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what is the best way to answer this well known question – “what are your strength and weakness?

Question by lecce_m: what is the best way to answer this well known question – “what are your strength and weakness?

Best answer:

Answer by m3o2n1a
strengths can be everythign and anything…that’s an easy one…but i always had troulbe with weaknesses and I learn a good one the other day…’being a perfectionist’ it’s positive but at the same time negative so you are not saying anythign bad about urself :)

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Question about the Geek Squad?

Question by lil_dwg: Question about the Geek Squad?
A while ago my internet stop working (more details in here —>http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Arr_ockhhbQt7_gAdtq8Ewnsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20090518143801AAXhbIl)

I have not try those techniques but i was wondering if Geek Squad(from Best Buy) can fix my Internet Connection and how much it cost.

Plus i don’t know how to delete my Norton and it might be that problem too.

But yeah, is Geek Squad good at fixing my internet connection problem or no.How much it cost.and What other kinds of problems or things can the Geek Squad do

Best answer:

Answer by Saad ibn Farooq
fix stuff

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Ive posted this question 3 times now cus i really dont understand this article. I dont get the key point of it

Question by ~~xx{Stelth[k9]}xx~~: Ive posted this question 3 times now cus i really dont understand this article. I dont get the key point of it
Researchers in Oregon are reporting that they used cloning to produce monkey embryos and then extracted stem cells from the embryos.

Not only is this the first time such cells have been produced in any animal other than a mouse, but the method, the researchers say, should also work in humans. In 2004, South Korean researchers reported making stem cells from cloned human embryos, but the claim turned out fraudulent.

“We hope the technology will be useful for other labs that are working on human eggs and human cells,” the lead researcher of the group, Shoukhrat Mitalipov at Oregon Health and Science University in Beaverton, said in a telephone interview. “I am quite sure it will work in humans.”

The monkey stem cells were genetically identical to an adult monkey, Semos, whose cells were cloned. They are a sort of universal cell that can, in theory, develop into any tissue or organ.

Medical researchers and patient advocacy groups have long hoped to use human embryonic stem cells to study diseases and supply replacement cells to treat them. So far, though, stem cell research has not yielded cures, and many obstacles lie ahead.

An advantage of using cloning to obtain stem cells is that they would genetically match a patient’s cells, making it unnecessary to suppress the immune system if the stem cells are used in treatment. Cloning could also produce stem cells that genetically match patients with complex diseases like Alzheimer’s. That might let scientists study those cells and understand how the diseases progress.

With the monkey work, some researchers say, cloned human embryonic stem cells seem more feasible. There is no way to know, of course, whether it will be harder or easier to repeat the work with humans. “I’m very enthusiastic,” said Dr. Leonard Zon, director of the stem cell program at Harvard’s Children’s Hospital. “The next step is definitely doing it in humans.”

Groups opposing human cloning and the destruction of human embryos to extract stem cells say the report makes it more urgent than ever to draw a moral line.

“I certainly think that this represents a new threshold in the entire discussion,” said the Rev. Tadeusz Pacholczyk, director of education at the National Catholic Bioethics Center. “At this point, it becomes essential to ask a question as a society: Are there ever going to be circumstances where it is morally justifiable to clone human beings?”

The report on cloned stem cells, which appears in the Nov. 22 issue of Nature, was published online Wednesday, after some details of the work had filtered into the news media.

Mitalipov said his team showed that the cloned cells had features characteristic of universal cells. For instance, they developed into monkey heart cells and nerve cells.

The team also put the cells in mice, where they turned into a wide array of cell types.

The stem cells, Mitalipov says, “can contribute to any cell of the body.”

The scientists began by removing skin cells from a 9-year-old adult male rhesus macaque and inserted them, along with all their genes, into monkey eggs whose genetic material had been removed.

The egg, in a part of the cloning process that remains mysterious, reprogrammed the genes from the skin cells, bringing them back to the state they were in when embryo development begins.

The reprogrammed genes took over developing the eggs. A result was monkey embryos that were genetically identical — clones — of the adult male monkey. A few days later, the investigators extracted stem cells from the embryo clones, destroying the embryos in the process.

Most attempts at cloning failed. The investigators started with 304 egg cells from 14 female macaques and ended up with two stem cell lines. One line had an abnormal Y chromosome. The other, Mitalipov said, appeared normal.

But, he speculates, one reason for the success was finding a gentle way to take the genetic material out of monkey eggs.

In previous attempts, the investigators had used a method that worked well in mice. They marked the egg’s chromosomes with a dye that glowed under ultraviolet light. That let them see the chromosomes and be sure that they were removed before they inserted the adult cell with its genes into the egg.

The dye and ultraviolet light, the researchers surmised, might damage the egg. So they used a new method that shines polarized light through the egg, allowing them to see the chromosomes directly, without dyes.

Randall Prather, professor of reproductive biotechnology at the University of Missouri, said he had had similar problems with the dyes and ultraviolet light when he tried to clone pigs. His group succeeded by going in blindly and plucking the nuclei out of the pigs’ eggs, he said.

“Each system has a quirk to make it work,” Prather said.

Mitalipov said that once his group decided to use its modified methods of producing the cloned embryos, it took just a few months to produce the stem cells.

Mitalipov says his group’s next project is to use its new method to try to create cloned monkeys that carry genes for human diseases. The researchers would add human disease genes to adult skin cells before starting the cloning.

A result would be cloned monkeys that had the human disease gene in every cell. Scientists could study those monkeys to understand the causes and treatment of the disease.

“We hope,” Mitalipov said, “to model every known human disease.”

Best answer:

Answer by bebe
woah man

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Second question about the arm and others. Jobs.?

Question by reloadations: Second question about the arm and others. Jobs.?
scroll to the bottom for the question.

A bunch of army recruiters come up to me everyday here in Mississippi. They tell me when you are in the army you can get a job easy……the economy is messed up right now……but how can the army get you a job if the economy is bad??? i’ve applied at so many jobs here in my state, walmart, best buy, at&t, lowes, home depot. no call backs, but yet if you are in the army you can get a job just like that????

If you are in the army will they get you a good job??? like at a casino, construction jobs(building, working on roads, pipeline), supervisor at walmart??

Check my other question out too(updated) http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081007202307AAT660h&r=w

Best answer:

Answer by hooah2127
My personal knowledge is with the Army National Guard. First to start things off if you were to join the Army or NationalTruly you truely will have an easier time getting a civilian job because you have what most people dont have. The Military discipline, leadership. The Army teaches you some really useful things for civilian life and employers really value that. I would suggest for you to do the Army National Guard “Active First Program”, that means you sign for 6year, your first 30-48 months are active, then you return to guard”reserve” status in which you would drill one weekend a month and 3 weeks a year. The best part is your sign on bonus for that program is ,000. That money gets split up and disbursed over the duration of your 6 year contract. Hey if you like being active after your 30-48 months is done then you can always volunteer to do Active again. When in the Army or Guard they teach you many job traits. I right now am 11B (Infantryman) so I am a Gunner, and it is an incredible feeling to get to shoot all of the things that I do, and not be punished for it. I get to play everyday with my guns and the government is paying me. Plus I get to see the world and get paid for it. Yeah there are rough times and times that really suck, but overall I would never want a regular 8-5 job. Hey if you do decide to join use me for a referral. Just tell the Recuiter you were referred by SPC Brandon Nickolai in the 2nd-127th Infantry Wisconsin Army National Guard and its for the G-RAP program. If you have any other questions please feel free to e-mail me. HOOAH2127@YAHOO.COM. Good Luck. HOOAH

What do you think? Answer below!

please answer NROTC question?

Question by abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz: please answer NROTC question?
If you have already answered this please ignore it, i am updating it and trying to get as many opinions as possible

I am a high school junior and i am thinking of applying for NROTC (Marine Option) scholarship.
I have a 3.6 GPA and take AP classes (History and English) as well as Honors Math. I am an eagle scout. I dont have any varsity sports but i do insanity and am in good physical shape and strong. Not to brag but i’m really good with logic, and thinking and stuff like that, so i know i’ll do really well in an interview, and pretty good on SAT/ACT. I got an 88 on my AFQT and i took it without warning (i did not study at all).
Do you think i would get the scholarship? and what could i do to make it more likely that i do?

Best answer:

Answer by Sandyd
It’s really hard to say. I had all that stuff last year, had a great interview and everything. They emailed me about a month later saying try again next year. It’s so hard to get a spot in any ROTC right now. You could join with no scholarship, but that takes a lot of money. It might be a little late for the application for this year, but it won’t be a problem for you. Since you are a junior, you can start filling everything out now. The quicker you apply, the better chance you have. There are only so many scholarship spots. And, if you don’t get a scholarship, there are a lot of other options. I have about a year of college completed and am going to join the AF reserves this summer. They will pay for the whole thing. Lots of options! Good luck to you!

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BIOETHICS QUESTION? help!?

Question by questions123: BIOETHICS QUESTION? help!?
do you think AIDS results should be made public? Why or why not?

Should we insert genes from one organism into another? Why or why not?

Shold we release genetically altered bacteria into the environment? Why or why not?

Should fetuses found to have a severe genetic disorder or birth defect be aborted? WHy or why not?

Should people experiencing pain and suffering from fatal illnesses have the option to terminate their lives? Why or why not?

please answer one or more if you can :) thanks!

Best answer:

Answer by dragon slayer
u are really dumb and stupid if you ask a question like that on here. Again, ur really stupid!! lol

Give your answer to this question below!

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