17/04/2007

Study: BPA research might have been bias

A U.S. scientific journal says bias might have resulted in inconsistent study results concerning the danger of a chemical found in many products.

U.S., Mexico sign nuke smuggling agreement

U.S. Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman and Mexican Minister of Finance and Public Credit Agustin Carstens signed a pact to halt nuclear materials smuggling.

Researchers develop technique for bacteria crowd control

A surprising technique to concentrate, manipulate, and separate a wide class of swimming bacteria has been identified through a collaboration between researchers at Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois Institute of technology, ...

The Drive for Data Protection

Not finished with updating your organization's payroll for the day? No problem - just save the documents to a USB thumb drive, drop the drive in your briefcase, stick it in one of your family PC's USB slots and finish up ...

Sage Adds to ACT Product Line

Sage has launched its Act by Sage Premium Dual Access, a single software license that allows small and midsize businesses, workgroups and sales teams to have constant online/offline access to their databases.

Researchers: Botnets Getting Beefier

Botnets are moving to more resilient architectures and more sophisticated encryption that will make them even harder to track and fight, researchers say at HotBots, a Usenix event.

Post oak grasshoppers emerging

They're not afraid of heights, they're voracious, and Dr. Spencer Behmer wants to know if you've seen them hanging out in oak trees or on your house. They're post oak grasshoppers, and Behmer, a Texas Agricultural Experiment ...

Intel Aims High at IDF

On the first day of the Intel Developer Forum, the company details several new products on its road map, including its 45-nm "Penryn" processors and its new System on a Chip technology. Intel is working to show that there ...

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