[ad_1] Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is incrementally taken seriously by businesses of all sorts – and that includes freight forwarders. The European…
Emily Smith
- Lifestyle
Medical News Beluga whale with harness was trained by Russia, claim scientists
by Emily SmithLife 29 April 2019 The whale was wearing a harness with the words “Equipment of St Petersburg” printed on it.Jørgen Ree Wiig/Fiskeridirektoratet By Sam WongA beluga whale wearing a tight harness spotted by fishermen off the coast of Norway may have been trained by the Russian military, Norwegian scientists have claimed. The whale has been…
[ad_1] We all know what salesforce is and how it helps to build a company’s foundation stronger. This article would be perfect…
[ad_1] Augmented reality tools are widely divided into three main categories including AR 3D viewers where users place 3D models in the…
[ad_1] There are a variety of methods one can use to improve their English skills. Such methods can include learning from textbooks,…
[ad_1] DrJava is a simple and light IDE for Java development. It is a free, open source IDE primarily designed for students.…
[ad_1] No business exists and operates in a vacuum, but as a part and parcel of the environment in which it finds…
Technology 26 April 2019 There’s a sweet new method for studying chewingGetty By David AdamDon’t tell the dentist, but electrical engineers want to give sweets to children to check how children chew. A team has used Haribo gummy bears to build a cheap medical device to measure the pressure exerted by teeth and it could…
- Lifestyle
Medical News Cyclone Kenneth is one of the strongest storms to hit mainland Africa
by Emily SmithEnvironment 26 April 2019 Cyclone Kenneth has hit MozambiqueNASA By Michael Le PageMozambique has been hit by one of the strongest hurricanes to ever make landfall on mainland Africa. Storms in the region appear to be growing stronger as a result of climate change. So far only a few deaths as a result of the…
- Lifestyle
Medical News How did the ancient Egyptians catch and mummify millions of ibises?
by Emily SmithSally Wasef (nearest) inspects mummified remainsEmma Chapman By Chris BaraniukThey were mummified in their millions. Stacks and stacks of sacred ibises were interred roughly 2,500 years ago as prayer offerings. At one site alone there are 1.75 million ibis mummies – where did the Egyptians get all these birds? DNA locked inside some of the…