LONDON, December 22 /PRNewswire/ --

- Having Recently Won More Than 20 Million Internet Users, Twenga Takes Comparison-Shopping Mobile With New Bargain-Hunter's Guide for the iPhone

Twenga (http://www.twenga.co.uk/), the most comprehensive shopping search engine on the Web, today launched the first iPhone application to help shoppers find the best price available before buying in-store. Developed in collaboration with software publisher Backelite (http://www.backelite.com/), this application is available from today in six countries, including the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and The Netherlands.

Know before you buy: prices, product specifications, consumer reviews...

Over the last 60 years, ever-smaller generations of transistors have driven exponential growth in computing power. Could molecules, each turned into miniscule computer components, trigger even greater growth in computing over the next 60?

Atomic-scale computing, in which computer processes are carried out in a single molecule or using a surface atomic-scale circuit, holds vast promise for the microelectronics industry. It allows computers to continue to increase in processing power through the development of components in the nano- and pico scale. In theory, atomic-scale computing could put computers more powerful than today’s supercomputers in everyone’s pocket.
The heat created by human activities does not even amount to 1/10,000th of the heat that the Earth receives from the sun, say a group of researchers, and it may not be possible to get people to agree to burn fewer fossil fuels but covering parts of the Earth would offset that.

This radical plan to curb global warming and so reverse the climate change caused by burning of fossil fuels since the industrial revolution would involve covering parts of the world's deserts with reflective sheeting and they write about it in the January issue of the International Journal of Global Environmental Issues.

LONDON, December 22 /PRNewswire/ --

- Revolutionary Bioresonance Nutritional Therapy Helps Smokers Beat Nicotine Addiction

- Drug Free, Pain Free, Non-Invasive Natural Therapy - 90% Success Rate

People who are thinking about giving up smoking and saving on average GBP92,000 in a lifetime are desperate to find an easy way to quit. 70% of the 10 million people who smoke want to quit but find the conventional methods of giving up very difficult. There is now a new revolutionary method allowing people to give up after just one treatment.

With the government tightening their reins on smoking in the UK and now looking at banning displays of cigarettes for sale, it's becoming increasingly difficult for smokers to buy cigarettes and smoke freely.

LONDON, December 22 /PRNewswire/ --

- With Photo

Mr Site - the UK's favourite DIY website creator - has just scooped a prestigious nomination at the Esquire Magazine's Man at the Top Awards.

The Mr Site Takeaway Website Pro was nominated in the Best Business Tool Category alongside the Nokia E71, Samsung SCX-4500W Printer, the Cardscan Executive and the Livescrive Pulse Smartpen.

A groundbreaking study of popularity by a Michigan State University scientist has found that genes elicit not only specific behaviors but also the social consequences of those behaviors.  According to the investigation by behavioral geneticist S. Alexandra Burt, male college students who had a gene associated with rule-breaking behavior were rated most popular by a group of previously unacquainted peers.

It's not unusual for adolescent rule-breakers to be well-liked – previous research has made that link – but Burt is the first to provide meaningful evidence for the role of a specific gene in this process. The study appears in the latest issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Scientists report that human gene mutations expressed in yeast cells can predict the severity of Batten Disease, a fatal nervous system disorder that begins during childhood. The new study published in Disease Models&Mechanisms (DMM) describes how the extent of changes in mutated cells paralleled the severity of symptoms seen in humans. 
Researchers in Nevada are reporting that waste coffee grounds can provide a cheap, abundant, and environmentally friendly source of biodiesel fuel for powering cars and trucks. Their study appears in the current online issue of ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a bi-weekly publication.

In the new study, Mano Misra, Susanta Mohapatra, and Narasimharao Kondamudi note that the major barrier to wider use of biodiesel fuel is lack of a low-cost, high quality source, or feedstock, for producing that new energy source. Spent coffee grounds contain between 11 and 20 percent oil by weight. That's about as much as traditional biodiesel feedstocks such as rapeseed, palm, and soybean oil.
Researchers say they have discovered an entirely new mechanism for making common electronic materials emit laser beams. The finding could lead to lasers that operate more efficiently and at higher temperatures than existing devices, and find applications in environmental monitoring and medical diagnostics. 
Premature infants who need intensive care or surgery are less sensitive to thermal (hot and cold) sensations later in life, according to research conducted at UCL (University College London). The study, published in the journal Pain, suggests that pain and injury related to major medical interventions in early development may alter how children respond to painful stimuli much later in life.