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Will the vAMP replace the CD?
While some people might argue that the CD has already been replaced by the MP3, music stores want to think otherwise. The digital device manufacturer MediaStreet has recently announced a product that it hopes will replace the CD and get music fans back in stores.
Israel gets local versions of eBay, PayPal
Israeli Internet portal Walla! unveiled on Wednesday two new services similar to eBay and PayPal: Walla!Buy and Walla!Pay.
Fujitsu Introduces Wireless Shopping Cart System
Consumers can say good-bye to long checkout lines and hello to the new face of retail customer service - the U-Scan Shopper.
Developed by Fujitsu Transaction Solutions Inc. in partnership with Klever Marketing, the Fujitsu U-Scan Shopper features a wireless, cart-mounted computer that empowers shoppers with store information and scan-as-you-shop convenience as they move through a store. The announcement was made at the Food Marketing Institute's (FMI) 2005 Marketechnics Show in Washington, D.C.
Counterintuitive physics may help everyone drive home quicker
If you're trying to drive to a destination as quickly as possible, you might think that knowing the traffic conditions would help you choose the quickest route for yourself. Traffic reports and new GPS technologies that provide traffic data are based on this assumption – but scientists have found that knowing this information may do more harm than good.
Use the Web to find the best bargains in shopping, shipping
ShopSmart, a Consumer Reports publication, has compiled a list of seven Web sites that will help you skip the Web surfing and get to the real deals quickly. Here are their picks, which will appear in the November issue.
Sequencing thousand and one genomes
(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in Tuebingen, Germany, reported the completion of the first genomes of wild strains of the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The entire genomes of two individuals of this species, one from Ireland, the other from Japan, have now been compared in great detail. They were found to be astonishingly different from each other, as Detlef Weigel and his colleagues write in
Genome Research.
New study offers solution to global fisheries collapse
A study published in the September 19 issue of
Science shows that an innovative yet contentious fisheries management strategy called "catch shares" can reverse fisheries collapse. Where traditional "open access" fisheries have converted to catch shares, both fishermen and the oceans have benefited.
New report finds food prices in Boston and Philadelphia 50 percent higher
Researchers from the Children's Sentinel Nutrition Assessment Program (C-SNAP) at Boston Medical Center and Drexel University School of Public Health, have reported that low-income families in Boston and Philadelphia using food stamp benefits do not have the financial resources to buy the Thrifty Food Plan, the standardized food plan used as the basis for calculating food stamp benefits by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Even families receiving the maximum food stamp benefit would have to spend an additional $2,250 in Boston and $3,165 in Philadelphia annually to purchase the Thrifty Food Plan.