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By: dominatorfireworks
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PFX5116 160 Shot Vertical Scrambling Comets
By: dominatorfireworks
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In The Crease With Xavier "Olympic Edition"
With the excitement of the Olympics coming up, Xavier wants to know what the Utica Comets like most about the Olympics.
By: Utica Comets
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Presentacin del libro "Piel de Destierro" de Antonio Manfredi. Accin Psoriasis.
Somos la asociacin de pacientes de psoriasis y artritis psorisica y familiares de Espaa. El libro es obra de nuestro socio, Antonio Manfredi. El vdeo se ...
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Presentacin del libro "Piel de Destierro" de Antonio Manfredi. Accin Psoriasis. - Video
Psoriasis Eczema P E Food Addictions #31
Avoid addictive foods like sugar in it #39;s many forms and dairy products for psoriasis Eczema free skin.Please subscribe to my Psoriasis channel.
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Baltic states St. Petersburg Travel, Vacations HD
Baltic states St. Petersburg Travel, Tours, Vacations HD World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube Baltic states St. Petersburg http://youtu.b...
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Baltic states St. Petersburg Tours HD
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Tips on Shoes for Disney World : Travel Gear
Subscribe Now: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehow Watch More: http://www.youtube.com/ehow Spending an entire day at Disney World can be...
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the women of wanderlust bungy !
watch desiree bungy jump in new zealand.
By: The World Travel Website
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Fox World Travel Ireland Trip
Paid Segment featured on Fox 11 Living With Amy.
By: WLUK-TV FOX 11
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-- The business travel branch of the Expedia group is leveraging technology investments from the world's largest travel company to help create the business travel of the future.
LONDON, PARIS and MUNICH, Feb. 4, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Today at the Business Travel Show in London Egencia, the corporate travel company of the Expedia group (NASDAQ: EXPE), launches its exclusive mobile-only hotel discounts for the Egencia TripNavigator mobile app and the most recent enhancements to its integrated online booking and customer service model.
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140204/CG57655LOGO)
Consumer-inspired mobile technology and offers During his keynote speech at the Business Travel Show today, Dara Khosrowshahi, the CEO of the Expedia group explained how the future landscape of business travel will be driven by the demand for consumer-inspired, integrated booking platforms. With an intuitive, next-generation interface, the recently launched Egencia TripNavigator incorporates technology from the Expedia brand's acquisition of Mobiata, a creator of best-selling mobile travel apps. Egencia is building on this platform by offering 'mobile only' hotel discounts to its customers. The service will offer deep discounts to approximately 7,200 hotel properties. This initiative will appeal to travellers looking for best value last-minute hotel bookings and help companies drive down the cost of late reservations.
"When our travellers change their itineraries on-the-go, TripNavigator helps us keep track. We always know where they are and they always know that they are booking hotels in policy," says Travel Manager, Jerome Bonnepart at Arkema, a France-based chemical company with operations around the world. "We are also looking forward to using the application's mobile only deals, for further savings on our hotel spend."
Rapid development cycle for next-generation booking and customer services "Our strategy is to offer our customers a combination of global technology and local service," says Christophe Peymirat, Senior Vice President, Egencia EMEA. "We leverage Expedia technology and insights to more quickly build the best user experience across all devices. Developing our own technology also helps us to deliver the high level of customer service that business travelers and arrangers demand."
With its customer service and technology platforms developed under one roof, Egencia is constantly bringing new innovation to the market. With Agile development methods, the company was able to increase its ability to introduce new core functionality from 4 to 24 releases a year. This nimble process allows the company to better incorporate customer feedback into the product design. Over the last 18 months, Egencia has enhanced its entire product offering, including 3-step booking with a consumer-style interface for air, hotel and UK rail reservations. Today, Egencia is officially launching a new best-in-class car booking experience, the latest addition to the company's proprietary technology offering.
Egencia's booking system is fully integrated across devices, uploading all reservations automatically into TripNavigator as soon as online bookings are complete and downloading all mobile hotel reservations into the web-based platform. Travellers immediately have access to step-by-step directions for all stages of travel and alerts for changes in itinerary, scheduling or next steps, such as filling the car with petrol before returning it to the hire agency.
You can meet with Egencia at stand 1130 during BTS, test this stunning new app and get a glimpse of the new car platform's design and features.
About Egencia Egencia is a leading full-service travel management company delivering innovative business travel technology and expert local service to more than 10,000 clients in over 60 countries around the world. As part of the Expedia group, the world's largest online travel company, Egencia provides forward-looking companies with the ability to drive compliance and cost savings in their travel programmes, while meeting the needs and requirements of the modern business traveller. For more information please visit us atwww.egencia.co.ukor connect with us on Twitter @Egencia_UK.
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Next Christmas when your rich relatives brag about their trips abroad, join in the discussion. Crow about your trips to exotic places and no one will have to know you never left Iowa.
Introducing the Tight Wad Iowan World Travel Service. Yes, folks, we will take you on a world tour on a very small budget. For your comfort we will travel in a luxurious 1973 school bus operated by our veteran driver, Happy Harry Lugnut.
Our "European Excursion" will excite the most adventurous soul. Our first stop is Madrid in Boone County. The natives prefer that you use the local pronunciation MAD-rid. You won't find any bullfights here but a couple of cows have been known to tease the bull on their farm north of town.
From magnificent Madrid we travel to Holland in Grundy County. Though there are no canals or windmills in this Holland, we will park the bus along a drainage ditch west of town and enjoy a cup of coffee while Happy Harry sings "Tulips from Amsterdam."
Next we zip to Paris, a wide spot in the road in northern Linn County. The bad news is there is no Eifel Tower here. The good news is you won't have to learn how to ask, "O sont les toilettes?" In this Paris you can ask for a restroom in English; if, in fact, there is a public toilet in Iowa's Paris.
We then travel to Norway in southeastern Benton County. Our tour guides will be Ole and Lars, Norwegian bachelor farmers who moved here from Lake Wobegone, Minnesota, a few years ago. A highlight of our visit to Norway will be a performance by Ole and Lars' high diving mule, "Yumpin' Yimminy."
After a roadside lutefisk luncheon we will motor to Moscow in northern Muscatine County. You won't see Red Square in this Moscow but there is a nice red barn south of town.
The last stop on our European Excursion is Hamburg in Fremont County where we'll enjoy a supper of what else? Tacos!
If you prefer domestic travel we're proud to offer our "Great American Cities Tour."
Our tour begins in Little Rock in northwest Iowa's Lyon County. This Little Rock is not the former home of Bill Clinton and a past chairman of the Lyon County Republicans will tell us why he doesn't care. We'll also treat you to a side trip to the neighboring town of George where we'll visit a farm, by George.
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The World Bank, best known for helping developing nations from Kenya to Pakistan combat chronic poverty, is advising euro-area members Greece and Cyprus on how to strengthen their economies in the wake of debt crises.
About 55 World Bank staff have spent some time in the Mediterranean nations to advise them on competitiveness, welfare policies or public administration, according to Dirk Reinermann, who manages the programs. Based on the collaboration, Greece this month plans to announce a new system to simplify the process of setting up a business, Development Minister Kostis Hatzidakis said in an e-mail.
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim is taking on little-publicized consulting work from developed nations to find a new outlet for the banks expertise in a test of the demand for services that would otherwise be provided by private companies. Officials in Greece and Cyprus, initially reluctant to work with a poverty-reduction agency, are indicating the partnerships are starting to show results.
In some parts of the world, some parts of Europe, we have a bit of a perception of being the bank of poor countries only, Reinermann said in an interview last month in Washington. As we work in more countries, this perception will fade over time.
Kim, a physician and former president of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, has set a goal of ending extreme poverty by 2030 and boosting the income of the poorest 40 percent. Offering advice to wealthier members may also bring in business once the number of borrowers starts to dwindle, said Eswar Prasad, who teaches economics at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.
The World Bank might be strategically positioning itself for a future where, if it is successful in its mission of poverty reduction, it will have to seek other avenues of engagement with a broader group of its member countries in order to maintain its relevance, said Prasad, a former International Monetary Fund official.
Demand for such advisory services has doubled to $95 million this year from 2012, covering 70 programs in 14 countries, including Poland and Romania, according to the bank. The Greek and Cyprus services combined are billed at about $6 million to Cyprus and the European Union, which led bailouts of the two crisis-stricken countries.
Its a small business for the Washington-based agency that has about 15,000 employees and made $53 billion worth of loans, investments and guarantees last year. The bank says it doesnt profit from the consulting activities, charging just enough to recover costs such as salaries and travel.
While still limited in scope, Kims expansion of advisory services beyond the worlds poorest countries is drawing criticism that its unnecessary and is spreading the lenders capabilities too thin.
We do fear that the bank is simply testing the water before seeking to increase significantly these sorts of consultancies, said Sargon Nissan, a program manager at the Bretton Woods Project, a London-based watchdog of the bank and the IMF. He said the banks advisory work does much the same as the IMF, yet at a more micro level.
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World Banks Greek Welfare Fix Shows Shift From Emerging Markets
Nexus VUS Gent 01/02/2014 - Transhuman Infection
By: anastacia aicatsana
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Nearly four years ago, "A Study in Pink," the first episode of the BBC'sSherlock, aired. And just five minutes into the episode, it became clear that the new series would be a new take not just on the Sherlock Holmes mythos, but on television drama as a whole. In the middle of a press conference where a beleaguered Inspector Lestrade was answering questions from reporters, the viewer heard a number of text message alerts -- and then, as each reporter checked their phone, saw all their text messages appearing onscreen.
Since then, that technique -- floating words representing text messages, internet searches, or some other form of technological interface -- has become a core element of the series' identity. And while there are plenty of tech-savvy shows out there, it's that technique that makesSherlockso incisive: not only is it reflective of our practices, but more importantly, it says as much about us as it does about its characters.
Echoes of that first-season press conference scene abound in a similar scene from this season's "The Empty Hearse": Multiple Twitter hashtags flood the screen as word spreads that Holmes is far more alive than had been previously believed. "It was really as simple as [director] Paul McGuigan not wanting to do close ups of a whole load of phones whilst we read the texts," producer Sue Vertue tells Wired about the origins of the show's visualisation of social media and text messaging. (McGuigan directed four episodes of the series across its first two seasons, and developed the idea during preparation for "The Great Game," which was actually shot before "A Study in Pink.")
"Episode 1 was written and shot last, and so could make the best use of onscreen text as additional script and plot points, such as the text around the screen of the pink lady," Vertue explains. "If you notice, 'The Blind Banker' doesn't use [floating text] a great deal, as it had already been written, and the script didn't lend itself so easily to the style in post-production."
Overall, Vertue says, "the writers have genuine fun playing around with the text stuff now. I love the drunk, out-of-focus texts that we've used in 'The Sign of Three' -- it really adds to the richness of the storytelling, I think."
That may be true, but as with so many aspects ofSherlock, there's an element of misdirection going on here, with the fun, eye-catching slickness of the visualisation distracting from a deeper commentary the show is making about its characters' relationship with technology -- and, by extension, our own relationship with it, as well.
"In a modern-day Sherlock Holmes series, wehadto incorporate social media -- it would seem weird and old fashioned not to," Vertue says. Such an attitude is in keeping with the spirit of Holmes -- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's original incarnation of the hero was both modern and populist in his use of technologyat time of publication, after all -- butSherlocktakes the character's reliance on props and outside elements to a new level.
Sherlock isn't alone in that -- internet and cellphone usage abounds throughout the cast, especially as a shorthand for emotional connections (or the lack thereof). Whether it's characters refusing to answer certain peoples' calls, or Sherlock nagging Watson into submission via text onslaught, we all know what these things meanbecause we do them ourselves. The show is, unlike nearly everything else on television, reflecting our own reality back to us.
But that's truly crystallised in Sherlock himself. The show repeatedly emphasises that for all the man's deductive prowess, he's noticeably lacking in more basic areas of life. "The Great Game," for example, made light of this by revealing that he didn't know that the Earth revolved around the sun. At first that seems like an unforgivable contradiction, but consider of how ubiquitous web searching is on the show. This Sherlock doesn't need to be an infallible repository of objective information; he has the internet for that.
Yet, the fact that the show extends its visual text effect to Sherlock's thought process tells us that Sherlock is himself a computer. Consider what Sherlock said when Watson was making fun of him for not knowing about the Earth revolving around the sun: "Listen. This [pointing to his head] is my hard drive and it only makes sense to put things in there that are useful."
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The most famous commercial to air during the Super Bowl during its 48-year history touted a personal computer, so its only fitting that tech companies see footballs biggest stage as an opportunity to make a big marketing splash. And while the ad blitz may have been nothing like the days of the Web 1.0 bubblewe miss you, too, Pets.com sock puppetplenty of tech companies sought to buy their fair share of the spotlight during Sundays big game.
But which tech companies got the most bang for their buck and which ones would have been better off setting fire to the pile of money it takes to buy an ad spot during the Super Bowl? Heres one mans rundown of which tech players delivered and which ones fumbled their big opportunity.
Americas most pugnacious carrier continued its one-company war against the tyranny of two-year commitments, enlisting college football standoutand NFL washoutTim Tebow to point out the folly of contracts.
Turns out Tebow is much better pitching wireless carriers than he ever was throwing passes to pro receivers.
T-Mobile made multiple Super Bowl appearances Sunday, again with Tebow and then with a fourth-quarter spot reminding everyone that its willing to pay your early termination fees if you care to leave your current carrier.
Grade: AT-Mobile stayed on message, and even got this cynical football fan to laugh with Tebow for once, and not at himor at least, not his throwing motion.
In a one-minute spot that never mentions any of its products by name, Microsoft drives home the point that the things it makes can improve our lives and expand our horizons.
Grade: A-minusMicrosofts efforts to humanize itself in the past have been more miss than hitwho can forget the awkwardness of Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld bonding over churros?but this minute-long ad actually generated a little lump in the throat in a venue that usually favors snark over sentiment.
Its not an ad so much as it is a public service announcement, but Bank of America bought time during the Super Bowl broadcast to let people know that they could download U2s Invisible for free on Apples iTunes Store for the next 24 hoursand that the bank would donate $1 for every download to the [Red] charity.
Grade: A-minusIts hard to get too snooty when somebody wants to give you something for free and is willing to donate money to charity on top of that.
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therapy treatment for stem cell therapy treatment for cerebral palsy by dr alok sharma, mumbai,
improvement seen in just 5 days after stem cell therapy treatment for cerebral palsy by dr alok sharma, mumbai, india. Stem Cell Therapy done date 31 Dec 201...
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Newswise LA JOLLAThe Salk Institute for Biological Studies will join Stanford University in leading a new Center of Excellence in Stem Cell Genomics, created through a $40 million award by California's stem cell agency, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.
The center will bring together experts and investigators from seven different major California institutions to focus on bridging the fields of genomics the study of the complete genetic make-up of a cell or organism with cutting-edge stem cell research.
The goal is to use these tools to gain a deeper understanding of the disease processes in cancer, diabetes, endocrine disorders, heart disease and mental health, and ultimately to find safer and more effective ways of using stem cells in medical research and therapy.
"The center will provide a platform for collaboration, allowing California's stem cell scientists and genomics researchers to bridge these two fields," says Joseph Ecker, a Salk professor and Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Investigator. "The Center will generate critical genomics data that will be shared with scientists throughout California and the rest of the world."
Ecker, holder of the Salk International Council Chair in Genetics, is co-director of the new center along with Michael Snyder, a professor and chair of genetics at Stanford.
Salk and Stanford will lead the center, and U.C. San Diego, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, the Scripps Research Institute, the J. Craig Venter Institute and Illumina Inc., all in San Diego, will collaborate on the project, in addition to U.C. Santa Cruz, which will also run the data coordination and management component.
"This Center of Excellence in Stem Cell Genomics shows why we are considered one of the global leaders in stem cell research," says Alan Trounson, president of the stem cell agency. "Bringing together this team to do this kind of work means we will be better able to understand how stem cells change as they grow and become different kinds of cells. That deeper knowledge, that you can only get through a genomic analysis of the cells, will help us develop better ways of using these cells to come up with new treatments for deadly diseases."
In addition to outside collaborations, the center will pursue some fundamental questions and goals of its own, including collecting and characterizing induced pluripotent stem cell lines from patients with familial cardiomyopathy; applying single-cell genomic techniques to better understand cellular subpopulations within diseased and healthy brain and pancreatic tissues; and developing novel computational tools to analyze networks underlying stem cell genome function.
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Salk Institute and Stanford University to Lead New $40 Million Stem Cell Genomics Center