(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
ScienceDaily: Free Newsfeed
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20070110062751/http://www.sciencedaily.com:80/subscribe/newsfeed.htm

Free Newsfeed

ScienceDaily Magazine now offers a free newsfeed service. In order to subscribe, you'll need a separate program or plug-in that can read RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feeds -- an XML-based format for distributing content. (For more information, see the following list of available RSS clients: http://blogspace.com/rss/readers)

Once you have the RSS client software installed on your computer, add the following URL to your RSS subscriptions:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/newsfeed.xml

The above newsfeed is automatically updated as many as six times a day (6 a.m., 9 a.m., 12 p.m. noon, 3 p.m., 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.), Eastern Time) with six new stories for each edition, for a total of 36 items. Each item includes the story's headline, summary, and link back to the full-text version on our web site.

If you're a webmaster, we encourage you to integrate our newsfeed into your web site, so long as you do not post our full-text articles, and so long as you provide proper attribution to ScienceDaily and a link back to our site (http://www.sciencedaily.com).

RSS Terms of Use

RSS (really simple syndication) service is a means by which ScienceDaily.com offers feeds of story headlines and brief summaries in XML format ("RSS Content") to visitors to ScienceDaily.com (the “Site") who use RSS aggregators. These Terms of Use govern your use of the RSS service. The use of the RSS service also is subject to the terms and conditions of Science Daily’s Terms of Use which governs the use of Science Daily websites and affiliated information services and content. These Terms of Use, as with Science Daily’s Terms of Use, may be changed by Science Daily at any time without notice. If you do not agree to all of the terms, do not use this Site’s RSS Feed.

Use of RSS Feeds

Science Daily encourages the use of the RSS feeds to augment content on your own site or blog, provided that you do not publish the full text of our stories. You must use the RSS feeds as provided by Science Daily, and you may not edit or modify the text, content or links supplied by Science Daily. You must also provide proper attribution (included in each RSS feed) by listing “Science Daily” in text as the source for each article. Science Daily reserves all rights in and to any Science Daily logos, trademarks or trade names contained in any RSS feed, and your right to use these Science Daily logos, trademarks or trade names is limited to providing attribution in connection with these RSS feeds. Any other uses, including without limitation the incorporation of advertising or other promotional content into, or the placement of advertising associated with or targeted towards the RSS Content, are strictly prohibited. You agree not to associate any Science Daily RSS feeds with any content that might harm the reputation of Science Daily, its affiliated sites, authors, employees, contributors or partners. Without limiting the above, you may not use the feed on any site that displays pornographic material, exploits children, provides instruction on or promotes illegal activities, or is in any way misleading, obscene, defamatory, libelous, or invasive of personal privacy.

No Fees Permitted

The feeds are free of charge for use by individuals and by organizations for commercial and non-commercial use. Users of ScienceDaily.com’s RSS feeds content cannot charge additional fees or licenses for the RSS feed content.

Attribution/Link to Science Daily

You agree to use the RSS Service only to provide headlines and summaries as provided by Science Daily, each with a functional link to the full story on the Science Daily website that shall display the full content immediately (e.g., no jump pages or other intermediate or interstitial pages). You further agree not to frame or otherwise control the browser window (if any) in which our content opens, including limiting the size or position of such window.

Copyright/Ownership

All RSS Feeds are protected by the copyright laws of the United States and international copyright treaties. All ownership rights and intellectual property rights in and to the RSS Feeds shall remain with Science Daily and no part thereof shall be deemed assigned or licensed to you.

Storing Science Daily Materials

You agree not to copy, duplicate or store any data retrieved from or derived from a Science Daily feed beyond the normal amount provided by Science Daily (approximately 40 headlines and summaries). Without limiting the above, no Science Daily content may be entered into a database or other organizational structure without the prior written consent of Science Daily.

Right to Discontinue Feeds

Science Daily may modify or remove the list of available RSS feeds (or the content in the feeds) at any time without notifying you. Additionally, Science Daily reserves the right to revoke RSS syndication privileges at any time, for any reason or for no reason.

 

 

New! Search Science Daily or the entire web with Google:

Google
 
Web ScienceDaily.com


 

Imaging Pinpoints Brain Regions That 'See The Future' (January 7, 2007) -- Using brain imaging, researchers from Washington University in St. Louis have identified several brain regions that are involved in the uniquely human ability to envision future events. The study, to ... > full story

Headaches Form Over A Possible New Form Of Aspirin (January 7, 2007) -- New scientific insights into the packaging of molecules in solids may tempt jokesters to add a second line to that old medical axiom, "Take two aspirin and call me in the morning." Insiders familiar ... > full story

Computer Scientists Discover New Way To Spin Up Pulsars (January 7, 2007) -- A team of scientists using Oak Ridge National Laboratory supercomputers has discovered the first plausible explanation for a pulsar's spin that fits the observations made by ... > full story

Cough And Phlegm Cause Fourfold Increase In COPD Incidence (January 7, 2007) -- Young adults (ages 20 to 44) with normal lung function who later develop chronic cough and phlegm have a fourfold higher risk of developing chronic obstructive pulmonary ... > full story

Getting Livestock Vaccines Past A Maternal Block (January 7, 2007) -- Use of a virus linked to the common cold is among the novel approaches Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Iowa are using to bypass maternal defenses that thwart vaccination of very ... > full story

Age, Gender Major Factors In Severity Of Auto-accident Injuries (January 7, 2007) -- Understanding the differences among drivers in different gender and age categories is crucial to preventing serious injuries, said researchers in a new study showing stark statistical differences in ... > full story

Chemistry Of Volcanic Fallout Reveals Secrets Of Past Eruptions (January 6, 2007) -- A team of American and French scientists has developed a method to determine the influence of past volcanic eruptions on climate and the chemistry of the upper atmosphere, and significantly reduce ... > full story

Renegade RNA: Clues To Cancer And Normal Growth (January 6, 2007) -- Researchers at Johns Hopkins have discovered that a tiny piece of genetic code apparently goes where no bit of it has gone before, and it gets there under its own internal ... > full story

Making Wheat Flour More Nutritious (January 6, 2007) -- Your favorite bread, breakfast cereal or pasta might tomorrow be made with wheat flour that's more nutritious than ever. Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and university scientists have identified ... > full story

The Shape Of Health To Come: Customized Fitness Program Helps Endometrial Cancer Survivors (January 6, 2007) -- While millions of Americans place fitness as one of their top New Year's resolutions to improve shape, muscle tone and overall appearance, cancer survivors have another priority -- life. Researchers ... > full story

Invention Detects Hidden Dried Plum Pits (January 6, 2007) -- Festive gift trays of sweet, sun-ripened fruits often include delicious dried plums--also known as prunes. Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in California have invented an inexpensive ... > full story

Should Smokers Be Refused Surgery? (January 6, 2007) -- Last year a primary care trust announced it would take smokers off waiting lists for surgery in an attempt to contain costs. In this week's British Medical Journal, two experts go head to head over ... > full story

New Sucker-footed Bat Discovered In Madagascar (January 5, 2007) -- Scientists have discovered a new species of bat that has large flat adhesive organs, or suckers, attached to its thumbs and hind feet. This is a remarkable find because the new bat belongs to a ... > full story

How Appetite-stimulating Brain Cells Work Overtime During Fasting (January 5, 2007) -- During periods of fasting, brain cells responsible for stimulating the appetite make sure that you stay hungry. Now, a new study of mice reported in the January issue of the journal Cell Metabolism, ... > full story

Brain Studies Reveal Mechanisms Of Voluntary Control Of Visual Attention (January 5, 2007) -- Neuroscientists at Duke University have mapped the timing and sequence of neural activations that unfold in the brain when people focus their attention on specific locations in their visual ... > full story

Glucose Levels Trigger Compensation For Type 2 Diabetics (January 5, 2007) -- Many individuals with type 2 diabetes are diabetic because their body no longer responds to the hormone insulin. Before they become clinically diabetic their body tries to compensate for the lack of ... > full story

Queen Bees Shown To Pass Viruses To Their Offspring (January 5, 2007) -- The first evidence that viruses can be transmitted vertically from mother queens to their offspring in honey bee colonies has been discovered by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists. ARS ... > full story

Change In Guidelines Could Help Eliminate Tuberculosis In United States (January 5, 2007) -- To eliminate tuberculosis (TB) in the United States, current guidelines should be changed to reclassify all foreign-born residents from high incidence countries as "high-risk" regardless of the ... > full story

2007 To Be Warmest Year Yet, Say UK Forecasters (January 5, 2007) -- 2007 is likely to be the warmest year on record globally, beating the current record set in 1998, say climate-change experts at the United Kingdom's Met ... > full story

Sugars In Liver Found To Clear Fats From The Bloodstream (January 5, 2007) -- In work with mice, researchers at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine discovered a factor that could be responsible for many unexplained cases of elevated triglyceride ... > full story

Family And Friends Set The Speedometer (January 5, 2007) -- If your family and friends approve of speeding, then chances are you are more likely to plant your foot on the accelerator, a study by Queensland University of Technology has ... > full story

What Memories Are Made Of: Researcher Studies Plasticity Of Recall (January 5, 2007) -- Unraveling the differences between various kinds of memories depends on understanding changes that happen in the brain at the molecular level, says a professor at the University of ... > full story

Using Comparative Genomics To Manage Virulent Chicken Disease (January 5, 2007) -- The genetic code for a virulent strain of Marek's disease virus was cracked a few years ago. Now, to determine how best to cripple it and other infectious strains, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) ... > full story

European Union Outpaces United States On Chemical Safety (January 5, 2007) -- New stricter European environmental policies may force even U.S.-based electronics makers to change their ways, say policy analysts at Brown University and Boston University. Stacy D. VanDeveer, a ... > full story

Text: small | med | large
Find a Job
Keywords:
Location:
Job category:
> more
 

In Other News ...

... more breaking news at NewsDaily -- updated every 15 minutes

Health & Medicine Mind & Brain Plants & Animals Space & Time Earth & Climate Matter & Energy Computers & Math Fossils & Ruins