AlumiFuel Power, Inc. Developing Flameless Ration Heater (PackagingNetwork)

Early production stage hydrogen generation company AlumiFuel Power, Inc. (”API”), the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-based wholly owned operating subsidiary of AlumiFuel Power Corporation , (the “Company”), announced recently that it has conducted successful testing of a new generation Flameless Ration Heater (FRH) prototype using its AlumiFuel powder mix, which is customized to serve a variety of …

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A decade of digital advances (Aljazeera)

In the fast-changing world of technology, one electronic component has been the star of what is being called the digital decade: memory. Back in 2000 it was expensive. This meant powerful computers and electronics were costly, just toys for the rich or tech-crazy.

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WBTshowcase to Present Emerging and Converging Companies and Technologies at WBT2010 (The Auto Channel)

ARLINGTON, Texas–Investors and corporate licensees from Fortune 1000 companies will meet once again in Arlington, Texas for the eighth annual WBTshowcase (WBT2010), the world’s largest forum offering a prescreened, pre-prepped collection of undiscovered companies and intellectual property emanating from top universities, labs and research institutions from across the country.

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Top stories of the decade (The Troy Record)

CRIME

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A New Year’s message from Mayor Tom Reid (Pearland Journal)

I want to extend best wishes to the citizens of Pearland for 2010. We had trying time and many challenged during 2009 with the national economic downturn and the cleanup after the unexpected visit of Hurricane Ike. By design, Pearland has grown as a planned community and we welcome the many new citizens and businesses that have decided to make Pearland Home. We have encouraged development that …

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The ’spaghetti’ artery that could transform heart bypass surgery (Daily Mail)

The clot-busting blood vessel – which resembles a short piece of spaghetti in shape and flexibility – is to be trialled on heart disease patients this year.

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Quelling Casimir: Scientists to control quantum mechanical force (Science Daily)

Scientists are developing a way to control the Casimir force, a quantum mechanical force that attracts objects when they are only hundred nanometers apart.

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Lockheed Martin pledges $400,000 to Washington Crossing Historical Park (The Advance)

Lockheed Martin on Christmas Day announced its pledge of $400,000 to the Washington Crossing Historical Park for the addition of a dedicated education wing at the park’s visitor center, which is scheduled for renovation in the latter part of 2010.

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How Medicines Affect Pregnancy: At Last, a Study

How do common medications affect pregnancy? Nobody really knows. Now the FDA and a consortium of HMOs have launched a huge study to find out.

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Another Year, Another Bankruptcy

OK,

Tally Time. It is time again to see whether my predictions for 2009 were right. Or if I was way off the mark.

The Highly Likelies first
1. Francis Collins will become the Director of the NIH……..You Betcha I pegged that one.
2. We will see a pharmacogenetics lawsuit……Well, still haven’t seen that yet, despite the FDA label changes

Batting 500, next up

Long Shots

1. X Prize winner: PacBio, ok, maybe I was a year early on this one
2. Oprah’s gene scan bougus. Guess what? It Was!

Still at 500, who’s next

Ridiculous

Ok, these are what they say they are. Ridiculous. I don’t think I can be held to the same standards for these swing for the fences…..

1. Mark Cuban Buys the rights to the 23andME database. Ok, I was off. DeCode tried to steal it and Google keeps dumping money into it……Both just as crazy as if Cuban would buy it……
Maybe we call that a fly out?

2. Next-Next-Next gen Sequencing will debut……you have heard of nanopore right? Is this Next-Next Gen? Or Next-Next-Next Gen? Hmmm. Foul Ball!

3. The last one is so silly I don’t think it was meant to be called………..The US fracturing into territories and fighting against the world…….Not quite yet.

So on to this year’s doozies!

Highly Likely

1. Another DTC failure……yes. I won’t say which one.
2. One of the DTC Genomics companies will get into clinical care. They will set up shops. It may be a newcomer or an old dog. But it will happen.
3. We will have data on PGx testing with Plavix. And it will support the use.

Possible

1. Francis and Kari will start the Population Genome Study in the US
2. The XPrize will be won by Complete Genomics.

Ridiculous

1. Again, Mark Cuban will Buy Sergey’s share of 23andMe’s database
2. Myriad will lose the first round of hearings re: their gene patents……

The Sherpa Says: If Kansas went bye bye last year, this year we will have to “Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!”
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Stocks for the Next Decade (The Motley Fool)

Over the long haul, innovative companies provide you with the best chance for stellar returns.

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Street Anatomy Turns 3!

Dancing skeletons

It’s been 3 years since Street Anatomy first started as a small blog on medical illustration and grew into one of the only blogs showcasing anatomy in art on the Internet. Over the years we’ve attracted enthusiastic contributors and have grown into a tight knit group of 5 unique team members spotting anatomy in art, advertising, design, media, food and beyond.

Big things are going to happen in 2010 including the first Street Anatomy Gallery show taking place at the International Museum of Surgical Science in September here in Chicago, IL. We’re excited to put this show together and already have a list of incredible artists including popular toy designers, street artists and illustrators.

And of course a big thank you to all of our loyal readers and newcomers to Street Anatomy and those who have sent us great links! You guys keep us going.

— Vanessa R., Heather, Jenny, Vanessa V. And Luis

[Photo by Fobgoblin via Flickr]

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Acupuncture May Help Ease Hot Flashes

Acupuncture not only cools hot flashes that occur as a result of breast cancer treatment but may offer a host of other benefits to boost women’s well-being, a study shows.

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Kevin McKidd to Showcase Musical Talents?

Get ready to see an entirely new side of Kevin McKidd.

According to Fancast, Owen croons a bluesy tune when Kevin makes a tiny cameo in the final, January 21 installment of the Seattle Grace: On Call webisodes.

But try not to read too much into it, he says.

“It kind of ties in loosely with the [Grey's Anatomy] episode airing that night – but very loosely,” McKidd said, noting that the tune he was given to sing was “a really nice number” – and, more importantly, written by someone other than himself.

“Initially they asked me to write something,” he said, “and I was like, ‘There’s no way I’m going to sit on network TV and sing a song I wrote in my bedroom.’”

Owen, Teddy, and Richard

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Smart Goal Setting

If your goals become a source of stress and failure — you’re doing something wrong. Every goal you set should be attainable and should lead you down a road to accomplishment. Set your goals the smart way and you’ll find that you can achieve anything you want.

Read More: S.M.A.R.T. Goals – How to set successful goals

Smart Goal Setting originally appeared on About.com Longevity on Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at 11:45:00.

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Muffling the Ringing

Researchers Use Specialized Music Therapy to Help Tinnitus Sufferers

Ringing is reduced in tinnitus sufferers after listening to music stripped of certain tones.

Ringing is reduced in tinnitus sufferers after listening to music stripped of certain tones.

One of the greatest benefits of subscribing to my weekly newsletter is that it provides you with the most up to date information available in health news.  So if there was something I reported last week about what you can do to improve your health, you can guarantee I’ll add or change those recommendations should it be warranted.   Perhaps an example would better explain what I mean.

Last week I released my tinnitus report.  It had the most up-to-date information on what can be done to reduce that ringing in your ears.  But there’s since been a study that shows how people can reduce the ringing even more.

The findings come on the heels of a warning issued by the European Union Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks on what people can do to better protect their hearing.  Hearing loss has never been higher than it is today, particularly in industrialized countries, with people everywhere blaring their music at excessive levels.

But researchers from Germany are using the very thing that caused so much damage—music—for relief.

Researchers did so through the use of specialized technology that “stripped” music of the tones that the participants heard in their ears.  The participants would do their best to mimic the tone that they heard in their heads, and then the researchers could take that similar sound out of the music being played.

For a year, the participants listened to their songs, each tailored to their tinnitus tone.  And according to the findings published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the music did the trick.  Compared to those who listened to a placebo kind of music (the placebo being a song that wasn’t manipulated in any way), there was a “distinct” decrease in the loudness of the ringing.

The study included 39 men and women who had chronic tinnitus for at least five years.  Each group listened to their specialized music for about 12 hours per week.

The study’s lead researcher, Christo Pantev from Westfalian Wilhelms University, says that the music treatment is low cost and effective, which suggests that this kind of technology is available here in the states.  Talk to your ear, nose and throat doctor about what resources are available in your area.  And please consult my tinnitus report if you haven’t already.  I’m confident it can help resolve your tinnitus symptoms.

Sources:
newsdaily.com
news.bbc.co.uk

Discuss this post in Frank Mangano’s forum!

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Mutant Gene Lessens Devastation Of Flesh Eating Bacteria

Scientists at The Methodist Hospital Research Institute in Houston recently discovered a simple gene mutation that decreases the chance people will get a flesh-eating disease called necrotizing fasciitis. Further, they proved that inactivating this section of the gene lessens the devastating disease in humans…

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Scientists Discover A Controller Of Brain Circuitry

By combining a research technique that dates back 136 years with modern molecular genetics, a Johns Hopkins neuroscientist has been able to see how a mammal’s brain shrewdly revisits and reuses the same molecular cues to control the complex design of its circuits. Details of the observation in lab mice, published Dec…

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Marseillevirus, A New Member Of The Giant Viruses

After Mimivirus, Mamavirus and the virophage, the group of giant viruses now has a new member called Marseillevirus…

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Genetic Causes Identified For Disturbances In Lipid Metabolism

Scientists of Helmholtz Zentrum Munchen led by Professor Karsten Suhre have identified new gene variants associated with disturbances in the lipid metabolism. Some of these common human gene variants are already known to be risk factors for diabetes mellitus. The pathomechanisms of diabetes have intrigued physicians and been the subject of much debate for many decades…

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Arts hang by bootstraps in 2009 (The Troy Record)

In early December, TV station WNYT, Channel 13, reported tight financial times at the Albany Institute of History and Art, the region’s 210-year-old cultural bastion – hinting that with admissions and donations down and deficits up, that longevity might be in danger.

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First Pepose Award From Brandeis Goes To Vision Researchers Jay And Maureen Neitz

Brandeis University selected Jay and Maureen Neitz, the husband-and-wife team whose pioneering research may lead to the use of gene therapy to treat vision disorders, as the inaugural recipients of the Jay Pepose ‘75 Award in Vision Sciences. The award is funded by a $1 million endowment established this year through a gift from Brandeis graduates Jay Pepose ‘75 and Susan K…

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8 Elected As AAAS Fellows

Eight UC Davis faculty members are among 531 new fellows elected to the American Association for the Advancement of Science this year for their efforts to advance science or its applications. The new fellows will be presented with a certificate and rosette pin on Saturday, Feb. 20, during the society’s annual meeting in San Diego…

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High Risk Of Colorectal, Endometrial And Lynch Syndrome Cancers For MSH6 Mutation Carriers

People carrying the germ-line MSH6 mutation are at high risk by age 80 years for colorectal and endometrial cancers and any cancer associated with Lynch syndrome, according to a new study published online December 22 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute…

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Genomic Toggle Switches Divide Autoimmune Diseases Into Distinct Clusters, Stanford Study Shows

Genomic switches can predispose an individual to one set of autoimmune disorders but protect the same person against another set of them, scientists at Stanford University School of Medicine have found…

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