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

Foreign Translations, Inc. Wins TopTenREVIEWS Bronze Award for Translation Services

TopTenReviews.com, one of the top 15 technology websites with several million page views per month, awarded Foreign Translations, Inc. (www.foreigntranslations.com) a leader in global translation services, the Bronze Award for translation services.

Foreign Translations, Inc. Wins TopTenREVIEWS Bronze Award for Translation Services
2011-04-12
GREENVILLE, SC, April 12, 2011 (Press-News.org) In a comparison of 9 leading translation vendors, highly ranked Foreign Translations, Inc. was commended for providing "accurate translations and responsive customer service."

Foreign Translations, Inc. specializes in foreign language translation, interpreting, and website localization and offers translation services for a wide range of projects, from technical manuals, legal contracts, and marketing collateral to financial statements, training manuals, websites, and software programs.

To receive the Bronze Award, Foreign Translations, Inc. excelled in categories such as Web Content Localization, International SEO and Desktop Publishing Translation, and it holds one of the highest quantities of language pairs for translation.

TopTenReviews.com praised Foreign Translations, Inc. for accommodating a wide range of languages in a wide variety of industry sectors, summarizing that Foreign Translations, Inc. "has a long list of satisfied corporate clients because it meets its deadline commitments, delivers well-written and accurate translations and provides responsive and courteous customer service." The complete review can be viewed at http://translation-services-review.toptenreviews.com/foreign-translations-review.html

Foreign Translations, Inc. is very pleased with the excellent review from the specialists at TopTenReviews.com. The independent reviewers confirm what Foreign Translations, Inc.'s CEO, Ken Zwerdling, believes, that, "Our customer service, accuracy and on-time delivery is one of the best in the industry."

Customers worldwide who choose to benefit from Foreign Translations, Inc.'s services include Tanya Candia with Candia Communications, who says, "I have worked with several translation firms over the years and the quality your firm has produced is among the best."

Foreign Translations, Inc. customizes its rates for each client according to the unique nature of each request. Foreign Translations, Inc. believes that a personal conversation with each client prior to providing any price quote is vital in achieving a detailed understanding of the needs.

Foreign Translations, Inc., www.foreigntranslations.com, is a 13-year old global translation services firm specializing in foreign language translation, interpreting, and website localization, headquartered in Greenville, SC. The company offers translation services for a wide range of projects, from technical manuals, legal contracts, and marketing collateral to financial statements, training manuals, e-learning courses, websites, software, policy and procedure handbooks, and newsletters. With thousands of native translators located across the world, the company frequently translates documents ranging from 1,000 words to over several million words in all the major languages. In addition, it provides interpreters for depositions, trials, and conferences. Foreign Translations, Inc. also offers a full range of Multilingual Desktop Publishing Services and International Search Engine Optimization.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Foreign Translations, Inc. Wins TopTenREVIEWS Bronze Award for Translation Services

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists find method to probe genes of the most common bacterial STI

2011-04-12
WHAT: In a new study from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, scientists describe successfully mutating specific genes of Chlamydia bacteria, which cause the most common sexually transmitted infection in the United States as well as a type of blindness common in developing nations. The procedure they used will help advance scientists' understanding of how these bacteria cause human disease and expedite the development of new strategies to prevent and control these infections. The advance could ...

New diabetes education program yields improved blood sugar control

2011-04-12
An intensive program that taught low-income, poorly educated diabetics to better manage their disease resulted in significantly improved long-term blood sugar control, according to Johns Hopkins researchers who designed and implemented the program. The findings, published online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, offer clinicians a proven new tool to help those with poorly controlled diabetes make lifestyle changes to improve their health, the researchers says. They noted that many educational programs for people with diabetes typically have little impact and ...

Bitterness induces nausea, swallowing not required

2011-04-12
The mere taste of something extremely bitter—even if you don't swallow it at all—is enough to cause that dreaded feeling of nausea and to set your stomach churning, according to a new study reported in the April 12th issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. "This work shows that our body and our physiology anticipate the consequences of foods we might eat, even if those foods contain toxins or anti-nutrients," said Paul Breslin of the Monell Chemical Senses Center and Rutgers University. Of course, it is well known that the promise of something tempting to ...

Finding may end a 30-year scientific debate

Finding may end a 30-year scientific debate
2011-04-12
A chance observation by a Queen's researcher might have ended a decades-old debate about the precise way antifreeze proteins (AFP) bind to the surface of ice crystals. "We got a beautiful view of water bound to the ice-binding site on the protein," says Peter Davies, a professor in the Department of Biochemistry and a world leader in antifreeze protein research. "In a sense we got a lucky break." AFPs are a class of proteins that bind to the surface of ice crystals and prevent further growth and recrystallization of ice. Fish, insects, bacteria and plants that live ...

Improve Your Foodservice Equipment Return on Investment With a Properly Conditioned Water Supply

Improve Your Foodservice Equipment Return on Investment With a Properly Conditioned Water Supply
2011-04-12
A new 600-pound cuber ice machine on average costs between $4K to $9K, while a 6-pan combi steam oven will cost about $12K to $35K. For a commercial semi-automatic espresso machine, a company has to spend between $8K to $20K. Even purchasing a 5-year old used machine, a company can expect to pay at least one-third of the new cost. With traffic only recently starting to increase after nearly a two year decline, operators have been understandably reluctant to spend on new equipment. As a result, foodservice equipment manufacturers saw a decline in sales of 15%-30%, or higher, ...

UNC study helps clarify link between high-fat diet and type 2 diabetes

UNC study helps clarify link between high-fat diet and type 2 diabetes
2011-04-12
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – A diet high in saturated fat is a key contributor to type 2 diabetes, a major health threat worldwide. Several decades ago scientists noticed that people with type 2 diabetes have overly active immune responses, leaving their bodies rife with inflammatory chemicals. In addition, people who acquire the disease are typically obese and are resistant to insulin, the hormone that removes sugar from the blood and stores it as energy. For years no one has known exactly how the three characteristics are related. But a handful of studies suggest that they ...

Penguins that shun ice still lose big from a warming climate

2011-04-12
WASHINGTON – Fluctuations in penguin populations in the Antarctic are linked more strongly to the availability of their primary food source than to changes in their habitats, according to a new study published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Funded in part by the Lenfest Ocean Program, this research indicates that species often considered likely "winners" of changing conditions, such as large-scale ice melting, may actually end up as the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. The two penguin species of focus in the study ...

Effective pain management crucial to older adults' well-being

2011-04-12
Improved management of chronic pain can significantly reduce disability in older adults, according to the latest issue of the WHAT'S HOT newsletter from The Gerontological Society of America (GSA). Based largely on presentation highlights from GSA's 63rd Annual Scientific Meeting in November 2010, the current WHAT'S HOT examines the impact of pain in older adults, strategies for managing pain and preserving function, and methods to improve the assessment and management of pain for residents in long-term care facilities, including those who have dementia. Support for this ...

MRI may contribute to early detection of Alzheimer's

2011-04-12
OAK BROOK, Ill. (April 11, 2011) – New research suggests that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) could help detect Alzheimer's disease (AD) at an early stage, before irreversible damage has occurred, according to a new study published online and in the June print edition of Radiology. With no known treatment to alter its course, AD exacts an enormous toll on society. The Alzheimer's Association estimates that 5.4 million Americans are living with the disease today, and the cumulative costs for care could top $20 trillion over the next four decades. As a result, there is ...

Stress wrecks intestinal bacteria, could keep immune system on idle

2011-04-12
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Stress not only sends the human immune system into overdrive – it can also wreak havoc on the trillions of bacteria that work and thrive inside our digestive system. New research suggests that this may be important because those bacteria play a significant role in triggering the innate immune system to stay slightly active, and thereby prepared to quickly spring into action in the face of an infection. But exactly how stress makes these changes in these bacteria still isn't quite clear, researchers say. "Since graduate school, I've been interested ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Improving resilience to tsunamis and earthquakes via predictions of waste disposal times

Scientists extend facial expression analysis system to include bonobos

SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin treatment stabilizes kidney function in patients who have had a heart attack

City of Hope developed a foundational map of tumor cells for personalized brain cancer treatments

Pangolins in Africa hunted for food rather than illicit scales trade – with meat ranked as ‘tastiest’

How solvents shape precision drug delivery

Swarm intelligence directs longhorn crazy ants to clear the road ahead for sisters carrying bulky food

Vaccinated patients hospitalized with COVID-linked acute kidney injury less likely to need dialysis, and more likely to survive, after discharge

What’s driving the rise of NLM wines?

Koalas set to benefit from new genetic screening tool

Scientists discover the ‘ticking’ mechanism driving nature’s simplest circadian clock

Potential anti-breast cancer drug identified

Major review finds 34% reduction in suicide risk following electroconvulsive therapy in patients with severe depression

Doctors urge FIFA to end deal with Coca-Cola ahead of Club World Cup

Scientists detect light passing through entire human head, opening new doors for brain imaging

Exposure to “forever chemicals” before birth may raise blood pressure during teen years

New study challenges assumptions linking racial attitudes and political identity in U.S. cities

Rising T1DE alliance adds Lurie Children’s to further disseminate new data-driven care model for type 1 diabetes

Earned sick leave alone is not enough for uninsured workers

New theory suggests we’re all wired to preserve culture

Study shows ways to tackle homophobic bullying in schools

Sandia to help propel US semiconductor manufacturing

Wet soils increase flooding during atmospheric river storms

Turning carbon dioxide into fuel just got easier, thanks to acid bubbles

Symmetrical crystals can absorb light asymmetrically

Platform rapidly designs organ-scale vasculature trees for 3D bioprinting

Inland, coastal regions have an overlooked role in nitrogen fixation

Ribosome profiling identifies thousands of new viral protein-coding sequences

Recent litigation has implications for medical artificial intelligence manufacturing

Knot good: How cells untie DNA to protect the genome

[Press-News.org] Foreign Translations, Inc. Wins TopTenREVIEWS Bronze Award for Translation Services
TopTenReviews.com, one of the top 15 technology websites with several million page views per month, awarded Foreign Translations, Inc. (www.foreigntranslations.com) a leader in global translation services, the Bronze Award for translation services.