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MEZZI Offers a Rare Sneak Peek at Hot New iPad Cases

2011-04-18
MEZZI, world-renowned aluminum case manufacturer, is offering a glimpse of a forthcoming hot new product before its arrival in early May. The company's new line of iPad cases (http://www.mezzi.com/iPad-Cases) will be available in three colors - black, pink and white. With an estimated 7+ million Apple iPads and iPad 2 sold in the first quarter of 2011 and 6+ million original iPads sold during past Christmas season, MEZZI finds the demand for protecting these devices is on the rise. "When consumers invest between $500 - $800 for a compact mobile device that fits so nicely ...

Talamas Broadcast Assists Boston Ballet With The Soundcraft Vi1 Digital Mixing Console

Talamas Broadcast Assists Boston Ballet With The Soundcraft Vi1 Digital Mixing Console
2011-04-18
Founded in 1963, the Boston Ballet has become one of the leading dance companies in the world. Under the leadership of Artistic Director Mikko Nissinen and Executive Director Barry Hughson, the Company maintains an internationally acclaimed repertoire and the Boston Ballet School, the largest ballet school in North America. The Boston Ballet recently upgraded its audio system, including the installation of a Soundcraft Vi1 digital mixing console. Talamas Broadcast Equipment of Newton, Massachusetts provided the Soundcraft Vi1 console in time for the recent holiday production ...

M500 Series of Line Scan Cameras Used with PPT VISION Embedded Vision System to Solve Demanding Applications

M500 Series of Line Scan Cameras Used with PPT VISION Embedded Vision System to Solve Demanding Applications
2011-04-18
PPT VISION introduces the IMPACT M500 Series of GigE compatible line scan cameras. The series includes twelve new cameras ranging from a 1024 pixel, 18.7 Khz model to a 2048 pixel, 29.2 Khz model; each with C or F mount lensing options and supporting multiple encoder configurations with direct digital inputs. The new M500 Series of line scan cameras can be used with the IMPACT M-Series Embedded Vision System to simply and reliably perform multiple machine vision inspections simultaneously. "PPT VISION has long offered a broad selection of IMPACT smart cameras and software, ...

BlueLinx Corporation Joins HomeSphere

BlueLinx Corporation Joins HomeSphere
2011-04-18
BlueLinx Corporation ("BlueLinx") and Lakewood-based HomeSphere, Inc. announced today they have entered into a joint agreement to offer Georgia-Pacific vinyl siding and trim products to HomeSphere's network of builders using HomeSphere's technology-driven solutions. BlueLinx joins more than 75 manufacturing brands currently using HomeSphere's BRI lead generation and marketing program to produce new builder leads through our dealer network and strengthen existing business, thus growing their market share through increased homebuilder sales. "Our relationship with ...

WinADayCasino Players Build Their Own Fairground in New 'Fair Tycoon' Slot Machine's Bonus Game

WinADayCasino Players Build Their Own Fairground in New Fair Tycoon Slot Machines Bonus Game
2011-04-18
WinADayCasino.com has launched another one-of-a-kind game, the new carnival-themed Fair Tycoon online slot machine with a bonus game where players build their own amusement park. As usual, WinADay is giving players free bonus money to try the new game and they'll give $3000 in special bonuses to the players that play it the most. To encourage feedback, WinADay will pay 5 players $75 each for their reviews. Fair Tycoon is an animated five reel slot machine with 17 pay lines and a Premium Game where players become a mighty tycoon. You can almost smell the hot dogs and ...

BaseKit Secures $6.5M for Global Expansion

BaseKit Secures $6.5M for Global Expansion
2011-04-18
BaseKit has raised $6.5m in venture capital from Nauta Capital, Eden Ventures and the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts (NESTA) from a second round of funding that takes investment in the British-based company to a combined $10m in the past year. The funding will enable the company to rapidly expand its global reach with new offices in Barcelona, Sao Paolo, Mexico DF, Buenos Aires and San Francisco. BaseKit is an online website builder and hosting service, which enables users to create next generation websites quickly and easily using an on-screen ...

New patient guidelines for heart devices

2011-04-18
DETROIT – A series of new guidelines for cardiac specialists has been developed to determine when heart failure patients should receive a mechanical heart-pumping device. "The new guidelines will likely affect who is referred for a mechanical circulatory support device, and how early in the process a physician would consider implanting a left ventricular assist device," says Jeffrey A. Morgan, M.D., associate director of Mechanical Circulatory Support at Henry Ford Hospital. "These guidelines have the ability to change clinical practice patterns for patients with advanced ...

Low-cost molecular medicine should be included in modern eye physicians' tool kit

2011-04-18
Dr. Richer, speaking at his 4th annual Nutrition & The Eye conference, April 16-17, hosted by the College of Optometry at the University of Missouri in St. Louis, says molecular medicine is beginning to provide hope for patients with declining sight when all other therapies have been exhausted. "These nutritional molecules have begun to be rigorously studied around the world in cardiology , cancer research and some human studies", Dr Richer reported. Dr. Richer has now accumulated a growing number of otherwise hopeless cases that retina specialists and other ophthalmologists ...

Sugarcane cools climate

2011-04-18
Palo Alto, CA—Brazilians are world leaders in using biofuels for gasoline. About a quarter of their automobile fuel consumption comes from sugarcane, which significantly reduces carbon dioxide emissions that otherwise would be emitted from using gasoline. Now scientists from the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology have found that sugarcane has a double benefit. Expansion of the crop in areas previously occupied by other Brazilian crops cools the local climate. It does so by reflecting sunlight back into space and by lowering the temperature of the surrounding ...

Arctic coasts on the retreat

2011-04-18
Bremerhaven/Geesthacht/Potsdam, 14 April 2011. The coastline in Arctic regions reacts to climate change with increased erosion and retreats by half a metre per year on average. This means substantial changes for Arctic ecosystems near the coast and the population living there. A consortium of more than thirty scientists from ten countries, including researchers from the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in the Helmholtz Association and from the Helmholtz Centre in Geesthacht, comes to this conclusion in two studies published in Estuaries and Coasts ...

Successful strategy developed to regenerate blood vessels

2011-04-18
VIDEO: Cardiologist Dr. Geoffrey Pickering of the University of Western Ontario describes a new strategy for stimulating the formation of highly functional new blood vessels in damaged tissue. Click here for more information. Researchers at The University of Western Ontario have discovered a strategy for stimulating the formation of highly functional new blood vessels in tissues that are starved of oxygen. Dr. Geoffrey Pickering and Matthew Frontini at the Schulich School of ...

Researchers get a first look at the mechanics of membrane proteins

Researchers get a first look at the mechanics of membrane proteins
2011-04-18
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In two new studies, researchers provide the first detailed view of the elaborate chemical and mechanical interactions that allow the ribosome – the cell's protein-building machinery – to insert a growing protein into the cellular membrane. The first study, in Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, gives an atom-by-atom snapshot of a pivotal stage in the insertion process: the moment just after the ribosome docks to a channel in the membrane and the newly forming protein winds its way into the membrane where it will reside. A collaboration between ...

Thorne Vet Launches ImmunoVET Serum Immunoglobulin Concentrate for Optimal Immune Support

2011-04-18
Thorne Vet, a division of Thorne Research, has introduced ImmunoVET for immune and gastrointestinal support. ImmunoVET is an immune globulin concentrate derived from purified bovine serum. It contains at least 45-percent immunoglobulin (IgG) - considerably more than the 20-25 percent typically seen in colostrums. ImmunoVET is purified from bovine serum, rather than bovine milk, hence there is no dairy component. ImmunoVET augments natural gut immunity by improving gut barrier function, activating gut immunity, and decreasing intestinal secretions for better stool consistency. ...

L-lysine may help schizophrenia sufferers cope

2011-04-18
Schizophrenia is a serious mental disorder that currently affects about one in every 200 people. Most patients find some relief from their symptoms by treatment with antipsychotics, however they may still suffer from cognitive and negative symptoms. These include poor concentration and memory, apathy, or a reduced ability to cope in social situations. Preliminary research published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Medicine shows that patients who received L-lysine alongside their normal medication found some reduction in the severity of their symptoms. In ...

Ancestors of land plants revealed

2011-04-18
It was previously thought that land plants evolved from stonewort-like algae. However, new research published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Evolutionary Biology shows that the closest relatives to land plants are actually conjugating green algae such as Spirogyra. Ancestors of green plants began to colonise the land about 500 million years ago and it is generally accepted that they evolved from streptophyte algae (a group of green, fresh water algae). But this group of algae is very diverse and currently ranges from simple, one cell, flagellates to more ...

Researchers inject nanofiber spheres carrying cells into wounds to grow tissue

2011-04-18
ANN ARBOR, Mich.---For the first time, scientists have made star-shaped, biodegradable polymers that can self-assemble into hollow, nanofiber spheres, and when the spheres are injected with cells into wounds, these spheres biodegrade, but the cells live on to form new tissue. Developing this nanofiber sphere as a cell carrier that simulates the natural growing environment of the cell is a very significant advance in tissue repair, says Peter Ma, professor at the University of Michigan School of Dentistry and lead author of a paper about the research scheduled for advanced ...

Texas Personal Injury Law Firm Abraham, Watkins, Nichols, Sorrels, Agosto & Friend Receives Landmark Decision from Houston Court of Appeals

Texas Personal Injury Law Firm Abraham, Watkins, Nichols, Sorrels, Agosto & Friend Receives Landmark Decision from Houston Court of Appeals
2011-04-18
Earlier this year the First Court of Appeals in Houston handed down a historic opinion guaranteeing undocumented workers a fair day in court. Through its ruling, the court set the standard for Texas courts in refusing to allow the immigration status of a plaintiff to prejudice a jury, while simultaneously affirming the relief granted through the original verdict to the family of a man killed on the job. The case, Republic Waste Services, Ltd., et al. v. Martinez, et al., was brought by Benny Agosto, Jr., a partner at the Houston law firm of Abraham, Watkins, Nichols, ...

Polarized microscopy technique shows new details of how proteins are arranged

2011-04-18
Whether you're talking about genes, or neurons, or the workings of a virus, at the most fundamental level, biology is a matter of proteins. So understanding what protein complexes look like and how they operate is the key to figuring out what makes cells tick. By harnessing the unique properties of polarized light, Rockefeller scientists have now developed a new technique that can help deduce the orientation of specific proteins within the cell. By turning their instruments toward the nuclear pore complex, a huge cluster of proteins that serves as a gateway to a cell's ...

La Jolla Institute identifies new therapeutic target for asthma, COPD and other lung disorders

2011-04-18
SAN DIEGO – (April 17, 2011) – Michael Croft, Ph.D., a researcher at the La Jolla Institute for Allergy & Immunology, has discovered a molecule's previously unknown role as a major trigger for airway remodeling, which impairs lung function, making the molecule a promising therapeutic target for chronic asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and several other lung conditions. A scientific paper on Dr. Croft's finding was published online today in the prestigious journal, Nature Medicine. The finding marks Dr. Croft's second major discovery with therapeutic ...

Missing the gorilla

Missing the gorilla
2011-04-18
SALT LAKE CITY, April 18, 2011 – University of Utah psychologists have learned why many people experience "inattention blindness" – the phenomenon that leaves drivers on cell phones prone to traffic accidents and makes a gorilla invisible to viewers of a famous video. The answer: People who fail to see something right in front of them while they are focusing on something else have lower "working memory capacity" – a measure of "attentional control," or the ability to focus attention when and where needed, and on more than one thing at a time. "Because people are ...

FrontDoorSoftware Now Offers Free Laptop Recovery Software that Provides 10 Ways to Get a Stolen Laptop Back

2011-04-18
FrontDoorSoftware Corporation has announced that it will now provide its basic laptop loss prevention and recovery software free. This innovative software program is responsible for helping owners track down and recover lost and stolen laptops across the world, and was formerly sold for $29.95 for a 3-year licensing agreement. "In this age of increasing probability for laptop theft, we felt it was important to provide this sound and reliable software as a complimentary service rather than a paid service," said President of FrontDoorSoftware Corporation, Carrie Hafeman. ...

Study: Parents likely to embrace predictive genetic testing for their children if offered

2011-04-18
Washington, D.C. – Parents offered genetic testing to predict their risks of common, adult-onset health conditions say they would also test their children. That is the finding of a new study published in the May issue of Pediatrics (published online April 18). The study authors note these and other findings should put pediatricians on alert that parents may chose predictive genetic tests for themselves and for their children, and seek guidance from doctors about what to do with the information. Personal genetic tests are available directly to consumers at drug stores ...

Cashing in Your Pension Early Giving you More Grief than Cash? Call Blue Tax!

2011-04-18
Cashing in your pension early can seem like a good idea if you're short on cash, but the taxes have to be paid sometime. This fact is easy to overlook with a large lump sum payment coming to you. This is what happened to Lenora (Los Angeles, CA) when she cashed in her pension in 2009, which ended up granting her a headache along with an IRS debt of over $25,000 for that year. As a result, she also had a sizable debt with the Franchise Tax Board. When she came to the Blue Tax offices for help, their team of experts knew it would be a challenge to negotiate an affordable ...

Study links social environment to high attempted suicide rates among gay youth

2011-04-18
NEW YORK – In the wake of several highly publicized suicides by gay teenagers, a new study finds that a negative social environment surrounding gay youth is associated with high rates of suicide attempts by lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) youth. The study, "The Social Environment and Suicide Attempts in a Population-Based Sample of LGB Youth," appears in the April 18 issue of Pediatrics. It was conducted by by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholar Mark L. Hatzenbuehler at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. The study of nearly 32,000 ...

Minorities born with heart defects at higher risk of dying in early childhood than whites

Minorities born with heart defects at higher risk of dying in early childhood than whites
2011-04-18
Tampa, FL (April 18, 2011) -- Non-Hispanic black infants born with heart defects are more likely to die within the first five years of life than their non-Hispanic white and Hispanic peers. For certain types of congenital heart abnormalities, Hispanic children as well as non-Hispanic black children fare worse than non-Hispanic white children. These findings, detailed in a new study by researchers at the University of South Florida, Texas Department of State Health Services and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, suggest preventive strategies are needed to ...
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