Friday, November 27th, 2009 at
7:00 am
New Step-By-Step System On How To Make Money With Cpa Even With No Experience Or Budget! Affiliates Make 60% Commission. The #1 Converting IM Product. Go To http://www.imcashsupreme.com/affiliates.php For Tools And Resources.
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Hot* The Cpa Affiliate Marketing System
Friday, November 27th, 2009 at
7:00 am
New Step-By-Step System On How To Make Money With Cpa Even With No Experience Or Budget! Affiliates Make 60% Commission. The #1 Converting IM Product. Go To http://www.imcashsupreme.com/affiliates.php For Tools And Resources.
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Hot* The Cpa Affiliate Marketing System
Friday, November 27th, 2009 at
7:00 am
‘Crossroads’ Is Both Step-by-step Instructional Course And Business Blueprint. Exquisitely Detailed, It Outlines A Unique Variant In The Internet (Niche) Marketing World That Introduces Two New Profit Streams Simply Unavailable With Other Programs.
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The Crossroads Methodology
Wednesday, November 25th, 2009 at
5:00 pm
Wednesday, November 25th, 2009 at
2:00 pm
Kassie Rose, 30 years old, faces a frightening prospect: if a genetic coin toss fails to go her way, she could lose her mind within a decade or two. A mutation that causes Alz
Monday, November 23rd, 2009 at
1:00 pm
What would happen if solar panels were free? What if it were possible to know everything about the world–not the Internet, but the living, physical world–in real time? What if doctors could forecast a disease years before it strikes? This is the promise of the World Changing Idea: a vision so simple yet so ambitious that its full impact is impossible to predict. Scientific American’s editorial and advisory boards have chosen projects in five general categories–Energy, Transportation, Environment, Electronics and Robotics, and Health and Medicine–that highlight the power of science and technology to improve the world. Some are in use now; others are emerging from the lab. But all of them show that innovation is the most promising elixir for what ails us. –The Editors The No-Money-Down Solar Plan [More]
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World Changing Ideas: 20 Ways to Build a Cleaner, Healthier, Smarter World (preview)
Friday, November 20th, 2009 at
7:00 am
Quickly And Easily Create A Profitable Tutoring Business Plan To Begin Your Tutoring Business. Create A Marketing Plan That Gets Clients And A Tutoring Business Where You Look Like You Know What Your Are Doing Right From The Start!
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How To Quickly And Easily Create A Profitable Tutoring Business Plan
Friday, November 20th, 2009 at
7:00 am
Quickly And Easily Create A Profitable Tutoring Business Plan To Begin Your Tutoring Business. Create A Marketing Plan That Gets Clients And A Tutoring Business Where You Look Like You Know What Your Are Doing Right From The Start!
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How To Quickly And Easily Create A Profitable Tutoring Business Plan
Monday, November 9th, 2009 at
9:55 pm
People are going to the doctor’s office more often–and for longer visits than nine years before. So, has care improved or do people just need more medical attention? It’s likely the latter, conclude the authors of a new paper in the Archives of Internal Medicine , published online Monday. [More]
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Are doctors getting slower or are patients getting sicker?
Monday, November 9th, 2009 at
1:00 pm
In 2004 a team of Australian and Indonesian scientists who had been excavating a cave called Liang Bua on the Indonesian island of Flores announced that they had unearthed something extraordinary: a partial skeleton of an adult human female who would have stood just over a meter tall and who had a brain a third as large as our own. The specimen, known to scientists as LB1, quickly received a fanciful nickname–the hobbit, after writer J.R.R. Tolkien’s fictional creatures. The team proposed that LB1 and the other fragmentary remains they recovered represent a previously unknown human species, Homo floresiensis . Their best guess was that H. floresiensis was a descendant of H. erectus –the first species known to have colonized outside of Africa. The creature evolved its small size, they surmised, as a response to the limited resources available on its island home–a phenomenon that had previously been documented in other mammals, but never humans. The finding jolted the paleoanthropological community. Not only was H. floresiensis being held up as the first example of a human following the so-called island rule, but it also seemed to reverse a trend toward ever larger brain size over the course of human evolution. Furthermore, the same deposits in which the small-bodied, small-brained individuals were found also yielded stone tools for hunting and butchering animals, as well as remainders of fires for cooking them–rather advanced behaviors for a creature with a brain the size of a chimpanzee’s. And astonishingly, LB1 lived just 18,000 years ago–thousands of years after our other late-surviving relatives, the Neandertals and H. erectus , disappeared [see “ The Littlest Human ,” by Kate Wong; Scientific American, February 2005]. [More]
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Rethinking "Hobbits": What They Mean for Human Evolution (preview)