AndroidCasinoApps.net Launch Mobile Casino Games Portal for Android Smartphones
2011-11-23
Android Casino Apps (www.AndroidCasinoApps.net) is a new mobile casino website that features the best real money casino games for Android smartphones & tablets. It is now possible to play mobile roulette, mobile blackjack, mobile slots, mobile baccarat and any mobile casino game on an Android device, such as the Sony Xperia, HTC Desire or Samsung Galaxy S2.
The popularity of smartphones has changed the way in which we interact with the world. We can now place bets from an iPhone, take part in a real money poker game from a BlackBerry or play casino games from an ...
Filemobile Provides UGC-Management Services to Maxim Magazine
2011-11-23
Filemobile, Inc. (www.filemobile.com) -- one of North America's leading developers of interactive online software -- is proud to announce the final phase of Maxim Magazine's Hometown Hotties 2011 contest, powered by Filemobile's Media Factory platform.
The contest invited the United States' most beautiful women over the age of 21 to submit their photos to compete for the title of Hometown Hottie. After months of submissions and deliberations, the contest -- a Maxim tradition for nearly a decade -- is currently in the top 10 judging round. The winner will be featured ...
Liberty Slots Casino Brings Back Slot Machine Favourites Like Cleopatra's Pyramid and Real Deal
2011-11-23
Liberty Slots has revived some of the most popular online slot machines in its online casino.
"Cleopatra's Pyramid is a classic online slot machine that's been popular for many years," said George Jones, manager of Liberty Slots Casino. "So we're very glad to be able to bring it back for online casino players everywhere. Judging by the feedback we've had so far, a lot of players are pretty happy to have a place to play Agent Cash and Real Deal too - and so are we!"
Liberty Slots Casino is being extremely generous with casino bonuses, especially ...
Coherent Laser Machining Tool Lowers Sheet Metal Cutting Costs
2011-11-23
Coherent, Inc. (Santa Clara, CA) (Nasdaq: COHR) last week presented the METABEAM 1000, a turnkey, laser-based machining tool that enables cost effective laser cutting of sheet metal including stainless steel, mild steel, aluminum and brass, at FABTECH 2011 exposition. The METABEAM 1000 uses a 1000W CO2 laser, Coherent's Diamond E 1000, which is the world's only completely sealed-off kilowatt CO2 laser that has a peak power greater than 2500W, an M2 less than 1.2, and is completely maintenance-free for the entire lifetime. The METABEAM tool will offer substantially lower ...
Rose Country Income Fund Completes Closing
2011-11-23
The Rose Country Income Fund ("RC Fund") is pleased to announce the completion of the initial closing pursuant to its Offering Memorandum dated July 30, 2011. On November 1, 2011 the RC Fund completed a closing of the subscription of 16,000 Class "A" Units and 84,000 Class "C" Units.
"The initial completion of fundraising for the RC Fund is important because it demonstrates the confidence that the investment community has in RC Fund's mandate," said Larry Whitehead, President of the Managing Partner, Rose Country Management Inc. ...
Octava Inc., Specialists in HDMI Solutions, Announced the Release of the HD41-ARC HDMI Switch
2011-11-23
Octava Inc., specialists in HDMI solutions, announced the release of the HD41-ARC HDMI switch. The HD41-ARC enables HDMI switching and simple integration of ARC enabled Display with non-HDMI AV Amp.
The Octava HD41-ARC is a 4x1 HDMI + Optical + ARC Switch that enables owners of New ARC enabled Displays to listen to the TV's inbuilt Web/IP applications or Freeview tuner via their AV Receiver using an Optical connection between the HDMI Switch and the AV Amp.
In addition, 4 Toslink optical Audio Inputs allow users to switch from toslink sources independent of video ...
Vajra Sol Yoga Adventures Offers Retreats in Costa Rica For 2012
2011-11-23
Vajra Sol Yoga Adventures announces their upcoming retreats for January through April 2012. Beginner and intermediate yoga enthusiasts will thoroughly enjoy a tropical getaway on the beautiful beaches of Costa Rica.
Vajra Sol was founded in 2005 and has been running retreats every year and growing due to demand. The popular Yoga and Surf combination is ideal for those who want to learn to surf and also for the experienced surfer. On the same retreat a Pure Yoga option is offered with twice daily sessions instead of surfing. New this coming season March 4-10th is a retreat ...
Wildlife access critical to children's health
2011-11-23
For the first time, researchers have uncovered a powerful connection between loss of access to wildlife and micronutrient deficiencies in children, according to a recently published study by the University of California-Berkeley, Harvard Center for the Environment and Harvard School of Public Health, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and others.
Hundreds of millions of people around the world rely on marine and terrestrial wildlife -- both of which have been declining in terms of diversity and abundance around the world -- as a primary source of food. The new study addresses ...
New strategy could lead to dose reduction in X-ray imaging
2011-11-23
Athens, Ga. – For more than a century, the use of X-rays has been a prime diagnostic tool when it comes to human health. As it turns out, X-rays also are a crucial component for studying and understanding molecules, and a new approach -- just published by researchers at the University of Georgia -- may dramatically improve what researchers can learn using the technique.
One of the primary ways scientists can understand molecules is to bombard their crystalline forms with X-ray beams. This allows a crystallographer to discover many things about the molecule, from the arrangement ...
Optimism helps females achieve higher grades - males score lower when overconfident -- BGU study
2011-11-23
BEER-SHEVA, ISRAEL -- Female students who were more optimistic achieved significantly higher grades than their less optimistic peers, according to a new study by Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) researchers. For male students, however, too much optimism led to overconfidence and less studying, resulting in lower grades.
"Optimism in male students can lead to overconfidence or an attitude of 'things will work out for the best'," according to Tamar Icekson, a Ph.D. student in BGU's Guilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management. "So instead of studying enough ...
Hope for muscle wasting disease
2011-11-23
A health supplement used by bodybuilders could be the key to treating a life-threatening muscular dystrophy affecting hundreds of Australian children, new research shows.
The amino acid L-tyrosine had a "rapid and dramatic impact" on Nemaline Myopathy (NM) in laboratory tests on mice, significantly improving symptoms of the muscle-wasting disease, medical researchers from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) found.
Trials showed that consuming L-tyrosine could significantly improve muscle strength and mobility in NM, raising the possibility it also could be effective ...
UGA discovery changes how scientists think about plant cell wall formation
2011-11-23
Athens, Ga. – University of Georgia researchers have discovered that two proteins come together in an unexpected way to make a carbohydrate, a chain of sugar molecules, in plant cell walls. This fundamental discovery changes the way scientists think about how plant cell walls are made and opens a new door to converting plants to biofuels and other carbon-based products.
In 2006, the UGA research team, led by Debra Mohnen, a faculty member in the UGA Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, discovered GAUT1, the first protein shown to synthesize pectin, a major component ...
UCLA team develops highly efficient method for creating flexible, transparent electrodes
2011-11-23
As the market for liquid crystal displays and other electronics continues to drive up the price of indium -- the material used to make the indium tin oxide (ITO) transparent electrodes in these devices -- scientists have been searching for a less costly and more dynamic alternative, particularly for use in future flexible electronics.
Besides its high price, ITO has several drawbacks. It's brittle, making it impractical for use in flexible displays and solar cells, and there is a lack of availability of indium, which is found primarily in Asia. Further, the production ...
Coffee may protect against endometrial cancer
2011-11-23
PHILADELPHIA — Long-term coffee consumption may be associated with a reduced risk for endometrial cancer, according to a recent study in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
Edward Giovannucci, M.D., Sc.D., professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, said coffee is emerging as a protective agent in cancers that are linked to obesity, estrogen and insulin.
"Coffee has already been shown to be protective against diabetes due to its effect on insulin," said Giovannucci, ...
Zinc supplementation does not protect young African children against malaria
2011-11-23
A study led by Hans Verhoef, a researcher at Wageningen University, the Netherlands, and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK, and published in this week's PLoS Medicine shows that supplementing young Tanzanian children with zinc —either alone or in combination with other multi-nutrients — does not protect against malaria.
Zinc helps to maintain a healthy immune system, and previous studies had shown a benefit of zinc in reducing diarrhea. Most African children are deficient in zinc, and in this study the authors wanted to investigate a possible role ...
Stigma among HIV-positive women complex and overlapping
2011-11-23
In this week's PLoS Medicine, Mona Loutfy of the University of Toronto, Canada and colleagues report their study examining experiences of stigma and coping strategies among HIV-positive women in Ontario, Canada. Using focus groups, the researchers found that women attributed their experiences of stigma and discrimination to HIV-related stigma, sexism and gender discrimination, racism, homophobia and transphobia, and involvement in sex work. The coping strategies they used included resilience (at a micro level), social networks and support groups (at a meso level), and challenging ...
Mental health research in LMICs needs good governance
2011-11-23
In this week's PLoS Medicine Taghi Yasamy from the WHO, Geneva, Switzerland and colleagues identify challenges facing good mental health research governance in low- and middle-income countries and provide suggestions for a way forward. The authors recognize the need to establish the general orientation of mental health research to deal with problems such as organizational structure, research prioritization and relatively limited capacity and resources, and to balance expensive research with assessment of services and resources using low-cost methods.
The authors state: ...
Why has synesthesia survived evolution?
2011-11-23
In the 19th century, Francis Galton noted that certain people who were otherwise normal "saw" every number or letter tinged with a particular color, even though it was written in black ink. For the past two decades researchers have been studying this phenomenon, which is called synesthesia. In an "Unsolved Mystery" article and accompanying podcast to be published November 22 in the online, open-access journal PLoS Biology, David Brang and VS Ramachandran strive to bring synesthesia into the broader fold of biology and to the scientific study of the arts through understanding ...
Awareness biases information processing
2011-11-23
How does awareness influence information processing during decision making in the human brain? A new study led by Floris de Lange of the Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour at Radboud University Nijmegen, offers new insight into this question, and is published November 22 in the online, open-access journal PLoS Biology.
When making a decision, we gather evidence for the different options and ultimately choose on the basis of the accumulated evidence. A fundamental question is whether
and how conscious awareness of the evidence changes this decision-making ...
Surgery improves endocarditis-induced heart failure survival rates
2011-11-23
DURHAM, N.C.— Surgery significantly improves short- and long-term outcomes in patients with heart failure caused by a bacterial infection known as endocarditis, according to Duke University Medical Center researchers.
"About 60 percent of patients with heart failure in endocarditis undergo surgery during initial hospitalization," says Duke cardiologist Andrew Wang, M.D., senior author of the study which appears today in the Journal of the American Medical Association. He believes that percentage should be higher. American College of Cardiology guidelines strongly recommend ...
Study assesses association between urinary salt excretion and risk of cardiovascular events or death
2011-11-23
For persons with cardiovascular disease or diabetes, urinary sodium excretion (a surrogate for salt intake) at higher levels or at lower levels compared to mid-range values was associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events (for higher levels) or cardiovascular death and hospitalization for congestive heart failure (for lower levels), according to a study in the November 23/30 issue of JAMA. Also, higher estimated urinary potassium excretion was associated with a reduced risk of stroke.
There is uncertainty regarding the optimal daily intake of sodium. Findings ...
Among patients with infective endocarditis and heart failure, valvular surgery may reduce mortality
2011-11-23
CHICAGO – Among patients with infective endocarditis (an infection of the heart lining which may involve the heart valves) and heart failure, about two-thirds undergo valvular surgery, which is associated with a significant reduction in the risk of death in the hospital and at one year, according to a study in the November 23/30 issue of JAMA.
"Infective endocarditis is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. Several published studies have reported in-hospital mortality of 15 percent to 20 percent and l-year mortality of 40 percent. In the United States ...
Paracetamol: Repeated ingestion of slightly too much can be fatal -- recognize and treat quickly
2011-11-23
Repeatedly taking slightly too much paracetamol over time can cause a dangerous overdose that is difficult to spot, but puts the person at danger of dying. Patients may not come to hospital reporting the overdose, but because they feel unwell. This clinical situation needs to be recognized and treated rapidly because these patients are at even greater danger than people who take single overdoses.
These so-called staggered overdoses can occur when people have pain and repeatedly take a little more paracetamol than they should. "They haven't taken the sort of single-moment, ...
P Rex-1 protein key to melanoma metastasis
2011-11-23
Chapel Hill, NC – Researchers from UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center are part of a team that has identified a protein, called P-Rex1, that is key to the movement of cells called melanoblasts. When these cells experience uncontrolled growth, melanoma develops.
Melanoma is one of the only forms of cancer that is still on the rise and is one of the most common forms of cancer in young adults. The incidence of melanoma in women under age 30 has increased more than 50 percent since 1980. Metastases are the major cause of death from melanoma.
The team found that ...
Earlier antiretroviral therapy might reduce the burden of cancer in those with HIV
2011-11-23
OAKLAND, Calif., November 22, 2011 – HIV-infected patients are at increased risk for cancer as a result of both their impaired immune system and lifestyle factors, such as smoking, according to researchers at Kaiser Permanente.
The study, which appears in the current issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention, is among the first to directly compare the risk of cancer in HIV-infected patients with a comparison group without HIV infection, while accounting for major cancer risk factors.
Of the 10 cancer types studied, six were more common in HIV patients, ...
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