I have been studying for the PE for the last couple of months. I got an email from Testmasters for a review for the PE that guarantees passing. My work won't pay for the course, which is $1600 and I have to take (4) vacation days, and spend (4) weekend days taking the course. I also will have to
Monthly Archives: March 2010
OnLive Streaming Game Service Launches June 17 For $15/Month [Onlive]
The OnLive streaming game service that takes console and PC games, renders them server-side, then streams it to your Mac or PC, will go live on June 17 in the US (lower 48). More »
Medical schools gain ground in tax debate – Minnesota Daily
Medical schools gain ground in tax debate Minnesota Daily Still in the midst of a lengthy battle with the Internal Revenue Service over whether medical school residents qualify for a student ... UR, residents eye $26M tax refundRochester Business Journal University of Rochester sues IRS to recover taxRochester Democrat and Chronicle |
Job Opportunity for PE with Soils, Structural and Helical Pile Experience
A 37 year old firm located in the New York Tri-State area. Our Company is heavily involved in soil remediation, foundation support systems, soil stabilization,retaining wall tieback systems,underpinning,soil grouting,etc............... We currently have a need for a PE with experience in soils, s
Giz Explains: How You’re Gonna Get Screwed By Ebook Formats [Giz Explains]
"We use the epub format: It is the most popular open book format in the world." That's how Steve Jobs announced the iPad. And wow, that sounds like all the ebooks you own will just work on anything. Um, no. More »
Injection Molding Tool Texture
Does anyone know the Yick Sang equivalent texture number for Mold-Tech 11020? Thank you.
Solarhart Solar Water Heater
Hi CR4 members,
I am planning to install a solar water heater (Solarhart) 180litre capacity to supply hot water in my 3 bedroom house with 2 bath tubs, 2 washhand basins and 1kitchen sink.And in my design I was thinking of installing a 1.5kw heating element with a timer to top up in cas
HTML5 vs. Flash: The Video Benchmark Deathmatch [Online Video]
With the release of the iPad, among other things, HTML5's been pitted against Flash as the savior of web video. It might be! (Or not!) Either way, a crucial arguing point is that it's more efficient. So, uh, is it? More »
Apple Must Feature PixieTea In Their Next iPhone Ad [IPhone]
A Chinese artist named PixieTea both recorded this song and shot the accompanying video almost entirely on an iPhone 3GS. The surprise? It's actually pretty decent! See for yourself: More »
Canon Lens Thermos Now Available for Preorder [Awesome Things]
Remember this amazing travel mug shaped like a camera lens that Canon handed out to press at the Olympics? Well, now you can pre-order one for yourself for a mere $30 CAD. Sweet! [Vistek via DoobyBrain via The Daily What] More »
Amazon Now Owns the Concept of One-Click Online Checkouts [Patents]
After years of fighting, Amazon's infamous 1-Click patent has been (re)confirmed. In other words, if a site wants to deploy a single-click checkout system for registered customers, it's gotta license the tech from Amazon. Oh, patents! More »
Etirement Lamp Concept Looks Like An Umbrella But I Wouldn’t Suggest Using It In A Downpour [Concepts]
If they ever make a 21st century Mary Poppins sequel—and say, Tim Burton directs it—I would like to see her umbrella replaced with this dimmer lamp. Mary could get swept away, up the electrical fuse. Forever. [Yanko Design] More »
Bid For The Oldest "Flying Car" This Weekend [Cars]
This isn't just any old rusty antique of a car. It's the oldest-dated flying car, and comes with the blueprints, 1921 patent and documents charting inventor Frank Skroback's creation. Here's the catch though: it doesn't fly. More »
Time for Grown-up Talk – Southern Maryland Online
Time for Grown-up Talk Southern Maryland Online That's why new doctors, with average medical school debts of $140000 and medical liability insurance bills to pay, avoid primary care and refuse to set up ... |
Puerto Viejo Bay in Mazatlan, an Endless Ribbon of Shimmering Sand
With its 2.5 miles of shimmering golden sands and gently lapping turquoise waters, Puerto Viejo Bay is perhaps the best choice for a day at the beach in Mazatlan, Mexico. The beach is within walking distance of the center of town and convenient to many of the smaller upscale hotels located in this area. It is also quite near Mazatlan’saquarium, which is worth a visit.
Shaped like a fishhook lying on its side, this endless ribbon is dotted with thatch-roofed beach palapas that serve up mounds of fresh ceviche or fresh grilled fish, washed down with the local cerveza or a lucious fruit smoothie whipped up from fresh-picked fruit. Vendors roam Puerto Viejo Beach, seeking customers for their handicrafts, but graciously disappear at a shake of the head. There is simply no pressure here.
Most times of the year this beach is virtually deserted. However during carnival, Semana Santa (Holy Week at Easter), and on other holidays, locals from all over the country flock to this beach. Many are poor peasants from the interior who arrive with only the clothes on their back and huge bags of food; they sleep on the beach, swim in their clothes, and grill food over open fires. During these times, barely an inch of sand remains and strolling down Mazatlan’s Puerto Viejo Bay Beach is a feast for the senses.
Photo Credit: Barbara Weibel
Article by Barbara Weibel of Hole In The Donut Travels
Space Policy and Election 2012
Obama's plans for NASA changes met with harsh criticism, Washington Post
"They made a mistake when they rolled out their space program, because they gave the perception that they had killed the manned space program," said Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), who disagrees with that perception but wants the Obama plan modified. Nelson said the president should declare during the Florida conference that NASA's goal is to send humans to Mars. Nelson noted that the Interstate 4 corridor through Central Florida is critical for national candidates. "I think it has a lot of repercussions for the president. If a national candidate does not carry the I-4 corridor, they don't win Florida," Nelson said."
Keith's note: The buzz at KSC and among the Florida Congressional delegation is that President Obama will hold a "Town Hall" style meeting on 15 April and that he will use that event to announce that he is authorizing one additional space shuttle mission after the four remaining flights currently on the shuttle manifest. This would stretch out employment for shuttle workers by as much as six months - well into the Summer and early Fall of 2011 - just as the 2012 presidential campaign season is starting to fire up.
The question I have to ask is why do this? In so doing it just opens the door to delaying the shut down of the shuttle program initiated by President Bush. If the White House wants to do one additional launch, then why not do three or six? Adding one launch simply buys you six months or so of workforce retention but the end result is still the same. If the intent is to shut down the shuttle program, then NASA should do so and move on to a new way of getting into space. If, on the other hand, the White House wants to develop a true shuttle-derived launch vehicle like the sidemount, one that purposefully uses existing shuttle infrastructure and workforce, then that is another issue. Alas, no one has yet given me a reason to do this other than to keep people employed. While it may be a humane thing to do now that Constellation won't be there with a safety net, this is not the way to try and shift paradigms. Rather, it is a way to stall that shift.
Jurassic Park Science: DNA of Extinct Bird Extracted From Eggshells | 80beats
An international team of researchers has discovered how to extract DNA from fossilized bird eggs–including the eggshell of the enormous elephant bird that went extinct four centuries ago.
In a research breakthrough, scientists were able to isolate DNA from the eggshells of not just the extinct giant moa bird from New Zealand, but also a 19,000-year-old emu from Australia and the extinct elephant bird of Madagascar. The elephant bird’s egg is the largest known bird egg, with 160 times the volume of a chicken’s egg [New Scientist].
The discovery of these birds’ DNA could help scientists understand how they lived, and why they became extinct. The DNA was extracted from desiccated inner membranes in fossil eggshells, found in 13 locations in Australia, Madagascar and New Zealand [PhysOrg], and the work was published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
For years scientists have been trying to extract DNA from old eggshells without success, because their approach, scientists admit, was faulty. Charlotte Oskam and Michael Bunce of Murdoch University in Perth, Western Australia, who isolated the DNA, say researchers (including themselves) were using techniques designed to extract DNA from bone, not eggshells. They even threw out the most DNA-hardy bits of eggshell [New Scientist]. Bunce explains that extracting DNA from bone involves sucking out the bone’s calcium and discarding it.
In the new study, the researchers figured out that the DNA was stuck in the eggshell’s calcium carbonate matrix–which they then proceeded to draw out. Because eggshells attract fewer bacteria than bone, researchers say their DNA samples from ancient eggs are less likely to be contaminated.
With this new method of extracting bird DNA in hand, scientists are hopeful that they can piece together the story of how these ancient birds lived, evolved, and went extinct. For example, the elephant bird, which weighed about 900 pounds and stood ten feet tall, became extinct at the same time that humans colonized the island of Madagascar, but there have been no signs that the birds were hunted by humans. Says archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson: “There’s not even evidence that they ate the eggs — even though each one could make omelets for 30 people” [BBC]. By studying the elephant bird’s genetics, scientists can look for clues about the bird’s physiology and diet that may help them understand what made the giant avian go the way of the dodo. But the researchers caution that so far, the new technique allows for the extraction of only a tiny amount of DNA–just 250 base pairs, the “rungs” on the ladder-like genetic code, and this is less than a fraction of one percent of the bird’s genome [PhysOrg].
So can we expect these extinct birds to be brought back to life like the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park? Says Bunce: “We can reassemble the genome to get an idea of what an extinct species looked like. But (resurrecting it) is still in the realm of science fiction. It’s completely hypothetical, and frankly not a debate I really want to have.” [PhysOrg].
Related Content:
80beats: Ancient Ice Man’s Genome Sequenced via 4,000-Year-Old Hair
80beats: We May Soon Be Able To Clone Neanderthals. But Should We?
80beats: Crichton’s Dream Survives: Woolly Mammoth Genome 50% Complete
DISCOVER: Jack Horner’s Plan to Bring Dinosaurs Back to Life
Image: PhysOrg
Rumor: Cisco Prepping New Flip Video Cameras [Cisco]
Silicon Alley Insider is reporting that Cisco is prepping a new line of Flip video cameras to be announced next month at the NAB conference in Vegas. Makes sense! No details on the models themselves, unfortunately. [Silicon Alley Insider] More »
Trunnion Pipe Supports
Hi all, can someone please tell me what are the advantages of using a trunnion pipe support? I guess that since it is welded on the pipe, it will prevent pipe movements in any directions, but then why would you use a trunnion instead of an anchor?
Thank you!
How Much Until Doctors Approve of 23andMe?
Commenter “AnneW” at Genetic Future writes about Dr. Steven Murphy’s alleged claims against 23andMe:
…Prove us wrong Steve. How many doctors need to offer/endorse/whatever a test before you like it? How many publications in what journals? What is your criterion if anything?
Posted by: AnneW | March 5, 2010 4:09 PM
“AnneW,” how many doctors need to offer/endorse/whatever a test before you dismantle your doublespeak?
3. Description of What the Services Are and Are Not: 23andMe Service Is For Research and Educational Use Only. We Do Not Provide Medical Advice, And The Services Cannot Be Used For Health Ascertainment or Disease Purposes
Nobody bashes Steve but me. Cut the bullshit.










