Gatekeeper Rosen
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Tech Article Fridah the Thirtinth
Kwanghun Chung wants to make it easy for scientists to take a molecular snapshot of the brain. The very best imaging technology available today allows inspection of just 10 or so biomolecules in 3-D. “It’s not enough,” says Chung, who hopes to render a complete picture of all of the hundreds of thousands of biomolecules at work inside the thousands of distinct cell types across a whole human brain.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Twitter In Education
Twitter is a vital part within the internet community. It involves social protocol which is important for all children, teachers could assign posts to notify their students (if they follow them that is) to ensure that no homework would be missed. However, one would argue that
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013
Do Now 11 / 18 / 13
The fact that nobody else will.
In this world, I believe there are the people who watch what is being done, and their are people who create things to be done. Much like how there are people who watch television, and people who entertain. It is better to be the entertainer, than the watcher, for the watcher will believe anything that is made, whereas the entertainer is the person who creates what is to be made.
Tech Article 11 / 22: Repairing Human Hearts
A discovery that creates heart cells from skin cells, which could make it possible to repair damaged human hearts. Such an application is at least 10-20 years away, but the process can already be utilized for in-depth study of genetic diseases and the development of personalized drugs for irregular heartbeats and other inherited disorders. Published in the latest issue of Circulation, the findings by Prof. Lior Gepstein of the Technion’s Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and Rambam Medical Center could make it possible to clinically repair damaged human hearts.


Friday, November 1, 2013
Tech article 11-1
Texas man reportedly arrested due to overdue library book
Jory C. Enck had been arrested numerous times after not returning a study guide from a local library in Copperas Cave, TX. Copperas Cove City Municipal Judge Bill Price told KWTX that the law, which was passed almost four years ago, was intended to offset the cost of replacing library materials. Copperas Cove Police Sgt. Julie Lehmann said an officer will make an arrest for overdue library materials, if during a routine stop or call, they discover an individual has an active warrant.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)