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347 articles from WEDNESDAY 9.5.2012
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WEDNESDAY 9. MAY, 2012
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Why the city's tech cluster has been such as a success
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Violent sex is taken to an extreme in warehouse pirate bugs, where the male uses his daggerlike penis to break though the female's body wall and insert sperm directly into her abdomen. Now researchers have found that after enduring bouts of traumatic insemination, the females live fast and die young.
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Reading a nasty word in a second language may not pack the punch it would in your native tongue, thanks to an unconscious brain quirk that tamps down potentially disturbing emotions, a new study finds.
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The unusual sight of humpback whales intervening in a killer whale hunt has been caught on camera by a BBC/National Geographic film crew.
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Magazine apps failed, and their unexpected replacements could threaten revenue.
Jason Pontin, editor in chief and publisher of Technology Review, which (full disclosure!) is the publication you are reading now, recently penned an
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The environment commissioner's report says the government's "sector-by-sector" approach to regulate greenhouse gas emissions lacks an overall implementation plan.
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The government has not undertaken the kinds of analysis that would be needed to reduce emissions sector by sector, the environment commissioner warns.
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Peru's northern beaches have been declared off-limits as scientists scramble to pin down what is causing the mysterious deaths of thousands of birds and dolphins.
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Increasingly "plugged-in" customers are grabbing extra seats, counter space and table tops by using cell phones, laptops and cups of steaming hot coffee to shield others from seemingly public spaces, according to two marketing professors who've studied this brewing consumer clash.
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As people pump groundwater for irrigation, drinking water, and industrial uses, the water doesn't just seep back into the ground it also evaporates into the atmosphere, or runs off into rivers and canals, eventually emptying into the world's oceans. This water adds up, and a new study calculates that by 2050, groundwater pumping will cause a global sea level rise of about 0.8 millimeters per year.
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Interpol president Khoo Boon Hui said on Tuesday that organised international gangs are behind most internet scams and that cyber crime's estimated cost is more than that of cocaine, heroin and marijuana trafficking put together.
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The idea of discovering a new form of life has not only excited astronomers and astrobiologists for decades, but also the wider public. The notion that we are the only example of a successful life form in the galaxy has, for many, seemed like an unlikely statistic, as we discover more and more habitable planetary bodies and hear yet more evidence of life's ability to survive in extreme conditions. A new essay, published May 8 in the online, open-access journal PLoS Biology, examines what really constitutes 'life' and the probability of discovering new life forms.
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(AP) -- Myspace, the once mighty social network, settled a privacy investigation by the Federal Trade Commission and agreed to submit to privacy audits over the next 20 years.
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(Phys.org) -- With the age of the incandescent light bulb fading rapidly, the holy grail of the lighting industry is to develop a highly efficient form of solid-state lighting that produces high quality white light.
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(Phys.org) -- NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has detected light emanating from a "super-Earth" planet beyond our solar system for the first time. While the planet is not habitable, the detection is a historic step toward the eventual search for signs of life on other planets.
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Americans' support for government action on global warming remains high but has dropped during the past two years, according to a new survey by Stanford researchers in collaboration with Ipsos Public Affairs. Political rhetoric and cooler-than-average weather appear to have influenced the shift, but economics doesn't appear to have played a role.
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The Tracking and Data Relay Satellite 4 (TDRS-4) recently completed almost 23 years of operations support and successfully completed end-of-mission de-orbit and decommissioning activities. TDRS-4's operational life span was well beyond its original 10-year design.
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Twitter is challenging a court order to turn over to law enforcement data on one of its users involved in Occupy Wall Street in a case described by a civil liberties group as a major test of online freedom of speech.
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New generation of diodes could produce brighter light with less juice
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New Brunswick has its first confirmed wolf killing in more than a century, DNA tests show.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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PhysOrg (dnes, 13:25)
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Yahoo! (dnes, 12:23)
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BBC Science/Nature (dnes, 11:37)
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Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 08:00)
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EurekAlert (dnes, 06:00)
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ScienceNOW (dnes, 00:20)
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ScienceDaily (dnes, 00:03)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (22. 5, 23:16)
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National Geographic News (22. 5, 23:03)
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (22. 5, 22:46)
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NYT > Science (22. 5, 21:11)
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Sci-Tech Today (22. 5, 20:42)
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NASA (17. 5, 02:56)
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Discovery (7. 3, 18:11)
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TIME (27. 7, 08:30)



