[physik] International trading company is proud to offer a high-paid position for a honest hard-working ambitious person.

fidel kirk hyram at p5com.com
Wed Sep 12 11:53:38 CEST 2007


International company Web Electronic Industry
is taking the candidates in the USA for the position of Local Agent.
We are looking for the trustworthy person with excellent organizational and communicative skills.
Good knowledge of computer and business relations practice will be your advantage.
This is a part-time job which can be combined with any permanent or another part-time job.
Average workload is up to 8 hours a week.
No special experience is necessary. Excellent compensation
package, the salary starts from $20,000 a year.
If you got interested in our vacancy and you have any questions,
please contact us staff at w-ei.com
The offer is for USA citizens only.

Courtesy of Steve Block Volume II, Issue 2 17 Sizing Up Nanotechnology Block, is that "if we are ever to build machines which are in any way based on biological structures, then we will have to learn about how real biological systems function."
Nature's own marvelous nanoscale machines include motors that spin bacterial flagella at up to 1000 revolutions per second and polymerases that step along DNA and RNA to facilitate the flow of genetic information. Block, along with other Stanford researchers such as Professors W. E. Moerner (Chemistry) and Steve Chu (Physics), are studying Nature's machines through single molecule science. This young field is devoted to following molecules one at a time rather than observing their averaged behavior, as has been done traditionally. To understand why average properties may obscure molecular behavior, "Consider a ship traveling from New York to San Francisco," says Block. "If it's small enough, it will travel down into the Caribbean and go across the Panama Canal and then back up to San Francisco. If it's a big oil tanker, it won't fit through the Panama Canal; it's got to go all the way around Cape Horn. But the average path of a ship traveling from New York to San Francisco would probably come out somewhere in the middle of the Amazon where there is in fact no route at all!"
Energy: Self-Assembling Solar Cells Dr. Michael McGehee, Materials Science and Engineering





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