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Alibris (Feb 28 2007 08:59 GMT) - Price: $33.85; Rating: 3 |
Audiobook
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The Godfather Returns (Unabridged) (Feb 28 2007 08:54 GMT) - The Godfather Returns (Unabridged)You are using you mp3-player or ipod only for music? Audiobooks are the next step... you can walk or drive to work, school or college and meanwhile get entertained with up2date news or books like The Godfather... |
Business of Life
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Patient Advocates - Your Attorneys in the Court of Medicine (Feb 28 2007 08:52 GMT) - Instead, they aim to provide comfort and compassion while helping fragile and elderly patients navigate the increasingly complex medical system by accompanying them to the doctor's office, the hospital, and the nursing home.... -- Fine, 75, of Cambridge, envisions a cadre of retired doctors, nurses, physician's assistants, and trained lay people who would provide one-on-one support to thousands of patients, seeking to humanize healthcare while reducing medical errors, complications, and hospitalizations. |
TechIMO Forums
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Un install Norton Anti Virus (Feb 28 2007 08:51 GMT) - Hi, I have a Dell Latitude D520 laptop that has arrived in our office with a new employee from another part of the parent company. It is fitted with the dreaded Norton Antivirus which has expired from updates in March 2005. I would like to uninstall it and install something more user and... |
Engadget
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Energy-efficient Deepglider scours the ocean for scientific data (Feb 28 2007 08:48 GMT) - Filed under: Misc. Gadgets The University of Washington's Deepglider won't go down as the first manmade projectile to scour the ocean for random (albeit useful) tidbits of information, but it does sport an ultra-modern frame and energy source that certainly sets it apart. Similar to the nuke detector, Edinburgh Duck, and the bevy of other submarines used for the benefit of mankind, this concoction is used to capture underwater data to aid researchers in discovering more about global warming and seafloor conditions, but its autonomous nature and carbon fiber enclosure gives it the ability to remain underwater "for up to a year" and sink to depths of nearly 9,000 feet. The 71-inch long, 138-pound device carries sensors to measure "oceanic conditions including salinity and temperature," and when not patrolling the seas based on satellite-driven controls, it can transmit the data remotely using the same signal path in reverse. |
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