| Traffic jam: the coming cellphone crunch 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 19:45) | 
  | Smartphone users beware? the days of all-you-can-eat wireless data may be numbered 
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  | Silica deposits on Mars could entomb possible life 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 10:12) | 
  | Deposits of hydrated silica on a Martian volcano point to a hydrothermal origin– they could preserve evidence of ancient life 
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  | 'Introspection' brain networks fully formed at birth 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 4:00) | 
  | Babies are born with fully formed networks thought to be used for introspection– but that doesn't mean they can contemplate the future 
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  | Clearing tropical forests is a lose-lose 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 4:00) | 
  | It's clear that cutting down tropical forests to plant crops is bad for the climate, but it's not even a good way to feed people 
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  | Today on New Scientist: 1 November 2010 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 3:00) | 
  | All today's stories on NewScientist.com, including: the ultimate brain test, what makes bones strong and why western science conquered the world 
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  | First whole human liver built in lab 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 2:55) | 
  | Human livers, about the size of small plums, have been made in the lab for the first time– if they can be scaled up, transplantable ones may follow 
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  | Pictures captured at the world's extremes 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 2:50) | 
  | Extreme Exposures, a new exhibition in Los Angeles, shows that some of the world's most challenging environments are also some of its most beautiful 
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  | Machine intelligence put to test in alien world 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-2 2:30) | 
  | Computers that can beat chess grandmasters? Ho-hum. The new challenge for artificial intelligence is a strategy game called StarCraft 
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  | What the UN ban on geoengineering really means 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-1 23:40) | 
  | The agreement last week at the UN Convention on Biodiversity appeared to outlaw geoengineering– but its wording is vague and contradictory 
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  | Why western science conquered the world 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-1 23:15) | 
  | History boils down to biology, and geography can be unfair, says Ian Morris : but the advantages they confer may not last forever 
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