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

Livecasinos.asia Launches Chinese Version

Livecasinos.asia, a resource focussed on live dealer gaming for Asian region players, has launched a Chinese language version of its website.

2012-11-21
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, November 21, 2012 (Press-News.org) Livecasinos.asia, a resource focussed on live dealer gaming for Asian region players, has launched a Chinese language version of its website.

Livecasinos.asia provides visitors with reviews and player ratings of the best Asian facing live casinos. Particular consideration is given to casino characteristics that impact on regional suitability such as game range, localized language and support capability, banking options, playing currencies offered and of course accepted jurisdiction policies.

Live casino games are playable online (PC and in some cases tablets) but are conducted by real dealers using traditional casino equipment (playing cards, roulette wheel & ball, dice, tiles etc). The games are live streamed along with a linked bet interface enabling players to participate in a human-dealt game remotely. It's an online playing format favoured by a growing number of players over RNG (random number generator) games which rely on computer generated outcomes for games such as baccarat.

As a resource built for players in Asia, the need to localize the site for languages in the region is an obvious one, and the first major step in this regard has been made. In addition to English, visitors may now access site content in Chinese (simplified characters), with plans for other languages to follow in due course.

For more information visit http://www.livecasinos.asia.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

S L Media Productions, Wedding Photographers in Charlotte, North Carolina, Thanks Clients With Free Engagement Photography

S L Media Productions, Wedding Photographers in Charlotte, North Carolina, Thanks Clients With Free Engagement Photography
2012-11-21
Charlotte wedding photographers in North Carolina S L Media Productions is offering free and discounted Charlotte engagement photography sessions for some brides looking for North Carolina wedding photographers in Charlotte this holiday season. Booking a quality wedding photographer in Charlotte can be costly to some brides. With the high importance that brides give wedding photography in Charlotte and other parts of North Carolina the Charlotte wedding photographers of S L Media Productions want to give back this holiday season with hopes to make some brides wedding planning ...

Medisoft Medical Billing Software Version 18 Available for Doctors and Medical Billing Services

2012-11-21
Physicians and Medical Billing Services can now take advantages of the latest version of Medisoft V18. "With this release of Medisoft Version 18, physicians and billing services can stay up to date with accurate claims submissions by being on the most current version of the software that supports electronic medical claims submissions thru the Relay Health Clearinghouse and other national clearing houses," says Selent. An important piece in the life-cycle of revenue for a practice is statement mailings. "This used to be a time consuming and challenging ...

Dry leaves make for juicy science

Dry leaves make for juicy science
2012-11-20
A research team consisting of a University of Arizona graduate student, about 40 middle school students and a UA research lab has undertaken the first systematic study looking at how much plant leaves shrink when they dry out. The results are published in the November issue of the American Journal of Botany, one of the foremost publication venues in the botanical sciences. "Our simple observation that leaves shrink when they dry out has very important consequences for our understanding how ecosystems work," said Benjamin Blonder, a graduate student in the UA's department ...

Reasons for severe bleeding in hemophilia revealed

2012-11-20
VIDEO: This movie shows the formation and propagation of thrombin activity and a fibrin clot in plasma stimulated with immobilized TF (90 pmol/m2). Imaging of thrombin activity in blood plasma from... Click here for more information. New insights into what causes uncontrollable bleeding in hemophilia patients are provided in a study published by Cell Press on November 20th in the Biophysical Journal. By revealing that blood clots spread in traveling waves through vessels, the study ...

King's College London finds rainbows on nanoscale

Kings College London finds rainbows on nanoscale
2012-11-20
New research at King's College London may lead to improved solar cells and LED-displays. Researchers from the Biophysics and Nanotechnology Group at King's, led by Professor Anatoly Zayats in the department of Physics have demonstrated in detail how to separate colours and create 'rainbows' using nanoscale structures on a metal surface. The research is published in Nature's Scientific Reports. More than 150 years ago, the discovery at King's of how to separate and project different colours, paved the way for modern colour televisions and displays. The major challenge ...

'Obese but happy gene' challenges the common perception of link between depression and obesity

2012-11-20
Hamilton, ON (November 20, 2012) – Researchers at McMaster University have discovered new genetic evidence about why some people are happier than others. McMaster scientists have uncovered evidence that the gene FTO – the major genetic contributor to obesity – is associated with an eight per cent reduction in the risk of depression. In other words, it's not just an obesity gene but a "happy gene" as well. The research appears in a study published today in the journal Molecular Psychiatry. The paper was produced by senior author David Meyre, associate professor in clinical ...

JTCC researchers play important role in groundbreaking study that may change transplant practices

2012-11-20
Hackensack, NJ (November 20, 2012) – Researchers from John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center, one of the nation's 50 best cancer centers, played an important role in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine on October 18 that may change the current blood and marrow transplantation practices. The phase 3, multicenter study compared harvesting stem cells from bone marrow rather than blood and suggests there are benefits to both approaches, but no survival differences between the two methods. Over the past 10 years, 75 percent ...

Nanotech device mimics dog's nose to detect explosives

Nanotech device mimics dogs nose to detect explosives
2012-11-20
(Santa Barbara, CA —) Portable, accurate, and highly sensitive devices that sniff out vapors from explosives and other substances could become as commonplace as smoke detectors in public places, thanks to researchers at University of California, Santa Barbara. Researchers at UCSB, led by professors Carl Meinhart of mechanical engineering and Martin Moskovits of chemistry, have designed a detector that uses microfluidic nanotechnology to mimic the biological mechanism behind canine scent receptors. The device is both highly sensitive to trace amounts of certain vapor molecules, ...

Nanomedicine breakthrough could improve chemotherapy for childhood cancer

2012-11-20
In a world-first, researchers from the Australian Centre for Nanomedicine at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) in Sydney have developed a nanoparticle that could improve the effectiveness of chemotherapy for neuroblastoma by a factor of five. Neuroblastoma is an aggressive childhood cancer that often leaves survivors with lingering health problems due to the high doses of chemotherapy drugs required for treatment. Anything that can potentially reduce these doses is considered an important development. The UNSW researchers developed a non-toxic nanoparticle ...

Rituximab shows promise for clinical problems tied to antiphospholipid antibodies

2012-11-20
Rituximab, a drug used to treat cancer and arthritis, may help patients with antiphospholipid antibodies (aPLs) who suffer from aPL-related clinical problems that do not respond to anticoagulation, such as cardiac disease and kidney disease, according to a new study by rheumatology researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery. The study appears online ahead of print, in the journal Arthritis and Rheumatism. "This is the first study to systematically analyze rituximab in aPL-positive patients. Rituximab may have a role in treating a subgroup of aPL patients," said Doruk ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Distinct brain features in football players may tell who is at risk of long-term traumatic disease

Identifying safer implant designs for total hip replacement

Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration

Game-changing heat shield to revolutionize aerospace manufacturing with long-life engines

Pusan National University researchers show how AI can help in fashion trend prediction

Sinking Indian megacities pose 'alarming' building damage risks

Cul-de-sac effect: Why Mediterranean regions are becoming more prone to extreme floods in a changing climate

Now in 3D, maps begin to bring exoplanets into focus

Researchers develop an ultrasound probe capable of imaging an entire organ in 4D

Oxygen deprivation heightens risk of illness by changing genes

Missing nutrient in breast milk may explain health challenges in children of women with HIV

Custom-designed receptors boost cancer-fighting T cells

Polar bears act as crucial providers for Arctic species

Body clocks matter for heart health

Crystal-free mechanoluminescence illuminates new possibilities for next-generation materials

Scientists develop an efficient method of producing proteins from E. coli

AAAS announces addition of Cancer Communications to Science Partner Journal Program

Systematic review reveals psilocybin reduces obsessive-compulsive behaviors across clinical and preclinical evidence

Emerging roles of neuromodulation in the management of treatment-resistant OCD

All prey are not the same: marine predators face uneven nutritional payoffs

What drives sleep problems in long-term care facilities?

New antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria found hiding in plain sight

New mapping identifies urgent opportunities to strengthen Singapore’s children’s mental health ecosystem

New research reveals significant prevalence of valvular heart disease among older Americans

Outdoor air pollution linked to higher incidence of breast cancer

Thiophene-doped fully conjugated covalent organic frameworks for efficient photocatalytic hydrogen peroxide production

Earth’s ‘boring billion years’ created the conditions for complex life

Health data for 57 million people in England show changing patterns of heart diseases before, during and after the pandemic

Cycling ‘near misses’ in London worst at rush hour and on roads without dedicated infrastructure

Roots in the dark: Russian scientists uncover hidden carbon dioxide uptake in plant roots

[Press-News.org] Livecasinos.asia Launches Chinese Version
Livecasinos.asia, a resource focussed on live dealer gaming for Asian region players, has launched a Chinese language version of its website.