HOUSTON, TX, November 24, 2011 (Press-News.org) Securecomm, Inc., a company that designs custom security systems for business clients recently launched their new website. The new website gives potential business clients information about the security products and services that Securecomm offers. The company provides a variety of cost effective Houston business security systems to protect a client's assets and employees.
Houston commercial security systems save businesses money by decreasing the number of incidences of customer and employee theft. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce estimates that businesses in the U.S. lose more than 50 billion dollars each year to employee theft alone. With industrial espionage and break-ins on the rise as well, many businesses are seeing an increase in their inability to protect their assets. Securecomm, Inc. designs custom security systems that can significantly reduce property loss and help to decrease insurance premiums.
Securecomm, Inc. has security systems experts that are trained to assist business owners in evaluating their specific security needs before implementing security measures to protect their office building, warehouse, refinery, restaurant or any other commercial business. It does not matter whether a client's business is large or small; Securecomm, Inc. offers security solutions for all business owners. In addition, the company installs monitoring systems, access entry systems, fire alarm and detection systems.
Securecomm, Inc. specializes in Houston access control options including card access or keyless entry, closed circuit television, video surveillance, and other electronic access barriers. Monitoring and restricting access to certain departments or areas within a building are some of the security solutions available to protect a client's inventory, trade secrets and other business assets.
Securecomm, Inc. can also integrate a client's existing security equipment with a fire detection system. Incorporating a monitoring system with early warning fire detection identifies the location of a fire together with tracking the direction the fire is taking to protect employees and customers.
For more information about these and other security solutions, visit their new website at http://www.houstoncommercialsecurity.com.
Securecomm, Inc. Launches Their New Website
Houston-based custom security provider, Securecomm, Inc. presents a company website to display their service offerings.
2011-11-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Wharton Family Dentist, Scott Pinkston DDS, Launches New Website
2011-11-24
The website is fully operational and ready to receive visitors. A full range of dental services are available for the entire family including general dentistry, Wharton cosmetic dentistry, reconstructive dentistry and teeth whitening.
The Dental clinic of Scott Pinkston DDS is located in Wharton Texas and is now accepting new patients of all ages. The residents of the nearby towns of Richmond, Rosenberg, Needville and the general area are also welcome. A new patient form is conveniently available to print directly from the website. Just print it, fill it out and bring ...
When friends fail them, girls hurt worse than boys
2011-11-24
Chestnut Hill, MA – Young girls have been viewed as far more savvy than boys at navigating the emotional pitfalls of friendships. But a new report shows that when friends let them down, girls are even more devastated than boys, researchers from Boston College and Duke University report in the journal Child Development.
Researchers examined whether or not girls cope better than boys when a friend violates a core expectation of friendships. The study of fourth- and fifth-grade children found that these violations – taking the form of cancelling plans, sharing a secret with ...
Is sustainability science really a science?
2011-11-24
LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico -- The idea that one can create a field of science out of thin air, just because of societal and policy need, is a bold concept. But for the emerging field of sustainability science, sorting among theoretical and applied scientific disciplines, making sense of potentially divergent theory, practice and policy, the gamble has paid off.
In the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists from Los Alamos National Laboratory, Santa Fe Institute, and Indiana University analyzed the field's temporal evolution, geographic ...
How old yeast cells send off their daughter cells without the baggage of old age
2011-11-24
Kansas City, MO -- The accumulation of damaged protein is a hallmark of aging that not even the humble baker's yeast can escape. Yet, aged yeast cells spawn off youthful daughter cells without any of the telltale protein clumps. Now, researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research may have found an explanation for the observed asymmetrical distribution of damaged proteins between mothers and their youthful daughters.
Reporting in the Nov. 23, 2011, issue of Cell the research team, led by Stowers investigator Rong Li, Ph.D., proposes that the limited mobility ...
Introducing the monarch butterfly genome
2011-11-24
The Monarch butterfly is famous for its ability to travel up to 2,000 miles from North America to central Mexico every fall. Now, it's enjoying fame of a different sort. In the November 23rd issue of Cell, researchers report the full genomic sequence of this iconic butterfly. The new genome is the first for any butterfly. It is also the first complete genome of any long-distance migrant.
"With this genome sequence in hand, we now have an overwhelming number of opportunities to understand the genetic and molecular basis of long-distance migration," says Steven Reppert ...
Is short stature associated with a 'shortage' of genes?
2011-11-24
New research sifts through the entire genome of thousands of human subjects to look for genetic variation associated with height. The results of the study, published by Cell Press in the December issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics, suggest that uncommon genetic deletions are associated with short stature.
Height is a highly heritable trait that is associated with variation in many different genes. "Despite tremendous recent progress in finding common genetic variants associated with height, thus far these variants only explain about 10% of the variation ...
UMMS scientists present draft sequence of monarch butterfly genome
2011-11-24
WORCESTER, Mass. – Each fall millions of monarch butterflies from across the eastern United States use a time-compensated sun compass to direct their navigation south, traveling up to 2,000 miles to an overwintering site in a specific grove of fir trees in central Mexico. Scientists have long been fascinated by the biological mechanisms that allow successive generations of these delicate creatures to transverse such long distances to a small region roughly 300 square miles in size. To unlock the genetic and regulatory elements important for this remarkable journey, neurobiologists ...
Researchers discover clues to developing more effective antipsychotic drugs
2011-11-24
Researchers from Mount Sinai School of Medicine, have identified the pattern of cell signaling induced by antipsychotic drugs in a complex composed of two brain receptors linked to schizophrenia. The discovery should allow researchers to predict the effectiveness of novel compounds for the treatment of schizophrenia and other serious mental disorders and may accelerate the development of better antipsychotic drugs. The findings are published in the November 23 issue of Cell.
Until now, the molecular mechanism through which current treatments for schizophrenia achieve ...
Big pest, small genome
2011-11-24
SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 23, 2011 – A University of Utah biologist and an international research team decoded the genetic blueprint of the two-spotted spider mite, raising hope for new ways to attack the major pest, which resists pesticides and destroys crops and ornamental plants worldwide.
The voracious mites, which technically are not insects, can eat more than 1,100 plant species – a rare trait. The mites' newly revealed and sequenced genome contains a variety of genes capable of detoxifying pesticides as well as toxins plants use to defend themselves, the scientists ...
Hours of Service Rules for Commercial Truck Drivers Traveling Through Atlanta
2011-11-24
Almost a year ago, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) proposed new limits on Hours of Service (HOS) rules for commercial drivers. While the intent was to improve highway safety for all who travel by limiting fatigue among truck drivers, the proposed changes have come under fire from trucking advocacy groups as having little impact on highway safety. The proposed changes in hours of service have not yet been finalized.
Existing Hours of Service Limitations for Commercial Drivers
HOS regulations generally apply to all drivers of commercial vehicles. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Face‑/edge‑shared 3D perovskitoid single crystals with suppressed ion migration for stable X‑ray detector
Multiple solutions help fly embryos overcome the fundamental problem of ‘tissue tectonic collision’
GLP-1 weight-loss drugs pose hidden risks for young women
Strategies for enhancing energy‑level matching in perovskite solar cells: An energy flow perspective
3D‑printed boron‑nitrogen doped carbon electrodes for sustainable wastewater treatment via MPECVD
Screening anionic groups within zwitterionic additives for eliminating hydrogen evolution and dendrites in aqueous zinc ion batteries
New tectonic geodynamics textbook bridges scientific disciplines
Tiny and powerful – metamaterial lenses for your phones and drones
Study used AI models to improve prediction of chronic kidney disease progression to end stage renal disease
Peanut shell biochar composite shows promise for removing antibiotic-resistant bacteria from aquaculture wastewater
Compact genetic light switches transform disease control
Sunglasses for plants, and sustainable agriculture
Nearly half of those with diabetes unaware they have the disease
Emergency department visits by uninsured children in Texas soar 45% after COVID-era federal funding ends
Bright children from poorer backgrounds twice as likely to receive hospital mental health treatment than affluent high-achievers
‘Artificial cartilage’ could improve arthritis treatment
Breathing device could have profound impact on survival for people with sleep apnoea and type 2 diabetes
Artificial intelligence assessment indicates stress levels in farmed Amazonian fish
Keith Cole receives grant to conduct integrated research on mobility, cognition and aging
Internationally recognized malaria researcher Stefan Kappe, Ph.D., appointed new director of the UM School of Medicine's Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health
Lung cancer genetics study launches open-source data platform to research community
Pre-conception radiation exposure from CT scans increases risk for miscarriage and birth defects
Boston University appoints Kenneth Lutchen to top research job
For video-on-demand platforms, release strategy matters: streaming episodes gradually boosts consumers’ searches, subscription rates
Sleep strengthens muscle and bone by boosting growth hormone levels. Here's how
Only 1 in 7 online health images show proper technique to accurately measure blood pressure
Children receiving biofeedback speech therapy improved faster than with traditional methods
Scientists discover why the flu is more deadly for older people
The salmon superfood you’ve never heard of
How does chemotherapy disrupt circadian rhythms?
[Press-News.org] Securecomm, Inc. Launches Their New WebsiteHouston-based custom security provider, Securecomm, Inc. presents a company website to display their service offerings.