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Rocket Science

 
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Review: Rocket Science - Different Like You
24 days ago
Disease-ravaged devils have started living fast and dying young [Not Exactly Rocket Science]
37 days ago
Rocket science : 50 flying, floating, flipping, spinning gadgets kids create themselves / Jim Wiese. Due: Jul 12
42 days ago
News: Rocket Science Launch New LP
57 days ago
It's Not Rocket Science, But It's Our Work
75 days ago

Source: au.rd.yahoo.com --- 15 days ago
The Economic Development Department wants more Tasmanians employed and is teaching business owners how to attract and retain their workforce. ...
Source: www.marketwatch.com --- 5 days ago
With gas prices soaring into the stratosphere, drivers are working harder than ever to eke out the best mileage from a tank of gas. And while saving at the pump isn’t Rocket Science, it doesn’t hurt to know some if you want to sort out the good tips from the duds. ...
Source: www.theinquirer.net --- 47 days ago
Fernando Cassia , Friday 4 July 2008. 10:54:00 Hands On Kiss the WinXP Language Bar goodbye YOU DON'T have to struggle with the default key maps provided with Windows. Yet few people venture to redesign their own keyboard map with Microsoft's freeware utility. We prove here you have nothing to fear.... ...
Source: icwales.icnetwork.co.uk --- 21 hours ago
IT RUNS on space shuttle fuel, and will reach nearly twice the speed of sound on its journey to an altitude of around two miles. ...
Source: www.sciam.com --- 16 days ago
More bad news for Elon Musk, the billionaire PayPal founder who wants to sell low-cost space delivery to NASA and whoever else is buying. [More] ...
Source: upcoming.yahoo.com --- 6 days ago
'Secret of the Cardboard Rocket' gives an introduction to the solar system with the aid of a talking astronomy book. It is about two children who build a Rocket out cardboard and wonder off into the universe in their imaginations. ...
Source: upcoming.yahoo.com --- 34 days ago
Climb aboard a magical cardboard Rocket with two young adventurers, Marcus and Bonnie and experience a breathtaking, up-close look at the solar system's planets with guidance from astronomy book. ...
Source: www.wsutoday.wsu.edu --- 49 days ago
RICHLAND - Sixty rockets will reach for the sky starting at 9 a.m. Thursday, July 3, during the "Space and Rocketry" summer Science camp at WSU Tri-Cities. The Rocket launch will be on the Hanford High School sports field. It will take about 45 minutes to launch all the rockets. The Comet ... ...
Source: domino.lancs.ac.uk --- 46 days ago
Lucy Rogers If you have satellite TV or a satnav in your car, you are benefiting from the hundreds of satellites orbiting the Earth which provide us with information about everything from... ...
Source: camden.yourguide.com.au --- 8 days ago
NEARLY 350 kilometres above Earth, seeds from Mount Annan Botanic Garden are visiting space. ...
Source: www.scienceblogs.com --- 17 days ago
Bad news from the worthwhile sections of this morning's New York Times : another SpaceX Rocket blew up . A privately funded Rocket was lost on its way to space Saturday night, bringing a third failure in a row to an Internet multimillionaire's effort to create a market for low-cost space-delivery. The accident occurred a little more than two minutes after launch, and the two-stage Falcon 1 Rocket appeared to be oscillating before the live signal from an on-board video camera went dead. On the one hand, I hate to see these things blow up. I'm no free-market zealot, but I'm all for cheap space travel, and I'd love to see more launch vehicles available. Particularly given the gross mismanagement of a lot of NASA programs from the executive level. At the same time, I have to admit to a little schadenfreude here, not for the SpaceX folks, but for the hordes of annoying private space flight evangelists on the Internet and at SF cons. While I agree that there are lots of things NASA does badly, a lot of the expense and risk of launching stuff into space comes from the fact that launching stuff into space is fundamentally a Hard Problem. It's not just government incompetence that can be fixed through the magic of entrepreneurial vigor or whatever. I hate to see them lose rockets, but I hope that some good comes from it, not only in refining the launch vehicles themselves, but also in forcing some of the more outlandish claims of the privat ...
Source: www.scienceblogs.com --- 4 days ago
Imagine reading the paper to find that a new wonder drug has been created that could save your life, if only you could afford it. Alternatively, put yourself in the shoes of the authorities that must decide not to offer powerful new drugs on the NHS because they simply aren't cost-effective enough. These situations are all too common-place and are often due to the extremely high costs of drug development. But a couple of years ago, scientists at Icon Genetics and Bayer Bioscience made an exciting step toward lowering these costs for some of the most promising new treatments. The treatments in question are called 'monoclonal antibodies' or 'MAbs', synthetic versions of the natural antibodies that our immune systems use to identify and neutralise infectious agents. MAbs are specially shaped to act like molecular gloves, sticking onto a target of choice and inactivating it by blocking interactions with other molecules. The most famous member of this group, the breast cancer drug Herceptin , is one of a handful of currently available MAbs. But they are about to be joined by many more - over 150 MAbs are in development and the market for them is likely to exceed £10 billion. But no matter how good these new biotechnological wunderkinds are, they will be worthless unless they reach the patients they are designed to benefit. And with the cost of treatment courses exceeding tens of thousands of pounds, that is looking unlikely. Every stag ...
Source: www.designnews.com --- 10 days ago
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Source: www.scienceblogs.com --- 1 day ago
When you look at someone's face, what part do you concentrate on? Common wisdom has it that the eyes are the focal point of the face and they are the features that draw attention first. But according to a new study, that may not be universally true - while Western cultures do fixate on the eyes, East Asians tend to focus on the nose. We owe a lot of our knowledge about the way we look at images to a Russian psychologist Alfred Yarbus. He was the first scientist to carefully record the subtle eye movements that people make when they take in a view. Yarbus's experiments showed that our gaze rapidly flicks back and forth across an image so that our centre of vision focused on the most important parts. For example, while surfing websites, our eyes tend to focus on headings, words at the top of the page and words on the left. The same thing happens when we look at faces. Previous studies have found that viewers tend to flick their gaze between the eyes and the mouth - an inverted triangle of important features. Some psychologists have taken this to mean that humans have a single, universal and innate strategy for processing faces. But this conclusion has a big snag - it's only really based on experiments done with Western populations. To get a more cross-cultural perspective, Caroline Blais and colleagues at the University of Glasgow tracked the eye movements of fourteen white Western students and fourteen East Asians, eight of whom w ...
Source: www.boxxet.com --- 5 days ago
The beauties and geeks plot to de-throne the "King Geek," while the house romance takes a steamy turn that threatens to destroy one of the teams. As voted on by viewers, this week the teams compete in one of America's all-time favorite challenges that finds the geeks giving a sensual massag... Original story at The CW Episode Guide . View our complete collection of news and blogs, plus related videos, photos and more at Boxxet: Beauty and the Geek . ...
Source: www.muskogeephoenix.com --- 37 days ago
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Source: www.sunstar.com.ph --- 25 days ago
YOU got it. More of these overused expressions. ...
Source: www.barterbee.com --- 20 days ago
"Rocket Science" by John Boy & Billy listed for 7 points on 2008-07-30 at 11:47 ...
Source: www.woodburybulletin.com --- 35 days ago
A group of 12 young scientists took part in District 833's summer community education program recently. Advertisement: DIRTYBLINDS.COM 10% off any blind service Print coupon below to receive this deal! -Woodbury Bulletin- ...
Source: desicritics.org --- 39 days ago
Every now and then one hears the catchphrases “It doesn’t require a degree in Rocket Science to figure out that….” Or “I may not be a Rocket scientist but I know that…” Rocket Science on Wikipedia leads us to a tiny article, 80% of which is: Due to the complexity and depth of this area of engineering (requiring mastery in subjects including mechanics (fluid mechanics, structural mechanics, orbital mechanics, flight dynamics), mathematics, control engineering, materials Science, aeroelasticity, avionics, reliability engineering, noise control and flight test), it is also informally used as a term to describe an endeavor requiring great intelligence or technical ability. More often, the term is used to describe an endeavor that is simple and straightforward by stating that the aforementioned endeavor "is not Rocket Science". This is amusing. I think that as such the courses one does in aerospace engineering (aka Rocket Science for the layman) do require a high amount of intellect, but then so does training at Langley or John Hopkins . I think it’s the whole feel of having thousands of buttons around you and being responsible for manning something which is so colossal and worth so many billions of dollars (with minimum scope for error) that enables Rocket Science to be revered as the final frontier in terms of intellect. As specialization increases, we perceive the task to become monumental because we start to dissociate from the fi ...

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