PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

uPushit Launches as the First Social Challenge Network

The interactive platform, uPushit, is more than just a social media network. It's an interactive and comprehensive social networking tool, which rewards users for their efforts and participation.

2014-03-05
FRISCO, TX, March 05, 2014 (Press-News.org) De'Lamar Technologies Corporation, a startup Internet technology company, is proud to announce the launch of uPushit.com. Built on the idea of engagement and rewards, uPushit.com offers users the ability to share thoughts, ideas and personal experiences, but branches much further than any other social network to date - giving users the ability to earn revenue by building income through indulging in cash tournaments and engaging in ground-breaking auctions.

uPushit.com was built on the idea of four main principles; have fun, share, socialize and capitalize, while you are you using uPushit's interactive platform. The technology is centered around the competitive nature of gaming, both for the experienced gamer, as well as the amateur gamer. Studies show, sharing and socializing is a primary factor why users use social networks, to begin with. With the ability to not only post photos, daily activities, and send messages to friends, uPushit provides an added feature - an open community forum - this tool allows users to interact with the entire community of uPushit. The added ability of being as public or private as you want, provides an added layer of security, that no other social media platform produces.

What makes uPushit truly unique is the ability to capitalize through sharing, posting, and captivating content exclusively on uPushit.com. The platform is broken down into three main categories: Push iT, uBlogs and The iMag, allowing users the ability to earn revenue from their content in a wide variety of ways.

"We are looking to break through the social network barrier," says Larry West, Founder of uPushit. "We looked at the social market and social trends and looked to contribute a unique element - giving users the ability to be challenged, become competitive and earn rewards, all from a social challenge network."

uPushit.com will provide users with a new, improved and unique experience that social network users have been waiting to embrace. Allowing users to be immersed in a social challenge network, brings out the competitive nature in all of us, while still allowing users to be socially active.

uPushit is now accepting open membership, free of charge, to new users on uPushit.com. Once users register and create an account online, they are given access to the complete uPushit portal, where they can begin their first challenge.

For more information on uPushit, visit: http://www.upushit.com.

About uPushit: uPushit.com is an innovative concept designed to engage and reward users like no other social network before. It's a comprehensive social networking and social media tool with a unique entertainment element where users can ultimately get rewarded for their efforts.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ultra-high-field MRI may allow earlier diagnosis of Parkinson's disease

Ultra-high-field MRI may allow earlier diagnosis of Parkinsons disease
2014-03-05
OAK BROOK, Ill. – New research shows that ultra-high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides detailed views of a brain area implicated in Parkinson's disease, possibly leading to earlier detection of a condition that affects millions worldwide. The results of this research are published online in the journal Radiology. Parkinson's disease is a chronic, progressive disease characterized by shaking, stiffness, and impaired balance and coordination. With no radiologic techniques available to aid in diagnosis, clinicians have had to rely on medical history and neurological ...

3D scans map widespread fish disease

2014-03-05
AQUATIC ENVIRONMENT Seventy-five per cent of antibiotics in Danish fish farms is used to treat fish with enteric redmouth disease. With the help of 3D scans, researchers at the University of Copenhagen have mapped how the fish are infected with the bacterium. The findings were recently published in the scientific publication PLOS ONE. Fascinating 3D images of rainbow trout give researchers a crystal clear picture of how the bacterium causing enteric redmouth disease infects fish. "The new scans show us that the fish are infected through their ultra-thin gills," explains ...

Muscle-controlling neurons know when they mess up, according to Penn research

Muscle-controlling neurons know when they mess up, according to Penn research
2014-03-05
Whether it is playing a piano sonata or acing a tennis serve, the brain needs to orchestrate precise, coordinated control over the body's many muscles. Moreover, there needs to be some kind of feedback from the senses should any of those movements go wrong. Neurons that coordinate those movements, known as Purkinje cells, and ones that provide feedback when there is an error or unexpected sensation, known as climbing fibers, work in close concert to fine-tune motor control. A team of researchers from the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton University has now begun ...

Motion-sensing cells in the eye let the brain 'know' about directional changes

2014-03-05
How do we "know" from the movements of speeding car in our field of view if it's coming straight toward us or more likely to move to the right or left? Scientists have long known that our perceptions of the outside world are processed in our cortex, the six-layered structure in the outer part of our brains. But how much of that processing actually happens in cortex? Do the eyes tell the brain a lot or a little about the content of the outside world and the objects moving within it? In a detailed study of the neurons linking the eyes and brains of mice, biologists at UC ...

New approach to breast reconstruction surgery reduces opioid painkiller use

2014-03-05
New York — March 3, 2014 — A new approach to breast reconstruction surgery aimed at helping patients' bodies get back to normal more quickly cut their postoperative opioid painkiller use in half and meant a day less in the hospital on average, a Mayo Clinic study found. The method includes new pain control techniques, preventive anti-nausea treatment and getting women eating and walking soon after free flap breast reconstruction surgery. It has proved so effective, it is now being used across plastic surgery at Mayo Clinic. The findings were being presented at the Plastic ...

Study: Greater music dynamics in shoebox-shaped concert halls

Study: Greater music dynamics in shoebox-shaped concert halls
2014-03-05
Therefore, such a concert hall shape affects perceived dynamic range even though rooms itself amplify all passages the same amount. "Dynamic expression is an inseparable part of music. For this reason, a concert hall's ability to transmit the orchestra's played dynamics is one of the most important criteria of good acoustics. Our research is the first that explains how halls influence perception of dynamic expression," Dr. Jukka Pätynen says. The importance of early lateral reflections to good concert hall acoustics has been known for decades. Earlier, they were believed ...

Prequel outshines the original: Exceptional fossils of 160 million year old doahugou biota

Prequel outshines the original: Exceptional fossils of 160 million year old doahugou biota
2014-03-05
Over the last two decades, huge numbers of fossils have been collected from the western Liaoning Province and adjacent parts of northeastern China, including exceptionally preserved feathered dinosaurs, early birds, and mammals. Most of these specimens are from the Cretaceous Period, including the famous Jehol Biota. However, in recent years many fossils have emerged from sites that are 30 million years earlier, from the Middle-Upper Jurassic Period, providing an exceptional window on life approximately 160 million years ago. A new paper published in latest issue of the ...

What bat brains might tell us about human brains

2014-03-05
WASHINGTON — Could a new finding in bats help unlock a mystery about the human brain? Likely so, say researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center who have shown that a small region within the amygdala, an almond-shaped structure in the brains of all mammals, is responsible for producing emotional calls and sounds. They say this discovery might be key to locating a similar center in human brains. Localizing and manipulating this center in the human brain may provide a way to treat malfunctions in emotional responses, resulting, for example, in pathological aggression, ...

How sexual contacts with outsiders contribute to HIV infections within communities

2014-03-05
While a number of strategies can prevent and control HIV transmission and spread, their effective use depends on understanding the sexual networks within and between communities. A paper published in this week's PLOS Medicine reports a detailed analysis with surprising results from the Rakai district in Uganda, one of the most studied areas of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Africa. Mary K. Grabowski, from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, led an international group of scientists in an effort to test the hypothesis that most people who contract HIV outside their ...

Intimate partner violence in men who have sex with men is linked to adverse health effects

2014-03-05
Intimate partner violence (IPV) among men who have sex with men (MSM) is linked to greater risk of mental and physical health symptoms, substance misuse, and sexually transmitted infections, according to a research article published in this week's PLOS Medicine. The study, led by Ana Maria Buller and Loraine Bacchus from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK, working with experts from King's College London, identified associations with negative health indicators for both victims and perpetrators of IPV among MSM. The authors reached these conclusions by ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Are we ready for robot caregivers? The answer is a cautious “yes, if...”

Study shows why living in a disadvantaged neighborhood may increase dementia risk

Tie climate action to protecting a way of life to increase motivation, study says

New therapeutic brain implants defy the need for surgery

The chilling effect of air pollution

New approach expands possibilities for studying viruses in the environment

Are there different types of black holes? New method puts Einstein to the test

CRISPR screen identifies new regulator of androgen receptor in prostate cancer

Ice Age trees helped stabilize Earth's atmosphere by suffocating

Unlocking how viruses punch above their weight

New modelling shows difficult future for the GBR under climate change

More polar ocean turbulence due to planetary warming

Bowel cancer's "Big Bang" moment revealed

Fishes, young and old, are shrinking in Michigan's inland lakes

Predicted CO2 levels cause marked increase in forest temperatures

Common antibiotic may reduce schizophrenia risk, study shows

Delta.g appoints current Chair of Serendipity Capital and former HSBC Holdings Group CFO Ewen Stevenson as Chair of the Board

How much benefit comes from programs aimed at reducing pollution?

What factors determine the severity and outcomes of cyberwarfare between countries?

Can therapies against cellular aging help treat metabolic diseases?

New insights on gut microbes that prevent formation of cancer-causing compounds

Preventing dangerous short circuits in lithium batteries

Successful bone regeneration using stem cells derived from fatty tissue

ELSI to host first PCST Symposium in Japan, advancing science communication across Asia

Researchers improve marine aerosol remote sensing accuracy using multiangular polarimetry

Alzheimer’s Disease can hijack communication between brain and fat tissue, potentially worsening cardiovascular and metabolic health

New memristor wafer integration technology from DGIST paves the way for brain-like AI chips

Bioinspired dual-phase nanopesticide enables smart controlled release

Scientists reveal it is possible to beam up quantum signals

Asymmetric stress engineering of dense dislocations in brittle superconductors for strong vortex pinning

[Press-News.org] uPushit Launches as the First Social Challenge Network
The interactive platform, uPushit, is more than just a social media network. It's an interactive and comprehensive social networking tool, which rewards users for their efforts and participation.