Research at cellular level provides insights into intricacies of physical aging
Grok Headline matches for Research at cellular level provides insights into intricacies of physical aging
High Stress Levels Linked to Cellular
Aging
High Stress Levels Linked to Cellular
Aging
12/19/2004 02:54 PMDirector of The Science Advisory Board
to Present Biodefense Research Insights
Director of The Science Advisory Board
to Present Biodefense Research Insights
03/17/2005 02:52 AMTamara Zemlo, Ph.D., MPH, Executive Director of The Science Advisory
Board, will be presenting a review of biodefense research
opportunities at the American Society for Microbiology (ASM)
Biodefense Meeting. The presentation, “Biodefense Research: Turning
Obstacles into Opportunities,” can be viewed at the Monday Poster
Session on March 21, 2005 from 8:30 AM – 7:00 PM, and Dr. Zemlo will
be available to answer any questions from 5:00 – 7:30 PM. The meeting
takes place at the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront in Baltimore, MD.
[PRWEB Mar 16, 2005]
Director of The Science Advisory Board
to Present RNA Interference Technology
Research Insights
Director of The Science Advisory Board
to Present RNA Interference Technology
Research Insights
04/07/2005 02:52 AMOn Monday Tamara Zemlo, Ph.D., MPH, Executive Director of The Science
Advisory Board, presented an overview of RNA interference research
opportunities at the Emerging Technologies for Drug Discovery Meeting
in San Francisco, CA. Her talk, “RNA Interference Technology:
Challenges and Opportunities,” provided life science researchers with
insights into the types of products and services required to support
functional genomics research, and was based upon a survey conducted by
BioInformatics, LLC (http://www.gene2drug.com), an Arlington, VA-based
market research and consulting firm. [PRWEB Apr 7, 2005]
Research and Markets : 3G: Taking Mobile
to the Next Level
Research and Markets : 3G: Taking Mobile
to the Next Level
03/14/2005 05:59 PMResearch and Markets (researchandmarkets.com/reports/c13841) has
announced the addition of 3G: Taking Mobile to the Next Level to their
offering. [PRWEB Mar 14, 2005]
Byte Level Research Launches “Global By
Design”-- The Official Publication of
the “Next Internet Revolution”
Byte Level Research Launches “Global By
Design”-- The Official Publication of
the “Next Internet Revolution”
03/14/2005 04:46 PMThe first publication devoted to the emerging field of Web
globalization covers companies such as Amazon, Dell and Starbucks
[PRWEB Feb 24, 2005]
WiFi, Cellular, and Wired Networks
Merging To Form Pervasive Networks in
Homes and Offices, Says INSIGHT Research
WiFi, Cellular, and Wired Networks
Merging To Form Pervasive Networks in
Homes and Offices, Says INSIGHT Research
12/22/2004 01:46 AMPervasive networks—a ubiquitous “fabric” of computing, information,
entertainment, and telemetry capability tied together by high-speed
wired and wireless networks—are emerging from a flurry of new
communication technologies now being used in home and office networks.
Though communications carriers do not offer this type of continuous
communication as a service today, the piece parts are already in
place. [PRWEB Dec 20, 2004]
Exploring the Intricacies of Google IPO
Exploring the Intricacies of Google IPO
08/03/2004 02:14 PMAP via Los Angeles Times Aug 3 2004 6:45PM GMT
Exploring the Intricacies of Google's
IPO
Exploring the Intricacies of Google's
IPO
08/05/2004 12:31 PMI want in on the Google IPO. And for once, it looks like I might
actually get in. Initial public offerings, known as IPOs, aren't
usually for regular folks.
RESEARCH AND CONSULTING FIRMS MERGE
Telecom Research Institute (TRI) to
Merge into Dittberner Associates Inc.
Next Generation OSS/BSS Research Program
RESEARCH AND CONSULTING FIRMS MERGE
Telecom Research Institute (TRI) to
Merge into Dittberner Associates Inc.
Next Generation OSS/BSS Research Program
09/18/2004 03:29 AMRESEARCH AND CONSULTING FIRMS MERGE Telecom Research Institute (TRI)
to Merge into Dittberner Associates Inc. Next Generation OSS/BSS
Research Program [PRWEB Sep 18, 2004]
Let's get physical
Let's get physical
04/01/2005 12:16 PMCNN Money Apr 1 2005 3:25PM GMT
Cites & Insights
Cites & Insights
12/23/2003 09:16 PMCites & Insightshttp://cites.boisestate.
edu/civ4i1.pdfCites & Insights: Crawford at Large 4:1
(January 2004) is now available for downloading at the above URL. This
26 page issue, PDF as usual includes the following:
*Bibs &
Blather (looking forward & back, plus weblog blather
*First
Have Something to Say: 15: Breaks and Blocks (the third and final free
chapter)
*Scholarly Article Access (PLoS publicity and
feedback; other OA notes; and why this is the final Scholarly Article
Access)
*Following Up (Martin Luther King, Jr. library; DVD
compatibility; Amazon's Search in the Book and swamping)
*Ebooks, Etext and PoD (the ebook biz, elibraries, devices)
*Copyright Currents (DMCA exemptions, the SunnComm follies, more
music stuff, SCO and Linux)
*A Scholarly Access
Perspective: Tipping Point for the Big Deal? (Elsevier, ScienceDirect,
Cell Press, and academia)
FC Now: Off-Site Insights
FC Now: Off-Site Insights
09/25/2004 05:22 AMFor the last two days, the Fast Company team has been sequestered in a
country home built during the 1830's in the Delaware Valley. The...
Engineering An End to Aging
Engineering An End to Aging
06/02/2004 12:03 PMComputing Gets Physical
Computing Gets Physical
06/28/2004 10:04 AM“I’m standing in front of a green backdrop inside a windowless
studio at Cybernet Systems, a technology research and development
company in Ann Arbor, MI. A digital camera in front of me is beaming
my image, real time, to a television monitor that shows a scene
typical of a nightly news weather report. There I am, standing before
a map of the Midwest. I extend my arm and begin twirling my hand over
the blip of Detroit. The map behind me zooms in on the area beneath my
palm. The city widens into view and comes into focus. Looks like it’s
going to be a wet one, folks. This is GestureStorm - a software
system Cybernet developed to let weather broadcasters run through
their forecasts with simple flicks of the hand.”
MIT Offers new Insights into Vision
MIT Offers new Insights into Vision
04/13/2004 09:10 PMPawan Sinha and
other MIT
researchers have combined MRI scans, René Magritte paintings, and a
study of
individuals who are born blind but later gain some vision to offer new
insights into how the human brain recognizes objects and, in
particular,
faces. Humans are much better at recognizing faces than the best
machine vision, even when the faces are extremely blurred. Humans use
contextual clues that are not available to most machine vision
systems. Up until now, machine vision developers have intentionally
removed or cleaned-up images by isolating the object of
interest (which precludes consideration of contextual clues). An MIT
News
story summarizes the research. For more see the Sinha Lab Vision
Research webpage.
Internet Security Insights
Internet Security Insights
03/29/2005 11:26 AMHostReview.com Mar 29 2005 2:43PM GMT
Short-Cited Insights about RSS
Short-Cited Insights about RSS
02/07/2005 01:41 AMOn page six of the February
issue (PDF) of Cites
& Insights (“Rss hub-bub”), Walt Crawford
pooh-poohs the idea of ILS vendors providing native RSS feeds out of
the catalog. It’s a difficult assertion to challenge because
nowhere in his comments does Walt use the word “because,”
thereby directly stating his objection(s). There are implications,
though, so let’s examine them since they are all we have to
go on.
First of all, Walt seems to think that someone has
advocated libraries replace their email alerts with RSS alerts.
That’s a statement Walt can’t back up, although I’m
sure he’ll note it if he has proof of *anyone* ever in the
history of the world using the word “replace” or a
synonym. If he backs off from that statement, I’ll be curious to
know why his first assumption was that the two can’t live
happily ever after together, side by side, especially since RSS would
be the driving force behind the new titles lists he claims will vanish
into the olden days of yesteryear.
In reality, the only
time I’ve ever received an email from my catalog is when I had a
book that was really, really, really, really, really overdue and I
think they were about to send Guido after me.
That they’ll email me about. But the
convenience notice when it’s a couple of days overdue (or even a
couple of weeks or months)? Fuggedaboutit. So SWAN libraries, consider this me
begging for email alerts! Oh, and I
guarantee you that none of my libraries went to Innovative (or before that
GEAC) asking for email alerts. It’s just something
that made a lot of sense, the vendor understood what was happening in
the outside world, and the code was relatively easy to implement.
Just like RSS.
Next, Walt seems to advocate that libraries
shouldn’t offer a service for what he asserts is 1% or less of
your population. I’m not challenging the mathematical figure,
but I can think of lots of services that libraries provide for users
that comprise less than 1% of our patrons. Let’s use my
home library as an example. They serve a population of about 30,000
people right now. One percent of the current population would be 300
people, and 1% of actual users would probably be closer to 150.
So what services do they offer that only 149 or fewer people use?
Here’s a list just to name a few:
- Homebound service
(even though we have a lot of senior housing in our
area);
- Sign language translators for patrons who are deaf
and might attend their programs;
- Night Owl telephone reference
service;
- A form for challenging “offensive”
titles in the collection.
- A web site that is accessible
to blind users.
- The ability to use a USB flash drive with the
library’s computers (I’m sure that figure is rising,
but I don’t see tons of patrons picketing libraries over this
one and yet a lot of libraries are now offering this).
I
don’t think Walt would quibble that these are all valuable, even
essential, services, but then he’d probably be basing those
decisions on factors other than how many people are using the
service. Nowhere in his comments does Walt use any other criterion for
RSS, so why the double standard?
In addition, far less than 1%
of 1% of a library’s RSS users actually go to the trouble of
programming for themselves services the library’s catalog
doesn’t offer. However, I can name three off the top of my head
(from across North America), the most obvious example being Peter Rukavina who rolled his own RSS but is [rightly]
too busy to help the rest of us who would like to provide that service
but aren’t programmers. If his home library wanted to, they
could download his script and start displaying the list of their new
DVDs on their own web site, but they can’t get it natively from
their own ILS. What’s wrong with that picture?
Of
course, you could also flip this example and argue that you really
should be providing a service that your users want badly enough that
they resort to hacking your catalog and then noting it on their
very public blog. There are at least three examples of users who
are running scripts against catalogs, and there are a lot more who
have signed up with Library
ELF, probably without their librarys’ knowledge. Disclaimer:
I love ELF, and I use it myself. I’m willing to give my personal
data to a guy in Canada in order to get the email and RSS alerts my
catalog refuses to give me. I can’t imagine that Walt thinks
that a non-programmer like myself should be forced to do that just to
get an RSS feed of what I have checked out, but he also doesn’t
seem to care about RSS in the context of patron data. I assure
you there is no one at MLS or
at a SWAN library that can code this themselves to offer it to
patrons, which means we’d be forced to have someone else do
this. Why shouldn’t that be the vendor?
But just
because Walt doesn’t do it, doesn’t mean I won’t
look at other criteria to discuss reasons to implement RSS.
In a previous post, I
noted that in my library system alone, we could conceivably
save 924 hours of actual librarian work each year if our vendor,
Innovative, provided native RSS
feeds out of the catalog. Let’s take it a step further
and come up with the number of potential saved work
hours for just half of the 3,700 libraries in Illinois.
Let’s say that only half of them might actually take
advantage of RSS feeds to change how they display new titles on
their web sites. If this saved just one hour per month for 1,850
libraries, native RSS feeds would save Illinois
librarians 22,200 hours in just one year.
So even
if there was never a single patron that subscribed to a single feed,
it would save Illinois librarians 22,200 hours, and let me
tell you something: other than funding, the biggest thing we could
really use more of is time (which can also be translated into
more staffing, but on a personal level, I feel very constrained
time-wise). So now we’ve freed up 22,200 hours of
librarians’ days, thanks to relatively easy programming on the
part of the major vendors. How awesome is that?! And if my vendor
can’t understand that kind of savings, then I have to question
them as my vendor. Sometimes you really can make a big difference with
just “a flip of the switch.”
Other ways I think
native RSS feeds would be used, furthering the benefit to
libraries:
- I think there are users who would display queues
(if we offered queues) or lists on their sites, just like they do now
with NetFlix and Amazon. I’m even willing to
bet my hat that some of them (yes, less than 1%) would display what
they have checked out at this moment, just like they do with NetFlix
and Amazon (“what I’m reading now”). While
you’re at it, throw music in there, too, since a lot of people
(less than 1%) like to post what they’re listening to as
they’re composing their blog posts.
- Library holdings
could be displayed on third-party web sites, like a school’s
site, an academic department’s site, or a community’s
site. In fact, libraries could partner with newspapers, area sports
clubs (a brilliant idea from Stephen Abrams), and other groups to more
easily display material on their web sites. The content
would update automatically, thereby keeping those librarian hours free
for other tasks.
And yet, Walt doesn’t think
it’s exciting that ILS vendors are starting to offer this type
of support to libraries. In fact, Walt doesn’t seem to think
that ILS vendors should be providing RSS feeds here and now at all. I
don’t see any of my member libraries clammoring for Z39.50
compliance with the Bath Profile, but that doesn’t mean
Innovative shouldn’t be compliant or working on it (number of
patrons who are requesting this or even know about Z39.50: zero). I
don’t hear about any of my member libraries doing anything with
Dublin Core metadata, but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t
be (number of patrons who are requesting this or even know about DC:
zero). Should vendors offer only those services that are formally
requested by 50% of library users (the implication Walt makes by
noting that even in his high-tech community, less than half the
residents probably know about RSS)? What’s the magic number at
which Walt would consent to let ILS vendors start working on
providing RSS feeds? 40%? 25%? 10%? Hopefully
he will leave a comment so the vendors will know when to
start.
I don’t know if he was just lobbing a
softball over the plate in order to help prove the
point that native RSS feeds would be valuable right now or if
he truly believes the position he declines to actually support, but
either way, this one clearly demonstrates Walt’s bias against
RSS. That’s okay, because everyone has their biases. This time,
though, Walt’s just asking for trouble.
Insights on how obesity kills
Insights on how obesity kills
05/09/2004 06:30 PMStraits Times May 9 2004 11:12PM GMT
Michael Jackson Aging
Michael Jackson Aging
12/02/2003 01:53 AMmichael jackson age progression .. You will be shocked the result ..
Michael Jackson's Real Face! .. If he were a normal guy .. would look
.. Cockaigne ..
rendition
forartist.com/forensic/modification/mj/jackson.htm
track this
site | 12 links
Technology For Aging Boomers
Technology For Aging Boomers
02/11/2004 01:32 PMWhile the cool market many companies try to aim for is the youth or
young adult market, a quick look at some basic demographic information
still shows that there are an awful lot of baby boomers out there, and
they're getting older. Many who work in the technology field are
realizing now would be a good time to
come up with new technologies that will help them
over the next few decades. Those of us who are younger than the
baby boomers are now going to benefit from an awful lot of research
and development designed to create technologies that help senior
citizens in a variety of ways.
The End of Aging:7 Deadly Things That
Really Do Us In
The End of Aging:7 Deadly Things That
Really Do Us In
06/11/2004 06:27 AMFortune Jun 11 2004 11:14AM GMT
Aging Mobster's Testimony Could Be Key
Aging Mobster's Testimony Could Be Key
01/25/2004 08:37 PMReuters via Wired News Jan 25 2004 11:43PM GMT
The National Institute on Aging (NIA)
The National Institute on Aging (NIA)
09/26/2004 07:27 AM
The National
Institute on Aging (NIA)
The National
Institute on Aging (NIA)
http://www.nia.nih.gov/
The National Institute on Aging (NIA), one of the 27 Institutes and
Centers of the
National Institutes of
Health, leads a broad scientific effort to understand the nature
of aging and to extend the healthy, active years of life. In 1974,
Congress granted authority to form the National Institute on Aging to
provide leadership in aging research, training, health information
dissemination, and other programs relevant to aging and older people.
Subsequent amendments to this legislation designated the NIA as the
primary Federal agency on Alzheimer’s disease research. NIA sponsors
research on aging through
extramural and
intramural programs. The extramural program funds research and
training at universities, hospitals, medical centers, and other public
and private organizations nationwide. The intramural program conducts
basic and clinical research in Baltimore, MD and on the NIH campus in
Bethesda, MD. This has been added to
Elder Resources Subject
Tracerâ„¢ Information Blog.
Computers ease aging
Computers ease aging
07/21/2004 12:47 PMChicago Tribune Jul 21 2004 5:21PM GMT
"physical security of oil supplies"
"physical security of oil supplies"
05/16/2004 09:06 PMIs physical presence necessary for
community?
Is physical presence necessary for
community?
12/19/2003 11:46 AMA few months ago I responded to a site that claimed The Internet is
Shit with a reposte designed to illustrate that although our
networks might contain difficult and unpleasant material, they also
contain enough of value and facilitate enough legitimate and real
communities to be able to state pretty conclusively that The Internet is not Shit. Note - not that it's perfect,
not that it doesn't have flaws, not that bad things don't go on in it,
but that pound-for-pound it's more useful and valuable and
community-generating than it is useless or damaging or
culture-destroying.
Over the last few days, the post has turned into a bit of an
argumentative arena, with various posters weighing with positions on
what constitutes utopian rhetoric versus what constitutes a reasonable
and rational position about the possibilities of (among other things)
online communities. Throughout this article various people - myself
included - have stumbled in our logic, presented clumsy opinions and
misunderstood each other. Nonetheless, I want to pick up one
particular fragment of these arguments - a fragment that I feel
strongly about and am prepared to fight vigorously about. It's about
the authenticity or otherwise of online 'communities'. At a certain
point in the debate, my sparring partner posts:
"We're not talking about abstract information - which is
expedited magnificently over the internet - we're talking about flesh
and blood people. An actual meeting is far more meaningful than
tapping on a keyboard. It is substantially different.
Physically congregating with other folk is the same as being on the
internet as is reading a book about Tibet compared to actually going
there. Or reading a menu and eating the food. You can't reduce and
flatten the physical, sensory, emotional, kinaesthetic and social
world in that way."
Now I'm going to agree with the premise that the particulars of the
medium through which people communicate can add a timbre to a
community and that they can faciliate certain parts of the exchange
more effectively than others. On the other hand, I'd also argue that
the qualities of the community space are supprted by the software that
they run on, and that quite possibly that software hasn't yet - in the
ten/twenty years that it's been being developed - quite achieved the
elegance and sophistication that we take for granted in some other
social spaces. But the one thing I will not stand for is this sense
that online communities are somehow inauthentic because they
are unphysical - or that the truncation in social 'signal' somehow
reduces them down to a point of uselessness or redundancy. So excerpts
from my reply follow:
Your analogies are hideously flawed for a start - if I
communicate on the internet or by phone with someone, it's not like a
transcript of that person or a decription of that person. You're
talking as if whenever you talked to people who weren't present
physically (say via the telephone), that what you were actually doing
was listening passively to bloody recordings! Of course they're not -
it's not bloody radio! People are talking to each other!
Now obviously there are things that you can do in person that you
can't do physically online. It's harder to guage someone's mood, it's
harder to have sex with them, it's harder to get intonation or a tone
of voice. But it's still communication! And the possibility of
community still exists! I mean, there are many circumstances in which
certain elements of the experience an interaction can be truncated -
if you're on a phone for example and can't see the person concerned,
or if they're wearing sunglasses so you can't see their eyes, or if
you're actually bloody deaf and are forced to lip-read, for Christ's
sake! But none of these things stop the possibilities of
communication, and none of them stop people being supportive, helpful,
useful, friendly or even forming communities through them. I work on
the internet, and often my first experience of people is online.
Sometimes my only experience of them is online. And yet we can be
friends! Most of them have helped me out in some ways in the past, and
I've helped most of them out in the past as well. Those I haven't met,
I'd like to and those I have I see regularly. But that our
relationships have moved sometimes from purely online to a mix of both
online and off doesn't mean they weren't real to begin with.
You talk about 'tapping on a keyboard' as if touching keys was the
entire point. You're confusing the method of communication with the
communication itself. It would be like me saying, "There's a
substantial difference between communicating with someone (online) and
just causing air to vibrate with your vocal chords". It's
trivialising, innaccurate, clumsy and - frankly - stupid.
[I should apologise at this point for resorting to name calling
in the final line - put it down to frustration.]
There's a lot more to the argument that's worth reading and talking
abotu on the post itself, but I just thought I'd ask do
people still think that the term 'online community' is
necessarily an oxymoron? Do you really think that the fact
you're interacting through your fingers dramatically limits the
strength of the relationships you can make?
Read the comments
Why was Bush allergic to his physical?
Why was Bush allergic to his physical?
09/09/2004 01:41 AMAs we continue to sift through the spotty record of George Bush's
military service, it's good to keep in mind
the point Josh Marshall makes: "This isn't about what
President Bush did 30+ years ago. Or at least it's not primarily about
that. The issue here is that for a decade President Bush has been
denying all of these things. He did so last January. He did so again
as recently as last month. He's continued to cover this stuff up right
from the Oval Office."
Or, a
s our Eric Boehlert puts it, "The controversy, after all, is not
merely about how he received a million dollars' worth of free pilot
training and then stiffed the government when it came time to pay it
back in service. It's also about how, for the last decade, Bush and
his advisors have done everything possible to distort, if not erase,
the truth about Bush's service record in order to advance his
political career."
Now we have a flood of new jigsaw puzzle pieces, including this
strange one from May 19, 1972, in which Bush's Texas commander
writes: "Physical. We talked about him getting his flight physical
situation fixed before his date. Says he will do that in Alabama if he
stays in flight status. He has this campaign to do and other things
that will follow and may not have the time. I advised him of our
investment in him and his commitment. He's been working with staff to
come up with options and identified a unit that may accept him. I told
him I had to have written acceptance before he would be transferred,
but think he's also talking to someone upstairs." Another
memo records a direct order to Bush to take the physical.
Now, I'll accept that young Bush was a busy guy, with political
campaigns to run and parties to attend -- but here he is, he's been in
the Guard for four years, what's the big deal about a physical?
How long does it take, an afternoon? Why was it so important to him
not to undergo this routine procedure?
I'm afraid this is the sort of query that leads one toward that
other swamp of evasion in the Bush record -- those questions about his
alleged drug use that have always been answered with nods, winks,
comments about having been "young and irresponsible" and denials of
drug use carrying carefully crafted expiration dates. Earlier this
year, Boehlert r
eported on the strange coincidence that Bush's Guard disappearing
act almost exactly coincided with the institution of random drug
testing for military personnel: "At the time when Bush, perhaps for
the first time in his life, faced the prospect of a random drug test,
his military records show he virtually disappeared, failing for at
least one year to report for Guard duty."
The odds of our ever knowing the truth about that aspect of Bush's
life are even worse than the odds of our getting his service record
clear. And bringing the issue up without knowing the truth is not the
sort of thing that makes anyone feel good: Who did or didn't inhale
(or snort) three decades ago ought to be covered by veils of privacy
and statutes of limitation.
But decorum feels like surrender in this mad electoral fight. The
Bush campaign has gone completely off the rails in its smears of
Kerry's service record. Even if you don't want to consider the facts
and just look at the charges, there's no equivalency here between the
issues under dispute. In one case, we're arguing over how serious a
guy's battlefield wounds were; in the other, we're weighing
whether to call absenteeism and cover-ups by their proper names. What
a falling-off!
It may be ugly, it's certainly no one's idea of what this country
should be talking about during this election, but with the whirlwind
of attention on his military record Bush is reaping what his August
barrage against Kerry's record sowed. It's rough justice.
v1.0 of HD-DVD Physical Specs Approved
v1.0 of HD-DVD Physical Specs Approved
06/15/2004 01:16 PMPhysical World Hyperlinks
Physical World Hyperlinks
04/15/2005 05:59 PMWhile the cell phone is changing society at many levels, the most
fundamental change is yet to come. This is when our phones start to
bridge the physical and the digital worlds, to enrich our lives in
ways we can currently only guess at. Just as hyperlinks allowed the
web to fulfil its potential, physical world hyperlinks read by our
cell phones, will take the role of technology to a whole new level in
our lives.
Physical perils of gaming
Physical perils of gaming
11/01/2003 05:19 AMBBC Nov 1 2003 3:32AM ET
Don't Skip Your Financial Physical
Don't Skip Your Financial Physical
12/27/2004 03:37 PMThe end of the year is the perfect time to get your financials in
order.
Nappletizer users - getting physical?
Nappletizer users - getting physical?
01/06/2005 10:16 PMCD sales up in US
New technique provides insights into
gene regulation
New technique provides insights into
gene regulation
12/22/2004 01:25 AMMedical News Today Dec 22 2004 2:09AM GMT
Float offers insights into Google
Float offers insights into Google
04/30/2004 10:29 AMThe financial documents filed by Google offer a fascinating insight
into the search engine powerhouse.
MMOG Subscription Analysis Provides New
Insights
MMOG Subscription Analysis Provides New
Insights
08/19/2004 03:15 PMBook offers insights into Web privacy
with P3P
Book offers insights into Web privacy
with P3P
12/14/2002 03:34 AMCNET Dec 14 2002 1:58AM ET
offers a broad ranging set of insights
offers a broad ranging set of insights
03/15/2003 09:44 AMJon Markman offers a broad
ranging set of insights into the current Wi-Fi climate, from Intel
to rural wireless ISPs to hot spots, and his take on Intersil and
Broadcom's wireless future is bleak: Intel has the dominance and the
marketing muscle.
Gore's TV Seeks Northern Insights
Gore's TV Seeks Northern Insights
04/14/2005 07:00 AMAl Gore's new cable television network promises to update the boob
tube for the internet generation. An experimental Canadian TV show has
been doing just that for the last three years -- and it ain't easy. By
Niall McKay.
IS 2004 provides rare insights for CIOs
IS 2004 provides rare insights for CIOs
07/30/2004 08:31 AMExpress Computer India Jul 30 2004 12:37PM GMT
Grok Description matches for Research at cellular level provides insights into intricacies of physical aging
GrokA matches for Research at cellular level provides insights into intricacies of physical aging
Research at cellular level provides insights into intricacies of physical aging