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Medicine

What's Causing the Rise In Obesity? Everything. 926

Mr_Blank writes "We all know — because we are being constantly reminded — that we are getting fat. Americans are at the forefront of the trend, but it is a transnational one. Apparently, it is also trans-species: Over the past 20 years, as the American people were getting fatter, so were America's laboratory macaques, chimpanzees, vervet monkeys and mice, as well as domestic dogs, domestic cats, and domestic and feral rats from both rural and urban areas. Researchers examined records on those eight species and found that average weight for every one had increased. The marmosets gained an average of 9% per decade. Lab mice gained about 11% per decade. Chimps are doing especially badly: their average body weight had risen 35% per decade. What is causing the obesity era? Everything."

Comment Re:prove it (Score 1) 29

Not sure that's the same thing. I've known of tools to recode alarm fobs to a car for VW for years (and have used them when I've broken a transponder and didn't want to pay £200 for a replacement from the dealer) but they all require access to the car - e.g. either ODBII interface that's usually under the steering wheel on the underside of the dash (and which needs the key present to power up), or need the old physical key to be inserted and flicked on / off in the ignition. Both options need the car to be unlocked and a key of some sort present. This isn't the same as a drive-by tool that automagically unlocks cars on the street, unless I'm missing something?

Comment Re:Why not block by IMEI -what the rest of world d (Score 1) 282

Europe blocks the IMEI number of the phone. Granted, on some phones it is possible to change IMEI, but it is neither simple nor easy. It also carries a significant prison sentence in the UK. Once IMEI is blocked, provided the phone providers respect the shared blacklist (which virtually all do) then that phone is not going to connect to a network, regardless of what SIM you have in it. Thus it becomes worthless. Seems pretty simple, TBH.

Comment Re:I'm quite enjoying my Archos G9 (Score 1) 278

My dad just surprised my by dropping by yesterday and saying he'd just ordered one of these. My immediate reaction was "ah, no, what pile of inventory-to-clear has he picked up?" but the specs actually look pretty decent. I guess this is the point where we have functional tablets at a significantly cheaper price.

Comment Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution (Score 1) 478

interesting app. I'm presuming that it doesn't integrate to the People hub? Or the dialler? That would put a bit of a crimp in it, the People hub is really good, particularly if you use social media (although possibly you wouldn't if you had privacy concerns with your contacts I guess...)
I suspect the use case of local only contacts storage wasn't on the radar for WP7 dev team. Not sure how the phone responds if you have old-school SIM contacts either. There is an obvious interest in getting users into the Live ecosystem from MS's point of view, along with the safety of your contacts being backed up in the cloud. I think the average user is quite happy to either bring their existing Gmail or Outlook cloud contacts, or have them hosted in Live to be honest - I can see your reason why this isn't acceptable, but do bear in mind this is not an issue for the majority of people.

Comment Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution (Score 1) 478

You're right, IMAP/POP no good for contacts (I think GMail's implementation is actually licenced EAS). You could look at Zarafa or similar open source MS Exchange Server compatible mail servers, think it does EAS as well...this would be really nice as you'd have the ability to use any consumer device that supports EAS, you'd get webmail and it would all be stored on premise. Also may be possible to implement EAS remote-wipe - you can certainly do this with Exchange server...

Comment Re:Why not wipe it? (Score 1) 209

Obvious response: massive overhead in time taken to wipe individual drives. It's very, very, very slow. If it takes 4 hours a drive and you have a couple of hundred, this is a problem. This is why the correct answer is "buy cheap storage, invest in a pillar drill, destroy old drive with drillbit thru platters plus associated paperwork"

Comment Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution (Score 1) 478

When I log into Live Contacts, I see my Facebook and Twitter contacts. I'm not sure if this is because I authorised FB and Twitter via Live, or whether it's because I'm signed into FB and Twitter as accounts on my phone. I do not see my Exchange or Google contacts in there. I don't think the phone has a concept of local contacts, to be honest, I think they have to be a mirror of a remote service: be it Live, or Exchange, or Gmail etc...

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