缅北强奸

By Katherine Gombay
Some potentially good news for aging Baby Boomers: researchers believe that they have developed a hip replacement that will last longer and create fewer problems for the people who receive them than those currently in use. The secret? An implant that 鈥渢ricks鈥 the host bone into remaining alive by mimicking the varying porosity of real bones.

Interestingly, the key factor that distinguishes the new implant is that is LESS rather than more solid than those in current use, while still being just as strong.

Classified as: engineering, technology, Faculty of Engineering, science and technology, Hip replacement
Category:
Published on: 2 Nov 2016

As governments struggle to keep pace with rapid advancements in science and technology, a new report by the Institute for Research on Public Policy () and the Canadian Academy of Engineering () outlines how governments can better incorporate that knowledge in policy-making processes and improve the quality of government decisions.

Classified as: Research, Sustainability, science, report, technology, policy, government, Public, private
Published on: 23 Mar 2016

By Katherine Gombay, 缅北强奸 Newsroom

The substance that provides energy to all the cells in our bodies, Adenosine triphosphate (ATP), may also be able to power the next generation of supercomputers.

Classified as: science, technology, Supercomputers, Dan Nicolau, PNAS, Nanoengineering, Department of Bioengineering
Published on: 26 Feb 2016
Classified as: technology, Jui Ramaprasad, Love, Online Dating, Valentine's Day
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Published on: 12 Feb 2015

The Chapters bookstore at Stanley and Ste. Catherine will be closed and transformed into a Victoria鈥檚 Secret lingerie store.

...聽Despite the upgrades, bookstores are on their way out, said 缅北强奸 business and technology professor聽Jui Ramaprasad.

Read full article:聽

Classified as: Business, technology, Jui Ramaprasad, Professor, chapters, victoria's secret
Published on: 31 Jul 2014

January 28, 2013 - A revolutionary technology has the ability to detect and diagnose Alzheimer鈥檚 disease with unprecedented accuracy. The computerized technique known as SNIPE analyzes magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans to capture patterns of atrophy specific to the disease in brain structures, specifically the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex. Diagnosing Alzheimer鈥檚 disease (AD) is still an inexact science, relying mainly on the patient's symptoms and performance on memory tests. Detecting pre-clinical AD, before symptoms appear, is extremely difficult.

Classified as: neuroscience, Alzheimer's, neurological disease, technology, Neuro, detect, diagnosis, Louis Collins
Category:
Published on: 5 Feb 2013

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