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 | 31 | |||||
Navigation
400 articles from WEDNESDAY 18.7.2012
-
WEDNESDAY 18. JULY, 2012
-
Giving children with egg allergies increasingly higher doses of the very food they are allergic to can eliminate or ease reactions in most of them, according to results from a federally funded U.S. study.
-
When hospital patients are placed on a mechanical ventilator for days at a time, their lungs react to the pressure with an out-of-control immune response. Researchers have discovered potential drug targets that might reduce the resulting inflammation.
-
Giving egg-allergic children small amounts of egg over many months found to reduce severe reactions, help some shed the allergy entirely.
-
After your summer tan begins to fade and you worry about all the damage you may have done to your skin, wouldn’t it be great if you could check out your skin for potential skin cancer without trekking to your doctor? Now there’s an app for that. But there’s a catch: You’ll have to fully expose yourself for results.
-
Harvard researchers are unlocking the evolutionary secrets of one of the world's most recognizable groups of mushrooms, and to do it, they're using one of the most comprehensive fungal "family trees" ever created.
-
Researchers at MIT and the University of Central Florida (UCF) have developed a versatile new fabrication technique for making large quantities of uniform spheres from a wide variety of materials a technique that enables unprecedented control over the design of individual, microscopic particles. The particles, including complex, patterned spheres, could find uses in everything from biomedical research and drug delivery to electronics and materials processing.
-
EBay says its second-quarter net income more than doubled, thanks to higher revenue from its PayPal online payments business and its e-commerce websites.
-
(Phys.org) -- Researchers at Portland State University have discovered how mosses can use chemical cues to recruit small creatures to help with fertilization, via a process similar to pollination in flowering plants.
-
(AP) Google's online mapping service is incorporating additional images from Antarctica.
-
(AP) Google, so far, has won the search engine wars. Now it wants to target international crime, including Mexico's powerful drug cartels.
-
Throughout the universe more than 99 percent of matter looks nothing like what's on Earth. Instead of materials we can touch and see, instead of motions we intuitively expect like a ball rolling down a hill, or a cup that sits still on a table, most of the universe is governed by rules that react more obviously to such things as magnetic force or electrical charge. It would be as if your cup was magnetized, perhaps attracted to a metal ceiling above, and instead of resting, it floats up, hovering somewhere in the air, balanced between the upward force and the pull of gravity below.
-
(AP) IBM says its second-quarter earnings rose 6 percent despite a downturn in revenue amid Europe's economic jitters.
-
Infrared imagery of Tropical Storm Khanun shows that the storm is weakening as it heads toward a landfall in the Chungcheongnam-do province of western South Korea. Khanun is already bringing rainfall and stirring up seas around southwestern South Korea.
-
Infrared satellite data from NASA's Aqua satellite showed a very small area of strong thunderstorms north of the center of what is now post-tropical storm Fabio as it moves toward the southern California coast.
-
A new National Agenda Opinion Poll by the University of Delaware's Center for Political Communication reveals support for voter identification laws is strongest among Americans who harbor negative sentiments toward African Americans.
-
Chimpanzees use weight to pick the best tool, and monkeys beg more when they're paid attention to, as reported in two independent research reports published July 18 in the open access journal PLoS ONE.
-
(Phys.org) -- The no-nonsense, bareboned, elemental $35 computer called Raspberry Pi is making headlines again with its Wednesday announcement of its new Raspbian operating system, described as an OS specifically optimized for the Pi computers hardware specs. That means the Raspberry Pi now has a recommended operating system for making the device work. Raspbian meets the teams goal of delivering a faster running OS for the little computer, and it is of course no accident that Raspbian evokes the word Debian, the Linux OS flavor, as it is a custom Debian build that brings faster performance to the device.
-
Two species of single-cell parasites have co-opted "ready-made" genes from their hosts that in turn help them exploit their hosts, according to a new study by University of British Columbia and University of Ottawa researchers.
-
Unique arm morphology in Neandertals was likely caused by scraping activities such as hide preparation, not spear thrusting as previously theorized, according to research published July 18 in the open access journal PLoS ONE.
-
(AP) A report due out later this week recommends the U.S. government proceed with the sale of New York's Plum Island, home to America's only laboratory that studies infectious animal diseases that could affect the livestock industry.
-
Researchers have discovered that TDP-43, a protein strongly linked to ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) and other neurodegnerative diseases, appears to activate a variety of different molecular pathways when genetically manipulated.
-
Becoming infected with both of the two main types of HIV actually slows the progression of the disease, a new study says.
-
Some children with egg allergies may get relief from their symptoms by eating small but increasing doses of egg protein — the very thing they are allergic to, a new study suggests.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
-
PhysOrg (dnes, 01:28)
-
ScienceNOW (dnes, 00:20)
-
ScienceDaily (dnes, 00:01)
-
Yahoo! (22. 5, 23:28)
-
CBC - Technology & Science News (22. 5, 23:16)
-
National Geographic News (22. 5, 23:03)
-
Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (22. 5, 22:46)
-
Guardian Unlimited Science (22. 5, 22:00)
-
NYT > Science (22. 5, 21:11)
-
Sci-Tech Today (22. 5, 20:42)
-
BBC Science/Nature (22. 5, 19:00)
-
EurekAlert (22. 5, 06:00)
-
NASA (17. 5, 02:56)
-
Discovery (7. 3, 18:11)
-
TIME (27. 7, 08:30)



