What’s the one App Store app you couldn’t do without?

Is there an App Store app you can’t imagine doing without? Each and every single day there is hundreds of apps submitted to Apple for inclusion in the App Store. Some of them are great and some of them, not so much. The App Store is often times hard to navigate and finding great apps can be related to finding a needle in a haystack. But every now and then you find exactly what you’re looking for and that app, whatever it may be, never leaves your device. It’s an app you use every single day, love to use and can’t imagine not having it available or how you ever managed to get on without it before. Do you have an app like that?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/Gv_kkxND5OA/story01.htm
Tags: eminem   Lacey Holsworth   John Ridley   Mikaela Shiffrin   Bode Miller Wife  

Amazon Prime Pantry: 45 Pounds of Groceries Delivered for $6

Amazon Prime Pantry: 45 Pounds of Groceries Delivered for $6

Jeff Bezos wants to feed you. No, really: Amazon’s latest venture is Prime Pantry, a service that allows you to have 45 pounds’ worth of household essentials, in everyday sizes, shipped to your door for $6.

Read more…



Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/9FpfSetOk_I/amazon-prime-pantry-45-pounds-of-groceries-delivered-f-1566971944
Related Topics: Grumpy Cat   iOS 7.1   De La Soul   Tina Maze   atlanta weather  

Facebook wants you to know when your friends are nearby, if they’re cool with that

Facebook has announced an interesting new feature called Nearby Friends which does pretty much exactly what you think it does. User can optionally turn on broad proximity notifications, so you and your friends can get a notice when your friends are nearby. You can set specific friends and friends lists to get these notifications, and it only works if both parties have it enabled. The new system also allows you to share specific GPS coordinates for a limited amount of time with selected contacts.



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Tags: Halston Sage   masters   Kent State   Quicken Loans Bracket Challenge   Darren Sharper  

Running the Heartbleed Code to See Exactly How It Works

By now, you’ve read all about Heartbleed —but what, exactly, does it look like in action? Thankfully some nerdy brave computer scientists have run it, so you don’t have to.

Read more…



Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/qztd58r2yOk/running-the-heartbleed-code-to-see-exactly-how-it-works-1564602213
Category: Justin Moore   linda perry   april fools day   JoJo Nicolas   john wall  

MIT designs a floating, tsunami-proof nuclear plant

What’s the safest place to put a nuclear reactor? Offshore, apparently. A new power plant design concept from MIT envisions a facility built on floating platforms, moored in deep water several miles off the coast. This, the concept’s creators…

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aD3hwdZjUoU/
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The Galaxy S5’s fingerprint reader can be fooled by fake digits

It looks like the iPhone 5s isn’t the only smartphone whose fingerprint reader can be fooled by fake digits. SR Labs has just posted a video (shown below) showing that Samsung’s just-launched Galaxy S5 is susceptible to the same trick: as long as you…

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/6Oibge6I_t0/
Category: maria menounos   The Americans   Alex Bilodeau  

Nokia Lumia 525 reaches Chinese regulator, hints at play-it-safe Windows Phone upgrade

Nokia Lumia 525 surfaces at Chinese regulator, hints at ifitain'tbroke strategy

Was Nokia’s recent cavalcade of new Lumias not enough for you? Don’t worry, there’s yet another model on the way — Chinese regulator TENAA has approved the Lumia 525, a previously rumored refresh of the entry-level 520. As the name suggests, the Windows Phone likely won’t be a radical break from the past. Photos that briefly appeared at the Chinese agency (and were first caught by LiveSide.net) show a device that closely resembles the 520, including the flash-free rear camera. We don’t know much about what’s inside beyond 3G and WiFi, although an earlier rumor at BlogJack has the 525 doubling the onboard RAM to 1GB and putting a greater focus on music. The clearance doesn’t necessarily confirm an imminent launch. However, there have been murmurs at Nokiapoweruser of a launch by early December; those who want yet another frugal Lumia may not have long to wait.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/04/nokia-lumia-525-surfaces-at-chinese-regulator/?ncid=rss_truncated
Category: steve bartman   jimmy kimmel   eagles   CDOT   9news  

Morning Report: Dana White says ‘Mayhem’ Miller ‘deserved what he got from Uriah Hall’

In promotion of this week’s upcoming UFC Fight Nights, Dana White elaborated on his feelings regarding the recent skirmish between Ultimate Fighter standout Uriah Hall and retired fighter Jason Miller. Days following the incident, White remarked on Twitter that rather than suspend Hall, he’d more likely give him a bonus.

Now, White explains this logic by saying Hall gave Miller what he deserved.

“We don’t ever want our fighters fighting outside of the Octagon, but guess what? There’s gonna be situations where men need to handle their business and that’s one of those cases. First of all, Mayhem Miller, how this guy is still walking the f***ing streets of America is beyond me, number one. Number two, he deserved what he got from Uriah Hall. It’s no different from the situation with Roger Huerta, right? Roger Huerta was in a situation where a guy punched a girl in the face and knocked her out, knocked her unconscious. Then Roger Huerta knocked him out. There’s gonna be cases where I don’t give a s**t.”

The UFC’s Conduct Policy reserves the right to disciple its contracted athletes for actions detrimental to the promotion, including the use of physical violence against others. Given the structure of the policy, it’s hard to imagine Miller not having been severely reprimanded for his part in the brush up had he been under contract.

Hall faces Chris Leben at UFC 168 on Dec. 28.

Star-divide

5 MUST-READ STORIES

No pressure. He’s currently next in line for the UFC middleweight title, but Vitor Belfort loses that status with a loss to Dan Henderson at UFC Fight Night 32.

Next for Gus. With Antônio Rogério Nogueira falling out due to injury, Alexander Gustafsson will now face Jimi Manuwa next March in London.

20 in 20. Chuck Mindenhall’s series reaches 2005, when Stephan Bonnar and Forrest Griffin put on arguably the UFC’s biggest fight to date.

Karma. The back and forth continues between Dana White and Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney.

Mainstream. The UFC, and MMA in general, have a long way to go to reach the greater masses.

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MEDIA STEW

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Fight for the Troops: Official Weigh-In.

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Dan Henderson back on TRT.

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Behind the scenes at Bellator 106. Alvarez also gets into it with one of Chandler’s guys at the end.

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Tarec Saffiedine “I’m the most underrated Strikeforce Champion coming into the UFC”

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EA Sports UFC trailer. Still waiting on gameplay footage.

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Don Frye says he was partying harder than he was fighting. My god.

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This video is worth it for the soundtrack alone. Can anyone name them all? I got most of them.

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TWEETS

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Ready for the troops.

Bonus Glover.

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Chatter at the weigh-ins spills to twitter.

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Upgrade?

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Hittin’ the leg press.

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Better call Saul.

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Album?

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Comeback?

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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announced yesterday (Nov. 5 2013)

cancelled Vaughan Lee vs. Sergio Pettis at UFC 167

Kiichi Kunimoto vs. Hyun Gyu Lim at UFC Fight Night 34

Shunichi Shimizu vs. Kyung Ho Kang at UFC Fight Night 34

Alexander Volkov and Vitaly Minakov moved from Bellator 109 to Bellator 108

added Alexander Shlemenko vs. Doug Marshall moved from Bellator 108 to Bellator 109

Star-divide

FANPOST OF THE DAY

Today’s Fanpost of the Day comes viaMarc Donnay

Melendez vs. Sanchez: The making of a modern classic

“Classic fight”. It’s a phrase that has been ever-present in the jargon of combat sports since time immemorial.

Recently, legions of fans and commentators have put Melendez vs. Sanchez into this bracket without hesitation. And how could you not? Mike Goldberg had christened it “The Mexican World War” for crying out loud – and that was even before we had heard the final bell. The badass nickname – surely that’s the hallmark of every classic bout?

But what really makes a classic?

For many fans, Jones vs. Gustafsson fits the bill perfectly – an underdog story which took everybody by surprise. Neither fans or bookmakers were willing to give the challenger a chance, and although the marketing of the bout was centred on how the fighters’ physical similarities meant Jones was in for his first legitimate challenge – one in which his height and reach would not be deemed unfair by his cult of critics – it still gave equal thrust to the alternative questions it posed: what would those critics say when an opponent of near-identical dimensions was crushed like all those that came before him? And who could possibly challenge next?

Those questions were quickly answered in the first two rounds – well not answered, more thrown out of court with disdain by Gustaffson who quickly established that his rangy, accurate boxing and light footwork would give Jones the gruelling dogfight he had claimed to have craved.

Check out the rest of the post here.

Star-divide

Found something you’d like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we’ll include it in tomorrow’s column.

Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/11/6/5070216/morning-report-dana-white-mayhem-miller-uriah-hall-ufc-rebney-griffin-belfort-mma-news
Tags: Peter Gunz   The Blacklist   dexter   Brian Hoyer   burn notice  

Bringing out the best in X-ray crystallography data

Bringing out the best in X-ray crystallography data

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Contact: Lynn Yarris
lcyarris@lbl.gov
510-486-5375
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory


“Function follows form” might have been written to describe proteins, as the M. C. Escher-esque folds and twists of nature’s workhorse biomolecules enables each to carry out its specific responsibilities. Technology’s workhorse for determining protein structures is X-ray protein crystallography, in which a beam of x-rays sent through a crystallized protein is scattered by the protein’s atoms, creating a diffraction pattern of dots that can be reconstructed by computer into a 3D model.

While synchrotron radiation facilities, such as Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source, have been a boon to the field of protein crystallography, providing increasingly higher resolution structures over increasingly shorter time-spans, the technology is still a challenge. For some molecules, especially large molecular complexes, it is often only possible to obtain low-resolution experimental data, which means models are difficult to make and must be manually refined using computer modeling.

“Refinement of protein and other biomolecular structural models against low-resolution crystallographic data has been limited by the ability of current methods to converge on a structure with realistic geometry,” says Paul Adams, a bioengineer with Berkeley Lab’s Physical Biosciences Division and leading authority on x-ray crystallography, who, starting in 2000, has been leading the development of a highly successful software program called PHENIX (Python-based Hierarchical ENvironment for Integrated Xtallography) that automates crystallography data analysis.

Now, Adams and a team that included Nathaniel Echols in his research group, and Frank DiMaio with the research group of David Baker at the University of Washington, have developed a new method for refining crystallographic data that combines aspects of PHENIX with aspects of Rosetta, the most widely used software for the prediction and design of the three-dimensional structure of proteins and other large biomolecules.

The Rosetta program, which was originally developed by Baker and his research group, utilizes a detailed all-atom force field plus a diverse set of search procedures for the creation of its 3D models. PHENIX assembles 3D models atom-by-atom through the extraction of the best data from X-ray measurements. One of the most important components of PHENIX is “phenix.refine,” a program for improving these models against the X-ray data using maximum likelihood methods. It was this feature that was combined with Rosetta.

“Our new method integrates the Rosetta and PHENIX programs directly in a flexible framework that allows it to be adapted to a wide variety of different scenarios,” says Echols. “The main advantage of our method is that it can aggressively optimize models to fit the data and also present realistic geometry. In general, it has been difficult to come up with methods that handle both of these demands. As a result, crystallographers have either spent a lot of time fixing errors, or the published structures end up being of poor quality.”

Echols is one of two lead authors, along with DiMaio, of a paper in Nature Methods describing this work. The paper is titled “Improved low-resolution crystallographic refinement with Phenix and Rosetta.” In addition to Adams and Baker, other co-authors are Jeffrey Headd and Thomas Terwilliger. Adams and Baker are the corresponding authors.

###

Funding for this research was provided by the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.



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Bringing out the best in X-ray crystallography data

[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

5-Nov-2013

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]


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Contact: Lynn Yarris
lcyarris@lbl.gov
510-486-5375
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory


“Function follows form” might have been written to describe proteins, as the M. C. Escher-esque folds and twists of nature’s workhorse biomolecules enables each to carry out its specific responsibilities. Technology’s workhorse for determining protein structures is X-ray protein crystallography, in which a beam of x-rays sent through a crystallized protein is scattered by the protein’s atoms, creating a diffraction pattern of dots that can be reconstructed by computer into a 3D model.

While synchrotron radiation facilities, such as Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source, have been a boon to the field of protein crystallography, providing increasingly higher resolution structures over increasingly shorter time-spans, the technology is still a challenge. For some molecules, especially large molecular complexes, it is often only possible to obtain low-resolution experimental data, which means models are difficult to make and must be manually refined using computer modeling.

“Refinement of protein and other biomolecular structural models against low-resolution crystallographic data has been limited by the ability of current methods to converge on a structure with realistic geometry,” says Paul Adams, a bioengineer with Berkeley Lab’s Physical Biosciences Division and leading authority on x-ray crystallography, who, starting in 2000, has been leading the development of a highly successful software program called PHENIX (Python-based Hierarchical ENvironment for Integrated Xtallography) that automates crystallography data analysis.

Now, Adams and a team that included Nathaniel Echols in his research group, and Frank DiMaio with the research group of David Baker at the University of Washington, have developed a new method for refining crystallographic data that combines aspects of PHENIX with aspects of Rosetta, the most widely used software for the prediction and design of the three-dimensional structure of proteins and other large biomolecules.

The Rosetta program, which was originally developed by Baker and his research group, utilizes a detailed all-atom force field plus a diverse set of search procedures for the creation of its 3D models. PHENIX assembles 3D models atom-by-atom through the extraction of the best data from X-ray measurements. One of the most important components of PHENIX is “phenix.refine,” a program for improving these models against the X-ray data using maximum likelihood methods. It was this feature that was combined with Rosetta.

“Our new method integrates the Rosetta and PHENIX programs directly in a flexible framework that allows it to be adapted to a wide variety of different scenarios,” says Echols. “The main advantage of our method is that it can aggressively optimize models to fit the data and also present realistic geometry. In general, it has been difficult to come up with methods that handle both of these demands. As a result, crystallographers have either spent a lot of time fixing errors, or the published structures end up being of poor quality.”

Echols is one of two lead authors, along with DiMaio, of a paper in Nature Methods describing this work. The paper is titled “Improved low-resolution crystallographic refinement with Phenix and Rosetta.” In addition to Adams and Baker, other co-authors are Jeffrey Headd and Thomas Terwilliger. Adams and Baker are the corresponding authors.

###

Funding for this research was provided by the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.



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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-11/dbnl-bot110513.php
Category: Wojciech Braszczok   Kenichi Ebina   Eiza Gonzalez   Phillip Lim Target   Dick Van Dyke  

New tool may unveil inhabitable worlds

New tool may unveil inhabitable worlds

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4-Nov-2013

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Contact: William Raillant-Clark
w.raillant-clark@umontreal.ca
514-343-7593
University of Montreal

SPIRou, a near-infrared spectropolarimeter, will also investigate the birth of Sun-like stars and their planets

This news release is available in French.

Funding for SPIRou, a spectropolarimeter and a high-precision velocimeter optimized for both the detection of habitable Earth twins orbiting around nearby red dwarf stars and the study of the formation of Sun-like stars and their planets, was confirmed today by the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) observatory. University of Montreal and France’s Institut de Plantologie et d’Astrophysique de Grenoble lead the international consortium that manages the SPIRou project. “SPIRou is a spectropolarimeter it decomposes light from stars into elementary colors and vibration modes. It is also a high-precision velocimeter, capable of recording the tiny motions of a star that probe the presence of an orbiting planet,” explained SPIRou premier investigator Ren Doyon, a University of Montreal professor and director of the Mont-Mgantic Observatory. “It’s like a radar speed gun, but rather than detecting excess or unusual velocity of an observed star, it finds the regular and periodic variations of its velocity.” The construction of SPIRou will start in 2014, for installation in Toulouse, France, in 2016 and the first light to result from the new tool will be perceived at the CFH telescope in 2017.

SPIRou will be able to hunt Earth-like planets orbiting in the habitable zones of nearby red-dwarf stars. The atmospheres of these Earth “twins” will then be scrutinized for the potential presence of water and other life-related molecules with instruments such as the James Webb Space Telescope that will be launched in 2018. “How do stars and planets come to life? How do magnetic fields impact their birth? Is our Earth one of the few planets in the Milky Way capable of hosting liquid water on its surface, or is it just one in a multitude? SPIRou, CFH Telescope’s next-generation instrument, will investigate these astronomer-intriguing major questions over the coming decade,” Doyon said. Doyon is in fact also the premier investigator of the FGS/NIRISS instrument that is being installed on the Webb telescope, an instrument dedicated to the search and the study of exoplanets and their atmosphere.

SPIRou: a major technical challenge.

To optimally observe celestial bodies as cool as red-dwarf stars (whose surface temperatures barely match that of standard halogen bulbs) SPIRou must work in the infrared, meaning that the heart of the instrument, the high-resolution spectrograph, must be installed within a cryogenic dewar and cooled down to the temperature of liquid nitrogen (-200C). This is to prevent the ambient thermal radiation from outshining the dim light from the red dwarf stars that SPIRou collects and deciphers. Moreover, the temperature within the cryogenic dewar will have to be exceptionally stable, to within a few thousandth of a degree, to enable SPIRou to detect the nanometric motions of stellar spectra that will reveal the existence of habitable Earth-like planets. Universit de Montral researchers have met this challenge, having designed SPIRou’s camera and infrared detector. Their colleagues at Universit Laval contributed expertise in optical design.

SPIRou will be installed at the CFH Telescope, a sentinel of the starry skies atop the 4,200 m Maunea Kea extinct volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. Although the 3.6 m telescope boasts top-grade instrumentation and is located in one of the best astronomical sites in the world, competition is fierce and so the observatory has adopted an ambitious science policy in order to continuously innovate and remain in a leading position amongst the world’s giant telescopes. SPIRou is one of the key instruments that should guarantee the future of the telescope over the next decade. In addition to the commitments that the CFHT has announced today, the SPIRou construction budget includes the support a large and international consortium of universities and research laboratories.


###


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New tool may unveil inhabitable worlds

[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

4-Nov-2013

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Contact: William Raillant-Clark
w.raillant-clark@umontreal.ca
514-343-7593
University of Montreal

SPIRou, a near-infrared spectropolarimeter, will also investigate the birth of Sun-like stars and their planets

This news release is available in French.

Funding for SPIRou, a spectropolarimeter and a high-precision velocimeter optimized for both the detection of habitable Earth twins orbiting around nearby red dwarf stars and the study of the formation of Sun-like stars and their planets, was confirmed today by the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) observatory. University of Montreal and France’s Institut de Plantologie et d’Astrophysique de Grenoble lead the international consortium that manages the SPIRou project. “SPIRou is a spectropolarimeter it decomposes light from stars into elementary colors and vibration modes. It is also a high-precision velocimeter, capable of recording the tiny motions of a star that probe the presence of an orbiting planet,” explained SPIRou premier investigator Ren Doyon, a University of Montreal professor and director of the Mont-Mgantic Observatory. “It’s like a radar speed gun, but rather than detecting excess or unusual velocity of an observed star, it finds the regular and periodic variations of its velocity.” The construction of SPIRou will start in 2014, for installation in Toulouse, France, in 2016 and the first light to result from the new tool will be perceived at the CFH telescope in 2017.

SPIRou will be able to hunt Earth-like planets orbiting in the habitable zones of nearby red-dwarf stars. The atmospheres of these Earth “twins” will then be scrutinized for the potential presence of water and other life-related molecules with instruments such as the James Webb Space Telescope that will be launched in 2018. “How do stars and planets come to life? How do magnetic fields impact their birth? Is our Earth one of the few planets in the Milky Way capable of hosting liquid water on its surface, or is it just one in a multitude? SPIRou, CFH Telescope’s next-generation instrument, will investigate these astronomer-intriguing major questions over the coming decade,” Doyon said. Doyon is in fact also the premier investigator of the FGS/NIRISS instrument that is being installed on the Webb telescope, an instrument dedicated to the search and the study of exoplanets and their atmosphere.

SPIRou: a major technical challenge.

To optimally observe celestial bodies as cool as red-dwarf stars (whose surface temperatures barely match that of standard halogen bulbs) SPIRou must work in the infrared, meaning that the heart of the instrument, the high-resolution spectrograph, must be installed within a cryogenic dewar and cooled down to the temperature of liquid nitrogen (-200C). This is to prevent the ambient thermal radiation from outshining the dim light from the red dwarf stars that SPIRou collects and deciphers. Moreover, the temperature within the cryogenic dewar will have to be exceptionally stable, to within a few thousandth of a degree, to enable SPIRou to detect the nanometric motions of stellar spectra that will reveal the existence of habitable Earth-like planets. Universit de Montral researchers have met this challenge, having designed SPIRou’s camera and infrared detector. Their colleagues at Universit Laval contributed expertise in optical design.

SPIRou will be installed at the CFH Telescope, a sentinel of the starry skies atop the 4,200 m Maunea Kea extinct volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. Although the 3.6 m telescope boasts top-grade instrumentation and is located in one of the best astronomical sites in the world, competition is fierce and so the observatory has adopted an ambitious science policy in order to continuously innovate and remain in a leading position amongst the world’s giant telescopes. SPIRou is one of the key instruments that should guarantee the future of the telescope over the next decade. In addition to the commitments that the CFHT has announced today, the SPIRou construction budget includes the support a large and international consortium of universities and research laboratories.


###


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-11/uom-ntm110413.php
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