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Saturday, April 27, 2013

Insecurities of age through the eyes of Google Suggest

Insecurities of age through the eyes of Google Suggest

Apr 26, 2013 09:15 am

In this straightforward video, Marius Budin offers a look at our insecurities as get older through the eyes of Google Suggest. If anything, it's clear that there's one thing we fear throughout: loneliness. Although, the suggestions in the early years worry me.

Every Kid Deserves This

Oh, your child (or future child) doesn't have a slide in his/her bedroom? Why not? Explain yourself!

Sorry, but you're doing this wrong.

22 Things You're Doing Wrong

It is cleaning season, anyway.

33 Meticulous Cleaning Tricks For The OCD Person Inside You

This would look amazing in your new place.

28 Decorating Tricks To Brighten Up Your Rented Home

Don't let it happen to you!

The Addiction Of Leopard

An important how-to.

How To Eat Food

These could be yours.

31 Insane Fabrics You Can Actually Buy

You might have missed...

The 'fire' was actually apple juice spewing out of Dorothy's shoes.

17 Things You Probably Didn't Know About "The Wizard Of Oz"

Would definitely eat.

7 Very Strange Plates Of Nachos That Still Look Delicious

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The Dumbest People On Facebook

Oh, Facebook. You're the magical place where some of the stupidest people on the internet live.

The 35 Dumbest Things Ever Said On Facebook

If you've called this majestic eagle a "weird looking parrot," congrats! You've made one of the 35 dumbest Facebook statuses ever.

Oh, you've got to be kidding me.
WIN
Ready to be blown away? Check out these 13 insane National Geographic photos.
LOL
If you're having a bad day, remember: Life could be a million times worse.
OMG
These are the worst things in the world. Why do such terrible things happen to good people?
FAIL
Do not be one of these people. Do not be one of the worst tippers ever.
LOL
You're out of hope. You're struggling to live with yourself. You ARE George Costanza.
CUTE
Don't mess with redheads. They're not going to take it anymore.
FTW
These are 10 amazing 'SNL' sketches. They were all made better when the cast members starting cracking up.
So, you were raised by hippies. You only wore tie-dye. But it's going to be okay.

29 Signs You Were Raised By Hippies

A lot changes in four years. Enjoy the real world, graduating seniors!

The Difference Between Freshman Year And Senior Year In College

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Browser newsletter [27 April 2013]

27 April 2013

 Best of the Moment

The Mind Of A Con Man

Yudhijit Bhattacharjee | New York Times | 26th April 2013

Admired Dutch psychologist admits to faking a whole career's worth of academic research. "I always checked that the experiment was reasonable, that it followed from the research that had come before. Everybody wants you to be novel and creative, but you also need to be truthful and likely. You need to be able to say that this is completely new and exciting, but it’s very likely given what we know so far" (Metered paywall)

What If The Tsarnaevs Had Been The “Boston Shooters”?

John Cassidy | New Yorker | 25th April 2013

With assault rifles, they'd have killed a lot more people than with homemade bombs. But they wouldn't have been charged with using weapons of mass destruction. They would, on the other hand, have pretty much ensured the passage of post-Newtown gun-control bills which, instead, perished in Congress a couple of days later. Use a bomb, and you are public enemy number one; use a gun and you're a nutcase with no policy implications

Obituary: Fred “Nosher” Powell

Anonymous | Telegraph | 26th April 2013

Sparring partner for Joe Louis, market porter, film extra, stunt double for Roger Moore as James Bond, minder for Sammy Davis Jr, friend of the Great Train Robbers, chauffeur to J Paul Getty, bouncer in Soho nightclubs where "he once had to apologise to customers affronted by Orson Welles’s malodorous farts after the great director had gorged himself on the house speciality, potato soup" (Metered paywall)

My Juventus

Financial Times | Simon Kuper | 26th April 2013

Juventus versus Milan used to be one of the greatest games in global football. Now it's a local derby. Italian football has shared its country's moral, political and economic decline. Andrea Agnelli, president of Italy's leading club, Juventus, catches the general pessimism: "Half the stadiums are empty, there is violence. It’s not the best product ... Italian football, as much as Italy, needs structural reforms" (Metered paywall)

Why Your Supermarket Sells Only Five Kinds Of Apple

Rowan Jacobson | Mother Jones | 26th April 2013

Meet John Bunker, "apple whisperer" of Maine. America had thousands of varieties in the 1800s before industrial agriculture crushed diversity. But apple trees live for 200 years: the old ones are still there to be rediscovered by new enthusiasts. "These centenarians hang on, flickering on the edge of existence, their identity often a mystery to the present homeowners. Bunker is determined to save as many as he can before they, and he, are gone"

White And Inexpressibly Horrid Land

Richard Hamblyn | Times Literary Supplement | 24th April 2013

Highly readable review-essay discussing recent books about Antarctica, which, for James Cook, was an "inexpressibly horrid" land "not worth the discovery". Scott might have come to agree. But times have changed. "The century since the death of Scott has seen such views of Antarctica transformed, from a howling wilderness to an ice-bound utopia, a kind of transnational Eden devoted to the pleasures of research"

Video of the day: Sundae Stroll

Thought for the day:

"Skepticism is the elegance of anxiety"— Emil Cioran

ScienceDaily: Top Environment News

ScienceDaily: Top Environment News


NASA mission to study what disrupts radio waves

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

A NASA-funded sounding rocket mission will launch from an atoll in the Pacific in the next few weeks to help scientists better understand and predict the electrical storms in Earth's upper atmosphere These storms can interfere with satellite communication and global positioning signals.

Competing pathways affect early differentiation of higher brain structures

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

A new study shows how the strength and timing of competing molecular signals during brain development has generated natural and presumably adaptive differences in a brain region known as the telencephalon -- much earlier than scientists had previously believed.

Sea surface temperatures reach highest level in 150 years on Northeast continental shelf

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

Sea surface temperatures in the Northeast Shelf Large Marine Ecosystem during 2012 were the highest recorded in 150 years, according to new research. Temperature is also affecting distributions of fish and shellfish on the Northeast Shelf.

Computer scientists suggest new spin on origins of evolvability: Competition to survive not necessary?

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

Scientists have long observed that species seem to have become increasingly capable of evolving in response to changes in the environment. But computer science researchers now say that the popular explanation of competition to survive in nature may not actually be necessary for evolvability to increase.

Developmental neurobiology: How the brain folds to fit

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:55 AM PDT

During fetal development of the mammalian brain, the cerebral cortex undergoes a marked expansion in surface area in some species, which is accommodated by folding of the tissue in species with most expanded neuron numbers and surface area. Researchers have now identified a key regulator of this crucial process.

Fish win fights on strength of personality

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:54 AM PDT

When predicting the outcome of a fight, the big guy doesn't always win suggests new research on fish. Scientists have found that when fish fight over food, it is personality, rather than size, that determines whether they will be victorious.

Scientists investigate release of bromine in polar regions

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:48 AM PDT

Researchers have employed a novel measurement device for new studies in Alaska.

New excavations in Sweden indicate use of fertilizers 5,000 years ago

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:48 AM PDT

Researchers have spent many years studying the remains of a Stone Age community in Karleby outside the town of Falköping, Sweden. The researchers have for example tried to identify parts of the inhabitants' diet. Right now they are looking for evidence that fertilizers were used already during the Scandinavian Stone Age, and the results of their first analyses may be exactly what they are looking for.

Bird navigation: Great balls of iron

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 04:38 AM PDT

Every year millions of birds make heroic journeys guided by the earth's magnetic field. How they detect magnetic fields has puzzled scientists for decades. Today, biologists have added some important pieces to this puzzle.

Europe needs genetically engineered crops, scientists say

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:26 AM PDT

The European Union cannot meet its goals in agricultural policy without embracing genetically engineered crops. That's the conclusion of scientists based on case studies showing that the EU is undermining its own competitiveness in the agricultural sector to its own detriment and that of its humanitarian activities in the developing world.

Cellulose goes off the rails: Without microtubule guidance, cellulose causes changes in organ patterns during growth

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:25 AM PDT

Mathematics is everywhere in nature, and this is illustrated by the spiral patterns in plants such as pine cones, sunflowers or the arrangement of leaves around a stem. Most plants produce a new bud at 137 degrees from its predecessor, and this mathematical precision leads to observable helices. Normally, the relative position of organs does not change during growth, because the stems grow straight.  But if the connection between the cytoskeleton and cellulose is removed, the cellulose fibres are synthesized in a tilted fashion and the stems start to twist. As a result, the angle between successive flowers disappears, and is instead replaced by other mathematical patterns that prove to be equally robust. Incidentally, this work suggests that in the absence of regulation, all plant stems should twist rather than grow straight.

Field reports indicate slaughter of elephants

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:23 AM PDT

Biologists have received alarming reports from field operations that elephants are being slaughtered in the violence-ridden Central African Republic (CAR).

Peculiar life history of Middle American Stenamma ants

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 07:33 AM PDT

A recent revision of the Middle American clade of the ant genus Stenamma provides the description of 40 species, 33 of which are recognized as new to science. The extensive study provides the first thorough examination of the biology and taxonomy of these ants, focusing mainly on the worker caste and describing their peculiar nesting habits.

New metric to measure destructive potential of hurricanes

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 06:12 AM PDT

Researchers have developed a new metric to measure seasonal Atlantic tropical cyclone activity that focuses on the size of storms in addition to the duration and intensity, a measure that may prove important when considering a hurricane's potential for death and destruction. Just ask the survivors of Hurricane Sandy.

ScienceDaily: Top Health News

ScienceDaily: Top Health News


Physicists, biologists unite to expose how cancer spreads

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 12:25 PM PDT

A multi-institutional study has found that cancer cells that can break out of a tumor and invade other organs are more aggressive and nimble than nonmalignant cells.

New drug stimulates immune system to kill infected cells in animal model of hepatitis B infection

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 12:25 PM PDT

A novel drug developed and tested in an animal model suppresses hepatitis B virus infection by stimulating the immune system and inducing loss of infected cells.

Hitting 'reset' in protein synthesis restores myelination: Suggests new treatment for misfolded protein diseases such as Alzheimer's

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 10:50 AM PDT

Neuroscientists show how turning down synthesis of a protein improves nerve, muscle function in a common neuropathy. A potential new treatment strategy for patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease is on the horizon. This research may also have relevance for other diseases that result from misfolded proteins, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, Type 1 diabetes, cancer and mad cow disease.

Battery of tests on cancer cells shows them as 'squishy,' yet tactically strong

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 10:50 AM PDT

A team of student researchers and their professors from 20 laboratories around the country have gotten a new view of cancer cells. The work could shed light on the transforming physical properties of these cells as they metastasize.

Competing pathways affect early differentiation of higher brain structures

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

A new study shows how the strength and timing of competing molecular signals during brain development has generated natural and presumably adaptive differences in a brain region known as the telencephalon -- much earlier than scientists had previously believed.

Weight loss programs via virtual reality

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

There are many barriers that can interfere with weight loss. For those attending face-to-face weight loss programs, barriers can include travel, conflict with work and home, need for childcare, and loss of anonymity. In a new study investigators continue to explore alternative weight management delivery methods to eliminate some of these barriers. The solution they are investigating -- virtual reality for weight loss and weight maintenance.

Drivers education for older drivers remains for 2 years, researcher finds

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

In seeming contrast to the notion that the elderly often have memory problems, a new study finds driver retraining to be an effective strategy for improving the safe-driving habits of older drivers over the long term. Participants who received simulator training and video critiques of their driving performance two years prior increased their likelihood of scanning while negotiating an intersection by 100 percent.

Developmental neurobiology: How the brain folds to fit

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:55 AM PDT

During fetal development of the mammalian brain, the cerebral cortex undergoes a marked expansion in surface area in some species, which is accommodated by folding of the tissue in species with most expanded neuron numbers and surface area. Researchers have now identified a key regulator of this crucial process.

Intermittent fasting may help those with diabetes and cardiovascular disease, study suggests

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:54 AM PDT

Intermittent fasting is all the rage, but scientific evidence showing how such regimes affect human health is not always clear cut. Now a scientific review suggests that fasting diets may help those with diabetes and cardiovascular disease, alongside established weight loss claims.

Protein shaped like a spider: Immune protein C4BP is potentially suitable as a transporter for drugs

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:54 AM PDT

The protein C4BP is similar to a spider in its spatial form with eight "arms." This leads the scientists to unconventional ideas -- the protein is possibly suitable as a scaffold for the transport of active pharmaceutical substances, particularly biomolecules.

Flu and bacteria: Better prognosis for this potentially fatal combination

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:54 AM PDT

Scientists have provided insights into how much harm bacteria can cause to the lung of people having the flu. The results could prompt the development of alternative treatments for flu-related bacterial infections, to improve patient outcome and prevent permanent lung damage.

Scientists discover new way protein degradation is regulated

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 08:46 AM PDT

Researchers have identified the mechanism by which the cell's proteasome ramps up its activity to take care of unwanted and potentially toxic proteins. The finding has implications for treating muscle wasting and neurodegeneration, and suggests that small molecule inhibitors of this mechanism may be clinically useful in treating multiple myeloma.

U.S. health insurance survey: 84 million people were uninsured for a time or underinsured in 2012

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 04:38 AM PDT

84 million people -- nearly half of working-age US adults -- went without health insurance for a time last year or had out-of-pocket costs that were so high relative to income they were considered underinsured.

Cardio could hold key to cancer cure

Posted: 26 Apr 2013 04:38 AM PDT

Regular exercise has been proven to reduce the chance of developing liver cancer in a world-first mice study that carries hope for patients at risk from hepatocellular carcinoma.

Researchers 'capture' replication of human genome for first time

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:28 AM PDT

Scientists have for the first time obtained a panoramic photo of the proteins that take part in human DNA division, a process known as replication.

Suppressing protein may stem Alzheimer's disease process

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:26 AM PDT

Scientists have discovered a potential strategy for developing treatments to stem the disease process in Alzheimer's disease. It's based on unclogging removal of toxic debris that accumulates in patients' brains, by blocking activity of a little-known regulator protein called CD33. Too much CD33 activity may promote late-onset Alzheimer's by preventing support cells from clearing out toxic plaques. Future medications that impede CD33 activity might help prevent or treat the disorder.

Potential diabetes breakthrough: Hormone spurs beta cell production

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:26 AM PDT

Researchers have discovered a new hormone that holds promise for a dramatically more effective treatment of type 2 diabetes, a metabolic illness afflicting an estimated 26 million Americans. The researchers believe the hormone might also have a role in treating type 1, or juvenile, diabetes.

Gene networks in brains of deceased patients reveal potential therapy for Alzheimer's disease

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:26 AM PDT

Most information about the cause of Alzheimer's is based on studies from animal models. Now, a study examines the brain tissue of deceased human patients and sheds light on dysfunctions in molecular networks in the brain that are at the root of Alzheimer's. By showing that the TYROBP gene plays a key role in disrupting immune system pathways in the brains of Alzheimer's patients, the study reveals a potential therapeutic target for preventing brain damage.

Prevention programs dramatically cut substance abuse among teens

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:24 AM PDT

Young adults reduce their overall prescription drug misuse up to 65 percent if they are part of a community-based prevention effort while still in middle school, according to researchers.

Teaching the next generation of science learners

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:23 AM PDT

New science education standards present challenges and opportunities, scholar says.

Reviving a foe of cancer

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 10:23 AM PDT

Cancer cells are a problem for the body because they multiply recklessly, refuse to die and blithely metastasize to set up shop in places where they don't belong. One protein that keeps healthy cells from behaving this way is a tumor suppressor named p53. This protein stops potentially precancerous cells from dividing and induces suicide in those that are damaged beyond repair. Not surprisingly, p53's critical function is disrupted in most cancers.

Influence of the family on back pain sufferers

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 06:13 AM PDT

Researchers have published a research paper that focuses on the social factors involved in back pain sufferers returning to work, to give a wider context to the medical factors that are often considered.

Insight on Pandemic Flu

Posted: 25 Apr 2013 06:12 AM PDT

Pandemic flu continues to threaten public health, especially in the wake of the recent emergence of an H7N9 low pathogenic avian influenza strain in humans.

Using microbubbles to improve cancer therapy

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 07:24 PM PDT

Microbubbles decrease the time and acoustic power of ultrasound required to heat and destroy an embedded target, finds new research. If these results can be replicated in the clinic, microbubbles could improve the efficiency of high intensity ultrasound treatment of solid tumors.