New Series Provides Fast, Easy Answers For PC Users
Over the past 20 years, the personal computer has evolved from a high-tech toy for brainiacs with pocket protectors, into a vital part of virtually every American home and business.
Over the past 20 years, the personal computer has evolved from a high-tech toy for brainiacs with pocket protectors, into a vital part of virtually every American home and business.
A new book points out that many scientists and clinicians are concentrating their energies on umbilical cord-derived stem cells from healthy babies.
In a year marked by war and natural disasters, there is good news: Americans are commited to service, charitable giving and volunteering.
…a young boy who is desperately fretting over the class reaction to his strange family. He dreads the day the children in his classroom are due to present their portrayals of their families. Much to his delight, he realizes his family is not so strange after all…
There’s helpful news–and possibly inspiration–available to women who are trying to juggle the roles of individual, wife and mother.
Action, thriller and humor ? this book has it all! Men of Extreme Action by Joseph Kochanoff is one of the better books I have reviewed this year, despite its obvious need of editing. Based in the action movie making industry…
A delicious and nutritious way to add zinc, iron and protein–zip–to a salad is to add some beef tenderloin. Not only is beef tenderloin an excellent or good source of nine essential nutrients, but it is also one of 29 lean cuts of beef.
A stimulating adventure! Sabine Muir has written a wonderful children?s story that can be read many, many times. This is a time-travel, Christian fantasy novel…
Asking most kids to pick up a book during July or August is like asking them to clean their room or eat their Brussels sprouts. Fortunately, there’s a simple solution to the quandary of summer reading lists: Stock them with titles that are fun and challenging and encourage kids to look beyond a book’s covers.
Belle Smith gives us a great science fiction read without the typical concoction of space travel and high-tech aliens. Instead, she keeps us on Earth with a taste of what computers, combined with nano-technology and human creativity, may achieve for us in the not too distant future? or should I say past?