Archive for the ‘Virus Killer’ Category

Ultra Virus Killer: ITGeek Tools and Misc.Tools 2014 – Video


Ultra Virus Killer: ITGeek Tools and Misc.Tools 2014
In this video I show you two features that are included with UVK called ITGeek Tools and Miscellaneous Tools. Both features are great for managing, cleaning...

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Ultra Virus Killer: ITGeek Tools and Misc.Tools 2014 - Video

Ultra Virus Killer: Portable 2014 – Video


Ultra Virus Killer: Portable 2014
Learningtocomputes website: https://sites.google.com/site/learningtocomputessite/home In this video I show you the portable version of Ultra Virus Killer (UV...

By: learningtocompute

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Ultra Virus Killer: Portable 2014 - Video

Ultra Virus Killer: Complete Walk Through 2014 – Video


Ultra Virus Killer: Complete Walk Through 2014
This video is all of the UVK videos combined into one. There is a lot to soak in, but you will soon see this is a valuable tool in your IT Toolkit. This vide...

By: learningtocompute

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Ultra Virus Killer: Complete Walk Through 2014 - Video

Saudi camel virus found in humans, killer bug detected in secretions and blood

Saudi camel virus found in humans, killer bug detected in secretions and blood (02-25 13:52) A killer respiratory virus spreading in the Middle East, is widespread in camels and may be jumping directly to humans, a study has found. The Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS, the virus has killed 79 of the 182 people infected since September 2012, according to the World Health Organization. Senior study author Ian Lipkin of Columbia University said the virus is extraordinarily common'' in camels and has been for at least 20 years. In some parts of Saudi Arabia, two-thirds of young animals have infectious virus in their respiratory tracts,'' he told AFP. It is plausible that camels could be a major source of infection for humans.'' Lipkin worked with colleagues at the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and lead author Abdulaziz Alagaili of King Saud University in Riyadh on the study, published in the journal mBio on February 25. Researchers took blood samples as well as rectal and nasal swabs from more than 200 camels in Saudi Arabia in November and December of 2013. They found antibodies for MERS as well as active virus, particularly in the nasal secretions of younger camels. Overall, 74 percent of camels sampled countrywide had antibodies to MERS-CoV [coronavirus],'' said the study. The team also analyzed archives of blood samples from dromedary camels the most common species taken from 1992 to 2010, and found evidence of MERS going back two decades. The virus that has been identified in these camels is identical to the virus that has been found in humans with disease,'' Lipkin said. If confirmed, MERS would not be the only disease known to pass from camels to humans, but such cases are rare. One other is Rift Valley fever, which can cause fever and flu-like symptoms in people. Camels that tested positive for the virus appeared to be in otherwise good health. Most of the human infections of MERS have been in Saudi Arabia, with others scattered across Jordan, Qatar, Tunisia, and the United Arab Emirates. Some cases have also been reported in France, Germany, Italy and Britain, but all have had some links to travel in the Middle East. Researchers now think close contact with camels, which are known to be slobbery creatures, could be how the virus is transmitted. People race them, people keep them as pets,'' said Lipkin. And they also eat camels, so there are many opportunities for exchange of material between camels and people.''

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Saudi camel virus found in humans, killer bug detected in secretions and blood

Hot right now: Virus Syndicate

Manchester rap crew Virus Syndicate are on a roll.

Their infectious new single, Sick Wid It, was last weeks Radio 1Xtra Best of British selection. A classy video featuring local chanteuse and future-star Ndege is getting hammered on YouTube. Their much-anticipated third LP, The Swarm, features an international roster of cutting-edge bass music producers and debuts on March 9. Added to that, theyre in the middle of a 15-date European tour.

Formed in 2005, the trio, Goldfinger, JSD and Nika D, are typically described as grime scene veterans. Strictly speaking, though, theyve often been more associated with dubstep due to their work with their sometime fourth member, MRK1, one of the genres originators and the producer of much of their material to date.

Not that they like to be pigeon-holed, explaining that one factor that brought them together was an admiration of ragga drum and bass MCs. Moss Sides Trigga is cited as a particular influence. Back then, the 140 beats-per-minute style that was emerging in the UK, slower than DnB but faster than traditional hip-hop, seemed well-suited to their synchronised lyrical intricacies.

JSD, aka Dave Hindley, originally from Chorlton and now resident in Northern Moor, says: The thing is, we always made darker music, so when we came into it, it was garage, it was happy, it was like champagne-in-the-dance, that kind of thing, and we never made that sound, that style of music. It was always more that the darker side, like Oris Jay and Zed Bias, then evolved into dubstep and people coined it as dubstep, and we never necessarily put ourselves in the grime bracket or in the dubstep bracket but we span all of those things.

Indeed, the new LP, a boisterous, high-octane ride stamped with their trademark swift-flowing, razor-sharp rhymes, spins through a range of styles. With MRK1s blessing, Virus Syndicate assembled a cohort of new collaborators that have mutated their gritty sound in new directions.

Knock It Back, the first single from the LP released back in September, for instance, was made with Russian-Ukrainian trap specialists Teddy Killerz. DJ Muggs, of hip-hop legends Cypress Hill, produced the gothic stomper Sick Em. The rather lovely urban melancholy of The Sky is the result of a team-up with Anglo-French rapper Grems and London tunesmith Son Of Kick.

In contrast to last years single Cold World, a bleak portrayal of Camerons Britain, or their 2012 aggrostep anthem Ayah Bass, the LP is collectively a more upbeat affair. Its a high-energy album, its us feeling good, explains Goldfinger, real name Marvin McKenzie from Whalley Range, and who now lives in Ancoats.

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Hot right now: Virus Syndicate