration from the simple designs of comic books and computer chips, are surprisingly low-tech and cheap. Patients put a drop of blood on one side of the slip of paper, and on the other appears a colorful pattern in the shape of a tree, which tells medical professionals whether the person is infected with certain diseases. Water-repellent comic-book ink saturates several layers of paper, he said. The ink funnels a patient's blood into tree-like channels, where several layers of treated paper react with the blood to create diagnostic colors. It's not entirely unlike a home pregnancy test, Whitesides said, but the chips are much smaller and cheaper, and they test for multiple diseases at once. They also show how severely a person is infected rather than producing only a positive-negative reading.
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    A chemistry professor at Harvard University is trying to shrink a medical laboratory onto a piece of paper that's the size of a fingerprint and costs about a penny.
Skeptical Debunker

Scientists reveal driving force behind evolution - 0 views

  • The team observed viruses as they evolved over hundreds of generations to infect bacteria. They found that when the bacteria could evolve defences, the viruses evolved at a quicker rate and generated greater diversity, compared to situations where the bacteria were unable to adapt to the viral infection. The study shows, for the first time, that the American evolutionary biologist Leigh Van Valen was correct in his 'Red Queen Hypothesis'. The theory, first put forward in the 1970s, was named after a passage in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass in which the Red Queen tells Alice, 'It takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place'. This suggested that species were in a constant race for survival and have to continue to evolve new ways of defending themselves throughout time. Dr Steve Paterson, from the University's School of Biosciences, explains: "Historically, it was assumed that most evolution was driven by a need to adapt to the environment or habitat. The Red Queen Hypothesis challenged this by pointing out that actually most natural selection will arise from co-evolutionary interactions with other species, not from interactions with the environment. "This suggested that evolutionary change was created by 'tit-for-tat' adaptations by species in constant combat. This theory is widely accepted in the science community, but this is the first time we have been able to show evidence of it in an experiment with living things." Dr Michael Brockhurst said: "We used fast-evolving viruses so that we could observe hundreds of generations of evolution. We found that for every viral strategy of attack, the bacteria would adapt to defend itself, which triggered an endless cycle of co-evolutionary change. We compared this with evolution against a fixed target, by disabling the bacteria's ability to adapt to the virus. "These experiments showed us that co-evolutionary interactions between species result in more genetically diverse populations, compared to instances where the host was not able to adapt to the parasite. The virus was also able to evolve twice as quickly when the bacteria were allowed to evolve alongside it."
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    Scientists at the University of Liverpool have provided the first experimental evidence that shows that evolution is driven most powerfully by interactions between species, rather than adaptation to the environment.
Skeptical Debunker

New Rocket Engine Could Reach Mars in 40 Days - Yahoo! News - 0 views

  • A mission trajectory study estimated that a VASIMR-powered spacecraft could reach the red planet within 40 days if it had a 200 megawatt power source. That's 1,000 times more power than what the current VASIMR prototype will use, although Ad Astra says that VASIMR can scale up to higher power sources. The real problem rests with current limitations in space power sources. Glover estimates that the Mars mission scenario would need a power source that can produce one kilowatt (kW) of power per kilogram (kg) of mass, or else the spacecraft could never reach the speeds required for a quick trip. Existing power sources fall woefully short of that ideal. Solar panels have a mass to power ratio of 20 kg/kW. The Pentagon's DARPA science lab hopes to develop solar panels that can achieve 7 kg/KW, and stretched lens arrays might reach 3 kg/KW, Glover said. That's good enough for VASIMR to transport cargo around low-Earth orbit and to the moon, but not to fly humans to Mars. Ad Astra sees nuclear power as the likeliest power source for a VASIMR-powered Mars mission, but the nuclear reactor that could do the job remains just a concept on paper. The U.S. only ever launched one nuclear reactor into space back in 1965, and it achieved just 50 kg/kW.
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    Future Mars outposts or colonies may seem more distant than ever with NASA's exploration plans in flux, but the rocket technology that could someday propel a human mission to the red planet in as little as 40 days may already exist. A company founded by former NASA astronaut Franklin Chang-Diaz has been developing a new rocket engine that draws upon electric power and magnetic fields to channel superheated plasma out the back. That stream of plasma generates steady, efficient thrust that uses low amounts of propellant and builds up speed over time. "People have known for a long time, even back in the '50s, that electric propulsion would be needed for serious exploration of Mars," said Tim Glover, director of development at the Ad Astra Rocket Company.
mobeen ahmmaad

SEO Service - 0 views

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    Internet marketing has created a buzzword around the world. Interests among the businessmen are increasing rapidly about internet marketing. Therefore, the number of people wanting to optimize their websites through SEO service has also increased. If you intend to do online business you will definitely want your website to be in the first page of a search.
dirozaye100

Human Diagram Worksheet - 0 views

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    Facts about cell "The shark diagrams help show where to cut," Kiskadden said One shark was distributed to each group of students. Using a worksheet that diagrammed the cuts as a guideline, Jessica Carter and Hunter Adkins got to work after Kiskadden directed Complete with a Venn diagram and a set of snappy instructions we will compare and contrast them and their actions," began the worksheet.
kondachary

Scientists Claim Ripples from Black Hole, Einstein was Right - 1 views

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    ientists are claiming a stunning discovery in their quest to fully understand gravity.They have observed the warping of space-time generated by the collision of two black holes more than a billion light-years from Earth.The international team says the first detection of these gravitational waves will usher in a new era
truthscience

How Far Should Science Go to Create Lifesaving Replacement Organs? - 0 views

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    The prospect of creating hybrid animals with human parts and killing them to harvest organs has already raised a slew of ethical questions. So have other sci-fi-esque scenarios, like using "brainless" host bodies as organ farms and building organs from scratch using 3D bioprinters. As we envision an era of regenerative medicine decades from now, how far is society willing to go to solve the organ shortage crisis?
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