Few days back we had wrote about Google Contacts Outlook Synchronizer which lets you to sync to and from Gmail Contacts with Outlook. Now here is one more synching tool Gravatar Importer which lets you to sync your contacts in the Gmail Contacts address book with their Gravatars, in case they didn’t choose a photo by themselves.
Posts Tagged ‘Few Days’
Facebook admits mistake
March 17th, 2009
admin In just a few days, over 108,000 Facebook users signed up in protest to the group “People Against the new Terms of Service” because Facebook took ownership of all uploaded material. Now pull Facebook change back. It is a great victory for consumers.A few weeks ago, Facebook revised their “Terms of use” and it meant that when you put pictures on your profile in Facebook, so you surrendered the rights to Facebook.
Cosmic Stage Set for Comet Lulin’s Fly-By
February 21st, 2009
admin Comet Lulin as photographed by amateur astronomer Jack Newton in Arizona.Jack Newton/NASAFrom FOX News/Space.com:A recently discovered comet is making its closest approach to Earth in the next few days and offers anyone with binoculars or a small telescope a chance to see some frozen leftovers of our solar system’s making.Comet Lulin has, as expected, crossed the threshold to naked-eye visibility for people with dark, rural skies. It hovers just inside that envelope of visibility, however, and is not likely visible from cities, where the glare of urban lights can drown out all but the brightest night-sky objects.Read more ….
The First Aid: Iceman May Have Dressed His Own Wounds
December 5th, 2008
admin The 5,000-year-old Tyrolean iceman may have used bog moss as a prehistoric wound dressing, according to a new analysis of his body’s remains.From Wired Science:Suffering from an arrow wound and a deep cut to the right hand, the iceman, known as Ötzi, may have engaged in some ancient first aid using the moss, a well-known wound dressing used as recently as the 20th century.”If he knew of the useful properties of bog mosses, as seems entirely plausible, then he may have gathered some to staunch the wound or wounds,” wrote James Dickson, an archaeobotanist at the University of Glasgow, and his team in the journal Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. “Tiny pieces could well have stuck to the blood drying on his fingers and then he accidentally ingested some of them when next eating meat or bread as we know he did during his last few days.”Read more ….
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