Mobile Internet Visits in Commercial Real Estate Increase 46% in the Past Year
2014-04-02
More users than ever are accessing commercial real estate websites from a Smartphone or other mobile device, according to a new study from inMotion Real Estate Media. Moreover, this reflects an ongoing upwards trend which past statistics and future predictions indicate shows no sign of stopping.
46% more site visits came from mobile devices in 2013 than 2012, according to the study, which reports that more than one in eight visits to commercial real estate websites come from a mobile device.
Furthermore, this statistic is part of a continued curve - in 2011, mobile ...
AmeriQuest Transportation Services Grows Financial Services Division Leasing Volume 20% Year Over Year
2014-04-02
AmeriQuest Transportation Services, a leading provider of fleet management services, today announced it grew its Financial Services Division Leasing volume by 20% in 2013. The 2013 volume of business was $157.9 million, up from $132.2 million the previous year.
By more effectively managing customers' fleet asset lifecycles through its proprietary Total Cost of Ownership analysis, AmeriQuest routinely increases a fleet's productivity and lowers overall operating costs by 15-20%.
"We design specific financial products for each of our customers' unique operations, which ...
High Grade LED Lighted Longboards by Life Made Better
2014-04-02
Hot on the heels of their latest success, Amazon Retailer Life Made Better has today introduced the newest longboard from their TNG lighted boards series. In conjunction with "the leader in lighted skateboard manufacturing", Life Made Better lives up to their name once again by providing a superior lighted board that improves both the quality and safety of the nighttime riding experience.
Sporting a super strong 9 ply maple deck with a sick detailed graphic underneath, the Rasta 420 Pintail is THE ultimate board for anyone looking to skate in comfort and style. Equipped ...
Mattia Fiumani Has A Different Vision
2014-04-02
Mattia Fiumani speaks four languages (English, French, Italian and German), received his Master's Degree in Architecture, has lived in Italy, Australia, Scotland, Fiji, Switzerland, Cairo, Berlin, and New York before moving to Los Angeles. Mattia is an internationally known director and producer that is making waves in the entertainment industry.
He may be new to this town, but he's not new to directing and producing. In 2009, he directed "27 Down" (which was released in 2013), a project that was selected by Radiance Institute in Berlin last summer, and in 2010 he directed ...
Indie Title, Non Friction, Voted Funniest, Sexiest Book of 2013
2014-04-02
Romance novelist, Morgan Parker, has a lot to smile about. With two novels due for release between now and June 1, Mr. Parker has also seen his biggest release of 2013 voted to the top spot on the Funniest, Sexiest Books of 2013 list by readers and fans at goodreads.com, the world's largest site for readers and book recommendations.
Achieving the top spot ahead of USA Today best-selling author Alice Clayton, and New York Times best-selling author Emma Chase (both of which are sold by Simon & Schuster Digital Sales) has come as a surprise to Mr. Parker, who writes ...
Caroar - A New Breed of Career Search Tool Has Arrived to Save The Workday
2014-04-02
A new breed of career search tool has been launched by the team at tech startup Caroar. They're taking a novel approach to finding us a great career and work lifestyle by analysing real career data from thousands of users. Intelligent algorithms match common points in the user's career with those who have managed to achieve the kind of rewarding and satisfying jobs so many of us are looking for. Whether it be an eye-watering salary, great flexibility, lending a helping hand or jet-setting around the world, the web app returns a list of possible paths to a new career. The ...
All Boxed Up Launches New Website
2014-04-02
All Boxed Up, LLC, manufacturer of custom-created and patterned boxes for nearly any application, has announced the launch of its new website. Aptly located at www.allboxedup.com, the revamped web portal is a vibrant showcase of everything All Boxed Up has to offer. Making the company unique, beyond the fact that they manufacture whatever they sell, are the creative custom designs they put together. With dazzling colors and all products made of strong, durable corrugated materials in All Boxed Up's Flower Mound, Texas facility, the company has remained dedicated to make ...
Record number of older adults completing living wills
2014-04-02
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A record number of elderly people are completing living wills to guide end-of-life medical treatments – up from 47 percent in 2000 to 72 percent in 2010 – according to new research from the University of Michigan and the Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
However, even with nearly double the number of people completing advance directives – which may specify preferences for surrogate decision makers and life-support treatment – there was little difference in hospitalization rates or deaths in the hospital, says the study that appears in the ...
Contrary to expectations, life experiences better use of money than material items
2014-04-02
SAN FRANCISCO -- Despite knowing that buying life experiences will make them happier than buying material items, shoppers might continue to spend money on the latter because they mistakenly believe items are a better value, according to a San Francisco State University study published today. That belief, however, isn't accurate.
Those surveyed after making a purchase rated life experiences both making them happier and as a better use of their money, indicating many are sacrificing their well-being for a sense of value that never materializes. The study is one of the ...
Levels of sodium intake recommended by CDC associated with harmful health outcomes
2014-04-02
NEW YORK, NY (March, 2014) – A new study published in the American Journal of Hypertension finds evidence that the average daily sodium intake of most Americans is actually associated with better health outcomes than intake levels currently recommended by the CDC and major health departments, which are now being viewed by many in the scientific community as excessively and unrealistically low.
The study, "Compared With Usual Sodium Intake, Low-and Excessive-Sodium Diets Are Associated With Increased Mortality: A Meta-Analysis," concluded that 2,645 – 4,945 mg of sodium ...
Great minds think alike
2014-04-02
Pinecone or pine nut? Friend or foe? Distinguishing between the two requires that we pay special attention to the telltale characteristics of each.
And as it turns out, us humans aren't the only ones up to the task.
According to researchers at the University of Iowa, pigeons share our ability to place everyday things in categories. And, like people, they can hone in on visual information that is new or important and dismiss what is not.
"The basic concept at play is selective attention. That is, in a complex world, with its booming, buzzing confusion, we don't attend ...
'Touched' female cockroaches reproduce faster
2014-04-02
To speed up reproduction, there's no substitute for the tender touch of a live cockroach.
That's the major takeaway from a North Carolina State University study examining whether artificial antennae – in this case, duck feathers – can mimic a cockroach antenna's capacity to hasten reproduction in cockroach females.
Female cockroaches that get "touched" – by other female cockroaches and, under certain conditions, even by duck feathers that mimic roach antennae – reproduce faster than female roaches that live in isolation or without tactile stimulation.
...
Ancient nomads spread earliest domestic grains along Silk Road, study finds
2014-04-02
Charred grains of barley, millet and wheat deposited nearly 5,000 years ago at campsites in the high plains of Kazakhstan show that nomadic sheepherders played a surprisingly important role in the early spread of domesticated crops throughout a mountainous east-west corridor along the historic Silk Road, suggests new research from Washington University in St. Louis.
"Our findings indicate that ancient nomadic pastoralists were key players in an east-west network that linked innovations and commodities between present-day China and southwest Asia," said study co-author ...
Unvaccinated infants act as 'kindling' to fuel epidemics
2014-04-02
ANN ARBOR—Nearly 4 million children under 5 die from vaccine-preventable diseases worldwide each year, and two University of Michigan doctoral ecology students are working to change that.
By taking into account seasonal fluctuations in birth rates, massive vaccination campaigns in the developing world could inoculate more unprotected infants and significantly reduce the number of deaths from diseases like measles, according to Micaela Martinez-Bakker and Kevin Bakker of the U-M Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.
"If you have lots of kindling, you can have ...
Care of heart failure patients falling short in the UK
2014-04-02
Care of patients with heart failure in the UK is inadequate and has not changed in a decade, according to new research published in BMJ Open.
The findings by a team at Durham University and Darlington Memorial Hospital - and funded by national charity Heart Research UK - highlight inadequacies in heart failure care as well as an uncoordinated approach to diagnosis and management of the condition between primary and secondary care clinicians.
The research showed that clinicians are uncertain about how to diagnose different types of heart failure and about who has overall ...
Warm North Atlantic Ocean promotes extreme winters in US and Europe
2014-04-02
The extreme cold weather observed across Europe and the east coast of the US in recent winters could be partly down to natural, long-term variations in sea surface temperatures, according to a new study published today.
Researchers from the University of California Irvine have shown that a phenomenon known as the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO)—a natural pattern of variation in North Atlantic sea surface temperatures that switches between a positive and negative phase every 60-70 years—can affect an atmospheric circulation pattern, known as the North Atlantic ...
Not so dirty: Methane fuels life in pristine chalk rivers
2014-04-02
Scientists from Queen Mary University of London have found that naturally high concentrations of the greenhouse gas methane contributes to energy production in chalk rivers, in a new study published today in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Chalk rivers, found from Dorset to Cambridgeshire, sustain a diverse range of protected animals and plants, and are renowned globally for fly fishing, an industry worth more than £4M on the Rivers Test and Itchen (Hampshire) alone.
"It's a surprise to find methane is such a big source of energy in these gin-clear ...
Male extinction prevented by promiscuous females
2014-04-02
LIVERPOOL, UK – 2 April 2014: Female fruit flies with a large number of sexual partners are playing an invaluable role in preventing the extinction of males, research at the University of Liverpool has shown.
Scientists have found that flies in the northern parts of the United States are more inclined to have multiple partners in order to reduce the occurrence of an X chromosome which causes the production of only female offspring.
This selfish genetic element (SGE) tries to replicate itself by killing sperm that carry the Y chromosome, but has the side-effect that ...
Still no clear evidence for health benefits of vitamin D
2014-04-02
They argue that "universal conclusions about its benefits cannot be drawn" and say further studies and better designed trials are needed.
A growing body of evidence indicates that vitamin D may reduce risks of a wide range of diseases, including bone mineral disease, multiple sclerosis, autoimmune disorders, cancer and cardiovascular problems. Yet, despite hundreds of trials, the evidence for vitamin D is still being debated.
Two papers published on bmj.com today attempt to make sense of the existing data.
The first, by researchers based in the UK, Europe and USA, ...
Probiotics do not help infants with colic
2014-04-02
These findings differ from previous smaller trials and do not support a general recommendation for the use of probiotics to treat colic in infants.
Infant colic (excessive crying of unknown cause) affects up to 20% of infants and is a major burden to families and health services. Although it spontaneously resolves three to four months after birth, its cause remains elusive and no single effective treatment exists.
Previous small trials suggest that the probiotic Lactobacillus reuteri effectively treats colic in breastfed infants. These studies, however, had limitations ...
New dementia diagnosis targets will lead to overdiagnosis
2014-04-02
The government is putting pressure on commissioners, and in turn general practitioners, to make more diagnoses of dementia, but no analysis has been done to assess the harm that these targets could cause.
Dr Martin Brunet, a GP from Surrey, says that "medicine depends on a fundamental, unspoken agreement between patients and doctors […] the only factor influencing the decision to diagnose should be the best interests of patients". He adds that the idea of doctors being motivated by self interest is "abhorrent and undermines the basis of the relationship".
He says that ...
The Sun's campaign may actually harm women
2014-04-02
The "check 'em Tuesday" campaign is a weekly call for women to examine their breasts. Readers are asked to send in photos to prove compliance and can even sign up for a text message reminder.
But Dr McCartney argues that teaching women to examine their breasts regularly "has been shown not to reduce deaths from breast cancer and actually increases the chances of a benign biopsy result." She says it is "unfair to tell women that regular self examination will save their lives when it may simply incur anxiety and have the potential to harm."
She points out that this is ...
Screening for liver cancer in patients with cirrhosis
2014-04-02
In a systematic review and meta-analysis of 47 studies with 15,158 patients, Amit Singal (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center) and colleagues found that patients with cirrhosis who underwent surveillance (via liver ultrasound with or without measurement of serum alpha fetoprotein) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) had cancers detected at an earlier stage, were more likely to receive curative instead of palliative treatment, and had longer survival. Across all the studies, the pooled 3-year survival rate was 50.8% among the 4735 patients who underwent HCC surveillance, ...
Heart attack gene, MRP-14, triggers blood clot formation
2014-04-02
Right now, options are limited for preventing heart attacks. However, the day may come when treatments target the heart attack gene, myeloid related protein-14 (MRP-14, also known as S100A9) and defang its ability to produce heart attack-inducing blood clots, a process referred to as thrombosis.
Scientists at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and University Hospitals Case Medical Center have reached a groundbreaking milestone toward this goal. They have studied humans and mice and discovered how MRP-14 generates dangerous clots that could trigger heart attack or ...
Will roe deer persist? Climate change spells disaster for species unable to keep up
2014-04-02
As the climate continues to change, it's unclear to what extent different species will be able to keep pace with altered temperatures and shifted seasons. Living organisms are the survivors of previous environmental changes and might therefore be expected to adapt, but are there limits?
According to research to be published in the Open Access journal PLOS Biology on April 1, some species may be much less able to cope with the effects of climate change than previously thought. The study, by Floriane Plard, Jean-Michel Gaillard, Christophe Bonenfant and colleagues, looked ...
[1] ... [3204]
[3205]
[3206]
[3207]
[3208]
[3209]
[3210]
[3211]
3212
[3213]
[3214]
[3215]
[3216]
[3217]
[3218]
[3219]
[3220]
... [8254]
Press-News.org - Free Press Release Distribution service.