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6 iPhone Apps to Plan Your Workday That's where your iPhone comes in: With the right apps and a little know-how, there are countless ways to plan your day, week, month and year. Every iPhone comes with Apple's own Calendar app, which offers basic functionality to help you schedule meetings, remember appointments and more. The app also connects with your address book, your maps app and even your social media accounts to deliver the information you need to plan smooth and productive meetings. When you need to schedule a meeting, Mynd links with your address book and LinkedIn account to help you send out invitations and check on individual availability. Read More »Long-Term Unemployed Reveal Emotional Struggles The loss of a regular income has affected the long-term unemployed in various ways, from accelerated credit debt to downsizing to tense relationships. Specifically, 25 percent of those surveyed don't have enough money for food, 25 percent have strained relationships with family and friends, 12 percent have maxed out their credit cards and 10 percent have lost their home or apartment due to the inability to pay the mortgage or rent. Read More »Want to Start a Business? Why You Should Keep Your Job Gone are the days when employees and entrepreneurs inhabited two different worlds. As the senior money editor and blogger at U.S. News and World Report and owner of her own small business, Kimberly Palmer is one of those leading the double life of an employee and entrepreneur. Palmer's book lays out the groundwork for balancing your full-time career with your entrepreneurial spirit, and argues that side-gigs — which she calls the "shining white knights" of 9-to-5 workers — are a saving grace in an age of economic instability. In an email interview with BusinessNewsDaily, Palmer explains how aspiring entrepreneurs can strengthen their careers and their earning power without quitting their day jobs. Read More »5 Interview Skills That Will Get You Hired Job interviews are arguably some of the most important meetings you will ever have in your life. In addition to knowing why you're a good fit for the job, brushing up on basic interview skills is always a good idea. Most people are afraid to ask an interviewer to clarify his or her question, said Sara Sutton Fell, CEO of job listing website FlexJobs. You might worry that the interviewer will think you weren't paying attention, but ensuring that you thoroughly understand the question can really help you give a thoughtful, relevant response. Read More »Tim Tebow Plays Moon Football in Super Bowl Ad (Video) Read More » | ||||
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Sunday, February 2, 2014
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Saturday, February 1, 2014
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Florida's Rat-Saving Labors Aren't Paying Off Read More » Obama Honors Fallen Astronauts of NASA Spaceflight Disasters Read More » NASA Video Captures Stunning Volcano Eruption View from Space Read More » Moon Myths and Facts for the Lunar New Year Read More » NASA Moon Camera Claimed to Be Used by Apollo Astronaut Up for Auction Read More » Advocates for Humane Treatment Welcome Scrutiny, If It's Honest (Op-Ed) Read More » Does Polar Vortex Mean 'So Much for Global Warming?' (Op-Ed) Read More » EPA: New Mine Threatens Half World's Wild Sockeye Salmon (Op-Ed) Read More » Super Bowl Ads Symbolize A Positive Cultural Shift for Animals (Op-Ed) Wayne Pacelle is the president and chief executive officer of The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). This Op-Ed is adapted from a post on the blog A Humane Nation, where the content ran before appearing in LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. One is the creative, and often provocative, advertising on display not only during the Super Bowl, but in advance — where companies and ad agencies push out their creative content in traditional and social media and get a national discussion going about their brands. Each year, it used to infuriate me to see baby or juvenile chimps dressed up and featured in commercials, because I knew what those chimpanzees would endure throughout their lives — and I also knew that the trainers would discard those chimps once they got big and leave it to the animal welfare community to pay for their care for the expected duration of their lives, sometimes as long as another half century. Read More »Atlas and Delta Rockets Have Packed 2014 Launch Schedule Read More » Super Bowl in Space: How Astronauts Celebrate the Big Game in Orbit (Video) Read More » Extradition: Will Amanda Knox Be Returned to Italy? In one of the most sensational murder trials — and retrials — in recent memory, an Italian court has found U.S. citizen Amanda Knox guilty of the 2007 murder of Meredith Kercher. The guilty verdict, however, has raised a thicket of thorny legal issues, including whether Knox will be extradited to Italy to serve a prison term for a crime she was found guilty of in her initial 2009 trial (that verdict was overturned on appeal in 2011, but a subsequent appeal declared her guilty once again this month). Despite the operatic convolutions of the Italian justice system, there are some experts who believe the legal framework surrounding the extradition process may work in Knox's favor. The ancient pharaohs of Egypt were known to negotiate the extradition of criminals from neighboring Hittite territories. Read More »Color-Changing 'Sea Chameleons' Could Inspire New Military Camouflage Read More » Colorado's Highest Peaks Re-Named After Super Bowl Team Read More » Super Bowl Science: How Cold Weather Could Affect the Big Game Football fans hoping for a snowy Super Bowl on Sunday (Feb. 2) may be out of luck, but temperatures for the Big Game could still dip to chilly lows, meaning players and spectators should take care to protect themselves from the wintry conditions, experts say. While football games have been played in freezing-cold conditions before, Sunday's game between the Seattle Seahawks and Denver Broncos at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., will be the first-ever outdoor, cold-weather championship game. Despite early talk that a big storm could blow through the area, the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University, in Ithaca, N.Y., is predicting relatively calm conditions for the Sunday matchup, with a high near 39 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius) and a low near 28 F (minus 2 C). "Despite all the hype, the latest Arctic outbreak looks to be gone by Super Bowl Sunday," Art DeGaetano, director of the Northeast Regional Climate Center, said in a statement. Read More »Top 10 Workplace Trends for 2014 More flexible work environments, an increase in workplace efficiency and more reliance on Big Data are all in store for businesses in 2014, according to new research. A recent poll of nearly 8,000 industrial-organizational (I-O) psychologists by the The Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP) uncovered the top 10 workplace trends for 2014. I-O psychologists study workplace issues of critical relevance to business, including talent management, coaching, assessment, selection, training, organizational development, performance and work-life balance. They expect to see the following workplace trends in 2014: Read More »Warning: Business Bank Accounts Aren't Safe from Cybertheft Waking up one day to find all the money drained from their small business bank account is every entrepreneur's worst nightmare. While entrepreneurs may think their money is secure in a small business account at their local bank, the truth is, they aren't protected from one of the fastest-growing crimes: cybertheft. Unlike personal bank accounts, by law small businesses accounts are not insured by banks, or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, when money is stolen by cyberthieves. Marc Kramer, president of the Commercial Deposit Insurance Agency — the first company to offer small businesses cybertheft insurance — said this comes as a shock to most business owners, since many see signs posted all around their bank regarding the money being insured by the FDIC. Read More » | ||||
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Friday, January 31, 2014
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Scientists Map What Your Brain Looks Like on English Researchers may now be closer to understanding how the brain processes sounds, or at least those made in English. Taking advantage of a group of hospitalized epilepsy patients who had electrodes hooked directly to their brains to monitor for seizures, Dr. Edward Chang and his colleagues at the University of California, San Francisco, and University of California, Berkeley, were able to listen in on the brain as it listened to 500 English sentences spoken by 400 different people. Read More »Methane Rising As Funding Cuts Threaten Monitoring Network Read More » Spy Device? One-Way Sound Machine Created
Ophidiophobics beware: flying snakes have great aerodynamics Scientists studying the amazing gliding proficiency of an Asian species known as the paradise tree snake say it does two things as it goes airborne. Researchers led by Jake Socha, an expert in biomechanics at Virginia Tech, replicated in a plastic model the shape the snake assumes while airborne, and tested it to evaluate its aerodynamic qualities. The paradise tree snake is one of the world's five species of flying snakes, all from the genus Chrysopelea. Read More »New big-headed fish species discovered in Idaho and Montana rivers By Laura Zuckerman SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - A tiny fish characterized by a disproportionately large head and previously unknown to scientists has been found in mountain rivers of Idaho and Montana in what biologists said on Thursday marked a rare discovery. The new aquatic species is a type of freshwater sculpin, a class of fish that dwell at the bottom of cold, swiftly flowing streams throughout North America and are known for their oversized head and shoulder structure. "The discovery of a new fish is something I never thought would happen in my career because it's very rare in the United States," said Michael Young, co-author of a scientific description of the find published in the latest edition of the peer-reviewed journal Zootaxa. Scientists with the U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station in Montana first encountered the new species while conducting a genetic inventory of fish found in the upper Columbia River basin, said Young, also an agency fisheries biologist. Read More »Video Game Can Teach Kids Signs of Stroke A short video game may help children identify the signs of a stroke, and call 911 if they witness someone having one, a new study suggests. The study involved about 200 children ages 9 to 12 living a community with many people at high risk for stroke(the Bronx, N.Y.). The children were tested on their knowledge of stroke symptoms before and immediately after they played a 15-minute stroke education video game. Children were 33 percent more likely to recognize stroke symptoms, and say they would call 911 in a hypothetical scenario immediately after they played the video game, compared with before. Read More »NASA Honors Fallen Astronauts with 'Day of Remembrance' Friday
Where's My Roof? Why Northern Football Stadiums Go Topless On Sunday, the Denver Broncos and Seattle Seahawks will square off at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey under the open sky. It's the first time in football history the Super Bowl has been played in an open stadium in a cold-weather city. But why is MetLife Stadium open anyway? There are 31 official NFL stadiums. Read More »Evidence for Universe Inflation Theory May Lurk in New Data Read More » Winter Constellations: Orion the Hunter Reigns in Cold Night Sky Read More » Aliens Didn't Do It! Mysterious Underwater 'Fairy Rings' Explained Read More » What's the Universe Made Of? Math, Says Scientist BROOKLYN, N.Y. — Scientists have long used mathematics to describe the physical properties of the universe. But what if the universe itself is math? That's what cosmologist Max Tegmark believes. In Tegmark's view, everything in the universe — humans included — is part of a mathematical structure. Read More »Virgin Galactic Fires New Engines for Satellite-Launching Rocket Read More » Super Bowl Space Tech: NASA Makes the Big Game Possible Read More » | ||||||
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