SARASOTA, FL, February 24, 2012 (Press-News.org) The Bar Code News (www.barcode.com)--the online magazine dedicated to being the "Go-To Site for everything Bar Code "-- recently announced new email subscription options. Subscribers can now opt for free daily, weekly, or monthly electronic newsletters delivered to their email inbox. Free quarterly print editions of The Bar Code News will also be sent, beginning in 2012, to those who enter a valid mailing address into the subscription form.
The Bar Code News, owned by Barcode Media Group, Inc., offers industry news, case studies, educational resources, videos, company and product listings, all related to bar code hardware and software, radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology, 2D bar codes, Quick Response (QR) codes, and more. Fresh, original content is posted five days a week. Since its inception in January 2010, The Bar Code News has grown to a pace of over 50,000 visitors monthly, and continues to expand.
"Barcode Media Group is concerned about the number of emails people receive on a daily basis and want to do our best to minimize waste, clutter. and congestion while being a useful resource," says Craig Aberle, President of the The Bar Code News.
Those interested in receiving either the email or print edition of The Bar Code News may sign up for a free subscription here. Existing subscribers may modify their accounts by clicking on the Update Subscription Preferences in the newsletter itself.
Press Release Contact Information:
Craig Aberle
Barcode.com
Founder/Operator
5020 Clark Rd 315
Sarasota, FL
USA 34233
Voice: 800-894-6789
Fax: 941847-0644
Website: http://www.barcode.com
The Bar Code News Offers Increased Subscription Options: Free Daily, Weekly, Monthly E-News and Quarterly Print Editions
Free daily, weekly, or monthly electronic newsletters for The BarCode News Free quarterly print editions of The Bar Code News will also be sent, beginning in 2012.
2012-02-24
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Proteins behaving badly
2012-02-24
San Diego, Calif. – Several neurodegenerative diseases – including Alzheimer's and ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease) – are caused when the body's own proteins fold incorrectly, recruit and convert healthy proteins to the misfolded form, and aggregate in large clumps that gum up the works of the nervous system. "For Star Trek fans, this is like the Borg, [a fictional race of cyborgs that abduct and assimilate humans and other species]," says Steven Plotkin, a biophysicist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver who studies the process of protein misfolding.
Plotkin's ...
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CORVALLIS, Ore. – Researchers at Oregon State University have discovered a way to make a low-cost material that might accomplish negative refraction of light and other radiation – a goal first theorized in 1861 by a giant of science, Scottish physicist James Maxwell, that has still eluded wide practical use.
Other materials can do this but they are based on costly, complex crystalline materials. A low-cost way that yields the same result will have extraordinary possibilities, experts say – ranging from a "super lens" to energy harvesting, machine vision or "stealth" coatings ...
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As another cold British winter passes by many British tourists are making plans to head off on long weekends and trips to the sunshine during the spring. With that in mind Carrentals.co.uk has sourced new prices to let people rent a car for less on trips to the beaches of Cyprus or for long weekends on the north-west coast of England.
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San Diego, Calif. – Each year, phytoplankton blooms known as "red tides" kill millions of fish and other marine organisms and blanket vast areas of coastal water around the world. Though the precise causes of red tides remain a mystery, a team of researchers in the United States and Spain has solved one of the main riddles about these ecological disasters by uncovering the specific mechanism that triggers phytoplankton to release their powerful toxins into the environment.
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Under a microscope, a tiny droplet slides between two fine hairs like a roller coaster on a set of rails until — poof — it suddenly spreads along them, a droplet no more.
That instant of change, like the popping of soap bubble, comes so suddenly that it seems almost magical. But describing it, and mapping out how droplets stretch into tiny columns, is a key to understanding how liquids affect fibrous materials from air filters to human hair. And that knowledge allows scientists to better describe why water soaks into some materials, beads atop others and leaves others ...
Action Dash Games Website Launches With Over 50 Action Packed Games
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Action dash Games' new website just launched with over 50 fast paced action games. Every subgenre of the action games scene is catered to on this site. For players who are into shooters, for instance, there's Dead Frontier, a top dozen zombie game that plays like Gears of War might have on the Sega Genesis. This game features dark, gritty graphics, hardcore shooting, and satisfyingly crunchy sound effects.
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Cooking Games 365 Website Launches With Tons of Great Culinary Games
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Cooking Games 365 has recently launched its new website, which features free online action games related to cooking, baking, dessert and pizza decorating, and restaurant and catering administration. The site hosts links to hundreds of interactive food preparation-related video games that any Internet user can play completely free of charge. The gameplay of certain games is at times challenging, but anyone can learn to rise to the culinary challenges presented in each game. The content of the games is appropriate for all ages. Game players might be schoolchildren who dream ...
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2012-02-24
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James Colman to take up post in April 2012.
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JUPITER, FL, February 23, 2012 – Although it's widely accepted that inflammation is a critical underlying factor in a range of diseases, including the progression of cancer, little is known about its role when normal cells become tumor cells. Now, scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute have shed new light on exactly how the activation of a pair of inflammatory signaling pathways leads to the transformation of normal breast cells to cancer cells.
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[Press-News.org] The Bar Code News Offers Increased Subscription Options: Free Daily, Weekly, Monthly E-News and Quarterly Print EditionsFree daily, weekly, or monthly electronic newsletters for The BarCode News Free quarterly print editions of The Bar Code News will also be sent, beginning in 2012.




