Women are being filtered out of high-level science, math and engineering jobs in the United States, and there is no good reason for it, according to a National Academies report released on Monday.
Currently browsing posts found in September2006
Study: Strong Bias Against Women in Science
Obese Moms Breastfeed Less’
Overweight and obese women are less likely than normal-weight women to keep breastfeeding their infants for six months or longer, an Australian study shows.
CEO’s Of Luxoft and Ping Identity To Share Outsourcing ”Secrets” At DaVinci In
Dmitry Loschinin, President & CEO of Luxoft and key client Andre Durand CEO of Denver-based Ping Identity will team up tomorrow to share the "secrets" of their successful global outsourcing partnership at the DaVinci Institute Movers & Shakers Breakfast Series event. This event is part of Advancing Colorado TechWeek being held in Denver.
Mobile Ad Market is Building Steam
Advertising is about to catch up with mobile customers. The reason is simple: Carriers need the revenues.
Shopping in Tibet
Tibet is vast and rich in local craftwork such as Thangka, a unique kind of scroll, silver ornaments, religious articles, Tibetan knittings and local snacks. A lot of precious Chinese medicines can be found in Tibet such as Aweto and snow lotus flower. As a result, shopping in Tibet is a great idea.
Man Sent 2 Billion Spam E-mails
An Australian man under investigation for illegal spamming sent more than 2 billion e-mails promoting Viagra in a year, an official said Wednesday.
Rules of Etiquette in Online Customer Relations
If visitors to your Web site become annoyed, it is very easy for them to broadcast their irritation: They are already online! This is one of the obvious but frequently ignored findings revealed in a recent study of how companies treat their online customers.
