www.Top100Science.com - TOP 100 SCIENCE SITES
TOP 100 SCIENCE SITES
 Main  |  Add a Site  |  FREE Content for Your Web-site  |  Bookmark this site  |  Webmaster 
Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
451.www.wodc.nl85200
452.www.cedex.es85000
453.www.wiso.uni-koeln.de84900
454.www.leica-geosystems.com84700
455.www.zeiss.de84300
456.spaceflight.nasa.gov84100
457.www.let.uu.nl84100
458.science.discovery.com83900
459.www.cos.com83900
460.www.biotoday.com83200
461.www.anl.gov83100
462.www.vialattea.net83100
463.www.standard.no82600
464.www.botanical-online.com81900
465.www.iac.es81600
466.www.afftis.or.jp81200
467.www.nao.ac.jp81100
468.www.iao.fraunhofer.de81100
469.www.nalusda.gov80900
470.www.solarviews.com80100
471.socionics.org79900
472.www.wolframscience.com79800
473.www.math.com79600
474.www.paleoportal.org79200
475.www.kemikalieberedskab.dk79100
476.www.nupi.no79000
477.www.hec.unil.ch78700
478.www.jpl.nasa.gov78600
479.www.matheplanet.com78400
480.www.archaeology.org78200
481.www.math.uni-augsburg.de78100
482.www.electronicafacil.net77500
483.www.wwf.org77200
484.www.luventicus.org77200
485.www.desy.de77100
486.www.cmap.polytechnique.fr76800
487.www.bosai.go.jp76800
488.www.whu.edu76700
489.www.zi.ku.dk76200
490.www.langenscheidt.de75900
491.www.ehess.fr75800
492.www.cfsan.fda.gov75600
493.www.wiwi.uni-augsburg.de75400
494.www.ul.com75300
495.www.riken.go.jp75300
496.www.tno.nl75300
497.similarminds.com74700
498.www-ai.cs.uni-dortmund.de74600
499.www.windows.ucar.edu74300
500.www.edscuola.it74100
Pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12 
 13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23 
 24  25  26  27 



Subscribe to RSS feed Subscribe to Feed Burner feed Add to Del.icio.us Add to Yahoo Add to Google Add to Reddit Add to Blink Add to Meneame Add to Fark Add to Newsvine

450. www.unister.de

Rating: 85200 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.unister.de' on the other websites

www.unister.de

Praktikum Bewerbung Karriere Wohnungsmarkt Bafg Hausarbeiten PraktikaStipendien

Description: Praktikum Bewerbung Karriere Wohnungsmarkt Bafg Hausarbeiten Diplomarbeiten und Praktikum (Praktika). Stipendien, Lexikon fr Medizin, BWL, Jura u. Maschinenbau.

Google

© 2005-2011 www.Top100Science.com
The Tale of Two Umudugudus
Access to improved water sources changes everything about life for subsistence farmers in Rwanda.
feeds.nytimes.com
Essex beaches closed after oil spill
People have been told to stay away from a beach in Essex where an oil slick has washed ashore, that is believed to have leaked from a boat in the Thames Estuary.
bbc.co.uk
House rules: the science of TV drama
House is the most watched drama on TV. Andrew Gumbel asks its creators whyIf Sherlock Holmes came back as a doctor, he might look like Dr Gregory House, the brilliant but flawed diagnostician in the medical drama, House. Pinpointing oddball conditions and rare afflictions with razor-sharp acuity after lesser doctors have tried and failed to come up with the right illness, House and his team have to cut through physiological red herrings and psychological obstruction to figure out what is ailing the hapless victim of the moment.It is this perfect blend of two of the modern world's most deep-seated fascinations the mystery story, and the gloriously varied dysfunctions of our own bodies that has made House the most watched show on TV. And it's obvious the writers and producers are having as much fun as the audience, as they unearth such obscurities as porphyria (which makes your urine turn purple), Wilson's disease (in which the body reacts badly to copper) or patent ductus arteriosus, which causes the patient's lungs to collapse under stress.Although the show is into its seventh series in the UK, it shows no sign of running out of material. Indeed, a lack of diseases to draw on has never been a problem according to the show's creator, David Shore. "There seem to be no limits to the ways the human body can break down." he says. Shore is a huge Holmes fan House and his most trusted sidekick Wilson are a self-conscious homage to Holmes and Watson. And, according to Dr Lisa Sanders of the Yale School of Medicine, the show's most influential medical adviser, doctors are the natural heirs of the Holmes tradition. "If you know Sherlock Holmes," says Sanders, "you know he would have been a doctor if he could have been. The problem was, in those days, there was no way to make a definitive diagnosis, and even if there were you couldn't do anything about it. So he couldn't be a doctor."Sanders has been fascinated for years by what she calls the "mystery story at the heart of the doctor-patient encounter" and writes an occasional column in the New York Times entitled Diagnosis, which mines much the same investigative territory as House, only without our hero's glaring character flaws and soap-opera relationships with his colleagues.The drama has no set rules. Sometimes the writers will craft a story around a disease; at other times they will craft the story and then go to the by now formidable team of medical experts for a suitable disease to fit around it, says Shore. It's a process that can lead to lengthy negotiations to keep the medicine real and the drama intact. For well-needed light relief, a handful of knockabout medical problems are worked into the scenes that depict House's clinic work. This scenes often draw on the real-life experiences of the production team a child who swallows a magnet (Shore's own nephew), for instance, and a boy who develops alarming red splotches on his body because he lies down naked on a bright red couch after taking a bath.Medical accuracy, however, is of paramount importance: House enjoys a vast worldwide audience, and nobody on the production team wants to risk viewers diagnosing themselves with ailments that don't exist, or dabbling in self-administered treatments inspired by the show that might cause them further damage.Every now and again, the diagnostic outcome is both delicious and surprising such as the time a CIA agent was convinced he was being poisoned, only to be told at the end he was chomping down too many Brazil nuts. Shore himself particularly enjoyed discovering that there was a kind of brain tumor that causes the patient to lie all the time. That syndrome tied beautifully into one of House's favourite sayings: "Everybody lies." And it also gets to the heart of what makes the show tick. "Really," says Shore, "it's about what the patient is hiding, what their secrets are, why they are lying."For Sanders, the show is a vindication of the notion that diagnosis itself is a process that exposes everyone's vulnerabilities, strengths and weaknesses not in all cases, certainly, but in the ones that are really interesting. "If you look at diagnosis before House," she says, "it's a one-liner: 'Sorry, you have leukaemia.' You saw Love Story. But to me that one-liner was just the tip of a fascinating iceberg."The show is very much in the classic tradition of mysteries, she says: "You have the clues, the red herrings, the incompetent boobs who get it wrong, and you have a doctor who is able to put it together exactly right." That explains why the show is much more than a dive into the more obscure pages of the medical encyclopedia. When Shore set up the show, he was insistent that the diseases be a vehicle for a broader drama full of psychological twists and ethical dilemmas. After all, as he puts it: "Germs don't have motives."House revels in cases of the unobvious, which also means exploding the myth of hospital consultants as all-knowing demigods of their own universe. "What House shows," Sanders says, "is that on the way to being right, we're often wrong. And that is something doctors have never been able to talk about." The point, though, is not to show up incompetence. "Incompetence isn't interesting. What's interesting is when really smart doctors get things wrong."House: season six is available now on Blu-ray and DVD. Season seven is now showing on Sky1 and season two on Channel Five.HouseHealth & wellbeingHugh LaurieMedical dramaAndrew Gumbelguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Budgie flutters hearts on frigate eats, tweets, then dies
Pet adrift off Devon coast finds sanctuary on navy ship, but gets burial at sea after suspected heart attack during alarm soundingThe last day in the life of Bostie the budgie was a helter-skelter ride. Things were looking grim when the bird, presumably an escaped pet, found himself flying too far from land off the Devon coast.Bostie had a stroke of luck when he found a perch on the Royal Navy frigate HMS Westminster and dined in style in an officer's cabin but then keeled over and died as an alarm sounded.The arrival of the yellow and green bird caused amusement on board the frigate as it took part in a training exercise off Plymouth. The animal landed on top of one of the sailors, was named Bostie after a type of cross-bred terrier and given a meal of bread, nuts and water.But when a routine alarm sounded the budgerigar appeared to suffer a heart attack. Attempts to revive him failed and the crew gave their feathered friend a burial at sea.A Royal Navy spokesman said: "The executive officer found the budgie on board and it kept the crew entertained for about two hours. It was very tame and we believe it may have been an escaped pet. Unfortunately, a general alarm sounded and it proved to be too much of a shock for the bird. We believe he suffered a heart attack. It was a sad moment for the crew and they decided to bury him at sea."Lieutenant Commander Nick Wood had spotted the tame budgie sitting on top of a communications box onboard. He said: "I'll miss Bostie. He was only in our lives for a brief time, but he made our day."AnimalsAnimal behaviourMilitaryguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Rare spider rediscovered in Fens
A rare spider, thought to be extinct in the UK, has been photographed for the first time in a new colony in the Fens.
bbc.co.uk