The Ape Bot

February 21st, 2010

The How-To Guide: Volunteering Your Time

Posted by admin in Bipartisan, Doing Business, Social Hub

We all know that giving your time as a volunteer lets you make your community stronger and at the same time assist the needy. Of course, organizing your schedule so that you’re free to volunteer often wastes very same time that could be put to better use. And you’ll have more fun volunteering with your co-workers getting involved right along with you.

This is a call, then, for other companies to take a cue from firms like Adaptive Marketing LLC. In addition to programs such as Todays Escapes designed for the benefit of consumers, Adaptive Marketing handles the organizational necessities to give its employees the time to reach out to the local community. When you think about company supported charitable effort, you probably think of giving blood, perhaps an annual donation drive, but this is simply not the case in the modern day. Looking at just one company, Adaptive Marketing has provided its staff with the opportunity to help with anything from shoe recycling campaigns to tree replanting weekends. In these cases, the locations, dates and times that had been arranged were posted, making sure that staff knew what to expect, and the exact amount of time each event might specifically require.

Naturally, it’s essential to let volunteers support projects in line with their own preferences. At Adaptive Marketing, the company bringing you Todays Escapes, staff have the chance to choose from a diverse list of volunteer drives. There’s so much to be done, after all; working with children, helping with environmental activities, or improving the area’s look through performance art to list just a few that have already been tried. A happy volunteer is an effective volunteer, consequently, by providing such a variety of programs Adaptive Marketing guarantee that their members of staff will make progress on as many as possible.

A one-off event or a regularly scheduled day — this is how a company typically arranges this kind of volunteer initiative, maybe at a local school or the homeless shelter in town. Regardless of how little time you have, we’d expect you can still find some program to suit, which makes time no block against volunteering.

We’re sure you know a number of examples of firms supporting the citizens of their home town. Goodwill comes from the projects undertaken by Adaptive Marketing’s members of staff, and the members of staff of companies like it, through these initiatives. One thing volunteer work is certain to do is provide your employees with a positive feeling about themselves, creating a motivated corporate culture.

May 19th, 2009

Rare but Fatal Malignant Mesothelioma Is Difficult to Diagnose, Due to Quite a Few Signs Are Similar to Other Diseases

Mesothelioma is a rare and fast acting tumor for which no effective treatment exists despite the breakthrough of several potential molecular targets. The final stages of Malignant pleural mesothelioma diagnosis and the long time that exists between contacts and diagnosis have made it tricky to comprehensively learn the role of risk factors and the insuing molecular effects.

Quite a few medical centers are beginning to see increasing numbers of people that have pleural cancer. This presents pathologists involved in making the diagnosis with a number of problems, which can be separated into those exposed in finding the differences between mesothelioma and benign changes and those experienced in differentiating mesotheliomas from other sorts of epithelial and connecting tissue tumors. IHC is a major factor in diagnosis, but it should be understood in regards to the clinical setting and radiological features, and understanding the wide morphological differentiations seen in malignant mesothelioma.

Malignant mesothelioma is a primary cancer of the serosal cavities, a basic site that is also frequently affected by metastatic disease, largely from primary carcinomas of the lung, breast, and ovary. Developments in immunohistochemistry have lead to improved diagnostic sensitivity and mesothelioma in regards to histological and cytological material. As of late, the authors faction applied increased levels of throughput technology to the identification of new signs that may aid in being able to tell the difference between malignant mesothelioma from ovarian and peritoneal cancer, tumors cells that contain closely related histogenesis and antigenic profile. Together with the better tools available for cancer of the serosa diagnosis, knowing the biology of cancer of the mesothelium has been accruing as of late.

September 18th, 2008

Wind Power as an Alternative


Among all the new alternative energies out there wind power is definitely one of the most impressive and high potential one. The facts in favor of wind power are mainly the perfect clean energy produced and also the fact that once implemented, the costs are close to zero. The negative aspects are that often the propeller towers cause problems to the overall scene and ambientalists are not always in favor of it and also if the wind is low, there might be some problems in actually generating energy.

Of course all these things have seriously taken in consideration and yet wind power appears to be a great solution, especially when compared to gas or oil and the pollution generated by those, without even mentioning the increasing price of energy and all the economical and social factors. Wind power might not be the ultimate solution, but it’s definitely a good alternative and it shouldn’t be disregarded too easily. It could be used as a back up or used as a primary source of energy with a back up, there is room to operate and improve the technology and every attempt and research is worth the effort. Wind power is however already fully implemented in many areas.

More about global warming and wind power, as well as solar energy and energy alternatives.

April 10th, 2008

A time for philanthropy

Posted by admin in Bipartisan

Philanthropy is rooted in the basic instincts that all social plants and creatures have developed and inherited on Earth. We have learned to strengthen ourselves by giving freely to others what we can spare from our own basic needs of survival. Philanthropic actions in the animal kingdom include standing watch over grazing and foraging herds or packs of animals, sharing water and shelter in times of danger, and welcoming new members to small communities. Human philanthropy is more closely tied to emotional needs than animal philanthropy. We developed complex societies to manage our resources and provide for our basic needs more efficiently, but as our societies grew we found some people were able to contribute less, or were more dependent upon the group as a whole. Although some social groups have pruned themselves of less productive members most societies extend some benefit and protection to the weak, the sick, the injured, and the elderly. By caring for those who once cared for us, and who may care for us again, we extended our survivability. But as we separated into classes (wealthy and poor) the burden of supporting the less fortunate shifted to the wealthy classes. Kings, nobles, and despots learned quickly that providing bread and circuses to the masses could win their loyalties. What may have begun as communal resource management evolved into political engineering and from there into social engineering. In the late 19th Century Andrew Carnegie suggested to his fellow magnates that they had a moral obligation to society to dispose of their excess wealth in a responsible and beneficial manner. Whereas medieval European nobles would bequeath wealth to the Church in hopes of heavenly rewards, Carnegie and his generation of magnates concluded that by enrichening socity they would help make the world a better place for their children and descendants. Ultimately, the redistribution of wealth through philanthropy ensures that wealth families obtain trust and respect from their less fortunate peers, who collectively have the power to strip them of their wealth and lives (as has happened to many wealthy groups throughout history). But the channels that philanthropy creates for investment and research also act as an economic pressure valve, stimulating growth in small industries whose value arise from broadening humanity’s growth rather than from promoting individual survival rewards. A full understanding of how the wealthier families empower us all through philanthropy has emerged slowly as we have come to share in many of the benefits that Carnegie and his successors championed. The next step forward in our social growth may empower the individual sufficiently to reduce our need for philanthropic activities, but only time will tell. Until the future brings such an individually liberating day we should celebrate this time for philanthropy.