Jumeirah Group’s first European resort, Jumeirah Port Soller Hotel & Spa, opened on the island of Mallorca, off the coast of Spain, just in time for the summer season. The hotel features 120 rooms and suites, two restaurants, four bars, two swimming pools, and three terraces overlooking the coastline, in ...
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Feed Subscription3 Crucial Indicators to Track as Your Company Grows
Are you on the path to domination? Here are the key business traits you should routinely measure and assess to find out.
Read More »Lenovo Goes It Alone With Own-Brand Laptop Broadband in EU, U.S.
News updates all day from Fast Company.
Read More »What’s in the Air You’re Breathing? Competition Aims to Spur the Development of Personal Air-Pollution Detectors
The amount of chemical and/or particulate pollutants in the air on a global scale is a touchy subject with little cross-border agreement over the best way to alleviate the problem. This week alone, the U.S.
Read More »The Difference Every Boss Can Make
How seemingly insignificant moments can have a lasting impact on your employees' lives. The smallest moments almost always make the biggest difference—whether in our lives, or in the lives of others
Read More »Physicists develop first conclusive test to better understand high-energy particles correlations
Researchers have devised a proposal for the first conclusive experimental test of a phenomenon known as "Bells nonlocality." This test is designed to reveal correlations that are stronger than any classical correlations, and do so between high-energy particles that do not consist of ordinary matter and light. These results are relevant to the so-called CP violation principle, which is used to explain the dominance of matter over antimatter. These findings by Beatrix Hiesmayr, a theoretical physicist at the University of Vienna, and her colleagues, a team of quantum information theory specialists, particle physicists and nuclear physicists, have been published in the European Physical Journal C.
Read More »Physicists develop first conclusive test to better understand high-energy particles correlations
Researchers have devised a proposal for the first conclusive experimental test of a phenomenon known as "Bells nonlocality." This test is designed to reveal correlations that are stronger than any classical correlations, and do so between high-energy particles that do not consist of ordinary matter and light. These results are relevant to the so-called CP violation principle, which is used to explain the dominance of matter over antimatter.
Read More »Can TheyFit’s 95 Condom Sizes Make Sex Better?
By David Zax Meet Joe Nelson, a former Goldman Sachs trader who believes custom-fitted condoms are the key to making safe sex more pleasurable.
Read More »How fake Avastin from overseas ends up in U.S.
CBS News' Armen Keteyian traces counterfeit vials of the cancer drug from Turkey and Egypt through several European countries to U.S. shelves
Read More »Airline CO2 Friction Hints at New Climate Politics
By Gerard Wynn LONDON (Reuters) - Threats of retaliation by China and India against a European Union plan to charge airlines for their carbon emissions is misplaced, given their weak legal case and a drift towards more such unilateral climate action.
Read More »Airline CO2 Friction Hints at New Climate Politics
By Gerard Wynn LONDON (Reuters) - Threats of retaliation by China and India against a European Union plan to charge airlines for their carbon emissions is misplaced, given their weak legal case and a drift towards more such unilateral climate action. Countries in Durban at the end of last year topped off years of lumbering U.N
Read More »Is This Island Start-up Paradise?
What happens when a flood of highly educated, entrepreneurial young people return from studies abroad to tiny Cyprus?
Read More »Is This Island Start-up Paradise?
What happens when a flood of highly educated, entrepreneurial young people return from studies abroad to tiny Cyprus? The answer offers a trickle of optimism.
Read More »Europe’s Chief Scientist Warns against Climate Delays
By Charlie Dunmore BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union cannot use the economic slowdown as an excuse to delay action on fighting climate change, the bloc's first-ever chief scientific adviser has warned. Molecular biologist Anne Glover took on the newly created role reporting to European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso at the start of this year, having previously served as chief scientific adviser to Scotland's devolved government.
Read More »How One Second Could Cost Amazon $1.6 Billion In Sales
Research on U.S. Net habits suggests that if this sentence takes longer than a second to load, many citizens will have clicked elsewhere already. If you've got the patience (or are European) read on for more shocking data on not dawdling
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