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Today on New Scientist: 4 September 2009  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-5 2:00) 
Today's stories on newscientist.com, at a glance? including bad news for meat-eaters, the coolest microgravity research, and extreme Velcro
California encourages buildings that are sure to burn  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-5 2:00) 
Insurance guarantees in state law encourage homeowners to build in brushy chaparral canyons where massive wildfires are inevitable
World's climate could cool first, warm later  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-5 1:56) 
Natural variations in ocean currents could mean we're in for a cool spell before warming from the greenhouse effect takes over
Extreme steel 'Velcro' takes a 35-tonne load  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-5 0:34) 
German engineers have used the everyday hook-and-loop concept to build a fastener capable of securing heavy components in high temperature environments
Hot on the trails of the mysterious monopole  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-5 0:30) 
Two experiments in strange stuff called spin ice provide the best evidence yet that lone magnetic poles– a north without a south– really do exist
Review: The Emperor's New Drugs and Doctoring the Mind  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-5 0:10) 
Where's the science underpinning the way we treat mental illness, ask psychology professors Irving Kirsch and Richard Bentall
This week's top stories [04 September 2009]  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-4 22:00) 
Our top articles ranked by reader popularity. Best visions of the night sky 13 more things that don't make sense China cracks down on stem cell tourism One partner stumbles in lunar probe pas de deux Biased parrots pass tests with flying colours Today on New Scientist: 1 September 2009 Lobsters teach robots magnetic mapping trick Why AI is a dangerous dream Intensive frog farming takes giant leap forward Full without food: Can surgery cure obesity?
[¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹] ½©ÍÕ¸¶¤Ë¤Æ³«ºÅ¤µ¤ì¤¿¡ÖÂè1²ó¥ë¥Í¥µ¥¹¥Þ¥¤¥³¥ó¥«¡¼¥é¥ê¡¼¶¥µ»²ñ¡×¥ì¥Ý¡¼¥È¡ÁÁ´¹ñ¤«¤é½¸¤Þ¤Ã¤¿2É  from Robot Watch  (2009-9-4 21:34) 

Code-breaking quantum algorithm run on a silicon chip  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-4 20:58) 
A quantum method for cracking a common form of online security has been demonstrated in a quantum circuit printed onto a chip under 3 centimetres long
Warmer climate could make succulent meat a memory  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-9-4 20:26) 
Pork chops will become soggier and paler as the world warms, say veterinary scientists, and steaks could become blander, leaner and darker



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