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338 articles from WEDNESDAY 25.7.2012
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WEDNESDAY 25. JULY, 2012
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The largest drought in 50 years has severely damaged much of the nation's "corn belt" and is threatening the viability of Minnesota's 2012 corn crop. While an extreme, this summer's condition is a reminder of a larger challenge facing agriculture to use limited resources like water in an effective and sustainable manner.
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A new study published in the prestigious journal Science, co-authored by University of Nevada, Reno's Glenn Biasi and colleagues at GNS Science in New Zealand, finds that very large earthquakes have been occurring relatively regularly on the Alpine Fault along the southwest coastline of New Zealand for at least 8,000 years.
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Improved technology has driven down credit card fraud in Europe dramatically, the European Central Bank said Wednesday in its first-ever report on the issue.
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Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt's dream of completing the 100m in 9.4sec is feasible, according to a Dutch mathematical study whose findings were unveiled Wednesday.
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(AP) It's showtime for Facebook. Call it the second act after its rocky initial public offering two months ago. On Thursday, the company will take the spotlight once again to announce its first earnings report as a public company.
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A scientist claiming to work for the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran told a Finnish cyber-security group that Tehran's nuclear programme had been the victim of a new cyber attack, the group said Wednesday.
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French archaeologists have discovered a roughly 5,000-year-old pharaonic solar boat in an expedition in Abu Rawash, west of the Egyptian capital, the antiquities ministry said on Wednesday.
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A new study by York University researchers finds that songbirds follow a strict annual schedule when migrating to their breeding grounds with some birds departing on precisely the same date each year.
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The company operating the US magazine Newsweek indicated Wednesday the venerable publication is likely to go digital to stem its losses and could undergo other changes by next year.
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Snakes evolved their curious body shape on land, not in water, and are probably the descendants of small burrowing lizards, scientists have deducted from 70-million-year-old fossil remains.
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Birds can master difficult problems, but children learn to solve "impossible" ones
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The Canadian Space Agency has just unveiled its contributions to the space telescope that will replace the Hubble – a highly-precise camera and a sensor.
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A dramatic gash in the surface of the Earth that could rival the majesty of the Grand Canyon has been discovered secreted beneath Antarctica's vast, featureless ice sheet.
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On the heels of Twitter's Promoted Tweets, Google's Sponsored Results, and YouTube videos and Facebook's experimental sponsored updates, location-tracking service Foursquare is jumping in the ad revenue game with Promoted Updates.
It's the latest in the wave of social media capitalization after years of hooking in Internet users to free networks, and it's the first attempt to generate revenue for a company funded by $70 million in venture capital.
Specials Delivery "Promoted Updates are just like the local updates that you see in your friends tab, except that businesses can pay to promote them in our Explore results," Foursquare says on its company blog. "The update can be a money-saving special, an update on a new fashion line, or a photo of their latest dish. It works similar to ads on Google; there, if you search for 'laptops,' you'll see an ad for an electronics Web site next to the results."
Foursquare, which was founded in 2009 by Dennis Crowley and Naveen Selvadurai and now has about 20 million users, promises to "make the world easier to use" by recommending businesses frequented by user's friends. It allows users to check-in to locations recognized by the application via their mobile devices. If they frequent a location more than other users, they get to be "mayor" of that venue.
Ads targeting specific people based on their associations, location, spending habits or browsing history are fueling a surging mobile advertising market that is expected to grow by 85 percent to $11.6 billion as smartphones, tablets and other connected devices make their way into more consumers' hands, according to a report by Strategy Analytics.
"Mobile and location-based marketing has enormous potential,"said digital advertising and media analyst Rebecca Lieb of the Altimeter Group. "We're already seeing national brands like Walgreen's and American Express experiment with Foursquare, but mostly it's at check-in,...
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The children of mothers on a low-protein diet are more likely to develop hypertension as adults, but why? New research finds that the high maternal testosterone levels associated with a low-protein diet in rats are caused by reduced activity of a testosterone inactivator, thereby allowing more testosterone to reach the fetus and increase the offspring's susceptibility to adulthood hypertension.
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A new study finds that very large earthquakes have been occurring relatively regularly on the Alpine Fault along the southwest coastline of New Zealand for at least 8,000 years.
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Organizers for the London Olympics have made significant strides toward more energy-efficient summer games, but some of their efforts didn't make it to the finish line.
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Biologists recommend further study of how rope-like polymers called microtubules function. They computational comparations of two models of microtubules, a component of cell cytoskeletons.
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Physicists have detected Higgs-type excitations in a low-dimensional system of ultracold atoms at the transition between different phases of matter.
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Nearly the entire ice sheet surface was slush after a few days this month—the fastest melt yet seen by satellites. What does it mean?
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It turns out BOTH men and women objectify women more frequently because of how our brains process information.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (dnes, 06:00)
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EurekAlert (dnes, 06:00)
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ScienceDaily (dnes, 04:38)
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PhysOrg (dnes, 03:25)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (dnes, 03:14)
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Yahoo! (dnes, 02:45)
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BBC Science/Nature (dnes, 02:18)
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ScienceNOW (dnes, 01:26)
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National Geographic News (dnes, 01:12)
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Sci-Tech Today (23. 5, 23:14)
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Guardian Unlimited Science (23. 5, 21:59)
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NYT > Science (23. 5, 20:04)
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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)





