High Dispensing Accuracy & Speed

Some of life’s best memories probably are made right in your own yard. Somehow popping the top on a cold beverage and laughing with friends and family takes your mind off the heat. As you gather for a barbeque, a birthday party on the deck, or a backyard pool party, you’re living life at its best, enjoying the people and relationships that you’ve been so blessed to have. When you look back and reminisce over your years, you may not remember every detail of your work, but when you look out over your yard, you’ll remember the people who made you smile.

You’ll remember your toddler learning to walk, your son taking those first bold bicycle ride while some of your buddies cheering, sitting on the porch swing swapping stories with your grandpa, or dancing on the deck in the moonlight with your better half. Well, these are the special moments that make your house a home. And if you’re missing out on making some of these special memories because your yard is in disarray with several reactive materials like adhesives, sealants and potting compounds and you can’t quite figure out how to make your outdoor space more people-friendly, you may be able to find glue dispenser the help you need.

In all cases, IPSCOT, Inc. has been supplying dispensing and fluid handling equipment to manufacturers and contractors. They can help you with their profound knowledge of dispensing applications. Their glue dispensing equipment will handle fluids of any viscosity from water thin to the heaviest paste and dispense them in any amount necessary from tiny dots to hundreds of gallons per minute. Their dispensing systems stand-out against conventional systems by their high dispensing accuracy and speed, as well as the possibility to selectively apply media, without contamination of surrounding areas. Now, turn your home into a place where celebrations and happy memories abound.

Promoting Science, and Google, to Students

Google is synonymous with “search engine,” and now, for students, it wants to be synonymous with “science.”

The company is getting into the science fair business with its first Google Science Fair, a global competition for teenagers that spans sciences as diverse as computer engineering, space exploration and medical technology.

The event does not have the name recognition and deep roots of the science fairs from companies like Intel or Siemens, but for most children, Google is the most familiar company of the three. With the science fair, Google aims to play an even bigger role in their lives by encouraging young scientists to experiment — and to use Google products while they’re at it.

Google’s science fair is different from the others in a major way: entrants submit their projects online, using Google products like Gmail, YouTube and Google Docs and Sites. It’s the modern-day version of showing up at the school gymnasium to demonstrate lava-spewing volcanoes or bacteria colonies in petri dishes. [Read more...]

US Begins First Human Embryonic Stem Cell Trial

US doctors have begun the first tests of human embryonic stem cells in patients, treating a man with spinal cord injuries in a landmark trial of the controversial process, the Geron Corporation said Monday.

The patient began the pioneering treatment Friday with an injection of the biotech company’s human embryonic stem cells, as part of a clinical trial that aims to test safety and efficacy toward regaining sensation and movement. [Read more...]

Kaspersky Lab Launches Anti-Virus 2011

Kaspersky Lab, a leading developer of secure content management solutions, today announced the launch of the latest versions of its flagship consumer products Kaspersky internet security 2011 and Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2011.

“The new products take full advantage of the most innovative cutting-edge technologies to provide more accurate detection and an even-faster response to any IT threats,” Kaspersky Lab’s South Asia, managing director, Suk Ling Gun, told reporters in Mumbai.

Kaspersky Lab India (KLI) started full-fledged operations from June 1, 2010 with marketing, sales and technology teams based out of Hyderabad. [Read more...]

Test-Tube Kids And Cancer? Method Unlikely A Cause

For the first time, a large study suggests a higher rate of childhood cancer among test-tube babies, but researchers say the reason probably has nothing to do with how the infants were conceived.

More likely, it’s related to the genetics of the parents who turned to in vitro fertilization because of infertility, the study’s Swedish authors and other experts say. Also, test-tube infants often are born prematurely and have breathing problems at birth – traits linked in other studies with increased cancer risks.

Still, cancer in these children is rare despite any elevated risks.

“It’s rather reassuring,” said Dr. Bengt Kallen, the study’s lead author and a researcher at the University of Lund. The risk “is so small that it can’t matter much for the individual parents or parents-to-be.” [Read more...]

Evolving Evidence

indohyus_NOVEMBER 24th will mark the 150th anniversary of the publication of On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection , in which Charles Darwin spelt out the famous theory. The big discovery, made by Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace, was not evolution itself, but the mechanism through which it works – natural selection. Some people still challenge the theory, despite it having received massive scientific validation. A recent publication entitled 15 Evolutionary Gems by H Gee, R Howlett and P Campbell (www.nature.com/nature/newspdf/

evolutiongems.pdf) briefly describes 15 examples published in the journal Nature over the past decade that offer powerful evidence for the theory. I will describe three examples.

1 The origin of feathers

The fossil record is one of the main pillars of evidence on which the theory of evolution stands. But critics claim the fossil record is fatally flawed because of the lack of “transitional forms” that illustrate intermediates in the transition of one major group of animals to another. The critics are wrong, and the first two cases I will cite describe examples of transitional forms.

Evolutionists tell us that modern birds are descended from dinosaurs. A famous fossil that provides evidence for this was discovered in Bavaria in 1861. The fossil is called Archaeopteryx . The creature displays reptilian features, such as teeth and a long, bony tail, but it also has wings and flight feathers like a bird. It is commonly interpreted as a fossil of the earliest known bird. But has the fossil record thrown up any dinosaurs with feathers – unambiguous transitional forms?

Yes. Fossils found in China in the 1980s showed a variety of dinosaurs with feathers and feathery plumage. Many of these feathered dinosaurs could not have flown, which means that feathers evolved for reasons other than flight (heat insulation, for example). Flight was an extra opportunity that was exploited by creatures already carrying feathers.

2 Land-living ancestors of whales

Whales are mammals, like ourselves, but they have lived in the water for millions of years. There is good evidence that mammals originated on land, which means that, originally, the ancestors of whales forsook the land for the water. The fossil record now provides good evidence for this.

There is no shortage of fossils from the first 10 million years of whale evolution of creatures showing whale features (anatomy of the ear, for example) and limbs like those of land-living animals from which they descended. But until 2007, there was no report of a good fossil of the land-living creature from which whales eventually evolved. Work by Hans Thewissen and others described now-extinct creatures called raoellids that looked like small dogs but were more closely related to even-toed ungulates (a group that includes cows, sheep, deer, pigs and hippos). Molecular evidence had already hinted at a deep evolutionary connection between whales and even-toed ungulates.

Thewissen’s work shows that one raeollid, Indohyus (oictured), is similar to whales but unlike other even-toed ungulates in various ways (for example, ear and teeth structure) that indicate the creature spent much of its time in the water. The raeollid diet is very unlike the whale diet, suggesting that the impetus to take to the water might have been dietary change. Indohyus is definitely a good candidate for a transitional form.

3 The molecular basis for Darwin’s finches

All living processes and behaviours are underpinned by molecular mechanisms. Evolution works through molecular mechanisms, and these mechanisms are being elucidated by elegant research.

Darwin described several species of finches in the Galapagos Islands that all looked similar except for their beaks. Ground finches had broad, deep beaks, warbler finches had slender, pointed beaks, and so on. Beak size and shape reflected differences in diet. Darwin speculated that all the finches had a common ancestor that originally migrated to the islands, and that natural selection had then evolved a variety of forms from this common ancestor suited to different ecological niches on the island.

Arhat Abzhanov and others have studied the genes that are switched on and off in the developing beaks of finch chicks. They found that differences in beak shape coincided with variations in the expression of the gene for calmodulin, a molecule that regulates the signalling effected by calcium on metabolism and development. For example, calmodulin is expressed stronger in species with long pointed beaks than in species with more robust beaks.

Biologists are advancing from the documentation of evolution at whole animal level to identification of the underlying molecular mechanisms. By William Reville, Irish Times