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proves: search
This situation is a prime example of why investors should never take anything for granted or just assume that big name company will never get into trouble. Around this time last year many analysts were screaming that investors should buy Citibank as if their lending losses weren't going to increase in the future, and investors actually had detailed information as to the extend of the toxic assets on their balance sheet.
in Banking
via Seeking Alpha @ 0:15 25th Nov
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Recession is in the air. Shoppers wonder what Brown is up to, struggle to cope with fare rises and blame America for starting the crisis. Victory in the next election looks like something of a poisoned chalice - but at least there are the Olympics to look forward to.
in IP & Patents
via Guardian Unlimited @ 2:06 23rd Nov
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Colugos (aka flying lemurs) — the closest living relatives of primates most notable for their ability to glide from tree to tree over considerable distances — are more diverse than had previously been believed, according to a new report published in the November 11th issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication.
in Biological Science
via Red Orbit @ 23:09 12th Nov
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Website of the Telegraph Media Group with breaking news, sport, business, latest UK and world news. Content from the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph newspapers and video from Telegraph TV.
in Cricket
via Telegraph @ 4:52 3rd Nov
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There is lots of anger about Barclays’ highly dilutive £7.3 billion fundraising, which was announced on Friday. No-one likes surprises, particularly in the City, and Barclays dished it out in spades. Middle Eastern investors, who are stumping up £5.8 billion, will ultimately end up controlling 31% of the group.
in Banking
via The Times @ 19:20 1st Nov
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Australia appear likely to enter tomorrow's third Test against India with only one change, but a bare, dry pitch at the Feroz Shah Kotla ground may cause the tourists to consider shuffling their meagre spin options.
in Cricket
via LiveNews @ 20:03 27th Oct
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Glancing at the features list for Fedora 10, at first you might be unimpressed. Many of the features are basically infrastructure improvements, fixing known problems and enhancing performance while laying the groundwork for future developments. However, infrastructure affects almost everything you do with your computer, and the more you use Fedora 10, the more you are likely to conclude that -- one or two minor problems aside -- this may be the strongest Fedora release yet, as well as the first glimpse of its future.
in Linux
via Linux.com @ 22:27 26th Nov
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Just as Nancy Pelosi proved beyond any doubt that a woman's rightful place is in the home, but definitely not the U.S. House, so it is that Astronaut Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper has confirmed that women are more suitable for mundane household chores than the intricate, highly technical work required of an astronaut.
in Space Science
via Post Chronicle @ 22:10 21st Nov
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A young boy in Ogaki, Japan, took his parent's car without permission and headed out on the highway; he says he learned how to drive from playing video games. Before you judge an out-of-control youth culture ruined by video gaming, though, consider this: the tyke only took the car because he wanted to visit his beloved grandmother. Keep reading.
in Computer Games
via ITworld.com @ 1:00 20th Nov
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A study carried out by US warranty provider, SquareTrade has found that the Apple iPhone needed fewer repairs than BlackBerry and Treo handsets within the first year of ownership. The report was based on the failure rates for more than 15,000 new phones covered by SquareTrade Care Plans.
in Handhelds
via Cellular-News @ 20:17 10th Nov
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In a paper published in Genome Research on Nov. 4, scientists at the Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS) report that what was previously believed to be "junk" DNA is one of the important ingredients distinguishing humans from other species.
in General Science
via Red Orbit @ 22:30 5th Nov
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SEGA of America needed to comply with Wal-Mart customer mandates, streamline its order process and create greater visibility into inventory. Uploading new orders via modem to its 10-year old B2B/EDI system took hours.
in Computer Games
via Bitpipe @ 18:37 28th Oct
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SEGA of America needed to comply with Wal-Mart customer mandates, streamline its order process and create greater visibility into inventory. Uploading new orders via modem to its 10-year old B2B/EDI system took hours.
in Computer Games
via Search SMB @ 12:07 28th Oct
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SEGA of America needed to comply with Wal-Mart customer mandates, streamline its order process and create greater visibility into inventory. Uploading new orders via modem to its 10-year old B2B/EDI system took hours.
in Computer Games
via BizReport.com @ 22:53 27th Oct
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SEGA of America needed to comply with Wal-Mart customer mandates, streamline its order process and create greater visibility into inventory. Uploading new orders via modem to its 10-year old B2B/EDI system took hours.
in Computer Games
via Line56 @ 19:11 27th Oct
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New research suggests the length of a relationship has little correlation to the strength of the feelings
in General Science
via Popular Science @ 20:04 21st Nov
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Cars Auto Financing Event Tickets Jobs Real Estate Online Degrees Business Opportunities Shopping
in Arts & Culture
via USA Today @ 10:03 12th Nov
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Steve LeibsonLeibson's Law: It takes 10 years for any disruptive technology to become pervasive in the design community. This blog is about the disruptive technologies that either have or will win over electronic engineers, some that won't, and why. Written by Steve Leibson, Tensilica's Technology Evangelist. See my history site at www.hp9825.com. You can email me by taking the first letter of my first name, appending that to my last name, then the magic email symbol, followed by the name of the company I work for, and then a dot followed by com.
in Photography
via EDN.com @ 21:00 8th Nov
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Democracy in its full-blooded form is like writing a novel - and Americans have just written the first chapter of their greatest work of all
in Arts & Culture
via Guardian Unlimited @ 15:51 6th Nov
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In a paper published in Genome Research on Nov. 4, scientists at the Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS) report that what was previously believed to be "junk" DNA is one of the important ingredients distinguishing humans from other species.
in Biological Science
via Science Daily @ 17:02 5th Nov
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In a paper published in Genome Research on Nov. 4, scientists at the Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS) report that what was previously believed to be "junk" DNA is one of the important ingredients distinguishing humans from other species.
in General Science
via EurekAlert! @ 22:20 4th Nov
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Those are some of the introductory words of Lou Dematteis, one of the authors and photographers of the new photo book Crude Reflections: Oil, Ruin, and Resistance in the Amazon Rainforest.
in E-commerce
via Amazonia @ 4:56 31st Oct
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To want to take charge of Pakistan, it has often been said that a coach would need to be a farsighted individual, but instead the country’s cricket board has chosen a qualified optometrist. Geoff Lawson, the former Australia fast bowler, will succeed the late Bob Woolmer after accepting the offer of a two-year contract from the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), which selected him ahead of Dav Whatmore and Richard Done, his fellow Australians. Lawson’s first assignment will be to oversee the ICC World Twenty20 in September, followed by home series against South Africa and Australia, with a tour to India in between.
in Cricket
via The Times @ 10:58 24th Oct
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Ten years ago, engineers at the National Institutes of Health decided to bundle together a bunch of regular computers in order to create a supercomputing capability. The result proved successful and has grown since, enabling scientists to run large-scale computational experiments that would otherwise be impossible, such as processing thousands of DNA sequences or running six-month-long molecular simulations to study cell processes.
in Open Source
via Linux.com @ 8:17 24th Oct
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