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Search Result for: stage Cool
I remember chemistry class as very boring and with all kinds of formulas that made me fall asleep. Well...at the Ontario Science Center, kids can take passion in chemistry by watching a cool show. Here it is on video, one part of that show!
Funny
In a weird, allegedly not staged, dance fight, a man gets his a$$ kicked by some guy in a dog costume. Props to the dog and his mad dancing skills. Enjoy!
It was probably staged, or the guys filming had something to do with it...either way it's an oportunity to see a pick-up truck take a dive off a ferry
...and that's not all. Guy coming to her rescue follows her in =)
A really funny stand-up comedy video featuring Demetri Martin. It's 10 minutes long, but you should really watch it if you got the time, and you're on you're launch break! Enjoy!
A funny compilation of modeling clips gone hilarious on stage. Enjoy
Big in Japan
Here's a cool Japanese show, with some guys on the stage playing soccer, Matrix style! It looks kinda fun
Gaming Videos
The Starcraft 2 demo was presented at WWI 2007 event in South Korea. This live stage demo of the long awaited game didn't disappoint, and it seems after watching this demo, that Starcraft 2 will be another hit signed by Blizzard. I can't wait for the game to come out, but until then, let's watch this amazing Starcraft 2 Demo trailer!
Starcraft 2 demo trailer part 1
Starcraft 2 demo trailer part 2
Starcraft 2 demo trailer part 3
Amazing
Here's an amazing Russian street performer who looks like he belongs rather on the stage than on the street. Watch, listen and enjoy this amazing street performance!
Sexy
A very sexy video photo shoot done by the supermodel Gisele Bundchen for the cover of Harpers's Bazaar. Enjoy her beautiful shapes and the backstage interview!
A very sexy model and actress, Elsa Petaky, recently did a photoshoot for Maxim magazine. Here is a short (1 minute) video, providing some hot scenes from that photosoot. And what better way to accessorize but with a live python. Now that's hot! Enjoy this sexy Elsa Petaky Maxim backstage photoshoot video!
A hot Italian girl in a sexy video that you don't want to miss. Gentleman's Quarterly magazine featured Manuela Arcuri and you can't go wrong with her. A very hot video and a backstage pass. Enjoy this Manuela Arcuri sexy video!
A very sexy Meilta Toniolo backstage video. She says that in Sicily, women are more dangerous than shotguns. Considering her beauty and the fact that she is Miss Maxim Italia, I am not bewildered by this! Enjoy this sexy bikini Melita Toniolo backstage video!
A sexy Karina Jelinek video of what looks like a beauty contest. She is dressed in a swimsuit or bikini, and she looks stunning in them. You've got to love the way she walks on stage! Enjoy this sexy Karina Jelinek video!
This sexy video of Manuela Arcuri was made at her photoshoot for Gentlemen's Quarterly magazine. The sexy Italian model knows what she's doing, and it shows that she's got talent. If you're one of her fans, than most definitely you'll enjoy this sexy video of Manuela Arcuri!
Here's a backstage Flavia Oliveira video, including one of her photo shoots. Flavia Oliveira is a Brazilian model who got her fame by participating in the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in 2006. Enjoy this hot Flavia Oliveira video!
Technology and Health News
Italian researcher Alessandra Luchini wins the first edition of "The Prize Award” with a paper of a system to identify those molecules that signal the presence of a tumor (tumor markers) that are beyond the traditional methods of investigation.
To do this requires making a hydrogel containing certain microscopic nano-spheres that once inserted in the samples of blood taken for analysis diagnostic trap some markers and protect them from deterioration.
"These nano-spheres, made of the same plastic as hydrated soft contact lenses are equipped with special molecules that, once in the blood, snap-specific tumor markers and incorporate them. In this way, they protect them from enzymes that would otherwise deteriorate them. Usually blood tests fail to identify precisely because these markers are destroyed prematurely, " says researcher Alessandra Luchini.
"The beauty of this system," says the researcher, "is that it does not need very sophisticated tools, which is simple and economical: with one hundred U.S. dollars we can make nano-spheres for more than two hundred patients." The new method is not going to replace the standard, but acts at a stage prior to analysis by providing a better quality.
A new technique, developed in the laboratories of the Foundation San Raffaele Biomedical Park, facilitates the process of regeneration of muscle tissue.
Stem cells, modified at the level of genes, could permit the recovery of tissue degenerated from Duchenne muscular dystrophy (Dmd), even when the disease is in an advanced stage. This is a further step towards developing a therapy, which is being developed for some years by researchers of the Foundation San Raffaele Biomedical Park of Castel Romano, coordinated by Giulio Cossu, University of Milan. The research, published in Nature Medicine, was conducted by Cesare Gargioli and Marcello Coletta, along with Fabrizio de Grandis and Stefano Cannata at the Roman Tor Vergata.
From previous studies and experiments on animal models it is known that mesangioblasti, stem cells normally associated with blood vessels, are able to spread easily and merge with and into the muscle tissue regenerating it (cell therapy). In advanced stages, however, this treatment had so far proven ineffective because of difficulties to penetrate between the muscle fibers. The degeneration, in fact, is accompanied by a process of inflammation followed by scarring tissue that impedes the provision of blood (and thus oxygen) to the muscles. Therefore, the muscle fibers are replaced with fatty tissue.
To overcome the obstacle, the researchers genetically modified cells derived from the tendons (fibroblasts) so as to make them express the protein metalloproteasi 9 (Mmp9), a molecule that can degrade collagen that accumulates between fibres degeneration.
The asymmetry of the skull of flatfish is the result of a progressive adaptation of the species. A study in Nature
The bizarre anatomy of flatfish had surprised even Charles Darwin, which had not managed to find an explanation for the asymmetry of their skull. All adult in this family - including the sole, turbot, halibut - in fact, have both eyes on the top of the head. But in fossils of fish of their progenitors, this feature was absent. The mystery of the asimmetric skull is now being revealed by a study carried out by Matt Friedman, a researcher at the Committee on Evolutionary Biology and the University of Chicago and State Department of Geology at the Field Museum and published in Nature: in the Eocene era, about 50 million years ago, there were fish with intermediate characteristics.
The U.S. researcher says it is enough to review the collections of fossils preserved in museums in some European countries (Italy, France, Austria, United Kingdom) to be able to find two kinds primitive - Amphistium, described for the first time more than 200 years ago, and the Heteronectes, unknown until now - in which the eye migration is partial. "We discovered thus an intermediate stage of development of these species," said Friedman, "showing that the asymmetry of the head of the fish we know today is the result of a gradual natural evolution."
The rodents, as primates, are able to learn simple abstract principles for later use in different situations...
A long considered exclusive to primates appears in reality shared by other species. Having already been demonstrated in some birds in fact, the ability to apply abstract rules just learned, and to to adapt to new situations was also observed in mice. The study, published in a number of Science, was conducted by Robin Murphy of University College London.
The experiments were carried out by subjecting the animals to visual and acoustic stimuli. In the first phase mice, divided into three groups, have responded to three different sequences of visual stimuli, consisting of the sequence of light and dark. For each group only a sequence was associated with the food. After an initial period of "training", the mice were able to distinguish between those identifying sequences associated with reward.
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