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Ginkgo Biloba No More Effective Than A Placebo

Written by Rhodos in Wednesday, November 19th 2008 under Health   
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One of the largest double blind studies on the effectiveness of herbal remedy for memory loss found Ginkgo Biloba medically useless. The collaborative effort of five academic medical centers across the U.S. recruited 3,069 people for the research study. They found a statically insignificant rise in memory degradation in the group that actually took the herbal extract over the placebo group.

Manufacturers of herbal remedies have made ridiculous claims outside the jurisdiction of the FDA for far too long. This latest study now proves that Ginkgo Biloba has no effect on memory loss or on patients suffering from the Alzheimer’s disease.

Source doc: nytimes

Making Sense this Black Friday

Written by Rhodos in Monday, November 17th 2008 under Consumer News   
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After reading countless Black Friday store ads, a few things stand out as possibly “good” deals. There are plenty of places to start your search, but Google “black Friday deals” should be sufficient.

Gamers are particularly hyped about the gift card deals with selected purchases of games at Amazon. Couple those deals with the previously available $150 Sony Style discount makes a pretty appealing deal. Amazon’s current one day sale for $300 includes the Xbox 360 60 GB holiday bundle, Lego Batman, and 1600 Xbox points.

Best Buy is really pushing its inventory of LCD Televisions in its current flyers. The cake in terms of deals for a LCD monitor (no TV tuner) is the Westinghouse 37” from Buy.com for $550 shipped.

There is the unconfirmed rumor that Apple is planning something big for their Black Friday. No word if they finally will offer a discount on the iPhone. This is if they want to gain ground against the Blackberry.

Expect a stronger showing for this Cyber Monday, with internet retailers pushing hard for your dollars in this slumping economy. Amazon is one example of this, and there are plenty of deals on eBay. Microsoft Live Cash back is still going strong at 25%, and Dell still has the 15% promotion.

What goes on in those over-nights Black Friday lines is a mystery, but bring plenty of your favorite caffeinated beverage and a warm coat.

Service Launch 101: What not to do

Written by Rhodos in Monday, May 12th 2008 under Consumer News   
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AT&T has been in the game as far as I can remember. So, you would think they would use press releases and give some hint that they would be offering free Wi-Fi access to iPhone users in Starbucks stores. Instead the events played out somewhat like a child picking their first toy.

AT&T offered no mention of the new service in its February press release. Reporters in the news then moved towards Starbucks and T-Mobile parting ways.

Then, last week, without warning, AT&T turned the service on. I spotted it on April 30 when I tried to log on to my T-Mobile account and discovered an AT&T link that wasn’t there the day before. I was already thinking about how many extra shots of espresso I could buy with the $39 a month I would save.

When word started to spread about this apparent change in provider, four days later the service stopped. This then followed a few days later by AT&T changing the language on its site to include news of the free service, followed by the removal of said language.

It seems AT&T’s marketing department is asleep at the wheel, or their management is jumping the gun. What should have been a pretty satisfying debut of a new free service, turned out like a slow speed car crash in reverse.

source doc: fortune

FBI Probe finds $3.5 M in Cisco Counterfeits

Written by Rhodos in Sunday, May 11th 2008 under Technology   
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Multiple investigations into Chinese counterfeit operations have led to the seizure of $3.5 million in counterfeit Cisco routers, switches, interface converters, and wide area network interfaces. The logistics involved 15 separate investigations at nine field offices, and included 39 search warrants. According to the FBI, with the end of investigations, there is still no word in any arrests. World wide the estimated total seizures were $76 million.

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Ants mimic human personalities

Written by Rhodos in Wednesday, April 16th 2008 under Health   
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When we think of ants, we imagine a line of military like creatures whose only goal is the transportation of that sugar you spilled earlier to their home. What you may not have noticed, maybe in your rush to get the bug spray, is that if you watched them long enough you would find they have unique personalities. Just like humans you find some are lazy, some hard workers, and others thinking of how to survive.

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Tumor cell study leads advances in cancer treatment

Written by Rhodos in Tuesday, April 15th 2008 under Health   
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Radiation therapy is an established method of treating some forms of cancer, but normal cells do get damaged as well. Scientists studying the tumor cells ability to withstand the immune systems “self destruct” instructions, have applied them to strengthen normal cells.

For cancer cells, radiation means death, but to normal cells it means a false instruction to expire. While the damage to the cell is manageable, the cells trigger a process called apoptosis, a fail safe for seriously damaged cells.

The experimental drug CBLB502 developed by the Roswell Park cancer Institute, was led by Andrei Gudkov in identifying the triggering cell-signaling process NFKB. The synthesized drug when injected in mice (and rhesus monkeys), followed by exposure to lethal levels of radiation, dramatically improved the survival rate.

It happens that the Defense Department is funding the research, as the drug has an advantage against bio weapons. According to Dr. Richard Kolesnick of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center:

This new information on the mechanisms of tissue damage to the GI tract has resulted in a potentially important new drug to prevent this lethal GI syndrome after a radiation accident or potential terrorist attack.

The drawback for everything is in the prolonged effects of long term use. While the short term use of the drug for infrequent and unlikely radiation emergencies is clear, the repeated exposure to radiation (a cancer patient for instance) has to deal with the cumulative effects, something which is beyond any current drugs.

Source doc: washington post

Third generation memory storage “RaceTrack”

Written by Rhodos in Monday, April 14th 2008 under Technology   
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Imagine taking a nanowire, taking a square micron portion on its surface, drill down into it, and etch a racetrack of spin-polarized bits. Essentially those areas of silicon would be 1 micron wide and 10 microns high, 10 times the density of conventional flash memory. As the technology matures, its creator Stuart Parkin, believes it will reach 100 times the density, effectively replacing hard disks.

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Senate Approved Bill Ignores Consumer Woes

Written by Rhodos in Sunday, April 13th 2008 under Consumer News   
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 New legislation made it out of the Senate (rider) on Thursday for relieving some of the turmoil the housing collapse created. The downside is no where in the language does it mention relief for the general public. The details of the bill include tax breaks for home builders, a $7,000 tax credit for people buying foreclosed homes, $150 million for counseling, and $4 billion for local governments to spend on said foreclosed properties. This probably goes without saying, but where in that bill do people in risk of foreclosure get relief?

The current endorsers of the bill believe only a portion of the bill will continue into law, therefore the created the overreaching bill. Other proposed legislation includes:

The Ways and Means Committee is originating a bill which will not include the tax breaks for business or credits for purchases of foreclosed homes.

Refinances of adjustable rate loans to government backed fixed rate loans is continuing, but according to government officials and advocacy groups, not nearly enough to help the 100,000 or so in risk.

On another note, all three Presidential candidates agree the current bill does not do enough to help the consumer directly.

Source doc: nytimes

Olympics defends political neutrality

Written by Rhodos in Saturday, April 12th 2008 under World News   
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While IOC repeatedly denounces the political protests, it fails to realize the history of the Olympics in marred in political controversy. Governments have stakes in their athletes, and stand to benefit economically and socially. The legislative actions of past host countries have led to serious ethical and civil rights violations.

While the IOC made clear it’s guidelines for how the host country should conduct itself, it turns a blind eye when it comes to enforcement. The condition of unfetter access to the global internet still hasn’t been satisfied, with easily the most obvious terms blocked. The mass displacement of residents for tourists is another sign of the trampled guidelines.

While legislation recently calls for a dialog between China and Tibet, the official response of China was not surprising “Unequivocally No”.

While thankfully the protests in San Francisco were peaceful, the phrase recently coined by the media is surprisingly fitting. Being dubbed the “Torch of Shame” was the Olympic torch as it played a game of hide-and-seek with the public. As if to defeat the purpose of a “public” ceremony, the mayor of San Francisco decided it was best to smuggle the torch through the city as quietly as possible and on to its next destination. The fact that the torch now requires body guards and secret routes speaks volumes of the lack of judgment by the IOC.

Faced with protests, torch bodyguards, forced extinguishments, poor air quality, secret routes, governmental boycotts, incarcerated monks, and the overall disapproval from every human rights group, the IOC will not admit its made an error. While the Olympic Games will pass, the lingering consequences will probably haunt the IOC for decades to come.

Newest Wordpress Plugins

Written by Rhodos in Friday, April 11th 2008 under Wordpress Plugins   
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Here are two interesting plugins found after upgrading wordpress:

Plugin Central (compatible up to 2.5)

A byproduct of the native automatic updating in Wordpress 2.5, features includes mass plugin update, install from URL, and mass export to another blog.

Ajax Comments-Reply (compatible up to 2.5)

This essentially replaces the Quoter, Threshold, and Ajax Comment plugins. If the author adds threaded (collapsible) comment support and comment rating, this would be a five star plugin.


Click here to read more

More From Health

  • Ginkgo Biloba No More Effective Than A Placebo
  • Ants mimic human personalities
  • Tumor cell study leads advances in cancer treatment

Recently in Technology

  • FBI Probe finds $3.5 M in Cisco Counterfeits
  • Third generation memory storage “RaceTrack”
  • Next Generation Silicon Batteries
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