MONTREAL, QC, August 25, 2012 (Press-News.org) A PawnUp.com online pawn shop newsletter subscription allows potential and existing customers to learn about various exclusive offers without the need to apply first. Any visitor to their online pawnshop can now subscribe for free and benefit from monthly offers like "0% interest on their pawn loans for the first month" or "$50 cash bonus" (offers are subject to the Terms and Conditions of PawnUp.com).
This free subscription service was created due to the increasing demand for pawn loans PawnUp.com has been receiving over the last few months. It aims to educate potential customers of PawnUp.com's pawnshop online and provide the most up-to-date information about the company's newest innovations, promotions, exclusive offers and initiatives. It will help customers to safely get more cash for their valuables as discreetly as possible, any time they need it.
About PawnUp.com
PawnUp.com is the leading secured loans provider in Canada. It offers low interest rates (up to 5% per month), professional customer service, fast, free evaluations, free shipping and insurance, security and confidentiality.
Website: http://www.pawnup.com
PawnUp.com Online Pawnshop Starts a Newsletter Subscription Program
PawnUp.com online pawnshop now offers website visitors the ability to subscribe to their newsletter, to be aware of the latest company news and regularly receive special offers that are available only via the newsletter subscription.
2012-08-25
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SpiritCube Internet Startup "Phase Two" Nears Completion
2012-08-25
Today, SpiritCube Inc. has reached a milestone and is near completion of its Re-Engineered version of the company website and interface www.spiritcube.com. The company announced that it has been working with a development team from i-Tul.com and is ready to release and launch the newly redesigned site on schedule. "Phase Two" includes the complete redevelopment of the internally developed company website. The substance of the site is to offer users a website link to develop their own Tribute or Memorial sites. In short, the interface allows for images, music and ...
U of M researchers: Newly discovered genetic markers could signal colon cancer development
2012-08-24
MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (August 23, 2012) – University of Minnesota Medical School and Masonic Cancer Center researchers have partnered with geneticists from Genentech, Inc., to discover how some proteins may cause the development of some forms of colon cancers.
The proteins – part of R-spondin family – normally help activate cell proliferation during embryonic development. Now, University of Minnesota researchers have discovered that when two types of R-spondins – RSPO2 and RSPO 3 – are reactivated in adults through certain gene mutations, they can signal cells to restart ...
Researchers develop simplified approach for high-power, single-mode lasers
2012-08-24
When it comes to applications like standoff sensing — using lasers to detect gas, explosives, or other materials from a safe distance — the laser's strength is of the utmost importance. A stronger and purer beam means devices can sense danger more accurately from a greater distance, which translates into safer workers, soldiers, and police officers.
Northwestern University researchers have developed a new resonator that creates the purest, brightest, and most powerful single-mode quantum cascade lasers yet at the 8-12 micron range, a wavelength of great interest for both ...
Good news from the bad drought: Gulf 'Dead Zone' smallest in years, says Texas A&M expert
2012-08-24
The worst drought to hit the United States in at least 50 years does have one benefit: it has created the smallest "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico in years, says a Texas A&M University researcher who has just returned from gulf waters.
Oceanography professor Steve DiMarco, one of the world's leading authorities on the dead zone, says he and other Texas A&M researchers and graduate students analyzed the Gulf Aug. 15-21 and covered more than 1,200 miles of cruise track, from Texas to Louisiana. The team found no hypoxia off the Texas coast while only finding hypoxia near ...
ChemCam laser first analyses yield beautiful results
2012-08-24
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., August 23, 2012 — Members of the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover ChemCam team, including Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists, squeezed in a little extra target practice after zapping the first fist-sized rock that was placed in the laser's crosshairs last weekend.
Much to the delight of the scientific team, the laser instrument has fired nearly 500 shots so far that have produced strong, clear data about the composition of the Martian surface.
"The spectrum we have received back from Curiosity is as good as anything we looked at on Earth," ...
Flat lens offers a perfect image
2012-08-24
Cambridge, Mass. – August 23, 2012 – Applied physicists at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have created an ultrathin, flat lens that focuses light without imparting the distortions of conventional lenses.
At a mere 60 nanometers thick, the flat lens is essentially two-dimensional, yet its focusing power approaches the ultimate physical limit set by the laws of diffraction.
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IBN develops superior fuel cell material
2012-08-24
Singapore, August 24, 2012 – Using a mixture of gold, copper and platinum nanoparticles, IBN researchers have developed a more powerful and longer lasting fuel cell material. This breakthrough was published recently in leading journal, Energy and Environmental Science.
Fuel cells are a promising technology for use as a source of electricity to power electronic devices, vehicles, military aircraft and equipment. A fuel cell converts the chemical energy from hydrogen (fuel) into electricity through a chemical reaction with oxygen. A fuel cell can produce electricity continuously ...
Most mutations come from dad
2012-08-24
Humans inherit more than three times as many mutations from their fathers as from their mothers, and mutation rates increase with the father's age but not the mother's, researchers have found in the largest study of human genetic mutations to date.
The study, based on the DNA of around 85,000 Icelanders, also calculates the rate of human mutation at high resolution, providing estimates of when human ancestors diverged from nonhuman primates. It is one of two papers published this week by the journal Nature Genetics as well as one published at Nature that shed dramatic ...
Survival statistics show hard fight when malignant brain tumors appear at multiple sites
2012-08-24
LOS ANGELES (Embargoed until 10 a.m. EDT on Aug. 24, 2012) – When aggressive, malignant tumors appear in more than one location in the brain, patient survival tends to be significantly shorter than when the disease starts as a single tumor, even though patients in both groups undergo virtually identical treatments, according to research at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Research Institute.
"We've known that certain independent factors, such as age at diagnosis, amount of residual tumor after surgery, and the patient's functional status are useful ...
Bigger creatures live longer, travel farther for a reason
2012-08-24
DURHAM, N.C. -- A long-standing mystery in biology about the longer lifespans of bigger creatures may be explained by the application of a physical law called the Constructal Law (www.constructal.org).
What this law proposes is that anything that flows -- a river, bloodstream or highway network -- will evolve toward the same basic configuration out of a need to be more efficient. And, as it turns out, that same basic law applies to all bodies in motion, be they animals or tanker trucks, says Adrian Bejan, the J.A. Jones Professor of mechanical engineering at Duke and ...
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[Press-News.org] PawnUp.com Online Pawnshop Starts a Newsletter Subscription ProgramPawnUp.com online pawnshop now offers website visitors the ability to subscribe to their newsletter, to be aware of the latest company news and regularly receive special offers that are available only via the newsletter subscription.