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Lab creates 'long-distance mouse'
Post Date: 2007-11-02 11:20:19 by robin
1 Comments
Lab creates 'long-distance mouse' The modified mice: They were also found to be aggressive A genetically modified "supermouse" which can run twice as far as a normal rodent has been created by scientists working in the US. It also lives longer, and breeds later in life compared with its standard laboratory cousin. The research has been conducted at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Details of the scientists' new transgenic animals are published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The mice were produced to study the biochemistry at play in metabolism and could aid the understanding of human health and disease. ...

Why Americans Will Believe Almost Anything
Post Date: 2007-11-02 07:52:46 by Kamala
1 Comments
Why Americans Will Believe Almost Anything By Tim O'Shea 10-30-7 Aldous Huxley's inspired 1954 essay detailed the vivid, mind-expanding, multisensory insights of his mescaline adventures. By altering his brain chemistry with natural psychotropics, Huxley tapped into a rich and fluid world of shimmering, indescribable beauty and power. With his neurosensory input thus triggered, Huxley was able to enter that parallel universe described by every mystic and space captain in recorded history. Whether by hallucination or epiphany, Huxley sought to remove all bonds, all controls, all filters, all cultural conditioning from his perceptions and to confront Nature or the World or Reality ...

Shook-Up San Franciscans Prepare to Crack Open Earthquake Kits
Post Date: 2007-11-01 11:15:51 by Brian S
8 Comments
Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) -- San Franciscans shaken by the earthquake two days ago are even more unnerved by seismologists' warning that they should be ready for a bigger temblor soon. ``I'm leaving town this Friday, and that makes me happy,'' said resident Michelle Clemensen, who works for a hedge fund. ``I'm not prepared in any way for an earthquake.'' The 5.6-magnitude earthquake that rattled the Bay Area significantly increased the likelihood of another damaging seismic shift in the next few days, a panel of scientists said yesterday. The quake broke windows and tossed items from shelves in San Jose but didn't cause major damage. It was centered near the ...

Smarty Plants: Inside the World's Only Plant-Intelligence Lab
Post Date: 2007-10-31 06:29:43 by Ada
1 Comments
The "plantoid" is a concept robot for exploring Mars. Its roots would explore the soil, while power and telecommunications are provided by the main stem and the solar "leaves." FIORENTINO, Italy -- Professor Stefano Mancuso knows it isn't easy being green: He runs the world's only laboratory dedicated to plant intelligence. At the International Laboratory of Plant Neurobiology (LINV), about seven miles outside Florence, Italy, Mancuso and his team of nine work to debunk the myth that plants are low-life. Research at the modern building combines physiology, ecology and molecular biology. "If you define intelligence as the capacity to solve problems, plants ...

Worm study may bolster idea of human sexuality - Scientists Create Homo Nematodes
Post Date: 2007-10-30 01:00:18 by Minerva
1 Comments
Biologists at the University of Utah have engineered "transgendered" worms that are attracted to worms of the same sex, bolstering evidence that sexual orientation may be hard-wired in the brain. The researchers isolated the nerve cells responsible for sexual attraction in nematode worms, then "flipped" a genetic switch in the brains of female worms so they became attracted to other females. "They look like girls, but act and think like boys," said Jamie White, a postdoctoral fellow at the U. and lead author of the study, which will be published in the November issue of Current Biology. The research does not provide solidanswers about human sexuality - ...

Scientists Kill Ming the Clam, The World's Oldest Living Creature
Post Date: 2007-10-30 00:53:20 by Minerva
7 Comments
t has been christened Ming and it's officially the oldest animal to have ever lived. A British scientific team discovered the 405-year-old clam, named after the Chinese dynasty and not the former Liberal Democrat leader, at the bottom of the ocean, and hope its longevity will reveal the secrets of ageing. The oldest creature ever So significant is the find that Help The Aged have awarded a £40,000 grant to the team to investigate how the molusc, born when Queen Elizabeth I was on the throne and William Shakespeare was writing The Merry Wives of Windsor, has survived over the centuries. The record-breaking shellfish, 31 years older than the previous oldest animal, another clam, ...

Terabyte Thumb Drives Made Possible by Nanotech Memory
Post Date: 2007-10-27 21:10:38 by robin
1 Comments
Terabyte Thumb Drives Made Possible by Nanotech Memory By Alexis Madrigal 10.26.07 | 4:00 PM Michael Kozicki, director of Arizona State's Center for Applied Nanoionics, has developed a new type of computer memory that he claims is cheaper and more energy-efficient than current technology. Photo: Michael Kozicki Researchers have developed a low-cost, low-power computer memory that could put terabyte-sized thumb drives in consumers' pockets within a few years. Thanks to a new technique for manipulating charged copper particles at the molecular scale, researchers at Arizona State ...

Non Lethal Heroes Needed
Post Date: 2007-10-27 17:03:53 by Ada
2 Comments
DIGG THIS Recently, on my favorite television channel, Turner Classic Movies, I saw a couple of old biopics. One was about French chemist Louis Pasteur, and the other was about Paul Ehrlich, a German scientist. They reminded me of how poisoned our culture has become. Hollywood's idea of heroes today are soldiers, cops, psychopaths or comic-book fantasy characters – all essentially killers. Yet Pasteur and Ehrlich did more for the human race and saved more lives than all the generals who have ever been born. Pasteur, from whose name the verb "pasteurize" comes, fought a lonely battle trying to convince physicians that most diseases were caused by microbes. He was ...

Exhibitionist spiny anteater reveals bizarre penis
Post Date: 2007-10-26 19:12:42 by Zipporah
1 Comments
The bizarre sex life of the spiny anteater has been exposed by researchers – the male ejaculates using only one half of its penis. New findings about the creature’s sex life may seem salacious but they could help shed light on an evolutionary mystery. It seems that the way the mammal ejaculates is similar to the way reptiles do – by shutting down one side of its penis before secreting semen from the other side. Reptiles have a pair of male members called hemipenes for sex, and they use only one of the two during each act of copulation. The spiny anteater (Tachyglossus aculeatus), also known as the short-beaked echidna, is a primitive mammal ...

HAARP: VANDALISM IN THE SKY? [Weather control, Earthquakes, Mind Control, Crowd control, etc. / DARPA, 9/11 Missing $2.3 TRILLION, ZAKHEIM]
Post Date: 2007-10-26 15:38:45 by AllTheKings'HorsesWontDoIt
1 Comments
HAARP: VANDALISM IN THE SKY? [Weather control, Earthquakes, Mind Control, Crowd control, etc. / DARPA, 9/11 Missing $2.3 TRILLION, Dov Zakheim] Published in Nexus Magazine, Volume 3, Number 1 (December '95-January '96) PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. email: nexus@peg.apc.org Telephone: +61 (0)74 429 280; Fax: +61 (0)74 429 381 Copyright: 1995 by Dr Nick Begich and Jeane Manning Technonet is the protest form of the 1990s-picketing on the information highways. For example, a fast-growing assortment of men and women around the world are using the Internet (started by the US military for information transfer and exchange that would never be interfered with) to draw ...

Teen's Ticket Hinges on GPS Vs. Radar
Post Date: 2007-10-26 13:30:08 by Brian S
3 Comments
WINDSOR, Calif. (AP) — Given the option of contesting a traffic ticket, most motorists — 19 out of 20 by some estimates — would rather pay up than pit their word against a police officer's in court. A retired sheriff's deputy nevertheless hopes to beat the long odds of the law by setting the performance of a police officer's radar gun against the accuracy of the GPS tracking device he installed in his teenage stepson's car. The retired deputy, Roger Rude, readily admits his 17-year-old stepson, Shaun Malone, enjoys putting the pedal to the metal. That's why he and Shaun's mother insisted on putting a global positioning system that monitors the ...

The Third Electrical Current
Post Date: 2007-10-26 07:05:40 by gengis gandhi
1 Comments
The Third Electrical Current A US Patent has been awarded to John Timothy Sullivan for the Sully Direct Current, which is not AC nor DC. Discovered as part of a new electrolysis technique. Critics say it is not new, and it is not a third type of current. BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, USA -- Clear Energy, Inc., a small R&D company in Baltimore, has been issued US Patent number 7,041,203 for a new electrical current. Previously, there were two types of currents used to deliver electrical power. Direct Current (DC), the kind that comes from your battery in your automobile, was discovered by Ben Franklin in the 1700’s. Alternating Current (AC) was brought forth by Nikola Tesla over a ...

Scientists map out first Asian genome
Post Date: 2007-10-25 23:34:49 by Tauzero
8 Comments
Scientists map out first Asian genome BEIJING, Oct. 12 -- Scientists have successfully completed the first sequence map of the diploid genome of an Asian individual. The sequence was worked out by a group of scientists in Shenzhen and is now on display at the Ninth Annual China Hi-Tech Fair in the city. The results, based on a Chinese, represent only the third human genome to have been sequenced in the world. The sequence map was created using advanced sequencing technology. American scientists earlier this year created the first two genome sequence maps, of two Caucasian people. The Chinese project was undertaken by the Shenzhen branch of the Beijing Genomics Institute (BGI), along ...

Scientists Denounce Global Warming Report 'Edits'
Post Date: 2007-10-25 17:35:16 by robin
0 Comments
Scientists Denounce Global Warming Report 'Edits' Public Health Experts Say Edits Represent Censoring of Science By RAJA JAGADEESAN, M.D. and CARLA WILLIAMS ABC News Medical Unit Oct. 25, 2007 — Environmental and public health experts overwhelmingly denounced editing by the White House of a federal health agency head's testimony to Congress Tuesday. Significant deletions were made from the testimony, concerning global warming and the potential impact on human health. The original, unedited testimony presented to Congress by Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and obtained by ABC News was 14 pages long, but the White ...

Russian Firm Files Patent for Password Cracker
Post Date: 2007-10-25 16:24:15 by robin
0 Comments
According to ElcomSoft, it has found a way to harness the combined power of a PC's Central Processing Unit and its video card's Graphics Processing Unit. "The resulting hardware/software powerhouse," it asserts, "will allow cryptology professionals to build affordable PCs that will work like supercomputers when recovering lost passwords." Others question how original the method really is. A Moscow-based software maker filed this week for a U.S. patent on a technology it claims will significantly reduce the time it takes to crack computer passwords. The Russian company, Elcomsoft, said in a statement that it has discovered "a breakthrough technology that ...

Hidden data: You may be sharing more than you think
Post Date: 2007-10-24 16:46:42 by gengis gandhi
0 Comments
October 24th, 2007 Hidden data: You may be sharing more than you think By RONALD HACKETT August 21, 2006 In April 2005, when the Defense Department’s Multi-National Force — Iraq posted a redacted report on the death of Italian secret agent Nicola Calipari in Iraq, a group of Pentagon Web site visitors from Italy could copy and paste the classified portions from Adobe Acrobat Reader from the Web site into a Microsoft Word document, including the name of the U.S. soldier who accidentally killed her. Last December, Web surfers found out from the posted White House policy document “Strategy for Victory in Iraq” who the report’s author was, causing some embarrassment ...

35 Inconvenient Truths: The errors in Al Gore’s movie
Post Date: 2007-10-21 17:06:17 by farmfriend
3 Comments
35 Inconvenient Truths: The errors in Al Gore’s movie Written by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley Friday, 19 October 2007 A spokesman for Al Gore has issued a questionable response to the news that in October 2007 the High Court in London had identified nine “errors” in his movie An Inconvenient Truth. The judge had stated that, if the UK Government had not agreed to send to every secondary school in England a corrected guidance note making clear the mainstream scientific position on these nine “errors”, he would have made a finding that the Government’s distribution of the film and the first draft of the guidance note earlier in 2007 to all English ...

Scientists hail DNA repair study
Post Date: 2007-10-18 11:51:40 by gengis gandhi
0 Comments
Enzyme image One of the images used by the research team Research into how the human body repairs damaged DNA has been described as a "major breakthrough". The way that cells protect themselves from diseases like cancer has been the focus of a study by scientists at Dundee and Leeds Universities. They used special x-rays to build 3D pictures of a particular enzyme, which recognises and fixes damaged DNA. The researchers used the images to get a better understanding of how the process works. The team studied an enzyme, known as T7 endonuclease 1, which played a central role in identifying damaged or "branched" DNA. 'New insight' The scientists said it was ...

Bleak U.S. "report card" finds warming Arctic
Post Date: 2007-10-18 08:37:37 by angle
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NASA satellite image from September 21, 2005 and released on September 21, 2007 shows Arctic summer sea ice coverage in 2005. Arctic sea ice melted to its lowest level ever this week, shattering a record set in 2005 and continuing a trend spurred by human-caused global warming, scientists said on September 20, 2007. WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bleak "report card" on global warming's Arctic impact released on Wednesday found less ice, hotter air and dying wildlife, and stressed that what happens around the North Pole affects the entire planet. The report, issued by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, also found that weird winds blowing warm air toward ...

Apple to allow outside applications on iPhone
Post Date: 2007-10-18 08:31:37 by angle
0 Comments
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Apple Inc Chief Executive Steve Jobs said on Wednesday that outside developers will be allowed to create programs for the iPhone, changing a policy that had angered many. Blocking outsiders from making programs that would run easily on the iPhone has been one of a series of restrictions that have annoyed users, even leading to some lawsuits. Jobs, in comments on Apple's Web site, said a kit for developers still will not be available until February, as the company works out how to open up the phone without exposing it to malicious programs. "We think a few months of patience now will be rewarded by many years of great third party applications running on ...

Study seeks genetic roots of homosexuality
Post Date: 2007-10-15 23:35:01 by Trace21231
2 Comments
Study seeks scientific explanation for roots of homosexuality The Associated Press Updated: 1:59 p.m. MT Oct 15, 2007 CHICAGO - Two gay brothers are convinced their sexual orientation is as deeply rooted as their Mexican ancestry. They are among 1,000 pairs of gay brothers taking part in the largest study to date seeking genes that may influence whether people are gay. The Cabreras hope the findings will help silence critics who say homosexuality is an immoral choice. If fresh evidence is found suggesting genes are involved, perhaps homosexuality will be viewed as no different than other genetic traits like height and hair color, said AKA Stone, a student at DePaul University in Chicago. ...

MS Process Explorer - Windows Users
Post Date: 2007-10-14 16:22:20 by Lod
0 Comments
This tool has really helped my machine.

RETHINKING RELATIVITY
Post Date: 2007-10-13 17:52:19 by RickyJ
15 Comments
Any physicists here at 4um care to comment on this? I would like your thoughts on this article. No one has paid attention yet, but a well-respected physics journal just published an article whose conclusion, if generally accepted, will undermine the foundations of modern physics -- Einstein’s Theory of Relativity in particular. Published in Physics Letters A (December 21, 1998), the article claims that the speed with which the force of gravity propagates must be at least twenty billion times faster than the speed of light. This would contradict the Special Theory of Relativity of 1905, which asserts that nothing can go faster than light. This claim about the special status of the ...

Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs.
Post Date: 2007-10-12 11:23:05 by Brian S
2 Comments
Vanessa Alarcon saw them while working at an antiwar rally in Lafayette Square last month. "I heard someone say, 'Oh my god, look at those,' " the college senior from New York recalled. "I look up and I'm like, 'What the hell is that?' They looked kind of like dragonflies or little helicopters. But I mean, those are not insects." Out in the crowd, Bernard Crane saw them, too. "I'd never seen anything like it in my life," the Washington lawyer said. "They were large for dragonflies. I thought, 'Is that mechanical, or is that alive?' " That is just one of the questions hovering over a handful of similar sightings at ...

Bill Clinton
Post Date: 2007-10-11 21:54:11 by Itisa1mosttoolate
0 Comments
Bill Clinton under Mind Control

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