Advertisement
Cloud hosting
Cloud hosting is new way how to optimize your costs for hosting services. With our Cloud you can run your website, applications, whatever you want ... It is very secure, scalable and extremely high available service. You can get as much performance as you need. With our advanced Cloud hosting you can also save your time and money. Check out more info about Cloud hosting in European MasterDC datacenter.
Virtual hosting in Europe
Are you looking for high quality, fully customizable virtual hosting in central Europe? We can offer good prices, quality support, modern datacenters and much more. Check out our Virtual hosting in Europe.
Search
Calendar
| Mo | Tu | We | Th | Fr | Sa | Su |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ||||||
| 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
| 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 |
| 30 | ||||||
Navigation
353 articles from TUESDAY 17.4.2012
-
TUESDAY 17. APRIL, 2012
-
Found at the site of an ancient Chinese city, the 1,500-year-old statues—some life-size—may have been buried by temple officials.
-
CHANTILLY, Va. — Cries of "I see it!" rang out through the crowd as a speck on the horizon got bigger and bigger, resolving into the odd shape of two attached aircraft approaching. Soon it was close enough to make out space shuttle Discovery riding piggyback aboard a jumbo jet.
-
A diverse team of paleontologists hopes to find the "history of the world" in the rocks of the Parnaíba Basin in Brazil.
-
The activity in a region of the brain associated with reward can predict who will gain weight or have sex in the next six months, according to new research.
-

Rogers has officially bailed on the video store business, announcing plans on Tuesday to close all remaining 93 Rogers Video locations across Canada.
-
Testosterone supplements may improve the quality of life for patients who have a certain heart condition, a new study says.
-
-
Over the last few decades numerous studies have shown negative states, such as depression, anger, anxiety, and hostility, to be detrimental to cardiovascular health. Less is known about how positive psychological characteristics are related to heart health. In the first and largest systematic review on this topic to date, researchers found that positive psychological well-being appears to reduce the risk of heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular events.
-
Childhood exposure to lead dust has been linked to lasting physical and behavioral effects, and now lead dust from vehicles using leaded gasoline has been linked to instances of aggravated assault two decades after exposure, according to researchers.
-
An increasing number of crops commercially grown today are genetically modified (GM) to resist insect pests and/or tolerate herbicides. Although Bt corn is one of the most commonly grown GM crops in the United States, little is known about its effects on the long-term health of soils. Although there are many benefits to using biotechnology in agriculture, such as potentially reducing insecticide use, there may be unintended side effects as welldoes GM corn impact non-target soil organisms, such as arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, or affect plants subsequently grown in the same field?
-
Millions of Gmail users were unable to get to their messages for about an hour on Tuesday due to a disruption at Google's free Web-based email service.
-
(Phys.org) -- Researchers are developing a technique that uses nanotechnology to harvest energy from hot pipes or engine components to potentially recover energy wasted in factories, power plants and cars.
-
Light of specific wavelengths can be used to boost an enzyme's function by as much as 30 fold, potentially establishing a path to less expensive biofuels, detergents and a host of other products.
-
Microsoft on Tuesday announced that a new installment to the hit videogame "Halo" will be released in November, and predicted it would launch the next decade of the hugely popular franchise.
-
Offshore drilling safety and oversight is still lacking two years after the massive BP oil spill sullied the US Gulf Coast, two reports released Tuesday have found.
-
(AP) -- Oracle CEO Larry Ellison says he wanted to compete against Google's Android software in the smartphone market before deciding to sue his potential rival instead.
-
Deadly police shootings, racial profiling and discriminatory law enforcement are once again in the forefront of national debate. Police killings of unarmed civilians in New Orleans and Seattle have generated local protests and national controversies. Accusations of racial profiling have been lodged against police departments in those and other cities as well as the Maricopa County sheriff's office in Arizona. In addition, the recent shooting of teenager Trayvon Martin by a neighborhood watch coordinator has forced a close examination of authorities' initial investigation of the killing. But what are the real facts about these issues and what is the federal government doing to curb local police misconduct? These important questions are discussed in the April 6, 2012, issue of CQ Researcher, published by CQ Press, an imprint of SAGE.
-
The remains of stranded minke whales, mostly from Massachusetts beaches, have helped scientists understand how they and their close relatives hear.
-
It might sound like something out of the 1950's, but new research contends that a shortage of eligible bachelors for female college students is leading many women to invest more in their career than in their family.
-
People with tattoos drink more than their tattoo-less peers, a new study from France suggests.
-

A bachelor of fine arts degree may be your ticket to a dream job at Google.
-
Live long and prosper in your new home, Discovery. If androids dream of electric sheep, you will never stop flying.
-
Aditya Chakrabortty (Economics is in crisis, G2, 17 April) should be more patient and perhaps look at the history of economics to understand that it takes time to construct an alternative paradigm in the face of crisis. There is no free lunch in economics, not even fast food. It took Keynes till 1936, seven years after the stock market crash of 1929 and two years after the UK economy had recovered from the crisis, to offer his general theory. The first sentence of the preface to the general theory says it is a book "addressed to my fellow economists". Economists talk to each other and test out the logic of their ideas before launching in the popular domain. There are numerous post-Keynesians, monetarists, Hayekians and neo-Marxists blogging away about the alternatives. If Chakrabortty wants hard print, he can look at Peter Flaschel and Sigrid Luchtenberg's Roads to Social Capitalism, just published. It is mathematical, of course, but it offers a series of alternatives based on the insights of Marx, Schumpeter and Keynes. More, no doubt, will follow. Economics can look after its own redemption.
Meghnad Desai
House of Lords• Chakrabortty's piece is interesting but flawed. His claim that no one has stepped into the breach since Marx, Wright-Mills and Bourdieu suggests he doesn't get around much. Poking fun at what an "entire discipline ... [of] sociologists did at their recent conference", most of the time discussing the holistic massage industry ("using a Foucauldian lens", shock horror), is of course amusing. But to judge recent sociological analysis of class, education, welfare and political economy (Savage, Scott, Ball, Skeggs and others) ignores a critical body of work addressing the failings of market and neoliberal reform. Politicians may decide to ignore such critical work, but it's troubling that he is unaware of important contributions to the field he is talking about.
Denis Gleeson
Emeritus professor of education, University of Warwickguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds -
In a beautiful display of stellar power, the sun blasted an M1.7 flare and coronal mass ejection into space.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
-
CBC - Technology & Science News (dnes, 01:20)
-
Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 01:06)
-
ScienceDaily (18. 5, 21:37)
-
PhysOrg (18. 5, 21:25)
-
Sci-Tech Today (18. 5, 16:34)
-
Yahoo! (18. 5, 16:20)
-
National Geographic News (18. 5, 14:09)
-
Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (18. 5, 06:29)
-
EurekAlert (18. 5, 06:00)
-
BBC Science/Nature (18. 5, 03:27)
-
NYT > Science (18. 5, 02:47)
-
ScienceNOW (18. 5, 00:23)
-
NASA (17. 5, 02:56)
-
Discovery (7. 3, 18:11)
-
TIME (27. 7, 08:30)




