Discussion:
Sign up for our free science e-newsletter!
(too old to reply)
Science newsletter
2005-02-26 08:52:36 UTC
Permalink
We'd like to invite you to join our free WORLD SCIENCE e-newsletter, which contains
some of the world's most exciting science news and photos long before they're in newspapers and magazines. A sample of the newsletter is below.

To subscribe, just send an email with "subscribe" in the subject line to
***@yahoo.com.

The newsletter, sent out about every 3-10 days, contains short summaries of
our new stories, with links to web pages containing the full stories. It's
free: no pop-ups, passwords, spam, or gimmicks -- that's our pledge! The full
story pages do contain small side ads (non pop-up), which are what supports
our newsletter. YOU pay nothing ever. You can unsubscribe anytime simply by
replying to a newsletter email and typing "unsubscribe" in the subject line.

Below is a sample newsletter. It doesn't contain the full story links
because we're not allowed to provide them here, but the real newsletter will
contain working links.

*****************************************************************
LAST WEEK'S WORLD SCIENCE EMAIL NEWSLETTER

* Possible dinosaur-bird missing link found:
It's not the first bird-like dinosaur ever found -
but it is the closest yet found to the actual
dinosaur ancestor of birds, researchers say.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)


* Science in Images - A more life-friendly Mars:
Most Mars photos show a rocky, dry-looking landscape.
This is another view: an area of the planet that
researchers think might have once been habitable.
They plan to explore further.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)


* Another record: biggest blast ever in our
galaxy:
The most powerful explosion in our galaxy ever
recorded occurred recently when an exotic star's
magnetic field snapped, astronomers say.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)


* New robots walk nearly like humans:
An older robot does it too, but it used 10 times as
much energy as humans do, researchers say; that is
changing.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)


* Brain doesn't have universal language rules,
researchers claim:
Some researchers argue that language is more like
a creation of itself than a creation of our brains.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)
n***@yahoo.com
2005-02-26 13:01:41 UTC
Permalink
n

Loading...