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Vanderbilt university, nashville, tennessee

Official site for this private university located in Nashville. News, information, and links about academic programs, athletics, admissions, campus resources and activities, and ...


Vanderbilt university, nashville, tennessee Fri, 22 Aug 2008 23:30:00 GMT,
Vanderbilt university - department of sociology

Daniel B. Cornfield received the 2008 Harvie Branscomb Distinguished Professor Award for distinguished accomplishments at furthering the aims of Vanderbilt University.


Vanderbilt university - department of sociology Thu, 28 Aug 2008 19:48:00 GMT,
Exploration, vanderbilt's online research magazine

Multimedia, science and research news and features stories about scientific, engineering and medical exploration-and the people who are doing it-from Vanderbilt University


Exploration, vanderbilt's online research magazine Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:33:00 GMT,
Vanderbilt university law school :: home

Among the nation's leading law schools, Vanderbilt stands out for its path-breaking approaches to preparing lawyers for the 21st century. Offers JD, LLM, and PhD degrees. ... Brain ...


Vanderbilt university law school :: home Fri, 29 Aug 2008 12:51:00 GMT,
Vanderbilt university human resources

Our Mission . To be a truly preferred place to work nationally, being THE model of excellence in customer service, response time, accuracy of information and pride of affiliation ...


Vanderbilt university human resources Sat, 30 Aug 2008 04:15:00 GMT,
Vanderbilt mathematics

Busy Conference Schedule Wraps Up Academic Year The Department of Mathematics wrapped up the 07/08 academic year with a particularly active conference season, hosting a number of ...


Vanderbilt mathematics Sat, 30 Aug 2008 22:37:00 GMT,
School of engineering at vanderbilt university

VUSE rises in U.S. News & World Report ’s 2009 rankings: Vanderbilt’s School of Engineering undergraduate program improved five positions to No. 38 in annual rankings by ...


School of engineering at vanderbilt university Fri, 29 Aug 2008 21:27:00 GMT,
Vanderbilt university programs for talented youth

VSA Vanderbilt Summer Academy (Rising 8th-12th Graders) WAVU Weekend Academy at Vanderbilt University (Current 7th-10th Graders) SAVY Saturday Academy at


Vanderbilt university programs for talented youth Tue, 15 Jul 2008 14:06:00 GMT,
Vanderbilt university medical center

The Vanderbilt medical complex in Nashville, Tennessee, is a leader in patient care, medical education, and nursing education.


Vanderbilt university medical center Mon, 04 Aug 2008 12:59:00 GMT,
Vucast: vanderbilt university's news network

Charlie Cook, publisher of The Cook Political Report and a highly respected expert on national politics, will lecture at Vanderbilt University at 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 10.


Vucast: vanderbilt university's news network Sat, 30 Aug 2008 14:30:00 GMT,
$208 million petascale computer gets green light

coondoggie writes "The 200,000 processor core system known as Blue Waters got the green light recently as the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and its National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) said it has finalized the contract with IBM to build the world's first sustained petascale computational system. Blue Waters is expected to deliver sustained performance of more than one petaflop on many real-world scientific and engineering applications. A petaflop equals about 1 quadrillion calculations per second. They will be coupled to more than a petabyte of memory and more than 10 petabytes of disk storage. All of that memory and storage will be globally addressable, meaning that processors will be able to share data from a single pool exceptionally quickly, researchers said. Blue Waters, is supported by a $208 million grant from the National Science Foundation and will come online in 2011."


$208 million petascale computer gets green light ,
"perfect" mirrors cast for lsst

eldavojohn writes "The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (which was partially funded by Gates & Co.) announced a world record casting for its single-piece primary and tertiary mirror blanks, cast at the University of Arizona. From the announcement: 'The Mirror Lab team opened the furnace for a close-up look at the cooled 51,900-pound mirror blank, which consists of an outer 27.5-foot diameter (8.4-meter) primary mirror and an inner 16.5-foot (5-meter) third mirror cast in one mold. It is the first time a combined primary and tertiary mirror has been produced on such a large scale.'"


"perfect" mirrors cast for lsst ,
Zebras get less spam than aardvarks

MojoKid writes "A recent study (PDF) by Richard Clayton at Cambridge University determined that the first letter of a someone's email address directly affects how much spam they receive. As shown in the graph at either link above, email addresses with numbers as their first characters receive even fewer spam emails. The corpus used in the study was 8 weeks' worth of email from the UK ISP Demon Internet, just over half a billion messages, of which 56% was deemed to be spam."


Zebras get less spam than aardvarks ,
Scientists use virus to reprogram adult cells in mice

n2hightech writes "Harvard University scientists figured out how to activate a trio of dormant genes that commanded non-insulin producing pancreas cells to switch to the Beta type insulin producing cells. The method uses an engineered virus to infect the cells and deliver special proteins that activate the dormant genes. This technology has the potential to make all stem cell based methods obsolete because it does not pose the risk of rejection and cancer associated with stem cells. A simple injection into the area where cells need to be reprogrammed is all that is required." Gospodin adds a link to coverage at the Washington Post.


Scientists use virus to reprogram adult cells in mice ,
New algorithm boosts network efficiency

palegray.net writes "Researchers at the University of California have developed a new network routing algorithm that has the potential to significantly boost Internet traffic routing efficiency. This new approach focuses on the needs of dynamic networks, where connections are frequently transient. From the article: 'What the team did with their new routing algorithm, according to Savage's student Kirill Levchenko, was to reduce the "communication overhead" of route computation — by an order of magnitude.' For the technically inclined, the full research publication (PDF) is available."


New algorithm boosts network efficiency ,
Capturing 3d surfaces simply with a flash camera

MojoKid writes with this excerpt from Hot Hardware (linking to a video demonstration): "Creating 3D maps and worlds can be extremely labor intensive and time consuming. Also, the final result might not be all that accurate or realistic. A new technique developed by scientists at The University of Manchester's School of Computer Science and Dolby Canada, however, might make capturing depth and textures for 3D surfaces as simple as shooting two pictures with a digital camera — one with flash and one without. First an image of a surface is captured without flash. The problem is that the different colors of a surface also reflect light differently, making it difficult to determine if the brightness difference is a function of depth or color. By taking a second photo with flash, however, the accurate colors of all visible portions of the surface can be captured. The two captured images essentially become a reflectance map (albedo) and a depth map (height field)."


Capturing 3d surfaces simply with a flash camera ,
Scientists discover cows point north

Dr Sabine Begall and colleagues from the University of Duisburg-Essen have discovered that cows tend to point north. The researchers studied deer in the Czech Republic and looked at thousands of images of cattle on Google Earth. The animals tended to face north when eating or resting. "We conclude that the magnetic field is the only common and most likely factor responsible for the observed alignment," the scientists wrote in an article. I guess cows will become the must-have item for long-distance hikers now. Having an edible compass would come in handy if you get lost.


Scientists discover cows point north ,
Browser extension defeats internet eavesdropping

Pickens writes to tell us that researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have created a simple system to help prevent man-in-the-middle attacks. Using a preset list of friendly sites called 'notaries,' the new 'Perspectives' system helps users to authenticate sites that require secure communications. Additionally this should help with the recently debated solution implemented by Firefox that has so many users frustrated and confused. "By independently querying the desired target site, the notaries can check whether each is receiving the same authentication information (a digital certificate), in response. If one or more notaries report authentication information that is different than that received by the browser or other notaries, a computer user would have reason to suspect that an attacker has compromised the connection."


Browser extension defeats internet eavesdropping ,
Newstrust founder fabrice florin answers your questions

On August 18 and 19, you submitted questions for NewsTrust founder Fabrice Florin about his (non-profit) site's ability to live up to its claim, "Your guide to good journalism." We sent selected questions to Fabrice on August 19. Here are his answers.


Newstrust founder fabrice florin answers your questions ,
Full facial transplant is one step closer

Hugh Pickens writes "A Chinese medical team led by Shuzhong Guo of the Fourth Military Medical University in Xi'an has successfully completed the first transplant to include facial bone in a transplant on a man whose face was slashed by a bear. The Chinese graft included muscles, nerves, blood vessels, cartilage and skin and included an intact salivary gland, another first. Two years after the procedure, the man can eat, drink and speak, thanks to the gradual fusing of transplanted nerves and muscles with what remained of the patient's own. This transplant together with the another ground breaking transplant last year by French doctors that removed a huge tumor that had completely infiltrated and disfigured their patient's face, now sets the stage for a full facial transplant."


Full facial transplant is one step closer ,

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