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

Bamboo Group Releases Ringtonium for Android

Bamboo Group announced that their popular iOS Ringtonium is now available on Android. Ringtonium is a simple and powerful ringtone maker with best class usability and UI, sound effects and super accurate cutting.

2012-07-08
MINSK, BELARUS, July 08, 2012 (Press-News.org) Bamboo Group announced that their popular iOS Ringtonium is now available on Android. Ringtonium is a simple and powerful ringtone maker with best class usability and UI, sound effects and super accurate cutting.

Ringtonium helps to make a library of unique tones. It is very easy and convenient to cut out the right section of the track with up to 0.01 sec accuracy. The user can record his voice and transform it beyond recognition. It is very easy to save and share ready ringtones. Moreover, there is no such a stylish and thought-out Android ringtone maker as Ringtonium on Google Play.

In its turn iPhone version was updated greatly. Now it has a Dropbox sync for one-click tone installation.

Links to download:
Google Play: Ringtonium - http://bit.ly/KXtyEm, Ringtonium Lite - http://bit.ly/NrHmZZ
App Store: Ringtonium - bit.ly/Mmmard, Ringtonium Lite - bit.ly/kKHQdp

On the blog a $100 contest is announced. Link to the blog - http://apps.bam-boo.eu/blog/list

Ringtonium is now available for $1,99 in the U.S. and is priced accordingly in other regions. Ringtonium Lite is free. Ringtonium and Ringtonium Lite is available worldwide from Google Play for Android phones and tablets and from App Store for iPhone and iPod Touch.

Welcome to www.apps.bam-boo.eu for more Ringtonium information including videos and screenshots of the app.
Bamboo Group social network pages:
www.facebook.com/BambooApps
www.twitter.com/BambooApps1
www.youtube.com/user/bamboogroup1
http://vk.com/BambooApps

Bamboo Group developing various mobile software began investing its resources exclusively in mobile software for iOS, Android and Symbian operating systems in 2011. More details about Bamboo group: www.bam-boo.mobi.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Physicists discover a new particle that may be the Higgs boson

2012-07-07
PASADENA, Calif.—Physicists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland, have discovered a new particle that may be the long-sought Higgs boson, the fundamental particle that is thought to endow elementary particles with mass. "This is a momentous time in the history of particle physics and in scientific exploration—the implications are profound," says Harvey Newman, professor of physics at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). "This is experimental science at its best." The international team of scientists and engineers—which includes a large ...

World's fastest camera, created by UCLA engineers, used to detect rogue cancer cells

2012-07-07
The ability to distinguish and isolate rare cells from among a large population of assorted cells has become increasingly important for the early detection of disease and for monitoring disease treatments. Circulating cancer tumor cells are a perfect example. Typically, there are only a handful of them among a billion healthy cells, yet they are precursors to metastasis, the spread of cancer that causes about 90 percent of cancer mortalities. Such "rogue" cells are not limited to cancer — they also include stem cells used for regenerative medicine and other cell types. ...

Loss of protein SPDEF allows prostate cancer cells to gain foothold at possible sites of metastasis

2012-07-07
Prostate cancer doesn't kill in the prostate — it's the disease's metastasis to other tissues that can be fatal. A University of Colorado Cancer Center study published this week in the Journal of Biological Chemistry shows that prostate cancer cells containing the protein SPDEF continue to grow at the same pace as their SPDEF- cousins, but that these SPDEF+ cells are unable to survive at possible sites of metastasis. "It's as if these cancer cells with SPDEF can't chew into distant tissue and so are unable to make new homes," says Hari Koul, PhD, investigator at the CU ...

Finding right meditation technique key to user satisfaction

2012-07-07
SAN FRANCISCO, July 6, 2012 -- New to meditation and already thinking about quitting? You may have simply chosen the wrong method. A new study published online July 7 in EXPLORE: The Journal of Science and Healing highlights the importance of ensuring that new meditators select methods with which they are most comfortable, rather than those that are most popular. If they do, they are likely to stick with it, says Adam Burke, the author of the study. If not, there is a higher chance they may abandon meditation altogether, losing out on its myriad personal and medical benefits. ...

Keeping the flu away

2012-07-07
San Diego State University researchers at the Donald P. Shiley BioScience Center may have found the secret to helping the immune system fight off the flu before it gets you sick. A new study published today in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE, finds that EP67, a powerful synthetic protein, is able to activate the innate immune system within just two hours of being administered. Prior to this study, EP67 had been primarily used as an adjuvant for vaccines, something added to the vaccine to help activate the immune response. But Joy Phillips, Ph.D. a lead ...

E-waste: Annual gold, silver 'deposits' in new high-tech goods worth $21B; less than 15% recovered

2012-07-07
A staggering 320 tons of gold and more than 7,500 tons of silver are now used annually to make PCs, cell phones, tablet computers and other new electronic and electrical products worldwide, adding more than $21 billion in value each year to the rich fortunes in metals eventually available through "urban mining" of e-waste, experts say. Manufacturing these high-tech products requires more than $16 billion in gold and $5 billion in silver: a total of $21 billion -- equal to the GDP of El Salvador -- locked away annually in e-products. Most of those valuable metals will ...

Why women watch the Olympics

2012-07-07
Washington, D.C. (July 2, 2012)– Forty years into the Title IX era, female athletes have risen to prominence and populate the sports landscape. Female viewership, however, has not witnessed the same rise. What sports are women watching (or not), and why? Of the many events in this summer's Olympics, which will be favored by women viewers? A recent study conducted by Erin Whiteside (University of Tennessee) and Marie Hardin (Pennsylvania State University) explores these questions. The results, published in Communication, Culture & Critique, show that women prefer condensed ...

Fertility drug usage and cancer risk

2012-07-07
Women using fertility drugs who did not conceive a 10-plus week pregnancy were at a statistically significant reduced risk of breast cancer compared to nonusers; however, women using the drugs who conceived a 10-plus week pregnancy had a statistically significant increased risk of breast cancer compared to unsuccessfully treated women, but a comparable risk to nonusers, according to a study published July 6 in the Journal of The National Cancer Institute. Ovulation-stimulating fertility drugs temporarily elevate estrogen levels in women, and estrogen is known to play ...

Atmospheric scientists release first 'bottom-up' estimates of China's CO2 emissions

2012-07-07
Cambridge, Mass. - July 6, 2012 - Atmospheric scientists at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and Nanjing University have produced the first "bottom-up" estimates of China's carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, for 2005 to 2009, and the first statistically rigorous estimates of the uncertainties surrounding China's CO2 emissions. The independent estimates, rooted in part in measurements of pollutants both at the sources and in the air, may be the most accurate totals to date. The resulting figures offer an unbiased basis on which China might measure ...

Arctic warming linked to combination of reduced sea ice and global atmospheric warming

2012-07-07
Professor Ian Simmonds from the University of Melbourne's School of Earth Sciences co-authored the study and said the new information showed this combined effect at both ground and atmospheric level played a key role in increasing the rate of warming in the Arctic. "Loss of sea ice contributes to ground level warming while global warming intensifies atmospheric circulation and contributes to increased temperatures higher in the Arctic atmosphere," Professor Simmonds said. Lead author, Dr James Screen of the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne said ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Malnutrition in children rises when economy drops

New model enables the study of how protein complex influences mitochondrial function

Device study offers hopes for spinal cord injuries

How urea forms spontaneously

Mayo Clinic’s AI tool identifies 9 dementia types, including Alzheimer’s, with one scan

Gene therapy improves blood flow in the brain in patients with sickle cell disease

Building breast tissue in the lab to better understand lactation

How gut bacteria change after exposure to pesticides

Timepoint at which developing B-cells become cancerous impacts leukemia treatment

Roberto Morandotti wins prestigious IEEE Photonics Society Quantum Electronics Award 

New urine-based tumor DNA test may help personalize bladder cancer treatment

How a faulty transport protein in the brain can trigger severe epilepsy

Study reveals uneven land sinking across New Orleans, raising flood-risk concerns

Researchers uncover novel mechanism for regulating ribosome biogenesis during brain development

RNA codon expansion via programmable pseudouridine editing and decoding

Post-diagnosis emergency department presentation and demographic factors in malignant skin cancers

A new genetic tuner for embryo development

Insurance churn and the COVID-19 pandemic

Postpartum Medicaid use in birthing parents and access to financed care

Manufacturing chemicals via orthogonal strategy, making full use of waste plastic resources in real life

Study overturns long-held belief about shape of fish schools

Precision oncology Organ Chip platform accurately and actionably predicts chemotherapy responses of patients suffering from esophageal adenocarcinoma

Verify the therapeutic effect of effective components of lycium barbarum on hepatocellular carcinoma based on molecular docking

Early intervention changes trajectory for depressed preschoolers

HonorHealth Research Institute presents ‘monumental’ increase in survivability for patients suffering ultra-low blood pressure

Mitochondrial dynamics in breast cancer metastasis: From metabolic drivers to therapeutic targets

Removing out-of-pocket fee improves access to 3D mammography

Does reducing exposure to image and video content on messaging apps reduce the impact of misinformation? Yes and no

A global microbiome preservation effort enters its growth phase

New credit card-sized TB test could close the diagnostic gap in HIV hotspots

[Press-News.org] Bamboo Group Releases Ringtonium for Android
Bamboo Group announced that their popular iOS Ringtonium is now available on Android. Ringtonium is a simple and powerful ringtone maker with best class usability and UI, sound effects and super accurate cutting.