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captured: search
Fourteen people accused of having of illegally transferred funds from various bank accounts to their own after obtaining account information from Russian hackers were captured in an operation staged by İzmir police in the Aegean cities of İzmir and Antalya on Friday.
in Banking
via Zaman @ 13:33 6th Dec
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It seems these days mobile phone and GPS technology can do just about anything... even help scientists learn more about the sex life of the koala.
in Mobile Technology
via Cellular-News @ 17:42 22nd Dec
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Brian Nichols • Transition to Power • Caylee Anthony • Gov. Blagojevich • Planet in Peril • more topics »
in Top Stories
via CNN @ 17:53 13th Dec
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The Huygens craft has made some amazing leaps for our science. For example, it landed a probe on one of Saturn’s moons in 2005. Now, the craft has managed to send back the first pictures (http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/) of extraterrestrial liquid ever taken. Full Story...
in Space Science
via IOL Technology @ 3:44 17th Dec
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12/23/08 - Chinese wireless equipment vendors Huawei Technologies and ZTE were the two largest winners for the China Telecom CDMA network tender, according to the latest report from EJL Wireless Research titled China Telecom CDMA Network Tender Analysis.
in Mobile Technology
via Broadband Wireless Exchange Magazine @ 15:42 28th Dec
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Morning Movers 12/19: ArthroCare (ARTC) Smashed On Restatement Expansion/CFO Resignation; GM Up On Govt Loan
in Mobile Technology
via Street Insider @ 10:30 19th Dec
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REDWOOD CITY, CA--(MARKET WIRE)--Dec 19, 2008 -- Chinese wireless equipment vendors Huawei Technologies and ZTE were the two largest winners for the China Telecom CDMA network tender, according to the latest report from EJL Wireless Research titled "China Telecom CDMA Network Tender Analysis."
in Mobile Technology
via Yahoo! Canada @ 10:31 19th Dec
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U.S. intelligence agencies warned their Indian counterparts in mid-October of a potential attack "from the sea against hotels and business centers in Mumbai," a U.S. intelligence official tells ABCNews.com.
in Mobile Technology
via ABC News via Drudge Report @ 22:15 1st Dec
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Swift captured Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3's fragment C as it passed the famous Ring Nebula (oval, bottom). Credit: NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler and Dennis Bodewits
in Space Science
via Spaceflight Now @ 14:09 13th Dec
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If you captured the greatest sunset ever with your digital camera, yours may be among the pictures we'll highlight in our Best of Reader Photos feature.
in Photography
via Honolulu Advertiser @ 19:48 28th Dec
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NASA's Cassini captured this stunning mosaic as the spacecraft sped away from this geologically active moon of Saturn.
in Space Science
via Jet Propulsion Laboratory @ 18:16 16th Dec
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Google Street View has captured this charming shot of a someone relieving themselves on the streets of Madrid.
in Search Engines
via Pocket-lint.co.uk @ 13:02 24th Dec
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Swifts UltravioletOptical Telescope (UVOT) captured Comet 73PSchwassmann-Wachmann 3s fragment C as it passed the famous Ring Nebula (oval bottom) on May 7 2006. Swift watched as the crumbling comet left dusty blobs behind. Credit: NASASwiftStefan Imm ...
in Space Science
via PhysOrg.com @ 9:47 4th Dec
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Bangalore: An exhibition of photographs captured by Shadi Ghardirian, an internationally acclaimed Iranian photographer, has been organised here by Tasveer from January 9.
in Arts & Culture
via The Hindu @ 16:51 5th Jan
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NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has captured a new, infrared view of the choppy star-making cloud called M17, or the Swan nebula.
in Space Science
via Space.com @ 15:47 10th Dec
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Swift's Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) captured Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3's fragment C as it passed the famous Ring Nebula (oval, bottom) on May 7, 2006 (NASA)Things appeared to get a little strange in the field of X-ray astronomy when the NASA/ESA ROSAT observatory started seeing emissions from a series of comets. This discovery in 1996 was a conundrum; how could X-rays, more commonly associated with hot plasmas, be produced by some of the coldest bodies in the Solar System? In 2005, NASA's Swift observatory was launched to look out for some of the most energetic events in the observable Universe: gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and supernovae. But in the last three years, Swift has also proven itself to be an expert comet hunter.
in Space Science
via Universe Today @ 3:53 4th Dec
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