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

DirectRooms.com - Bangalore Hosts Great Indian Developer Summit 2011 from 19 to 22 April 2011

DirectRooms.com can announce that the Great Indian Developer Summit 2011 will take place in India on Tuesday the 19th April to Friday the 22nd April 2011. The event is taking place at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore.

2011-03-22
PHUKET, THAILAND, March 22, 2011 (Press-News.org) Over 10,000 people have attended the summit in previous years and the 2011 summit is expected to be the best yet.

Anyone interested in attending the event must register for tickets at the Developer Summit website. Entrance will be denied in the absence of tickets. This year's event promises to be the most impressive yet with a packed schedule of 37 speakers including: Mark Miller (Chief Architect of IDE Tools division at Developer Express), Venkat Subramaniam (founder of Agile Developer, Inc.), and Tim Berglund. Alongside attending workshops and focused group sessions, participants can also take advantage of the networking opportunities available throughout the duration of the conference.

Tickets may be booked online at the above link or from a website called Eventbrite. Ticket prices vary considerably and are dependent on the number of days delegates wish to attend. The cheapest tickets cost around $70. The summit is likely to be extremely popular so early booking is highly recommended. Booking fees may apply.

For international participants, a stay in one of the many Bangalore Airport hotels is advised. Many hotels at Bangalore's HAL International Airport are well served by local transport links, allowing participants to travel hassle free to and from the summit.

About DirectRooms

DirectRooms an independent discount hotel Reservations Company based in Asia. Established and online since 2000 with over 55,000 hotels worldwide.

For further information please contact Lek Boonlert:

Email: email us here
Tel: + 66 (0)76 241 145
Website: http://directrooms.com


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Templated growth technique produces graphene nanoribbons with metallic properties

Templated growth technique produces graphene nanoribbons with metallic properties
2011-03-22
A new "templated growth" technique for fabricating nanoribbons of epitaxial graphene has produced structures just 15 to 40 nanometers wide that conduct current with almost no resistance. These structures could address the challenge of connecting graphene devices made with conventional architectures – and set the stage for a new generation of devices that take advantage of the quantum properties of electrons. "We can now make very narrow, conductive nanoribbons that have quantum ballistic properties," said Walt de Heer, a professor in the School of Physics at the Georgia ...

LateRooms.com - Explore Captain Cook's HMB Endeavour in Brisbane

2011-03-22
A replica of HMB Endeavour, used by Captain James Cook for his epic 18th century world voyage, will call at Brisbane next month. The original vessel was sent to the South Seas by King George III in order to view planet Venus's transit across the sun in 1769. It was hoped this would enable astronomers to calculate the distance between the earth and the star. Cook was also given secret orders from the Admiralty to discover the rumoured "Great South Land". Although he was unable to do this, he charted New Zealand's north and south islands and also sailed the east coast ...

How the lily blooms

How the lily blooms
2011-03-22
VIDEO: Mahadevan and Liang created an animated model to show how peripheral growth causes the developing petals to ruffle at the edges and curve outward, leading to blooming. Click here for more information. Cambridge, Mass. - March 21, 2011 - The "lily white" has inspired centuries' worth of rich poetry and art, but when it comes to the science of how and why those delicately curved petals burst from the bud, surprisingly little is known. Now, however, mathematics has ...

Alzheimer's Food Truck Block Party to Wrangle More Than 20 Gourmet Food Trucks for Signature Event to Launch 2011 Walks to End Alzheimer's

Alzheimers Food Truck Block Party to Wrangle More Than 20 Gourmet Food Trucks for Signature Event to Launch 2011 Walks to End Alzheimers
2011-03-22
The food truck frenzy is sweeping Orange County! On Thursday, April 14, 2011, The Alzheimer's Association will be front and center of the rolling food craze when it hosts an incredible gourmet food truck event. With authentic, innovative cuisine rumbling into Irvine from all over Southern California, you can bet the Alzheimer' s Food Truck Block Party will be packed with hungry mobile gourmands chomping at the bit to try the latest meals on wheels from more than 20 of the most popular gourmet food trucks in Southern California. So work up an appetite and bring everyone ...

Scientists grow personalized collections of intestinal microbes

Scientists grow personalized collections of intestinal microbes
2011-03-22
Each of us carries a unique collection of trillions of friendly microbes in our intestines that helps break down food our bodies otherwise couldn't digest. This relationship between humans and their microbes is generally a healthy one, but changes to the mix of microbes in the digestive tract are suspected to play a role in obesity, malnutrition, Crohn's disease and other ailments. Now, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis show they can grow and manipulate personalized collections of human intestinal microbes in the laboratory and pluck ...

New statement offers advice on treating dangerous, deep blood clots

2011-03-22
Doctors are encouraged to consider therapies in addition to blood thinners to treat certain patients with potentially dangerous blood clots that form in the deep veins and travel to the lungs, according to a new scientific statement from the American Heart Association. The statement is published online in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association. More than 250,000 people in the United States are hospitalized with deep vein thrombosis each year. Previously, there has been limited guidance for physicians on some of the more serious conditions caused by deep ...

New treatment may desensitize kids with milk allergies, say researchers at Stanford and Boston

2011-03-22
STANFORD, Calif. — Some 3 million children in the United States have some form of food allergy, ranging in severity from mild to life-threatening. Milk allergy is the most common, affecting 2.5 percent of children under age 3. In a small clinical study, immunologists and allergists at Children's Hospital Boston and the Stanford University School of Medicine report effectively desensitizing milk-allergic patients by increasing their exposure to milk in tandem with an allergy drug called omalizumab, allowing children to build up resistance quickly with limited allergic reactions. Their ...

Computerized systems reduce psychiatric drug errors

2011-03-22
Coupling an electronic prescription drug ordering system with a computerized method for reporting adverse events can dramatically reduce the number of medication errors in a hospital's psychiatric unit, suggests new Johns Hopkins research. "Medication errors are a leading cause of adverse events in hospitals," says study leader Geetha Jayaram, M.D., M.B.A., an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "With the use of electronic ordering, training of personnel and standardized information technology systems, ...

The District Messenger Says: "The Crack in the Lens ... Tells an Engrossing Story"

The District Messenger Says: The Crack in the Lens ... Tells an Engrossing Story
2011-03-22
Roger Johnson, editor of the District Messenger, the Newsletter of the Sherlock Holmes Society of London, writes: "The Crack in the Lens by Darlene A Cypser... tells an engrossing story of the boy Holmes and at the same time explores the reasons why the man Holmes turned out as he did - a brilliant, unconventional, and apparently emotionless righter of wrongs." In this account Mycroft, Sherrinford and Sherlock are the sons of Squire Siger Holmes of Mycroft Manor in Yorkshire, where Sherlock is educated by a private tutor, Professor James Moriarty. These inventions of William ...

Open-source software designed to minimize synthetic biology risks

2011-03-22
A software package designed to minimize the potential risks of synthetic biology for the nation's defense and security is now available to the gene synthesis industry and synthetic biology community in an open-source format. Virginia Tech has licensed GenoTHREAT, a software tool that helps detect the use of synthetic DNA as bioterrorism agents. Developed as an open-source project by a team led by Jean Peccoud, associate professor at Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech, it is being released using the Apache License Version 2.0 to ensure broad accessibility. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tracing gas adsorption on “crowns” of platinum and gold connected by nanotunnels

Rare bird skull from the age of dinosaurs helps illuminate avian evolution

Researchers find high levels of the industrial chemical BTMPS in fentanyl

Decoding fat tissue

Solar and electric-powered homes feel the effects of blackouts differently, according to new research from Stevens

Metal ion implantation and laser direct writing dance together: constructing never-fading physical colors on lithium niobate crystals

High-frequency enhanced ultrafast compressed photography technology (H-CAP) allows microscopic ultrafast movie to appear at a glance

Single-beam optical trap-based surface-enhanced raman scattering optofluidic molecular fingerprint spectroscopy detection system

Removing large brain artery clot, chased with clot-buster shot may improve stroke outcomes

A highly sensitive laser gas sensor based on a four-prong quartz tuning fork

Generation of Terahertz complex vector light fields on a metasurface driven by surface waves

Clot-busting meds may be effective up to 24 hours after initial stroke symptoms

Texas Tech Lab plays key role in potential new pathway to fight viruses

Multi-photon bionic skin realizes high-precision haptic visualization for reconstructive perception

Mitochondria may hold the key to curing diabetes

Researchers explore ketogenic diet’s effects on bipolar disorder among teenagers, young adults

From muscle to memory: new research uses clues from the body to understand signaling in the brain

New study uncovers key differences in allosteric regulation of cAMP receptor proteins in bacteria

Co-located cell types help drive aggressive brain tumors

Social media's double-edged sword: New study links both active and passive use to rising loneliness

An unexpected mechanism regulates the immune response during parasitic infections

Scientists enhance understanding of dinoflagellate cyst dormancy

PREPSOIL promotes soil literacy through education

nTIDE February 2025 Jobs Report: Labor force participation rate for people with disabilities hits an all-time high

Temperamental stars are distorting our view of distant planets

DOE’s Office of Science is now Accepting Applications for Office of Science Graduate Student Research Awards

Twenty years on, biodiversity struggles to take root in restored wetlands

Do embedded counseling services in veterinary education work? A new study says “yes.”

Discovery of unexpected collagen structure could ‘reshape biomedical research’

Changes in US primary care access and capabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic

[Press-News.org] DirectRooms.com - Bangalore Hosts Great Indian Developer Summit 2011 from 19 to 22 April 2011
DirectRooms.com can announce that the Great Indian Developer Summit 2011 will take place in India on Tuesday the 19th April to Friday the 22nd April 2011. The event is taking place at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore.