Open code
June 1, 2008 12:00 amThe use of open software grows within companies and among researchers
The use of open software grows within companies and among researchers
X-ray equipment to detect metal, glass and stone particles in foods
Research shows the difficulties of US-Brazil relations
Biography of this military figure reveals memory failure
Butantan will supply medication that saves premature babies
FAPESP and federal government to finance bioenergy and climate change projects
Biota-FAPESP map directs the removal of native green in São Paulo
Evaluation reveals the level of efficiency of four FAPESP programs
Study maps the strategies of countries that produce world class research
Almost 10 thousand researchers adjust the greatest particle accelerator
Collisions in sight
Sociology examining the edges of society, dreams and hope
A pioneering L.P. of colonial and imperial modinhas to be relaunched after 40 years
Restructuring underscore new phase of social sciences research program
Super continent that existed a billion years ago gains new contours
Why we love to eat pies, cakes and other sweets
Transgenic goats, cows, hens, and mice are a new way to produce drugs
Optical fibers besides telecommunications
Desks with touch screen for digital and manual writing
Research study reveals what life was like on São Paulo's coffee plantations
Intellectual Biography of Lévi-Strauss reveals a life full of dilemmas
Urban legends spread through the internet bring panic to the web
Mysteries of the Portuguese man-of-war challenge biologists
Minister from Supreme Court supports research on embryonic stem cells
Expansion of Brazil's ethanol production depends on investment in science
The naked, literal disease
Adolpho Lutz published two articles describing a new disease, 100 years ago
Concern with racial prejudice hides the historical anti-Semitism in Brazilian society
Different scenarios can make tuberculosis worse
Agricultural waste can reduce the use of cement and CO2 emissions