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Saturday, December 24, 2011

The Cynical Girl: F@%k It Friday: Movie Season

The Cynical Girl: F@%k It Friday: Movie Season

Link to The Cynical Girl

F@%k It Friday: Movie Season

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 03:45 AM PST

Cover of "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy"We are in my favorite season — movie season.

I’ve already seen Hugo and Young Adult and Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. I’m excited to see The Descendants, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Carnage, Iron Lady, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, My Week With Marilyn and even Mission Impossible.

I still need to see The Muppets.

I don’t want to see Sherlock Holmes or Tin Tin or The Darkest Hour. I’m lukewarm on War Horse.

What about you? What are you excited to see? Am I missing anything.

Some people have family holiday events. I have the movies!

Enhanced by Zemanta

ScienceDaily: Strange Science News

ScienceDaily: Strange Science News


Millipede border control better than ours

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

An Australian zoologist has documented a remarkably sharp boundary between two species of millipede in northwest Tasmania. The boundary is more than 200 km long and apparently less than 100 m wide.

Viagra against heart failure: Researchers throw light on the mechanism

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

Sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra, can alleviate heart problems, and now researchers can explain why. They studied dogs with diastolic heart failure, a condition in which the heart chamber does not sufficiently fill with blood. The scientists showed that sildenafil makes stiffened cardiac walls more elastic again. The drug activates an enzyme that causes the giant protein titin in the myocardial cells to relax.

ScienceDaily: Top Environment News

ScienceDaily: Top Environment News


Millipede border control better than ours

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

An Australian zoologist has documented a remarkably sharp boundary between two species of millipede in northwest Tasmania. The boundary is more than 200 km long and apparently less than 100 m wide.

ScienceDaily: Top Health News

ScienceDaily: Top Health News


Viagra against heart failure: Researchers throw light on the mechanism

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

Sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra, can alleviate heart problems, and now researchers can explain why. They studied dogs with diastolic heart failure, a condition in which the heart chamber does not sufficiently fill with blood. The scientists showed that sildenafil makes stiffened cardiac walls more elastic again. The drug activates an enzyme that causes the giant protein titin in the myocardial cells to relax.

Multiple sclerosis linked to different area of brain

Posted: 22 Dec 2011 04:50 PM PST

Radiology researchers have found evidence that multiple sclerosis affects an area of the brain that controls cognitive, sensory and motor functioning apart from the disabling damage caused by the disease's visible lesions.

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News


Shearing triggers odd behavior in microscopic particles

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:15 AM PST

Microscopic spheres form strings in surprising alignments when suspended in a viscous fluid and sheared between two plates, a finding that will affect the way scientists think about the properties of such wide-ranging substances as shampoo and futuristic computer chips.

New method for watching proteins fold

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

A protein's function depends on both the chains of molecules it is made of and the way those chains are folded. And while figuring out the former is relatively easy, the latter represents a huge challenge with serious implications because many diseases are the result of misfolded proteins. Now, a team of chemists has devised a way to watch proteins fold in "real-time," which could lead to a better understanding of protein folding and misfolding in general.

Millipede border control better than ours

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

An Australian zoologist has documented a remarkably sharp boundary between two species of millipede in northwest Tasmania. The boundary is more than 200 km long and apparently less than 100 m wide.

Viagra against heart failure: Researchers throw light on the mechanism

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

Sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra, can alleviate heart problems, and now researchers can explain why. They studied dogs with diastolic heart failure, a condition in which the heart chamber does not sufficiently fill with blood. The scientists showed that sildenafil makes stiffened cardiac walls more elastic again. The drug activates an enzyme that causes the giant protein titin in the myocardial cells to relax.

Go to work on a Christmas card: UK's wrapping paper and festive cards could provide energy to send a bus to the moon more than 20 times

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:13 AM PST

If all the UK's discarded wrapping paper and Christmas cards were collected and fermented, they could make enough biofuel to run a double-decker bus to the moon and back more than 20 times, according to the researchers behind a new scientific study.

Noise-free spectroscopy: Reversing the problem clarifies molecular structure

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:13 AM PST

Optical techniques enable us to examine single molecules, but do we really understand what we are seeing? After all, the fuzziness caused by effects such as light interference makes these images very difficult to interpret. Researchers have now adopted a "reverse" approach to spectroscopy which cleaned up images by eliminating background noise.

Multiple sclerosis linked to different area of brain

Posted: 22 Dec 2011 04:50 PM PST

Radiology researchers have found evidence that multiple sclerosis affects an area of the brain that controls cognitive, sensory and motor functioning apart from the disabling damage caused by the disease's visible lesions.

ScienceDaily: Top Technology News

ScienceDaily: Top Technology News


Shearing triggers odd behavior in microscopic particles

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:15 AM PST

Microscopic spheres form strings in surprising alignments when suspended in a viscous fluid and sheared between two plates, a finding that will affect the way scientists think about the properties of such wide-ranging substances as shampoo and futuristic computer chips.

New method for watching proteins fold

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:14 AM PST

A protein's function depends on both the chains of molecules it is made of and the way those chains are folded. And while figuring out the former is relatively easy, the latter represents a huge challenge with serious implications because many diseases are the result of misfolded proteins. Now, a team of chemists has devised a way to watch proteins fold in "real-time," which could lead to a better understanding of protein folding and misfolding in general.

Noise-free spectroscopy: Reversing the problem clarifies molecular structure

Posted: 23 Dec 2011 06:13 AM PST

Optical techniques enable us to examine single molecules, but do we really understand what we are seeing? After all, the fuzziness caused by effects such as light interference makes these images very difficult to interpret. Researchers have now adopted a "reverse" approach to spectroscopy which cleaned up images by eliminating background noise.

Box Office Report: Cameron Crowe's 'We Bought a Zoo' Sluggish at No. 6; 'M:I4' Still No. 1

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The Hollywood Reporter Box Office
 
December 23, 2011
Box Office Report: Cameron Crowe's 'We Bought a Zoo' Sluggish at No. 6; 'M:I4' Still No. 1

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