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The wild wild waste

Proceedings of the 35th annual ACM SIGUCCS fall conference, 2007
E-Waste is a popular, informal name for discarded electronic products such as computers, VCRs, cameras, which have reached the end of their "useful life". Discarded electronic products contain a stew of toxic metals and chemicals such as lead, mercury, cadmium, chromium, and PCBs.
Scott E. Hanselman, Mahmoud Pegah
openaire   +1 more source

The Wild, Wild West

CHEST
abstract
Avraham Z. Cooper   +1 more
  +4 more sources

The Wild, Wild West

2017
Canadian Literature, No 228-9 (2016): Emerging Scholars ...
Marion R. Just, Ann Crigler
openaire   +2 more sources

Identifying queries in the wild, wild web

Proceedings of the third symposium on Information interaction in context, 2010
Identifying user querying behavior is an important problem for information seeking and retrieval research. Query-related studies typically rely on server-side logs taken from a single search engine, but a comprehensive view of user querying behaviors requires analysis of data collected from the client-side for unrestricted searches.
Jingjing Liu 0007   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

How Wild is Wild?

2014
There is no obvious line or boundary that separates wild animals from those that are not wild. Instead, there are expansive grey areas, of which the most conspicuous encompass the domesticated animals that have reverted to a life outside human control, and the undomesticated animals that thrive within human environments.
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Born to be wild

Trends in Parasitology, 2015
Over the past 30 years, Trends in Parasitology has provided an overview of recent research in emerging areas of parasitology to a wide audience of readers. The journal has focused on a large number of parasitic infections, most of them of medical interest.
Ana, Camejo, Danielle T, Loughlin
openaire   +2 more sources

The Wild, Wild Pest

The Sciences, 1999
IT WAS AS IF THERE WERE A WAR among the lions," says Melody E. RoelkeParker of the events on the Serengeti Plain in the early months of 1994. "I saw lions who had been killed by other lions, lions with crushed skulls and hideous infected wounds." Roelke-Parker had been in Tanzania for barely a year at that point, hired by a Swiss foundation to set up ...
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Born to be wild: Wildings stay the course

Immunity
The immune system of wildlings-mice with a wild-derived microbiota-has features similar to that in adult humans. In this issue of Immunity, Oh et al. demonstrate the long-term stability of wildling microbiota and immune traits, establishing these mice as an accessible, transferable model for immunology research.
Carolyn A. Thomson, Kathy D. McCoy
openaire   +2 more sources

The Wild Wild Web

Anesthesia & Analgesia, 2008
Peter S. A. Glass, Paul F. White
openaire   +2 more sources

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