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Title: NeoWebTour - Vos idées, vos envies, vos besoins... Post by: Francois on December 08, 2006, 10:48:02 AM N'hésitez pas à laisser ici vos idées pour le développement des futures versions de NeoWebTour !
La parole est à vous ! Title: Re : NeoWebTour - Vos idées, vos envies, vos besoins... Post by: Man Dec on November 15, 2007, 02:34:33 PM Bonjour à tous,
Est ce possible de faire pour Joomla un composant totalement automatique qui serait capable de gérer le flux RSS dans une base de donnée (On y rentrerait une vaingtaine de flux) et le composant afficherait les titres par date... Peut être ça existe déjà mais je n'ai pas trouvé. Ca serait vraiment classe je trouve... Là c'est bien, mais tout faire à la main, ça fait perdre un peu de temps quand on a déjà un gros site à gérer. Merci de m'avoir écouté. Dans l'attente d'une réponse, bonne continuation Title: Re: NeoWebTour - Vos idées, vos envies, vos besoins... Post by: Raphael on November 16, 2007, 09:57:00 AM Bonjour,
Vous souhaitez simplement pouvoir regrouper des flux provenant de différents sites dans un seul et même module? Vous trouverez peut être votre bonheur ici (http://extensions.joomla.org/index.php?option=com_mtree&task=listcats&cat_id=1801&Itemid=35). Cordialement, Title: Re : NeoWebTour - Vos idées, vos envies, vos besoins... Post by: franc BAMBIO on November 13, 2008, 12:33:17 PM Bonjour, Moi, pour ce qui me concerne, je ne retrouve pas le module de neowebtour. J'ai cherché en vain mais rien. puis je avoir des info là dessus? Cordialement N'hésitez pas à laisser ici vos idées pour le développement des futures versions de NeoWebTour ! La parole est à vous ! Title: Re : NeoWebTour - Vos idées, vos envies, vos besoins... Post by: Raphael on November 15, 2008, 11:32:55 AM Bonjour Franc,
Il n'existe qu'une seule archive, celle du composant. Le module est installé automatiquement, en même temps que le composant. Bien cordialement, Title: New Robot Can Test 10,000 Chemicals Weekly Post by: enxdinryl on February 03, 2012, 02:01:23 PM Download Audio
The U.S. government recently unveiled its newest tool for safeguarding public health, a robot capable of screening thousands of chemicals each week for potential human toxicity. The robot is not only speeding up critical laboratory analyses, but also eliminating the controversial use of animals in product safety testing. The high-speed robotic tester is revolutionizing routine chemical toxicity studies. Robert Kablack is the Director of the National Center for Computation and Toxicology at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). "A single human may work on 10 chemicals a year, or 20," said Kablack. "We are doing 10,000 in a week." The robot was jointly purchased by five big federal agencies that are collaborating to improve chemical testing procedures, including the EPA and the National Institutes of Health's Chemical Genomics Center, where the robot is located. The plan is to create a comprehensive data library of toxic and harmful chemicals, a library that doesn't exist today. The robot is now testing chemicals found in industrial and consumer products, food additives and drugs, for evidence they might lead to adverse health effects. Besides its speed, the robot offers scientists other benefits: it works 24 hours a day without complaining or asking for holidays or vacations. And it eliminates the need for live animals in the testing process, working only with animal cells arranged on special plates: "On that plate are 1536 wells and... each well has a drop or 2 of solution," added Kablack. "And we put on each one of those cells a single chemical, so we have 1536 chemicals on a single plate." Each plate has a bar code label containing information about the chemical samples in those wells. The robot gets software instructions about what kind of biological activities to look for in the samples, and it tests for them very quickly. Once it is done, it sends the results to the scientists and waits for new instructions. The scientists,abercrombie (http://www.abercrombieandfitchfrancec.com/), meanwhile, will evaluate what the data means in terms of toxicity, and whether a chemical can cause birth defects, reproductive problems or cancer. "Industry will benefit because if we can develop a test that allows us to say whether a chemical is toxic or not toxic and we can do it for thousands of dollars and not millions of dollars, it becomes an economic benefit to industry to do it," noted Kablack. "It becomes a benefit to animal rights organizations concerned with how many animals we are using." Kablack notes that there is no safety information on a lot of chemicals in use today. And about 1500 new synthetic chemicals are introduced to the market every year in the United States. The new robot will give scientists a clearer picture of this torrent of chemical products, and help manufacturers and regulators separate the toxic stuff from the benign. 相关的主题文章: Clinton US is Not Shelving Missile Defense Plan (http://www.tsugeken.net/tencho/2011/02/post-7.html#comments) China's GDP Growth Slows, But Remains Robust (http://splitstepfouriermethod.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=9) Israeli Troops Kill Palestinian Youth in West Bank (http://www.jpbe.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=4&view=unread#unread) Last month the head of Fifa Sepp Blatter wrote to Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff to express concern over delays in the construction of stadiums and infrastructure for the World Cup.
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