Crushing milk at high pressures could help it last for seven weeks in the refrigerator without the unfavorable flavors associated with other long-lasting milks, researchers now report.
CHICAGO -- When you're marveling at what your cell phone can do -- play videos and music, surf the Web -- but can't figure out why its confounded battery drains so quickly, consider this classic scene from the original "Star Trek."
The late 1990s were a giddy time for biotechnology and high tech. Investors, flush with cash from a booming economy, leapt to fund budding start-up companies. Cities, excited by the prospect of high-paying jobs and environmentally friendly industry, raced to attract them.
JEDDAH, 12 November 2006 — As an advertisement of excellence and quality, restaurants in France with absolute confidence in their own cooking display a small sign: “Le patron mange ici.” (The owner eats here.)
Roger Reisert doesn't look or sound like an environmentalist — but look again. A mechanical engineer who spent most of his career in the petroleum industry, Reisert has run petrochemical processing plants and designed products to speed oil through Alaskan pipelines. Dressed in a tightly knotted tie, pressed shirt and conservative blue blazer, Reisert, 54, president of C2Biofuels, looks and sounds
I like to invite you and your company personnel to join me for the annual current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) training sessions in Dhaka, Bangladesh. This is the first of its kind training session in Bangladesh.
With the help of tiny, transparent zebrafish embryos, researchers are hoping to prove that a microscopic nanoparticle can be part of a "new class of radioprotective agents" that help protect normal tissue from radiation damage just as well as standard drugs. They've shown that the nanoparticle, DF-1 -- a soccer ball-shaped, hollow, carbon-based structure known as a fullerene -- is as good as two